NEWARK Blockbuster Inc. has agreed to pay $140,000 to settle a lawsuit brought by New Jersey that charged its ``no late fees’’ program was misleading and incomplete, state officials said Friday. More than $90,000 of the money will be refunded to about 75,000 customers who paid ``video restocking fees,’’ while the remainder will pay for state investigative costs, Attorney General Peter C. Harvey said. Blockbuster did not admit any wrongdoing, but settlement terms require the nation’s largest movie-rental chain to ensure that customers are clearly notified of all terms and charges under the ``no late fees’’ program. The settlement stems from a lawsuit the state filed in February, shortly after Blockbuster instituted the new policy with signs touting ``the end of late fees.’’ The fine print, however, said the company would charge consumers if they kept the movies too long, then charge a $1.25 restocking fee if the movies were returned. In March, Blockbuster agreed to pay $630,000 to 47 states that threatened to sue and to make refunds to customers who were charged the purchase price of DVDs or videos returned more than seven days late. Recently, Blockbuster stores in several Southern states, including Arkansas, have resumed charging late fees because they cannot keep popular movies on their shelves.