Rescue New Jersey: Plaintiff In Case Against Governor Left Picking Up the Pieces Following Business Shutdown

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Jennifer Jean Miller | (973) 532-2117

Plaintiff in Case Against Governor Left Picking Up the Pieces Following Business Shutdown Loss of Plaintiff’s Business Compounded by Spouse’s Recent Layoff

(Morris Plains, NJ) As Darlene Pallay continues to wait on the legal process of her Appellate Division case against Gov. Phil Murphy and pandemic shutdowns near their one-year anniversary, the former business owner of the CKO Kickboxing Franklin franchise remains in limbo while she tries to recover from the domino effect of the business shutdowns, with her husband also recently laid off from his job.

Pallay’s lawsuit against Murphy with her company JWC Fitness LLC, formerly based out of Sussex County, challenged the Governor’s improper execution of the Disaster Control Act in March 2020, when he invoked the Act in his Executive Orders and deemed some businesses, including Pallay’s, “non-essential.” Though Pallay’s attorneys Robert W. Ferguson, Esq. of the law firm of Stern, Kilcullen and Rufolo, LLC of Florham Park and Catherine M. Brown, Esq., of Denville - who filed the suit with the facilitation of the nonprofit advocacy group Rescue New Jersey - asked to have proceedings expedited based on Pallay’s plight, the Appellate Division denied their request.

In the meantime, Pallay continues to remain at the mercy of the Appellate Division schedule, with her side’s legal brief due on Feb. 18, the response for Murphy due March 22 and Pallay’s reply on April 1. Complicating the complete loss of her thriving, decade-old fitness business, Pallay’s family suffered a further setback with her spouse’s layoff, the family now having to add a steep monthly COBRA insurance premium to their already stretched budget.

Another wrinkle for the Pallays, she said, is that her three, school-aged children are on an inconsistent, in-person, school schedule due to the COVID-19 shutdowns in the schools, often switched to full virtual without notice, as she attempts to rebuild her livelihood.

In March 2020 when Pallay still had over 200 members who patronized her fitness franchise, Murphy began shutting down businesses with the first of his back-to-back emergency COVID-19 Executive Orders, resulting in the permanent closure of more than one-third of the state’s small businesses. Pallay described the impact of being unable to operate for months as a “complete domino effect.” “It resulted in a loss of income, members and staff,” Pallay said.

“We are still dealing with the financial fallout.” Pallay attempted to stay operational once she was permitted to reopen in June in a socially distant and outdoor capacity. However, after finally securing outdoor space, her class sizes were still limited and schedules weather dependent.

Around the same time the suit was filed on Pallay’s behalf in Sussex County Superior Court on Sept. 23 and she was permitted by the state to reopen at a severely reduced capacity in her facility, less than the state’s 25% due to the nature of her classes which require more space per student, she could barely make ends meet to afford her current and back commercial rent payments.

Pallay said she attempted to reopen in October but even before she could finish out the month, her landlord shut the water off in her facility. “I was trying to operate with handcuffs on,” Pallay said, seeing other expenses around the corner, including her business license renewal, which she knew would only accrue more debt. With the bleak picture in sight, Pallay made the difficult decision to close down her business entirely and is still facing eviction proceedings for back rent owed, though she was unable to occupy the space for months due to Murphy’s Executive Orders.

Her attorneys said had the Disaster Control Act been implemented as stated in Murphy’s Executive Orders, which mandated compensation boards are established in every county where businesses and individuals could petition for “future reasonable compensation,” in return for Murphy’s control over their properties, it could have helped to cushion Pallay’s business. “Why are people like Darlene Pallay personally paying this price and having their businesses destroyed?” Ferguson asked. “Rescue New Jersey is dedicated to helping restore the lives of people like Mrs. Pallay to a normalcy and safeguarding all their Constitutionally protected rights,” said Donald Dinsmore, Esq., Rescue New Jersey’s chairman. Court briefs show Pallay acted in her business as “a law-abiding, taxpaying citizen of this State” and was a vital part of her region, receiving Congressional recognition for “COVID-related activities that benefitted her community.”

