Congregacion Mita, Inc. v. Cliffside Park Borough

CourtNew Jersey Tax Court
DecidedJune 13, 2025
Docket009466-2022; 009640-2024
StatusUnpublished

This text of Congregacion Mita, Inc. v. Cliffside Park Borough (Congregacion Mita, Inc. v. Cliffside Park Borough) 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
Congregacion Mita, Inc. v. Cliffside Park Borough, (N.J. Super. Ct. 2025).

Opinion

TAX COURT OF NEW JERSEY JOSHUA D. NOVIN Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Justice Building Judge 495 Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Blvd., 4th Floor Newark, New Jersey 07102 Tel: (609) 815-2922, Ext. 54680

NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE APPROVAL OF THE TAX COURT COMMITTEE ON OPINIONS

June 11, 2025

Arthur C. Hopkins, Jr., Esq. 1135 Broad Street, Suite 105 Clifton, New Jersey 07013

Christos J. Diktas, Esq. Christine Gillen, Esq. Diktas Gillen, P.C. 596 Anderson Avenue, Suite 301 Cliffside Park, New Jersey 07010

Re: Congregacion Mita, Inc. v. Cliffside Park Borough Docket Nos. 009466-2022 and 009640-2024

Dear Mr. Hopkins, Mr. Diktas, and Ms. Gillen:

This letter constitutes the court’s opinion on Congregacion Mita, Inc.’s (“Congregacion”

or “plaintiff”), motions for summary judgment in the above matters. Congregacion asserts that its

residential property in Cliffside Park Borough (“defendant”), is being used to further its work as a

corporation organized exclusively for religious purposes, under N.J.S.A. 54:4-3.6. Thus, it argues

that the property should be exempt from local property tax for the 2022 and 2024 tax years.

For the reasons stated below, the court finds that no genuine issues of material fact exist

and that Congregacion’s property is entitled to an exemption from local property tax for the 2022

and 2024 tax years.

I. Procedural History and Findings of Fact

Pursuant to R. 1:7-4, the court makes the following factual findings and conclusions of law

based on its review of the pleadings, discovery materials, undisputed statements of fact, affidavits,

and exhibits submitted by the parties. Congregacion Mita, Inc. v. Cliffside Park Borough Docket Nos. 009466-2022 and 009640-2024 Page -2-

Congregacion was organized on March 9, 1984, as a nonprofit corporation under the New

Jersey Nonprofit Corporation Act, N.J.S.A. 15A:1-1 to 14-26. Effective May 1987, plaintiff was

granted Internal Revenue Code section 501(c)(3) tax exempt status by the Internal Revenue

Service. Plaintiff is a church chapter of the larger Christian church named Congregacion Mita –

Puerto Rico, established in Puerto Rico in or about 1957 (“Mita”). Mita operates in the United

States and internationally through its constituent church chapters.

Congregacion’s Certificate of Incorporation recites that it was formed for the purpose of

transacting, promoting, and carrying out the following goals:

Religious preaching, the teaching of Christian morals, the fostering and development of charity works, the education of missionaries and the formation of missions, the building and dedication of temples to worship God, the constriction, organization and administration of schools, orphan’s homes and hospitals and the carrying out of all such operations as may be necessary to these ends in the State of New Jersey or any other state or foreign county.

Similarly, Congregacion’s “Bylaws as amended” 1 state that its objectives and

purposes are:

the religious preaching based on the fundamental principles of Christianity, teaching of Christian morality, stimulus and development of charity work, education and formation of missionaries, acquisition and edification of temples for the worship of God, construction, organization and administration of schools, retirements homes and hospital, when economic resources permit, the moral formation of its members to improve their quality of life.

In New Jersey, Congregacion operates a church in Pennsauken. 2 In addition, Mita has

other regional church chapters in Hastings-on-Hudson, New York, Bristol, Connecticut, and

Boston, Massachusetts.

1 The “Bylaws as amended” submitted to the court were unsigned but bear a 2015 date. 2 Congregacion’s full-time pastor/minister at the Pennsauken chapter is Pastor Gloria Mestre. Congregacion Mita, Inc. v. Cliffside Park Borough Docket Nos. 009466-2022 and 009640-2024 Page -3-

On or about May 12, 2010, Congregacion purchased the real property and improvements

commonly known as 698 Palisade Avenue, Cliffside Park Borough, Bergen County, New Jersey,

for reported consideration of $1,300,000 (the “subject property”). 3 The subject property is

identified on defendant’s municipal tax map as block 3102, lot 33.

The court’s review of the motion record, opposition, deposition transcripts, affidavits,

answers to interrogatories, and exhibits reveal that the subject property is a residential side-by-side

duplex structure. Each duplex unit comprises three floors, containing several bedrooms,

bathrooms, kitchens, dining areas, and living areas. A doorway on the second floor of the subject

property provides a means of internal egress and access between the two duplex units.

To realize its religious goals and objectives, and to fulfill “their Christian ministry and

mission load responsibility,” Mita and Congregacion’s spiritual leader is charged with leading

faith missions. The subject property is principally used as a center of church operations and as a

residence for the spiritual leader and the church’s pastors, ministers, missionaries, and evangelists,

during these missions to New Jersey. In general, the spiritual leader conducts not less than two

missionary trips to New Jersey annually and resides in the subject property with the other

missionaries, on average, between two to four months each mission.

During these missions, Congregacion’s spiritual leader conducts religious services in the

subject property that are broadcast over the Zoom and YouTube platforms, and meets with

different church congregational groups, ministers, pastors, and missionaries from various Mita

church chapters in the United States to promote spiritual growth and spread its Christian messages

of love, peace, and freedom.

3 The deed was recorded on May 20, 2010 in the Bergen County Clerk’s Office in Deed Book 00435, Page 0213-0218. Congregacion Mita, Inc. v. Cliffside Park Borough Docket Nos. 009466-2022 and 009640-2024 Page -4-

In addition to the foregoing, the subject property serves a meeting place for Congregacion’s

Board of Directors 4; as the permanent residence of one of Congregacion’s pastors; as a temporary

residence for Mita’s administrative auditor, when she conducts audits of Congregacion and Mita’s

church chapters in the northeast United States; and as a temporary residence for Mita’s supervising

pastor, when she supervises Congregacion’s pastors and conducts church business in New Jersey

and in the northeast United States.

The subject property’s eastern duplex unit’s third floor bedrooms are exclusively reserved

for use by the spiritual leader, Rosinin Rodriguez, and certain aides/assistants. 5 Pastor Gladys

Acosta, a member of Mita’s Board of Directors, administrator of Mita’s Colegio Congregacion’s 6

department of social work and orientation, and the spiritual leader’s assistant, and Dora Lebron,

M.D., the spiritual leader’s physician and a church member, usually accompany the spiritual leader

on her missionary trips to New Jersey and occupy the eastern duplex unit’s third floor bedrooms.

The eastern duplex unit’s second floor comprises a dining room and living area. In these

areas, the spiritual leader conducts her virtually broadcast religious services and serves as the

meeting place for the spiritual leader’s meetings with different congregational groups, ministers,

pastors, and missionaries. The second-floor area is also where Congregacion’s Board of Directors

hold their meetings.

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