Davis & Associates, L.L.C. v. Stafford Township

18 N.J. Tax 621
CourtNew Jersey Tax Court
DecidedMarch 22, 2000
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 18 N.J. Tax 621 (Davis & Associates, L.L.C. v. Stafford Township) 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
Davis & Associates, L.L.C. v. Stafford Township, 18 N.J. Tax 621 (N.J. Super. Ct. 2000).

Opinion

AXELRAD, J.T.C.

This is a local property tax matter in which the taxpayer has challenged the property tax assessments on Block 123.01, Lot 18.08 and Block 120.30, Lot 51.01 in Stafford Township, Ocean County, New Jersey, for the 1999 tax year. The assessments are as follows:

Block 123.01, Lot 18.03 Block 120.30, Lot 51.01

Land $ 224,000 Land $3,560,000

Improvements -0- • Improvements -0-

Total $ 224,000 Total $3,560,000

[624]*624The taxpayer’s attorney filed an appeal with the Ocean County Board of Taxation on August 18, 1999 and sought review pursuant to the time extension provisions of N.J.S.A. 54:3-21.4. The petition and filing fee were returned along with a county board judgment of dismissal, which was entered on August 27, 1999, indicating Judgment Code “5E” (“appeal not timely filed”). The judgment was accompanied by a cover letter dated August 30,1999 from the county tax administrator referencing R.S. [N.J.S.A] 54:3-21, which provides that an appeal of an assessment on the regular tax list shall be filed on or before April 1st of the tax year. The taxpayer then filed this complaint in the Tax Court on September 17,1999.

The municipality filed a motion to dismiss the taxpayer’s complaint for untimely filing based on the fact that the complaint was not filed by April 1, 1999, the statutory deadline imposed by N.J.S.A. 54:3-21. In support of its motion the municipality submitted the certifications of Arlene Oliver, the Tax Assessor, and Nicholas Seutti, an employee of Tree Services, the company which provided the mailing service of the notices of assessment mandated by N.J.S.A 54:4-38.1, L. 1991, c. 75, (“Chapter 75 notices”) for the municipality. In opposition, the taxpayer submitted the certifications of Michael Bittner, its controller, and Elaine Devecehio, its receptionist. Upon the court’s direction, the recoi’d was supplemented by them testimony.

The taxpayer purchased thirteen parcels of vacant land in the township, including the subject properties, in January and February of 1998. The property at issue was an abandoned mining pit and the taxpayer recently received local board approval to develop the vacant tracts for a significant project of a 452-unit modular home park. For the 1999 tax list, the thirteen properties were consolidated into five parcels and assigned new Block and Lot numbers; the overall assessment was significantly higher than the 1998 assessment. For example, one of the properties under appeal, re-classified as Block 120.30, Lot 51.01 for the 1999 tax year, was designated on the 1998 tax assessment list as Block 120, [625]*625Lots 47, 48.01, 49, 51, 52, 53, 54 and 56 and had a total assessment of $205,900. For 1999 the assessment was $3,560,000.

The taxpayer contends that it did not receive any Chapter 75 notice of the 1999 assessment for any of its properties in the township. The taxpayer states that the first and only notification that the parcels were consolidated and renumbered, and that the assessment was higher for the 1999 tax year, was its receipt of the third quarter tax bills for each of the five parcels in July or August of 1999. As such, the taxpayer submits that its federal and state due process rights would be violated if the court dismissed its complaint.

The evidence presented by the municipality indicated that the tax assessment list certified by the assessor to the Ocean County Board of Taxation and the Board’s ensuing “Tax Assessment Notification List” properly designated the taxpayer as the owner of various parcels, including the two under appeal, with its proper mailing address of “8000 Sagemore — Suite 8301, Marlton, NJ 08053” for the 1999 tax year. According to Ms. Oliver, the municipality contracted with Tree Services, a mailing service, to pick up the Chapter 75 postcards, which were generated at the Ocean County Data Processing Center after the list was certified in January 1999, and to send them out to the property owners. The notices contain the return address of the township municipal building, and, if any are returned, Ms. Oliver’s office keeps track of them and resends them if they had been improperly addressed. The assessor did not receive any returned Chapter 75 cards relating to the taxpayer’s properties.

According to Mr. Scutti, Tree is a computer and mailing house service in Toms River, which generates and mails out Chapter 75 notices for twenty-three municipalities in Ocean County, including Stafford Township. Once Tree establishes contract agreements with municipalities, it orders the cards for each of them, checks that the cards were printed according to specification, and delivers the cards to the Ocean County Data Processing Department, using a separate box for each municipality, along with a list of the municipalities. For each municipality, Data Processing prints the [626]*626cards on a continuous form, automatically separates and assembles them in zip code order, generates a “computer summary of forms by zip,” puts them back in the boxes, and notifies Tree that the run has been completed. A representative of Tree brings the boxes and computer summary back to its premises, and, for each municipality, Tree runs the cards through a metering machine for bulk mailing, or affixes other postage as necessary, and places the cards into post office trays. The cards are not physically counted against the summary sheet, but rather are finger-searched to insure they are in zip code order. If any card is damaged running through the machinery, it is replaced with a hand-typed card, and if any of the notices are out of order, which occurs “very seldom,” they are properly filed. The cards are bundled by zip codes and elastic bands and placed in post office trays, which are then taken to the Toms River Post Office. The post office processes the mail, and within a few days Tree receives a receipt for the total number of pieces of bulk mailing processed for all of the municipalities.

According to the proofs submitted by the municipality, this business procedure was followed for the 1999 tax year. The zip code summary generated by Data Processing indicates that 14,095 cards were printed for Stafford Township, and a copy of the summary was received by the assessor on January 29, 1999. Mr. Scutti was not aware of any problem or failure with any of these cards being assembled or going out. According to the “Postal Service Permit System Statement of Mailing” sent to Tree, fifty-six trays containing 150,150 pieces were processed by the post office for bulk mailing on January 30, 1999, for twenty-three municipalities, including Stafford Township.

N.J.S.A. 54:4-38.1 mandates that:

Every assessor, prior to February 1, shall notify by mail each taxpayer of the current assessment and preceding year’s taxes. Thereafter, the assessor or county board of taxation shall notify each taxpayer by mail within 30 days of any change to the assessment____

For a discussion of the legislative history and policy considerations of this statute and the difference between an “assessment notice” and notice of “change of assessment” see Centorino v. Tewksbury Township, 18 N.J.Tax 303, 310-13 (Tax 1999).

[627]*627“New Jersey cases have recognized a presumption that mail properly addressed, stamped, and posted was received by the party to whom it was addressed.

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Related

City of East Orange v. Township of Livingston
27 N.J. Tax 161 (New Jersey Tax Court, 2013)
Southway, Peter & Lena v. Wyckoff Township
20 N.J. Tax 194 (New Jersey Tax Court, 2002)

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Bluebook (online)
18 N.J. Tax 621, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davis-associates-llc-v-stafford-township-njtaxct-2000.