As recognized by
SUPER
LAWYERS2024
Independent peer-recognition program (Thomson Reuters)
3d Cir.Reported
Third Circuit reported case — Delvoye v. Lee, 329 F.3d 330 (3d Cir. 2003)
AVVO10 yrs
AVVO “Top Attorney” rating — sustained 10+ years
A·A AVERY & AVERY · ESTD. MCMLXXVI
Vicinage 10 — Morris/Sussex

Newton Municipal Court

Newton Municipal Court — address, phone, hours, judges, vicinage, and Avery & Avery practice notes. (201) 943-2445.

Hours

Mon-Fri 8:30 AM - 4:30 PM
Sat-Sun Closed

Vicinage / System

Vicinage 10 — Morris/Sussex

Municipal Court

Serves: Newton

How Avery & Avery Practices Here

A Former Judge. A Father-Son Trial Firm. Fifty Years of New Jersey Practice.

A former municipal court judge who then crossed to the defense bar: Robert W. Avery (bench 1986-2000) brings judicial perspective to every appearance at Newton Municipal Court — 39 Trinity Street.

Newton Municipal Court — Sussex County’s anchor municipal court — runs a lighter-volume calendar than the Essex/Hudson high-volume courts; same-day disposition is more often available.

Newton Municipal’s smaller volume means closer attention to individual matters — useful where strategic positioning matters.

Address and contact

  • Name: Newton Municipal Court
  • Address: 39 Trinity Street, Newton, NJ 07860
  • Phone: (973) 383-3521
  • Vicinage: Sussex Vicinage (Vicinage 19)
  • Divisions: Municipal Court (Title 39 + Title 2C DP/PDP)

What this courthouse hears

Newton Municipal Court is a municipal court. It hears Title 39 traffic offenses, DP and PDP criminal matters, ordinance violations, first-offense DWI under N.J.S.A. 39:4-50, refusal under N.J.S.A. 39:4-50.4a, and after-hours TROs under N.J.S.A. 2C:25-17.

How matters are routed here

For first-offense / municipal-tier matters arising in the Sussex (Vicinage 19) jurisdiction, defense filings, motions, and appearances all proceed at this courthouse complex.

Appeals from this municipal court route to the corresponding County Superior Court — Law Division on the trial-de-novo standard.

Notes from our practice

The Avery firm has appeared at Morris/Sussex County courts — including Newton Municipal Court — 39 Trinity Street — for nearly fifty years. Consistency of counsel across that span builds the kind of courtroom familiarity that can influence outcomes: knowing the calendar, the prosecutors, the judges, and the patterns.

Call (201) 943-2445 for a free first consultation. Same-day callbacks on active matters.

Practical tips for appearances

Newton Municipal Court sits at the Newton Town Hall complex. Free lot parking; arrive 20 minutes early on calendar days.

  • Calendar position confirms morning-of. Vicinage portals and njcourts.gov post calendar updates the night before or by 8 AM the day of — confirm before leaving home.
  • Photo ID, no exceptions. A driver’s license or state ID is required; expired ID gets you turned away at security. Military ID covers federal court entry.
  • Documents in three copies. Court takes one, opposing counsel takes one, and you keep one. Pre-marked tabs help when a courtroom moves quickly.
  • Arrive early, expect a wait. Even a 9 AM hearing often runs 30-90 minutes past the call time once the daily docket settles. Plan a half-day buffer.
  • Phones go silent or surrender. Municipal courts vary; the entry deputy will direct. Plan for full surrender on bigger DWI calendar days.
  • Professional dress reduces friction. Business or business-casual; clerks notice and judges absolutely notice.
  • Parking — pay for the lot. Adjacent metered street is the most-ticketed parking in the state. The county or municipal garage at $5-10 is the cheaper outcome.

Surrounding court complex

This courthouse sits within a multi-building NJ judicial complex that typically includes:

  • The Municipal Court itself (this entry)
  • The Sussex County Surrogate’s Court — uncontested probate, executor qualification, minor guardianship
  • The Sussex County Prosecutor’s Office — indictable charge prosecution; PTI applications under N.J.S.A. 2C:43-12
  • The Sussex County Sheriff’s Office — service of process, courthouse security
  • The Sussex County Clerk’s Office — civil filings, judgment search, recording

Cross-courthouse moves between these offices are routine on a single appearance day.

What to expect after a hearing

Most NJ courts issue an order on the bench at hearing’s end; the written order follows by mail or email within several business days. The order’s effective date is typically the bench-ruling date unless the order specifies otherwise. Appeals run to the next level (Superior Court Law Division for municipal appeals; Appellate Division for Superior Court rulings) on the calendar set by Court Rule.

Recurring procedural questions

Appeals from this court

Appeals from a municipal court decision proceed to the corresponding County Superior Court — Law Division on a trial-de-novo standard under R. 3:23. The notice of appeal must be filed within 20 days of the municipal-court ruling. The Law Division reviews the record below and may take additional testimony if good cause is shown.

Subsequent appeals

A Superior Court Law Division ruling on a municipal trial-de-novo can be appealed to the Appellate Division under R. 2:2-3. The notice of appeal runs 45 days from final judgment.

Post-disposition compliance

Most NJ municipal-court orders require:

  1. Fine and court-cost payment within 30 days
  2. License surrender or DRP-receipt to NJ MVC where the order specifies
  3. IDRC scheduling and payment for first-offense DWI under N.J.S.A. 39:4-50.7
  4. Substance-evaluation reporting where ordered

Expungement after disposition

Title 39 matters are not subject to expungement (motor-vehicle violations are not records under N.J.S.A. 2C:52-1). Title 2C disorderly-persons offenses become eligible for expungement five years after completion of sentence per N.J.S.A. 2C:52-3.

Schedule a Free Consultation

Call (201) 943-2445 or submit through the form.

From the Firm

559 Bergen Boulevard, 2nd Floor · Ridgefield, NJ 39 Trinity Street, Newton, NJ 07860

Approximately 47 mi by road.