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Case Law - save on Lexis / WestLaw. Original WP 5.1 Version This case can also be found at 16 N.J. Tax 138.
NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE APPROVAL OF THE TAX COURT COMMITTEE
200 43RD STREET, L.L.C., * TAX COURT OF NEW JERSEY
* DOCKET NOS. 1021-96,
Plaintiff, * 1019-96
Decided October 18, 1996
Abe Rappaport for plaintiff (David Kessler, attorney).
Herbert H. Fine for defendant.
CRABTREE, J.T.C.
These are consolidated local property tax cases in which
plaintiff seeks review of judgments of the Hudson County Board of
Taxation determining an omitted added assessment on the subject
property for tax year 1994 and an omitted assessment on the same
property for 1995, as follows:
Improvements $550,000 $350,000
the subject property, prior to a district-wide revaluation
effective for 1992, had been a gasoline service station. In 1985
and 1986, a developer, having theretofore purchased the property
and having demolished the gas station, built a 24-unit residential
condominium. Thereafter, but prior to completion of construction
of the condominium, a moratorium was imposed by the New Jersey
Department of Environmental Protection and Energy (DEPE) upon sewer
connections to new construction. Thus, further construction of the
condominium was suspended as no certificate of occupancy could be
issued for the subject property.
on March 25, 1996See footnote 2. The assessor did not learn that the sewer ban
was lifted until February 1995. In October 1995, the assessor
made omitted assessmentsSee footnote 3 with respect to the improvement for both
1994 and 1995.
It appears to be well settled in this State that except where a
sale of the subject property is involved, real property must be
valued in accordance with events known or reasonably foreseeable on
the assessing date and without the benefit of hindsight. Lamm
Associates v. West Caldwell,
1 N.J. Tax 373 (Tax 1980); Fort Lee v.
Invesco Holding Corp.,
3 N.J. Tax 332 (Tax 1981), aff'd and
remanded
6 N.J. Tax 255 (App.Div. 1983); Inwood at Great Notch v.
Little Falls,
6 N.J. Tax 316 (Tax 1984). The statute quoted
specifically requires that omitted property be valued as of October
1 of the year preceding the tax year. a zero value to the improvement, notwithstanding the existence of a partially completed structure, on the premise that the improvement had no value because of the sewer ban. In making this decision, he ignored the fact that bricks and mortar have some value, however heavily they may be discounted because of the ban on sewer connections. The incomplete improvement called for a so called partial assessment, based upon the proportion of the final value existing on the assessment date. Snyder v. South Plainfield, 1 N.J. Tax 3 (Tax 1980). Cf. Boardwalk Properties v. Atlantic City, 5 N.J. Tax 192 (Tax 1983) (partial assessment for improvements not placed on assessment rolls as of October 1 could thereafter be made as omitted assessment). The purpose of the omitted assessment law is to provide for the taxation of real property which, through error, has been omitted from assessment. Appeal of New York State Realty & Terminal Co., 21 N.J. 90 (1956); Snyder v. South Plainfield, supra. The assessor's failure to make an assessment for improvements on the subject property for 1994 and 1995 was not an oversight; it was a deliberate judgment that the improvement had no value.See footnote 4 The omitted assessment law may not be
used to increase the assessed value on an improvement merely
because the factual basis of the prior assessment no longer exists.
Footnote: 1At the first hearing, on plaintiff's motion the court determined that some testimony was necessary, and another hearing date was fixed, at which time, the court heard the testimony of the assessor. See R. 4:46-3(b). Footnote: 2While the record is somewhat confused, it appears that consistent with the concession by defendant's counsel that an added assessment was inappropriate for both 1994 and 1995, the property was, in fact, not completed, i.e., substantially ready for the use for which it was intended within the purview of the added assessment statute, N.J.S.A. 54:4-63.1, until March 25, 1996, when the certificate of occupancy was issued. See Beranto Towers v. Passaic, 1 N.J. Tax 344 (Tax 1980). Footnote: 3As indicated, the assessments were omitted added assessments, but counsel for the taxing district conceded at the hearings that an added assessment was improper, because there was no addition to the property in 1994 or 1995. Footnote: 4Indeed, had the assessor chosen to assess the improvement at a nominal amount, such as $100, the outcome would be the same.
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