City of Jersey City v. Rm Holdings Jersey City LLC

CourtNew Jersey Tax Court
DecidedJuly 28, 2025
Docket009966-2023
StatusUnpublished

This text of City of Jersey City v. Rm Holdings Jersey City LLC (City of Jersey City v. Rm Holdings Jersey City LLC) 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 Jersey City v. Rm Holdings Jersey City LLC, (N.J. Super. Ct. 2025).

Opinion

TAX COURT OF NEW JERSEY

495 Martin Luther King Blvd., Fourth Floor MARY SIOBHAN BRENNAN Newark, New Jersey 07102 JUDGE 609 815-2922, Ext. 54560 Fax: 609 815-3079

NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE APPROVAL OF THE TAX COURT COMMITTEE ON OPINIONS

July 25, 2025

William Maslo, Esquire City of Jersey City Law Department 280 Grove Street Jersey City, New Jersey 07302

RM Holdings Jersey City LLC 222 ROCKAWAY TURNPIKE #3 Cedarhurst, New York 11516

RE: CITY OF JERSEY CITY V RM HOLDINGS JERSEY CITY LLC Docket Number: 009966-2023

Dear Mr. Maslo and Representative of RM Holdings Jersey City LLC:

This letter constitutes the Court’s opinion issuing default judgment as it relates

to a reverse/increase tax appeal. For the reasons set forth below, the Court issues

default judgment in favor of plaintiff, City of Jersey City (“Municipality”),

increasing the 2023 tax assessment of RM Holdings Jersey City LLC (“Defendant”).

I. Findings of Fact and Procedural History

This tax appeal involves the assessment of land and improvements identified

on the Jersey City tax map as Block 5103, Lot 1, with a street address of 178 Ogden

Avenue (“Subject Property”). For the 2023 tax year, the Subject Property was assessed at $2,888,900 in land and $13,971,200 in improvements, for a total

assessment of $16,860,100. Applying the 2023 Chapter 123 1 average ratio (82.91%)

results in an implied market value of $20,336,630.

The Subject Property consists of a 217,364 square foot lot improved by a five-

story building located in a residential housing zone. The site is generally level and

has approximately six hundred forty-two (642) feet of street frontage along Ogden

Avenue, Franklin Street, and Mountain Road. There is a surface parking lot on-site.

Currently, the Subject Property is used as a skilled nursing facility2 (also

referenced as the “facility”) including both private and semi-private units, known as

1 After a revaluation, all assessments in a municipality must be set at 100% of true market value measured as of October 1st of the pre-tax year. The State Division of Taxation (the “Division”) determines an equalization ratio (also known as the “average ratio”) for any municipality that has a deviation in assessments from 100% of true market value. The equalization ratio represents the average relationship in any given year between the assessed values and the true market values of properties within the municipality, which is based upon the Division’s annual analysis of relevant sales data. It is commonly referred to as “Chapter 123,” based upon the enactment of Chapter 123 of P.L. 1973. The goal of Chapter 123 is to verify the fairness of tax assessments in New Jersey – specifically, to confirm that the relationship between the total assessment and the true market value of a property, as viewed as a ratio or percentage, is within an acceptable range (known as the “common level range”) for the municipality. If it is not, then the current assessment is viewed as either too high or too low. 2 A skilled nursing facility is defined as “a state-licensed nursing home that provides a wide range of services to meet the needs of both short-term rehabilitative and long- term patient care. Nursing facilities provide twenty-four-hour high skilled nursing care (i.e., a level of care just below acute hospital care).” APPRAISAL INSTITUTE, THE DICTIONARY OF REAL ESTATE APPRAISAL 216 (6th ed. 2015).

2 Optima Care at Harborview. It houses one hundred eighty (180) beds in total and

comprises approximately 72,000 square feet of gross living area. Built in 1987, the

facility has an unfinished basement, six elevators, individual heat and air

conditioning units in each room, and offers laundry service, a salon, a day room and

a concierge for its residents.

The Defendant purchased the Subject Property on December 30, 2021, for

$60,000,000.

Pursuant to N.J.S.A. 54:3-21(a)(1), taxing districts which may feel

discriminated 3 against by an assessed valuation of property in the taxing district,

may, on or before April 1, file a complaint with the county board of taxation.4

N.J.S.A. 54:51A-9 allows parties dissatisfied with the judgment of the Board to seek

review of the judgment in Tax Court according to the procedures and time limits

3 In the context of property tax appeals, "discrimination" refers to the situation where a property's assessed value is considered unfair or excessive when compared to other similar properties in the same municipality. It essentially means that the assessed- to-market value ratio applied to a specific property is beyond the legally permitted range. This standard recognizes that property values fluctuate over time due to various factors like inflation or depreciation after a revaluation or reassessment. Therefore, the common level range is a permissible range within which assessed values can deviate from the true market value. In New Jersey the common level range for a taxing district is generally plus or minus 15% of the average ratio for that district. Chapter 123 establishes the annual ratios. 4 Or directly with the Tax Court if the assessed valuation of the property subject to appeal exceeds $1,000,000.

3 determined by the Director of the Division of Taxation, which is forty-five (45)

days.5

The Municipality filed a Verified Petition of Appeal with the Hudson County

Board of Taxation (“Board”) alleging that the Subject Property was underassessed

for tax year 2023. On August 3, 2023, the Board issued a Memorandum of Judgment

with Judgment Code #6B “Hearing Waived” affirming the $16,860,100 assessment.

On August 28, 2023, the Board mailed a copy of the Memorandum of Judgment to

the Municipality, with a copy to the Defendant at its address of 222 Rockaway TPKE

#3, Cedarhurst, NY 11516.

On October 11, 2023, the Municipality timely filed a complaint with the Tax

Court, appealing the Board’s judgment and naming RM Holdings Jersey City LLC,

the owner of record, as defendant. The complaint alleges discrimination and asserts

that the assessment is below its true market value.

R. 8:5-3(a)(2) provides that a complaint by a taxing district to review the

action of a County Board of Taxation shall be served on the County Board of

Taxation and, if the action to be reviewed involves the assessment of a specific parcel

5 Part 8 of the New Jersey Rules of Court govern the practice and procedure in all actions in the Tax Court. R. 8:1. The Tax Court has initial review jurisdiction of all final decisions of a county board of taxation. R. 8:2.

4 of property, on the taxpayer of said property and the assessor of the taxing district.

Furthermore, R. 8:5-4(3) states:

Service upon a taxpayer in a local property tax matter shall be: (i) By personal service or by certified or registered mail, return receipt requested, upon the attorney who appeared for the taxpayer in the County Board of Taxation proceeding which resulted in the judgment contested in the complaint. (ii) If there was no attorney for the taxpayer in the County Board of Taxation proceeding which resulted in the judgment contested in the complaint or if the complaint is a direct appeal by a taxing district pursuant to N.J.S.A. 54:3-21, service shall be made upon the taxpayer by personal service or by certified or registered mail, return receipt requested, and if by mail, at the address listed on the County Board of Taxation petition by the taxpayer, or if none, at the last known address as it appears on the last taxing district tax duplicate.

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City of Jersey City v. Rm Holdings Jersey City LLC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-jersey-city-v-rm-holdings-jersey-city-llc-njtaxct-2025.