N.J.S.A. 54:51A-1c(2). (If the tax court shall determine that the appeal to the county board of taxation has been ... (2) dismissed because of appellant's failure to prosecute the appeal at a hearing called by the county tax board ... , there shall be no review.) Plaintiff opposes the motion on the grounds that it did not receive notice of the County Board adjourned hearing date because the County Board failed to give such notice in accordance with written instructions from plaintiff's representative. These instructions were received by the County Board after the Petition of Appeal was filed but before the hearing notice was mailed.">
Rutgers School of LawDOCKET NUMBER: 00158-96 New Jersey Court Cases - Court Case Law from NJ - New Jersey Court Opinions
Original WP 5.1 Version
This case can also be found at 15 N.J. Tax 576.
NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE APPROVAL
OF THE TAX COURT COMMITTEE ON OPINIONS
TAX COURT OF NEW JERSEY
DOCKET NO. 000158-96
JANICE BERNSTEIN, :
:
Plaintiff, :
:
v. : OPINION
:
CITY OF ATLANTIC CITY, :
:
Defendant.:
Decided May 17, 1996
Bryan F. Ferrick for plaintiff (Ferrick
& Kurzeja, attorneys)
Daniel Gallagher for defendant
(Youngblood, Corcoran, Aleli, Lafferty,
Stackhouse, Grossman & Gormley,
attorneys)
RIMM, J.T.C.
In this local property tax matter, a case of first impression,
the issue before the court is whether a taxpayer who has paid the
taxes based on an original assessment must pay the taxes resulting
from an increase in the assessment by a county board of taxation in
order to appeal the county board judgment to the Tax Court.
Plaintiff, Janice Bernstein, owns property located at 1301
Boardwalk, Unit 1710-1, in the City of Atlantic City, designated as
Block C0011, Lot 196 WO3 on the municipal tax map. For the 1995
tax year, the subject property was originally assessed as follows:
Land $39,600
Improvements 39,000
Total $78,600.
This assessment resulted in a tax bill of $2,246.39 based on the
City's 1995 tax rate of $2.858 per $100 of assessed value. On
April 1, 1995, claiming the assessment was incorrect, plaintiff
filed an appeal with the Atlantic County Board of Taxation. During
1995, plaintiff paid $2,246.39 to the City for the entire 1995 tax
bill.
On September 20, 1995, the Atlantic County Board of Taxation
held a hearing to consider plaintiff's tax appeal. In a memorandum
of judgment dated November 9, 1995, and mailed on December 6, 1995,
the Atlantic County Board of Taxation increased the assessment on
plaintiff's land by $14,400 to $54,000 and decreased the assessment
on the improvements by $3,000 to $36,000. The total assessment on
the subject property was therefore increased for the 1995 tax year
by $11,400 to $90,000.
On January 17, 1996, plaintiff appealed the judgment of the
Atlantic County Board of Taxation by filing a complaint with the
Tax Court. In her complaint, plaintiff alleged that the county
board judgment was in excess of the true value of the subject
property. Plaintiff also alleged discrimination with respect to
the assessment....
On March 20, 1996, the City filed a motion to dismiss
plaintiff's complaint for failure to pay taxes. In her
certification, Linda Steele, the municipal tax collector, stated
that, as of February 13, 1996, there were unpaid taxes on the
subject property amounting to $325.82, plus interest. She also
stated that a tax bill for the $352.82 had been sent to the
taxpayer. In fact, the City did not send a bill for this amount to
the taxpayer, counsel for the City advising me of that fact during
oral argument.
In response to the City's motion, plaintiff's counsel
explained that the $352.82 deficiency, referred to by the municipal
tax collector in her certification, constituted the amount of taxes
that would result from the county board judgment that raised the
total original assessment by $11,400. Plaintiff admits that this
$325.82 was not paid to the City at the time her complaint was
filed with the Tax Court or within forty-eight days of the mailing
of the county board judgment on December 6, 1995. SeeN.J.S.A.
54:51A-1; N.J.S.A. 54:51A-9; and R. 1:3-3.
The payment of tax requirement for the filing of a complaint
with the Tax Court appealing a county board judgment is set forth
in N.J.S.A. 54:51A-1(b), which provides as follows:
At the time that a complaint has been filed
with the tax court seeking review of the
judgment of county tax boards, all taxes or
any installments thereof then due and payable
for the year for which review is sought must
have been paid. No interest shall be due and
payable by the appellant for the period from
November 1 of the current tax year to the date
of filing the complaint.
