Berkeley Arms Apartment Corp. v. City of Hackensack

7 N.J. Tax 457
CourtNew Jersey Tax Court
DecidedJuly 5, 1985
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 7 N.J. Tax 457 (Berkeley Arms Apartment Corp. v. City of Hackensack) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Tax Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Berkeley Arms Apartment Corp. v. City of Hackensack, 7 N.J. Tax 457 (N.J. Super. Ct. 1985).

Opinion

EVERS, J.T.C.

In this action, which was commenced by an order to show cause, taxpayers seek an order as follows:

1. directing the county tax board and the City of Hackensack to revise and correct the city’s tax duplicate and to immediately certify the corrected duplicate;
2. restraining the county board from promulgating the table of aggregates until the tax duplicate is corrected;
2. directing the city to send out corrected tax bills;
4. directing the city to prosecute 1985 tax appeals against those property owners whose assessments should have been changed as a result of the corrections made in the duplicate;
5. directing the assessor and tax collector to maintain assessments at 10096 of true value in the future; and
6. ordering the city to appropriate sufficient funds to perform all of the foregoing1

Defendants have moved to dismiss the complaint.

Essentially the relief requested is a direction to the appropriate officials charged with the administration of local property taxes to immediately increase all assessments in the City of [460]*460Hackensack to true value. The problem arises, according to taxpayers, because since the 1978 revaluation, except for a few changes resulting from conversions and new and added construction, the assessor has carried all assessments from year to year at the revaluation level. By maintaining virtually all assessments in a state of repose taxpayers claim that they are, and will continue to be, discriminated against. Plaintiffs claim that the situation is not readily remediable by filing tax appeals (by plaintiffs against those properties whose assessments should be increased) because (1) of the time, expense and effort which would be involved; (2) because it would not produce the immediate relief to which taxpayers are entitled; and (3) such course of action shifts the burden to taxpayers to perform a duty which should have been performed by the city and county officials in the first instance.

Plaintiffs claim that the most patent proof that the city assessor is derelict in performing his duties is evidenced by reference to the useable sales studies of the Director of the Division of Taxation for 1978 through 1984 which reveal a substantial number of properties whose sales-price-to-assessment ratio is below the common level range established by chapter 123 of the Laws of 1973 (N.J.S.A. 54:51A-6). In particular, taxpayers assert that the assessment of the Continental Plaza cries out for investigation and adjustment.2 According to taxpayers if this were done by the assessor in any of the years since 1981 it would have resulted in a substantially higher assessment for that and associated properties.

Plaintiffs suggest that the proper methodology to be employed in correcting the assessments is to select those properties in each of the years of the Director’s studies which fall below the common level range and multiply those sales prices by the applicable chapter 123 ratio for the year to generate the new assessment. Claiming that this concept is neither unfair [461]*461nor revolutionary, plaintiffs refer to the recent Supreme Court decision in Glen Wall Associates v. Wall Tp., 99 N.J. 265, 491 A.2d 1247 (1985) which approved the determination of value of land by means of a mathematical formula involving the chapter 123 ratio. In Glen Wall the court permitted an appraiser to give an opinion of the value of real estate by merely dividing the land assessment by the chapter 123 ratio. No other proofs of comparable sales or otherwise were required. This concept, according to taxpayers, bespeaks a confidence in the accuracy of the Director’s chapter 123 ratio and sanctions its use in the methodology suggested by plaintiffs. The argument continues that, if anything, the Supreme Court’s analysis is much more invidious and prejudicial than what plaintiffs suggest here. In Glen Wall the methodology of determining value by dividing the land assessment by the chapter 123 ratio is a process that is conducted at trial after which there is ordinarily very little opportunity for appeal. In the administrative process here under review, a similar methodology would still permit a taxpayer in a conventional tax appeal to present proofs concerning a different true value than that assumed by the sales price. In other words, here, there is an administrative opportunity for review that is, as a practical matter, absent where such a technique is used at trial. Thus, while the proposal may seem at first blush facile, it is analogous to the Glen Wall Associates concept and performs substantial justice as well, according to taxpayers.

While taxpayers may make some cogent arguments for the implementation of a revaluation in the city and although the court may be sympathetic to their plight, the relief which is sought must be denied for a myriad of reasons.

First, the request to direct the county board to correct the tax list, which list has already been certified, is barred by N.J.S.A. 54:4B-1 which states:

No proceeding before any administrative tribunal or before any court of this State or of the United States shall suspend the apportionment, collection or payment of county taxes, nor shall any official of any taxing district charged by law with such duty, fail to collect, or having collected, fail to transmit such [462]*462county taxes to the county treasurer or other county official authorized by law to receive them, by reason of the pendency of any such proceeding.

This provision clearly states that the apportionment, collection or payment of county taxes shall not be suspended. It contemplates that any finding of irregularity in the county apportionment scheme by a court can be corrected in the following year’s table of aggregates by a debit-credit procedure. N.J.S.A. 54:4B-2, -3, -4 and N.J.S.A. 54:4-49, -52.

The tax list reflects the ratable value of all taxable property in a municipality. A duplicate of the tax list is submitted by the county board to the municipal tax collector who is charged with the responsibility of preparing and submitting tax bills to the property owners. N.J.S.A. 54:4-64. Each tax bill reflects the tax rate per $100 of assessed value for various county, municipal and school budgets funded by the local property tax and indicates the total property tax payable by each property owner based on the established rates and the assessed value of the property. N.J.S.A. 54:4-48 to -52. Any restraint on the certification of the tax list would obviously result in a suspension of mailing tax bills and collecting property taxes, including property taxes necessary to fund the county budget. As such, not only would the City of Hackensack be affected, but so too would all other taxing districts in the county, all of whom contribute to the county budget. Therefore, even assuming that there is substance to plaintiffs’ complaint (discussed infra) the interests of the county, its 70 taxing districts and its over 800,000 residents must prevail.

Secondly, plaintiffs’ reliance on Baldwin Construction Co. v. Essex County Bd. of Taxation, 16 N.J. 329, 108 A.2d 598

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Westerhold, John v. Toms River Twp
New Jersey Tax Court, 2024
Bear's Nest Condominium Ass'n v. Bergen County Board of Taxation
25 N.J. Tax 237 (New Jersey Tax Court, 2009)
Roth v. Rutherford Rent Board
571 A.2d 352 (New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 1989)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
7 N.J. Tax 457, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/berkeley-arms-apartment-corp-v-city-of-hackensack-njtaxct-1985.