N.J. Admin. Code § 1:1-12.6 - Emergency relief
(a)
Where authorized by law and where irreparable harm will result without an
expedited decision granting or prohibiting some action or relief connected with
a contested case, emergency relief pending a final decision on the whole
contested case may be ordered upon the application of a party.
(b) Applications for emergency relief shall
be made directly to the agency head and may not be made to the Office of
Administrative Law.
(c) An agency
head receiving an application for emergency relief may either hear the
application or forward the matter to the Office of Administrative Law for
hearing on the application for emergency relief. When forwarded to the Office
of Administrative Law, the application shall proceed in accordance with (i)
through (k) below. All applications for emergency relief shall be heard on an
expedited basis.
(d) The moving
party must serve notice of the request for emergency relief on all parties.
Proof of service will be required if the adequacy of notice is challenged.
Opposing parties shall be given ample opportunity under the circumstances to
respond to an application for emergency relief.
(e) Where circumstances require some
immediate action by the agency head to preserve the subject matter of the
application pending the expedited hearing, or where a party applies for
emergency relief under circumstances which do not permit an opposing party to
be fully heard, the agency head may issue an order granting temporary relief.
Temporary relief may continue until the agency head issues a decision on the
application for emergency relief.
(f) When temporary relief is granted by an
agency head under circumstances which do not permit an opposing party to be
fully heard, temporary relief shall:
1. Be
based upon specific facts shown by affidavit or oral testimony, that the moving
party has made an adequate, good faith effort to provide notice to the opposing
party, or that notice would defeat the purpose of the application for
relief;
2. Include a finding that
immediate and irreparable harm will probably result before adequate notice can
be given;
3. Be based on the
likelihood that the moving party will prevail when the application is fully
argued by all parties;
4. Be as
limited in scope and temporary as is possible to allow the opposing party to be
given notice and to be fully heard on the application; and
5. Contain a provision for serving and
notifying all parties and for scheduling a hearing before the agency head or
for transmitting the application to Office of Administrative Law.
(g) Upon determining any
application for emergency relief, the agency head shall forthwith issue and
immediately serve upon the parties a written order on the application. If the
application is related to a contested case that has been transmitted to Office
of Administrative Law, the agency head shall also serve the Clerk of Office of
Administrative Law with a copy of the order.
(h) Applications to an agency head for
emergent relief in matters previously transmitted to the Office of
Administrative Law shall not delay the scheduling or conduct of hearings,
unless the presiding judge determines that a postponement is necessary due to
special requirements of the case, because of probable prejudice or for other
good cause.
(i) Upon determining an
application for emergency relief, the judge forthwith shall issue to the
parties, the agency head and the Clerk a written order on the application. The
Clerk shall file with the agency head any papers in support of or opposition to
the application which were not previously filed with the agency and a sound
recording of the oral argument on the application, if any oral argument has
occurred.
(j) The agency head's
review of the judge's order shall be completed without undue delay but no later
than 45 days from entry of the judge's order, except when, for good cause shown
and upon notice to the parties, the time period is extended by the joint action
of the Director of the Office of Administrative Law and the agency head. Where
the agency head does not act on review of the judge's order within 45 days, the
judge's order shall be deemed adopted.
(k) Review by an agency head of a judge's
order for emergency relief shall not delay the scheduling or conduct of
hearings in the Office of Administrative Law, unless the presiding judge
determines that a postponement is necessary due to special requirements of the
case, because of probable prejudice or for other good cause.
Notes
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