City of East Orange v. Township of Livingston

27 N.J. Tax 161
CourtNew Jersey Tax Court
DecidedJanuary 31, 2013
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 27 N.J. Tax 161 (City of East Orange v. Township of Livingston) 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
City of East Orange v. Township of Livingston, 27 N.J. Tax 161 (N.J. Super. Ct. 2013).

Opinion

SUNDAR, J.T.C.

This opinion rules on the parties’ respective motions for summary judgment as to this court’s subject-matter jurisdiction for [164]*164tax years 2009 and 2010. Based on the facts in evidence, and for the reasons more fully explained below, the court finds that the incorrect mailing addresses used on the 2009 notices of assessment were not sufficient bases to excuse plaintiffs’ failure to timely challenge those assessments in the Tax Court. Further, plaintiffs did not appeal their 2010 assessments. Plaintiffs’ allegation that defendant’s assessments are unconstitutionally excessive and that portions of the assessed properties are exempt as being used for a public purpose do not toll or waive application of the statute of limitations. Therefore, this court does not have jurisdiction pursuant to N.J.S.A. 54:4-21 over both these counts of the complaint. However, plaintiffs’ allegation that the tax sale certificate is void because it violates the Green Acres Act will survive and will be decided by this court. Until its resolution, the stay and injunction against proceeding with the tax sale shall continue to remain in place.

PROCEDURAL HISTORY1

Defendant, Township of Livingston (“Livingston”), imposed local property tax assessments upon forty (40) properties used and known as the East Orange Water Reserve (“Subject”) for tax years 2009 and 2010. It then issued a tax sale notice on September 28, 2010, against Block 6300, Lot 18, a 95.66-acre parcel of the Subject, due to delinquent property taxes for the fourth quarter 2009. The tax sale was scheduled for October 29, 2010.

Plaintiffs, City of East Orange and the Board of Water Commissioners (“East Orange”), filed a complaint with the New Jersey Superior Court in December 2010, seeking temporary restraints and injunctive relief enjoining Livingston from conducting the tax sale.2 The complaint stated three separate counts for relief: (i) [165]*165Livingston’s assessments were grossly excessive thus, erroneous and unconstitutional; (ii) the proposed tax certificate sale violated the New Jersey Green Acres Land Acquisition and Recreation Opportunities Act, N.J.S.A. 13:8A-35 et seq. (“Green Acres Act”); and (iii) portions of the Subject were statutorily tax-exempt as being used for “public purposes” pursuant to N.J.S.A 54:4-3.3. East Orange also alleged that for tax year 2009, it never received the assessment notices because 32 of the 40 notices were incorrectly addressed to “East Orange, City of, City Hall, East Orange, NJ, 07019,” while the other 8 were incorrectly addressed to “East Orange, City of, 99 So. Grove Street, East Orange, NJ, 01018.”

On February 14, 2011, the Chancery Division enjoined Livingston from selling the tax sale certificate or acting upon the tax assessments. Subsequently, it transferred the matter to this court. The Chancery Division continued the status quo of the injunction “until such time as the issues are determined.”

Both parties then moved for summary judgment. Livingston sought dismissal of the complaint for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction. East Orange claimed that for 2009 it never received the assessment notices within the appeal deadline, and that for both tax years 2009 and 2010, the appeal deadline should be relaxed.

FACTS

The facts are as established by testimonial and documentary evidence provided to the court in the motions and at the plenary hearing. Livingston presented testimony of its assessor; its tax collector; Vital Communications, Inc. (“Vital”), a company that performs the bulk mailing services for Livingston; and Appraisal Systems, Inc. (“Appraisal Systems”), the company that performed the 2009 revaluation for Livingston. East Orange presented the testimony of Harry L. Mansmann, Executive Director of the East Orange Water Commission (“Water Commission”).

For tax years 2008 through 2010, Livingston sent assessment notices (or “Chapter 75” cards) through Vital. In March 2009, Vital mailed the Chapter 75 cards to, among others, East Orange, for the Subject. The return address on the cards contained the assessor’s office address. Thirty-two Chapter 75 cards were [166]*166addressed to “East Orange, City of, City Hall, East Orange, NJ, 07019.” Eight were addressed to “East Orange, City of, 99 So. Grove Street, East Orange, NJ, 01018.” These addresses were taken from MOD-IV, the computer database in the assessor’s office. However, the tax collector’s office, which has its own computer database, sent tax bills to East Orange at 99 South Grove Street, East Orange, NJ 07018, for several prior tax years, including tax year 2009.

None of the 2009 assessment notices were returned as undeliverable to the assessor’s office for tax year 2009 (or for any other prior tax year). The assessor’s office never received any notice by East Orange of a change of address/es at any time until 2009. The assessor however conceded that her office and the tax collector could have different addresses for the same property because the two offices “were on two different [computer] systems.” She also conceded that the zip code “01018” used in 8 assessment notices should have been “07018.” A printout from the website for the City of East Orange lists the City Hall address as 44 City Hall Plaza, with a zip code of 07017 as opposed to 07019 used in the 32 Chapter 75 notices and on the one tax bill for Block 6100 Lot 7.

Local property tax bills for the third quarter of 2008 and the first three quarters of 2009 which were addressed either to the City of East Orange or to the Water Commission showed one address, 99 South Grove Street, with the zip code of 07018 (except for Block 6100, Lot 7, addressed to the City of East Orange, in which the zip code used was 07019 but the street address was still 99 South Grove Street). East Orange paid such bills using a “purchase order” showing the “vendor” as Livingston, with such purchase order reflecting the Water Commission’s name, and the address as 99 South Grove Street, East Orange, NJ 07018.

Mr. Mansmann testified that the Water Commission functions akin to an independent authority. It is charged with filing property tax appeals without requiring approval of the City of East Orange as the Water Commission can “sue and be sued.” However, its budgets have to be submitted to, and approved by, the Mayor and Council of East Orange. Although East Orange owns [167]*167the Subject, the Water Commission is solely responsible for the operation and maintenance of the Reserve, sanitary and storm systems. East Orange does not contribute to the payment of property taxes.

Mr. Mansmann further testified that all units within the Water Commission are housed at the administrative office located at 99 South Grove Street, East Orange, NJ 07018.3 There are no offices with a zip code of 01018, nor does the Water Commission have offices at City Hall. He stated that all mail addressed and received by the Water Commission at 99 South Grove Street, NJ 07018 is logged and date stamped on a daily basis, and he reviews all such mail. These mailings include tax bills sent to the 99 South Grove Street address. He stated that since 2003, the Water Commission never received any Chapter 75 cards, but only tax bills from Livingston at the 99 South Grove Street address.

Mr.

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27 N.J. Tax 161, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-east-orange-v-township-of-livingston-njtaxct-2013.