Joseph A. Pojanowski, III for plaintiff
(Pojanowski & Trawinski, attorneys).
Susan A. Feeney for defendant
(McCarter & English, attorneys).
KAHN, J.T.C.
This decision addresses the validity of an added assessment
for 1997 imposed on taxpayer's property for alleged improvements
made by taxpayer, subsequent to October 1, 1996.
Plaintiff, Michael Otelsberg (taxpayer), purchased the
subject property (one-family house and lot) on December 10, 1996.
The improvement is a three bedroom, single family home located at
56 Hearthstone Road, also known as block 1086, lot 22, in the
Township of Bloomfield (municipality). Taxpayer purchased the
property for $135,000 contending that the house contained
negative features, such as unpleasant odors, an outmoded kitchen,
and evidence of other neglect. In January 1997, taxpayer
completed renovations, which included replacement of the carpet
in the living room, dining room, hallway, and three bedrooms,
renovation of the kitchenSee footnote 11, and new interior painting. The cost
of the materials for said improvements was $5,400.See footnote 22 Taxpayer
acknowledged that there was no out-of-pocket labor cost since he
performed the labor himself. There is no dispute that taxpayer
did not apply for permits for any of the work performed on the
subject property. Taxpayer received his 1997 notice of
assessment for $162,300, and appealed same to the Essex County
Board of Taxation (County Board).
On or about May 1, 1997, the hearing date, taxpayer appeared
prose before the County Board, wherein he met with the
municipality's tax assessor (assessor) and discussed
settlement. Taxpayer and the assessor agreed that the 1997
assessment would be reduced to $135,000, reflecting taxpayer's
purchase price. At the time of the settlement, the assessor was
aware that the post-October 1996 improvements were completed in
January 1997, since he acknowledged inspecting the subject
property in January 1997. Taxpayer testified that the assessor
did not indicate, during the settlement conference, that the
municipality would later impose an added assessment on the
subject property. The assessor, on the other hand, testified
that he did not have any recollection of whether or not the
possibility of an added assessment was discussed. On May 16,
1997, the County Board entered judgment reducing the assessment
in accordance with the agreement.
Subsequent to the execution of the County Board's judgment,
the municipality levied an added assessment of $36,700 on the
property for 1997, prorating same for six months at $18,350. The
assessor testified that taxpayer's aforesaid improvements
increased the value of taxpayer's property by a total of $36,700.
On appeal by taxpayer, the County Board upheld the added
assessment, which determination was subsequently appealed to the
Tax Court.
For the reasons hereinafter set forth, this court finds that
the added assessment on taxpayer's property for the 1997 tax year
is valid. N.J.S.A. 54:4-63.3 permits a municipality to impose an added
assessment on a property, when the building or structure has been
erected, added to or improved after October 1See footnote 33 and completed
between January 1 and October 1See footnote 44.... N.J.S.A. 54:4-63.3. The
purpose of an added assessment is to allow the municipality to
add to the assessment of a property in a given tax year because
of improvements made subsequent to the dates prescribed by
N.J.S.A. 54:4-63.3. Snyder v. South Plainfield Boro.,
1 N.J. Tax 3, 7 (Tax 1980). Without the added assessments, an improved
property would escape taxation for a period of several months
until the next regular assessment date. Ibid.
Taxpayer contends that the May 16, 1997 judgment reflects
the true value of the subject property for 1997 and binds the
municipality to that assessment. In a similar case, United
States Postal Serv. v. Town of Kearny,
17 N.J. Tax 397 (Tax
1998), this court held that the settlement negotiation and
subsequent execution of the stipulation of settlement did not
incorporate, nor did it waive the municipality's right to impose
an added assessment. This court finds, consistent with that
case, that the executed stipulation of settlement in this
litigation related only to the assessment under review at the
time the settlement was made. The added assessment was not yet
levied on May 1, 1997, nor was it before the County Board when
they entered judgment based upon the stipulation of settlement.
In contesting the added assessment on its merits, taxpayer
has the burden of proof to establish by a preponderance of the
evidence that the assessment appealed from is invalid. New
Jersey Foreign Trade Zone Venture v. Mount Olive Tp.,
242 N.J.
Super. 170, 173-74 (App. Div. 1990), aff'g
10 N.J. Tax 330, (Tax
1989); Lorenc v. Bernards Tp.,
5 N.J. Tax 39, 52 (Tax 1982),
aff'd sub nomSage v. Bernards Tp.,
6 N.J. Tax 349 (App. Div.
1984). It is settled that there is a presumption of correctness
of a tax assessment made by a local taxing authority. Glen Wall
Assoc. v. Wall Tp.,
99 N.J. 265, 273 (1985), rev'g
6 N.J. Tax 448
(App. Div. 1984), aff'g
6 N.J. Tax 24 (Tax 1983). The
presumption of correctness is overcome when the moving party
presents sufficient and competent evidence to establish true
value of the property. Ibid. The evidence must not only be
sufficient, but also definite, positive and certain in quality
and quantity to overcome the presumption. Aetna Life Ins. Co.