In accordance with the language of N.J.S.A. 54:51A-1(b), our Courts
have consistently held that the taxes owed to a municipality for
the year for which review is sought of an original assessment must
have been paid as a jurisdictional prerequisite [for] an appeal to
the Tax Court from
a
county board judgment.
Schneider v. City of
East
Orange,
196 N.J. Super. 587, 593 (App. Div. 1984), aff'd
o.b.,
103 N.J. 115, cert. denied,
479 U.S. 824,
107 S.Ct. 97,
93 L.Ed.2d 48 (1986) (dealing with N.J.S.A. 54:2-39, the
predecessor provision
to N.J.S.A. 54:51A-1(b)); see alsoEchelon Glen Co-op. v. Voorhees
Tp.,
15 N.J. Tax 145, 153 (App. Div.), certif. denied,
138 N.J. 272
(1994); Stewart v. Hamilton Tp.,
7 N.J. Tax 368 (Tax 1985).
If there is no motion to dismiss by the municipality in the
county board based on unpaid taxes, a taxpayer has until the last
day for filing an appeal to the Tax Court from the county board
judgment to pay the taxes owed for the year in question. Olde
Lafayette Village, Ltd. v. Lafayette Tp., 9 N.J. Tax
562, 571 (Tax
1988); Stewart v. Roxbury Tp.,
4 N.J. Tax 658, 661 (Tax 1982). If
the taxes have not been paid by the end of the time period for
filing an appeal, the Tax Court cannot hear the case, even if the
taxpayer subsequently pays the taxes on the property. Echelon Glen
Co-op., supra, at 153.
In the present case, the City has asserted that, in order for
the Tax Court to be able to hear plaintiff's appeal, plaintiff must
have paid not only the taxes due on the original assessment made by
the municipality but also must have paid additional taxes as a
result of the increase on the original assessment by the county
board. Under the City's reading of N.J.S.A. 54:51A-1(b), the taxes
resulting from such an increase are then due and payable for the
year for which review is sought.... This is so, according to the
City, even though it never actually billed the taxpayer for the
taxes resulting from the increase in the assessment. The City
claims that, under the circumstances here, it was not required to
bill the taxpayer for the increased taxes in order for those taxes
to become due and payable under the law. The City argues that,
after the entry of the county board judgment increasing the
assessment, plaintiff, on her own, could have calculated the
increased taxes resulting from the county board judgment and was
immediately obligated to pay that amount to the City.
It is unnecessary to consider the City's argument regarding
billing. I conclude that, as long as the taxes based on the
original assessment have been paid to the municipality, any taxes
that might be calculated based on an increase in the assessment by
a county board of taxation are not due and payable in order to
confer jurisdiction to the Tax Court on an appeal from a county
board of taxation.
The City has pointed to no case law or statutory authority
expressly requiring a taxpayer to pay the taxes resulting from a
county board judgment which increases the original assessment when
an appeal of that judgment has been filed with the Tax Court.
While no case or statute specifically addresses the payment of
taxes when a county board has increased the original assessment, in
Woodcliff Management v. North Bergen Tp.,
106 N.J. Super. 292 (App.
Div. 1969), the Appellate Division dealt with the refund of taxes
when a county board has reduced the original assessment on a
taxpayer's property.
In Woodcliff Management, following the entry of county board
judgments reducing the assessments for the 1964, 1965, 1966, and
1967 tax years, the taxpayer sued in the Superior Court, Law
Division, for a refund of taxes and for interest based on the
reduced assessments. The Appellate Division affirmed that portion
of the Law Division's judgment ordering the municipality to refund
the overpayment of the 1964, 1965, and 1966 taxes and to pay
interest on the refunded amount, but it reversed that portion of
the judgment directing a refund of the 1967 taxes and interest.
The Appellate Division attributed the difference in result to the
fact that the municipality had unsuccessfully exhausted all
appellate review of the county board judgments for the 1964, 1965,
and 1966 tax years, but still had an undetermined appeal to the
Division of Tax Appeals pending as to [the 1967] tax year at the
time the [Law Division] judgment was entered.... Woodcliff
Management, supra, at 293. Since the municipality had not yet
obtained final appellate ajudication of the assessment amount,
the Appellate Division refused to permit the taxpayer to assert a
cause of action for a refund. Id. At 294.
