New Jersey Administrative Code
Title 1 - ADMINISTRATIVE LAW
Chapter 1 - UNIFORM ADMINISTRATIVE PROCEDURE RULES
Subchapter 3 - COMMENCEMENT OF CONTESTED CASES; JURISDICTION OF THE OFFICE OF ADMINISTRATIVE LAW
Section 1:1-3.2 - Jurisdiction of the Office of Administrative Law

Universal Citation: NJ Admin Code 1:1-3.2

Current through Register Vol. 56, No. 18, September 16, 2024

(a) The Office of Administrative Law shall acquire jurisdiction over a matter only after it has been determined to be a contested case by an agency head and has been filed with the Office of Administrative Law or as otherwise authorized by law, except as provided by N.J.A.C. 1:1-17. The Office of Administrative Law shall not receive, hear or consider any pleadings, motion papers, or documents of any kind relating to any matter until it has acquired jurisdiction over that matter, except as provided by N.J.A.C. 1:1-17.

(b) When the Office of Administrative Law acquires jurisdiction over a matter that arises from a State agency's rejection of a party's application, and at the hearing the party offers proofs that were not previously considered by the agency, the judge may either allow the party to amend the application to add new contentions, claims or defenses or, if considerations of expediency and efficiency so require, the judge shall order the matter returned to the State agency. If the matter is returned to the agency and thereafter transmitted for hearing, the agency's response to any new contentions, claims or defenses shall be attached to the transmittal form required by 1:1-8.2.

(c) Matters involving the administration of the Office of Administrative Law as a State agency are subject to the authority of the Director. In the following matters as they relate to proceedings before the Office of Administrative Law, the Director is the agency head for purposes of review:

1. Disqualification of a particular judge due to interest or any other reason which would preclude a fair and unbiased hearing, pursuant to 1:1-14.1 2;

2. Appearances of non-lawyer representatives, pursuant to 1:1-5.4;

3. Imposition of conditions and limitations upon non-lawyer representatives, pursuant to 1:1-5.5;

4. Sanctions under 1:1-14.4 or 14.14 and 14.15 consisting of the assessment of costs, expenses, or fines;

5. Disqualification of attorneys, pursuant to 1:1-5.3;

6. Establishment of a hearing location pursuant to 1:1-9.1(b); and

7. Appearance of attorneys pro hac vice pursuant to 1:1-5.2.

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