v. City of Newark,
10 N.J. 99, 105 (1952). Furthermore, the
taxpayer must prove the value of the entire property, land and
building, and may not simply accept the land assessment where
that assessment is demonstrably unreliable. Rockaway 80 Assoc.
v. Rockaway Tp.,
15 N.J. Tax 326, 336 (Tax 1996). (SeealsoNew
Jersey Foreign Trade Zone, supra, 242 N.J. Super. at 176). In
order to determine an added assessment, Judge Lasser:
There is no authority in the statute or the case law
which permits this court to determine the value of the
improvements alone, without considering the before and
after completion values of the land and improvements,
because it is the value of the land and improvements
combined that is the significant value, the allocation
between the land and improvements being merely an
administrative act.
[New Jersey Foreign Trade Zone, supra, 10 N.J. Tax at
335.]
In that case, the Tax Court rejected the taxpayer's argument that
they should not lose the benefit of a favorable assessment as a
result of litigating the added assessment. New Jersey Foreign
Trade Zone, supra, 242 N.J. Super. at 175. The taxpayer failed
to show that the added assessment was invalid because they relied
on the presumptive correctness of the settled assessment, and
did not introduce expert testimony to refute the added
assessment. New Jersey Foreign Trade Zone, supra, 242 N.J.
Super. at 173-74. The court opined that taxpayer failed to
appreciate that in order to establish the proper added assessment
for the parcel, the Tax Court needed reliable evidence of the
value of the entire parcel with all improvements included. Id.,
at 174. This court is mindful of the fact that this case is an
appeal of a single family home, and is aware of the cost of
litigating this action. SeeGlen Wall Assocs. v. Wall Tp.,
supra, 99 N.J. at 277. Although it may not be cost effective to
engage an expert witness, taxpayer is not relieved from the
responsibility of providing this court with competent and
sufficient evidence of value. Id. at 273, 280-81; New Jersey
Foreign Trade Zone, supra, 242 N.J. Super. at 174.
In the present case, taxpayer did not establish by a
preponderance of the evidence that the added assessment was
invalid. He failed to present both expert testimony and an
appraisal report during trial. Taxpayer relied solely upon his
experience as the manager of the Century 21--Thomas Realtors to
testify about his general knowledge of real estate values in the
Township of Bloomfield. His testimony only included a
description of the condition of the subject property at the time
of purchase and the nature of the improvements made. Taxpayer,
however, did not testify as to value nor did he produce sales of
comparable properties from which to draw a conclusion of value.
Although he may be more knowledgeable about real estate than the
average homeowner, nevertheless, taxpayer failed to present any
evidence of value. There is, therefore, no authority to support
taxpayer's use of the May 16, 1997 settlement of $135,000 as an
independent method of valuation of the subject property.
The municipality countered taxpayer's testimony by
presenting the municipal assessor as an expert witness. The
assessor offered an appraisal report, using comparable sales as
an approach to valuation. The assessor adjusted the comparables
to the subject property, concluding that the value of the subject
property is $171,700. The total value was based upon the initial
improvement of $135,000 and the added assessment of improvement
of $36,700. Although the expert witness acknowledged his
inability to gain access to the interior of some comparables, the
evidence submitted by the municipality is more reliable than any
evidence submitted by taxpayer.
Taxpayer relied exclusively on Harrison Realty Corp. v. Town
of Harrison,
16 N.J. Tax 375 (Tax ), aff'd,
17 N.J. Tax 174 (App.
Div. 1997), certif. denied,
153 N.J. 213 (1998), which held that
the improvements made on the property were such that they did not
constitute an added assessment under N.J.S.A. 54:4-63.3. The
adjustments made on the property consisted of renovating the
office space and installing a demising wall and three overhead
loading doors. No other proofs of cost or the value of the
improvements were submitted in that case. The Tax Court
concluded that it was irrelevant that the work done increased the
value of the property, since the following tax year would reflect
such an increase. Id. at 385. N.J.S.A. 54:4-63.3 consists of three distinct words,
erected, added to or improved, that grant authority to the
municipality to levy an added assessment. The Tax Court, in
Harrison Realty Corp., supra, defined the term improved as:
The mere retrofitting, upgrading or remediation of
deferred maintenance does not constitute an addition to
the property; nor does it constitute an improvement.
The term improved, as used the statute must, under
the doctrine of ejusdem generis, be read in the context
of the word added as used in the statute. That is to
say, an improvement is in the nature of an addition.
[Id. at 385 Citations omitted).]See footnote 55
There is no other case law, other than the Tax Court's decision
in Harrison Realty Corp. v. Town of Harrison to provide guidance
to the meaning of improved in N.J.S.A. 54:4-63.3. In that
case, the Tax Court applied the doctrine of ejusdem generis to
interpret the word improved to be used in the statute to mean
something in the nature of an addition. Harrison Realty Corp.,
supra, 16 N.J. Tax at 385. The Supreme Court in Edwards v.
