Borough of Roseland v. Essex County Board

15 A.2d 765, 18 N.J. Misc. 613, 1940 N.J. Misc. LEXIS 104
CourtNew Jersey Tax Court
DecidedOctober 22, 1940
StatusPublished

This text of 15 A.2d 765 (Borough of Roseland v. Essex County Board) 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
Borough of Roseland v. Essex County Board, 15 A.2d 765, 18 N.J. Misc. 613, 1940 N.J. Misc. LEXIS 104 (N.J. Super. Ct. 1940).

Opinion

Quinn, President.

These applications are disposed of together, both being based upon R. S. 54:4-49; N. J. S. A. 54:4-49,' and arising out of the same fact background. They were heard together by the board. We shall herein first consider the Roseland petition and the proofs adduced before us in reference thereto.

For each of the years 1936 and 1937, the borough of Rose-land paid county, state, and state school taxes upon the basis of aggregate valuations of ratables in the borough, which included a figure of $4,521,600 as the valuation made by the Roseland assessor for the public utility property situate therein, and owned by Public Service Electric and Gas Company. On July 29th, 1937, however, the State Tax Commissioner revised the said valuations for purposes of apportionment of the gross receipts taxes due from the Public Service Company, under the Voorhees act and supplemental legislation (Pamph. L. 1900, p. 502; Pamph. L. 1917, p. 42; Pamph. L. 1919, ch. 25), and arrived at new figures of $3,397,827.78 for the year 1936, and $3,397,046.28 for the year 1937, upon the basis of which the gross receipts taxes for those years were apportioned and recertified to the local tax collectors on September 20th, 1937. In the light of the analysis of R. S. 54:4-49; N. J. S. A. 54:4-49, hereinafter, it becomes important to note that on the same day, September 20th, 1937, the State Tax Commissioner also recertified his valuation of the same property for the year 1935, in the sum of $3,396,000. This latter valuation was the direct result of a judgment of this board, ordering the valuation for that year to be fixed in the amount stated, entered as the determination of an appeal to the State Board of Tax Appeals by [615]*615the city of Hoboken from the original apportionment made by the State Tax Commissioner of Public Service Company gross receipts taxes for the year 1935. Hoboken v. State Tax Commissioner, State Board Tax Reports, 1936, p. 117, filed October 27th, 1936.

Pursuant to the directions addressed to county boards of taxation under R. S. 54:4-49; N. J. S. A. 54:4-49 (Pamph. L. 1918, ch. 236, § 510), the borough of Eoseland filed with the Essex County Board of Taxation two petitions of appeal, one on January 21st, 1938, and another in November, 1939, making application for a deduction from its total valuations of ratables for succeeding years, as utlimately revised, corrected and equalized by that body, of an amount equal to the aggregate of the reductions in valuations of Public Service property for the years 1936 and 1937, represented by the reductions contained in the valuations entered for those years by the State Tax Commissioner, as having been made in pursuance of the judgment of the State Board of Tax Appeals, aforesaid.

R. S. 54:4-49; N. J. S. A. 54:4-49, under which the claims for deduction were made, reads as follows:

“Except as to any state tax at a fixed rate provided for in sections 54:4-50 and 54:4-51 of this title, each county board of taxation in apportioning the amount of money to be raised in various taxing districts for state, state school or county purposes, after having received the tax lists and duplicates of the local assessors and having revised, corrected and equalized the assessed value of all the property in the respective taxing districts, shall deduct from the total valuations of each taxing district as so revised, corrected and equalized an amount equal to the ratables of the preceding year or years of such district represented by the reduction or all reductions made in the assessments of such districts subsequent to the apportionment of the preceding year or years in consequence of any appeal or appeals to the county board of taxation or to the state board of tax appeals, or .by reason of the decision of any court, and the total valuations as ascertained after the assessments in the various assessment lists and duplicates have been revised, corrected and equalized, and after the [616]*616deductions herein provided for shall have been made, shall form the basis for the apportionment of state, state school or county taxes. When an assessment has been reduced on appeal and the decision on that appeal has been further appealed, no deduction as herein provided for shall be made with respect to the appealed assessment until the further appeal has been finally determined.”

This section was originally enacted as Pamph. L. 1910, ch. 57, which provided that:

“It shall be the duty of the county boards of taxation, in apportioning the amount of money to be raised in the various taxing districts for state, state schools or county purposes, * * * • to deduct from the total valuations of each taxing district * * * an amount equal to the ratables of the preceding year or years, of such district, represented by the reduction or all reductions made in the assessments of such district subsequent to the apportionment of the preceding year or years, in consequence of any appeal or appeals to the County Board of Taxation or to the State Board of Equalization of Taxes, or by reason of the decision of any court * * (Italics supplied.)

Prior to that act there was no remedy for the unfair situation which existed when a municipality paying county and state taxes for a certain year on a basis of a specific aggregate of ratables, ultimately collected taxes on ratables of a lesser sum, because of reductions of assessments on appeal. See, for example, Borough of Kenilworth v. Board of Equalization (Court of Errors and Appeals, 1909), 78 N. J. L. 439; 74 Atl. Rep. 480, where the court had said:

“* * * It would be quite intolerable to hold that the apportionment of state and county taxes among the municipalities is subject to change whenever the amount of ratables is altered by successful appeals of individual taxpayers. Probably it happens every year in nearly every municipality in the state that some such reductions are made. If the apportionment to the municipalities were thereby made liable to change, a final assessment would never be possible in time to permit the collection of the tax by the day fixed by law. Erequent as such changes must have been, this is the first [617]*617instance of an attempt to have the apportionment altered when based on the return of the local assessor. The impracticability of the attempt has no doubt been foreseen. In such cases, either the municipality or the state and county must suffer loss, and it is more reasonable to impose the burden upon the municipality whose officer has made the error; allowance for the result of possible errors of the kind should be made in making up the municipal budget, for which contingency, among others, the statute authorizes the addition of ten per cent, to the amount appropriated for state, county, school district or local purposes.”

The new legislation was referred to by Commissioner Jess of the Hoard of Equalization of Taxes in the case of Borough of North Plainfield v. Somerset County Board of Taxation, State Board Tax Reports, 1912-1934, p. 77, where he said: “The purpose of this legislation was to provide a means by which a taxing district might be reimbursed for payments made to the state school and county funds, upon valuations which, subsequent to the fixing of their apportionment, were reduced on appeal. Eormerly, as was pointed out in Borough of Kenilworth v.

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Related

Read v. Board of Commissioners
132 A. 314 (Supreme Court of New Jersey, 1926)
City of Newark v. State Board of Tax Appeals
191 A. 741 (Supreme Court of New Jersey, 1937)
Waldron v. Rowe
106 A. 212 (Supreme Court of New Jersey, 1917)
Borough of Kenilworth v. Board of Equalization of Taxes
74 A. 480 (Supreme Court of New Jersey, 1909)

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Bluebook (online)
15 A.2d 765, 18 N.J. Misc. 613, 1940 N.J. Misc. LEXIS 104, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/borough-of-roseland-v-essex-county-board-njtaxct-1940.