In 1975, six years after Woodcliff Management was decided, the
Legislature enacted N.J.S.A. 54:3-27.2. That provision also
addresses the taxpayer's entitlement to a refund when a county
board reduces the assessment on the taxpayer's property. N.J.S.A.
54:3-27.2 provides as follows:
In the event that a taxpayer is successful in
an appeal from an assessment on real property,
the respective taxing district shall refund
any excess taxes paid, together with interest
thereon from the date of payment at a rate of
5" per annum, less any amount of taxes,
interest, or both, which may be applied
against delinquencies pursuant to P.L.1983,
c.137 (C. 54:4-134), within 60 days of the
date offinal judgment.
[emphasis supplied.]
Interpreting the phrase date of final judgment in N.J.S.A. 54:3
27.2, Judge Conley concluded in Wilshire Selby West v. Ramsey Bor.,
6 N.J. Tax 60 (Tax 1983), that
the only reaasonable way to construe the
language is for it to mean the date of the
judgment from which no appeal has been or may
be taken.... It would be unreasonable to
conclude that the Legislature intended to
require a taxing district to refund payments
of real property tax before the taxing
district had exhausted its legitimate efforts
in court to have the tax assessment affirmed
or even increased.
[Id. at 64.]
Thus, when a municipality appeals the reduction of an assessment by
a county board of taxation, a taxpayer cannot successfully demand
a refund on taxes already paid, based on the county board judgment
reducing the assessment. Similarly, I hold that, when a taxpayer
appeals an increase in an assessment by a county board of taxation,
a municipality cannot successfuly demand payment of the increased
taxes based on the county board judgment as a jurisdictional
requirement for an appeal to the Tax Court.
In Inwood Owners v. Little Falls Tp.,
216 N.J. Super. 485
(App. Div.), certif. denied,
108 N.J. 184 (1987), the Appellate
Division considered an issue similar to that presented in the
present case. There, the municipal tax assessor attempted to
increase the assessment on the taxpayer's apartment complex by
imposing omitted assessments for the 1984 and 1985 tax years. The
full amount of taxes based on the original assessments had been
timely paid by the taxpayer. Under the procedure permitted by
N.J.S.A. 54:4-63.31, the assessor issued bills for the omitted
assessments and the taxpayer, disputing the assessments, filed a
petition of appeal with the county board. The county board
affirmed the assessments and the taxpayer appealed to the Tax Court
where the municipality moved to dismiss the complaint because the
taxpayer had not paid the taxes owed on the omitted assessments.
In the Tax Court, Judge Kahn held that the provisions
regarding the prepayment of taxes were only applicable to
conventional appeals and not to an appeal from an omitted
assessment. The Appellate Division affirmed Judge Kahn's ruling,
observing that
[a] municipality does not rely on the
collection of omitted taxes unknown during the
budget process to operate its government or
meet its expenses in the tax year in which the
omitted assessment is imposed. Presumably, it
would then be unaware of such assessments.
[Inwood Owners, supra, at 490.]
The same conclusions can be reached with respect to an
original assessment that is later increased by the county board of
taxation. Taxes resulting from a county board increase are not
relied on by a municipality in the development of the municipal
budget. A municipality formulates its budget only with regard to
the amount of taxes resulting from the original assessments. In
this case, those taxes were paid by the taxpayer in a timely
manner. A delay in the payment of the increased taxes would have
no effect on the operation of government or the provision of
necessary services to the community. The rationale behind the
requirement that taxes be paid for the Tax
Court to have jurisdiction over the contest of
a local property tax assessment is to avoid
putting the burden of an appealing taxpayer's
unpaid property taxes on the other taxpayers
in the taxing district....
Such a burden is absent under the circumstances presented in this
case.
The City's motion to dismiss plaintiff's complaint for
nonpayment of taxes is denied. Plaintiff's counsel will submit an
appropriate order under R. 4:42-1. Plaintiff's counsel will also
forthwith arrange for a case management conference with defendant's
counsel and my chambers to fix a discovery schedule and a trial
date.