Mayor, etc. of Borough of Moonachie,
3 N.J. 17, 23 (1949) stated:
The rule of ejusdem generis is in aid of
construction where the expression is of doubtful
meaning; and it has no application where the
legislative design is expressed in plain and
unambiguous terms. The doctrine is a specific
application of the maxim noscitur a sociis; and it
would be a perversion of its essential purpose if it
were allowed to render general words meaningless. It
is not an absolute formula that overrides all other
canons of interpretation; and it is never applied to
defeat the legislative purpose revealed by the
provision in its entirety, giving to all the terms
their normal sense and significance. It goes without
saying that general terms in a statute must be given a
meaning beyond the particular words where it is plain
from the whole that they were used in a broader sense.
As with all other canons of construction, the doctrine
yields to the intention revealed by the context,
viewing the language in its ordinary acceptation.
[Edwards v. Mayor of Moonachie,
3 N.J. 17, 23 (1949)
(citations omitted); SeeResnick v. East Brunswick Tp.
Bd. of Ed.,
77 N.J. 88, 100 (1978) (concluding that the
religious activities held after school hours were
within the meaning of the statute, even though the
statute does not specifically grant the school board
with the authority to allow religious services to be
carried out in a public school)].
The doctrine of ejusdem generis is inapplicable where the meaning
is clear, and in this case, the word improved is not ambiguous
in the context of the statutory scheme. This court, therefore,
respectfully declines to adopt the Tax Court's interpretation in
Harrison Realty Corp., which found improved to mean solely
physical additions to the property. Furthermore, this court
distinguishes improvements that are retrofitting, upgrading, or
remediation from those improvements that substantially increase
the value of the property.
The term improve is defined to meliorate, make better, to
increase the value or good qualities of, mend, repair . . . .
Black's Law Dictionary, 757 (6th ed. 1990). It is a settled
principle of statutory construction that the language of a
statute should be given its ordinary meaning and construed in a
common sense manner to accomplish the legislative purpose.
State v. Pescatore,
213 N.J. Super. 22, 28 (App. Div. 1986),
aff'd o.b.,
105 N.J. 441 (1987) (quoting In re Barnert Memorial
Hosp.,
92 N.J. 31, 40 (1983)). Furthermore, the Supreme Court in
Paper Mill Playhouse v. Millburn Tp.,
95 N.J. 503 (1984), states
that construction that will render any part of a statute
inoperative, superfluous or meaningless, is to be avoided.
Paper Mill, supra, 95 N.J. at 521 (quoting Abbotts Dairies v.
Armstrong,
14 N.J. 319, 328 (1954)). If the term improved was
to be interpreted in the nature of an addition, then the word is
extraneous since added is already included in the statute.
This court construes said statute to include any improvements
that increase the value of property, although it does not
increase the square footage of the subject property. This court
recognizes that an addition to an already existing structure or
an erection of a new building, generally increases the value of
property. Improvements, however, can significantly increase the
value of property without augmenting the structure. This court,
therefore, finds that improved does not exclusively mean actual
physical addition, rather, it means any change to the building
which increases the value of the property.
A municipality is empowered by the added assessment statute
to levy additional taxes to a property where there has been an
increase in the value of the property. Rockaway 80 Assocs.,
supra, 15 N.J. Tax at 332-33. The fact that there is no addition
to the square footage of the house is not dispositive of an added
assessment appeal, rather, an increase in the value of the
property as a result of the improvements is the relevant issue.
In this case, taxpayer painted the walls, re-carpeted the house,
and renovated the kitchen with new cabinets, appliances, and
linoleum floor. All these improvements combined not only
improved the quality of the home, but also created a significant
increase in the value of the property. Whether or not a single
improvement, such as repainting the interior walls, warrants an
added assessment is not the issue before this court.
Taxpayer cannot rely solely on the notion that the
improvements made on the subject property were not additions
thereto. Taxpayer failed to provide any competent evidence of
value in the first instance, and the municipal expert witness
provided reliable evidence that taxpayer's improvements created
an increase in the value of the subject property. For the
foregoing reasons, this court finds that the added assessment is
valid, and judgment is hereby entered as follows for 1997:
Added Improvements $36,700.00
(12 months)
Prorated for 6 months $18,350.00
Footnote: 1 1 The renovation of the kitchen included new cabinets, new appliances, new counter-top,
new linoleum floor, new electrical outlets and light fixtures, new sheetrock in the kitchen wall
that were damaged from removing the old cabinets, and removal of the upper half of the wall
separating the kitchen and dining room.Footnote: 2 2 The cost of $5,400 does not include the new appliances installed in the kitchen.Footnote: 3 3 In this litigation, October 1 refers to October 1, 1996.Footnote: 4 4 In this litigation, January 1 and October 1 refers to 1997, the relevant tax year.Footnote: 5 5 The Appellate Court affirmed the trial court's decision with respect to the method of
valuation but did not address the issue of the added assessment because it was not a subject of the
appeal. Harrison Realty Corp., supra, 17 N.J. Tax at 175 n.1.
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