She has recently also been appointed as a volunteer to the Franklin Borough Recreation Committee. For more information about Rescue New Jersey and this case, go to: www.rescuenewjersey.org

One-Third of New Jersey Businesses Shuttered; Governor Delays Lawsuit Protecting Businesses

CONTACT:
Jennifer Jean Miller (973) 532-2117

(Morris Plains, NJ) Recent news reports have spotlighted the destructiveness of Gov. Phil Murphy’s emergency COVID-19 executive orders, with many blaming Murphy’s mandates for the closure of one-third of all of New Jersey’s small businesses. According to data from the New Jersey Business & Industry Association, 28 percent closed by October, following the series of Murphy’s forced shutdowns since March.

The Hill weighed in with higher numbers, calculating a 31 percent closure up to Nov. 9, per estimates from TrackTheRecovery.org. Some businesses have floundered under Murphy’s partial reopening plans, the Governor having recently cracked down again on restaurant and bars, mandating 10 p.m. indoor closures and authorizing counties and municipalities to double down with further restrictions. The Governor even limited the number of people allowed in residents’ own homes, to a maximum of 10.

Rescue New Jersey, a not-for-profit and non-partisan group formed to assist New Jersey residents and businesses, has facilitated a lawsuit advocating not only for the plaintiff, but all businesses harmed by Murphy’s violations of the Disaster Control Act. As part of his edicts, Murphy was mandated - but failed - to establish compensation boards in each county, where businesses and individuals could petition for “reasonable compensation,” in return for the governor’s control over their property in his back-to-back states of emergency.

The case against the governor, filed in the Superior Court in September, which originally sought a declaratory judgment compelling him to establish these boards, is currently in the Appellate Division. The Governor, however, has asked the Appellate Division to deny counsels’ request to expedite the case, to obtain financial relief for the plaintiff’s owner, who already had to close her business in October, because of Murphy’s draconian restrictions. “This ongoing and escalating tragedy underscores the urgency of the lawsuit we’ve brought on behalf of JWC Fitness, LLC and its owner, Darlene Pallay, to obtain the reasonable compensation due by law to businesses injured by the Governor’s decrees,” said Robert W. Ferguson, Esq.

Ferguson, of the of the law firm of Stern, Kilcullen and Rufolo, LLC of Florham Park and Catherine M. Brown, Esq., of Denville, filed the suit for Pallay, a Sussex County business owner who operated CKO Kickboxing Franklin, under her LLC. “Our claims are straightforward: the emergency powers exercised by the Governor to order business shutdowns and other restrictions require the state to compensate those individuals and businesses whose property has been impaired by those orders,” Ferguson continued.

“But despite the state’s clear and unambiguous obligation to compensate affected property owners, the Governor’s lawyers, sadly but not unexpectedly, have opposed requests to expedite our case so that those who have complied with the Governor’s orders may obtain some redress for the disproportionate costs they’ve borne on behalf of the public.” “I am proud of the role that Rescue New Jersey has taken in advocating for those who have been left behind, such as Mrs. Pallay, in the Governor’s haphazard response effort to COVID,” said Donald Dinsmore, Esq., Rescue New Jersey’s chairman.

Court briefs have described Pallay as “a law-abiding, taxpaying citizen of this State,” who helped to support her family over the last decade with her business,” including her three young children. Pallay received Congressional recognition for “COVID-related activities that benefitted her community,” according to court documents.

“The defendant [Murphy] called upon all of us to comply with his executive orders for the good of the greater, general welfare,” the Appellate brief stated. “Plaintiff’s owner Mrs. Pallay did as she was ordered. But defendant asked her to give much more to the general welfare than most, her livelihood from a business she has built up over 10 years, and ultimately, the business itself.”

The brief further outlined Pallay’s debts to her commercial landlord and other creditors, which accrued as a result of her inability to operate under the restrictions.

For more information about Rescue New Jersey and this case, go to: www.rescuenewjersey.org