A year ago, New Jersey paid roughly $1 million to clean up and demolish the Kiddie Kollege day-care center, which made national news in 2006 when environmental inspectors discovered it had been housed in a mercury-contaminated former factory.
A state appeals court ruling issued Thursday will allow the state to recoup that money from the real estate broker who purchased the abandoned Gloucester County building and converted it into a facility attended by about 100 children, including infants.
In a 21-page decision, the appeals panel overturned a 2009 trial court ruling that voided the deed Jim Sullivan 3d and family members obtained when they foreclosed on the building after paying its former owner's delinquent taxes. Superior Court Judge James Rafferty, now retired, had said the Franklin Township tax collector should have expressly warned the Sullivans that the old thermometer factory was tainted.