G S Realty Corp v. Brick Township

CourtNew Jersey Tax Court
DecidedFebruary 27, 2026
Docket009174-2020
StatusPublished

This text of G S Realty Corp v. Brick Township (G S Realty Corp v. Brick 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
G S Realty Corp v. Brick Township, (N.J. Super. Ct. 2026).

Opinion

TAX COURT OF NEW JERSEY

TAX COURT MANAGEMENT OFFICE P.O. Box 972 (609) 815-2922 TRENTON, NEW JERSEY 08625- 0972

Corrected Opinion Notice

Date: February 27, 2026

C. Justin McCarthy, Esq 125 Half Mile Road Suite 300 Red Bank, NJ, 07701

Scott W. Kenneally, Esq. 401 Chambers Bridge Rd. Brick, NJ, 08723

From: Naglaa Elsayed Telephone number: (609)815-2922

Re: G S REALTY CORP V BRICK TOWNSHIP Docket number: 009174- 2020

The attached corrected opinion replaces the version released on February 27, 2026 The Opinion has been corrected as noted below:

Corrected February 27, 2026 -Page 1, to add the stamp “ Approval for Publication In the New Jersey Tax Court Reports.

njcourts.gov – select Courts/Tax Court NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT APPROVAL OF THE TAX COURT COMMITTEE ON OPINIONS

------------------------------------------------------x G.S. REALTY CORP., : : TAX COURT OF NEW JERSEY Plaintiff, : DOCKET NO: 009174-2020 : 005103-2021 v. : : TOWNSHIP OF BRICK, :

: Defendant. : ------------------------------------------------------x

Decided February 26, 2026.

C. Justin McCarthy and Steven W. Ward for G.S. Realty Corp. (Giordano, Halleran & Ciesla, P.C., attorneys).

Scott W. Kenneally for Township of Brick (Starkey, Kelly, Kenneally, Cunningham, Turnbach & Yannone, attorneys).

CIMINO, J.T.C.

Plaintiff G.S. Realty (GS) developed a phased expandable condominium

project in accordance with Federal National Mortgage Association (FNMA or

Fannie Mae) guidelines. Phasing precludes a developer from shifting the expenses

of unannexed, yet to be developed, phases to condominium unit owners. This

reduces mortgage loan defaults by unit owners. Fannie Mae phasing helps open the door to preferred financing for unit purchasers, which in turn enhances the

marketability of the units for developers. A master deed recorded by GS’s

predecessor in title guided the phased expansion of the condominium.

With GS annexing phases as the condominium progressed, the tax assessor

assessed the annexed phases to the unit owners. The assessor assessed the

unannexed phases to GS. GS asserts that the unannexed phases are taxable to the

unit owners. GS has filed for summary judgment essentially seeking a refund of the

taxes it paid on the unannexed phases.

GS argues that New Jersey’s condominium taxing statute, N.J.S.A. 46:8B-19,

obligates unit owners to pay the taxes for the unannexed phases. The statute is based

upon a Federal Housing Administration (FHA) model act. As a condition for

broadening the availability of condominium mortgage insurance in the state, FHA

mandated the enactment of the statute. The statute limits each unit owner’s taxes on

the common elements to a proportionate share. GS claims the common elements

include the unannexed phases.

Despite Fannie Mae phasing and the FHA-inspired taxing statute guarding

against mortgage loan defaults, GS urges the court to interpret the two provisions in

a way that enhances default risk by increasing the financial responsibility of unit

owners. Such interpretation is contrary to Fannie Mae and FHA policy goals of

encouraging home ownership as well as the phasing provisions of the master deed

2 establishing the condominium. The unannexed phases do not constitute

condominium common elements. Thus, the assessor appropriately assessed the

unannexed phases to GS.

I.

The property in question is located on Block 701, Lot 9.05 of the tax map of

the Township of Brick. A prior developer obtained municipal zoning and planning

approvals to construct 170 condominium units, later reduced to 168 units, on twenty-

one acres. The prior developer planned to complete the project in twenty-three

phases. Each phase consisted of a single building with five to seventeen residential

units.

The prior developer recorded a master deed in 2014. The introductory

language of the master deed declared the condominium as the land encompassing

Lot 9.05 along with any improvements. The master deed also defined the terms

“property,” “condominium” and “common elements” at sections 2.14, 2.32 and

5.01(a), respectively, to include the land encompassed by Lot 9.05. The introductory

and definitional language of the master deed tracks the generic boilerplate master

deed language found in a New Jersey treatise on condominium association law. See

Wendell A. Smith & Dennis A. Estis, New Jersey Condominium and Community

Association Law §§ 6:1, 6:2.30, 6:2.12, 6:15.01(a) (1996); Wendell A. Smith,

3 Dennis A. Estis & Christine F. Li, New Jersey Condominium and Community

Association Law §§ 6:1, 6:2.31, 6:2.12, 6:5.01(a) (2025).

Without any further language, filing the master deed would have created all

170 units at once, albeit unbuilt. However, the availability of Fannie Mae preferred

financing requires the sale of fifty percent of the units. As explained by GS, creation

of all the units at once would have impaired the ability of unit buyers to obtain

preferred financing. This preferred financing includes not only the greater

availability of mortgage loan funding, but the availability of lower interest rates and

down-payments.

Phasing enables more units to qualify for Fannie Mae financing sooner. To

that end, the master deed includes the following language creating an expandable

condominium:

3.01 The Condominium. . . . Upon the recordation of this Master Deed, only the lands and Units situated in Phase 1, comprised of a total of five (5) units, in Building No. 1 . . . shall be annexed to the Condominium. (emphasis added).

The master deed further provides:

3.01 [sic] Changes to the Condominium. Sponsor reserves the right, in its sole discretion, to annex the remaining lands and Units contemplated by this Master Deed. . . . No approval of the Association, any Unit Owner(s) or any Eligible Mortgage Holder(s) shall be required in order to expand the Condominium in this manner. (emphasis added).

4 The percentage interest schedule detailed in Exhibit F of the master deed

provides the:

. . . Condominium is an expandable condominium which, when and if fully constructed, will consist of a maximum of one hundred seventy (170) Units. As the Units are built and completed, they will be annexed to the Condominium upon the recordation of amendment to the Master Deed in the Office of the Ocean County Clerk . . . .

The master deed goes on to detail a building-by-building phasing plan to

annex the additional phases to the condominium. The master deed includes a map

entitled “Condominium Phasing Plan for FHA and FNMA Project Approvals”

showing the building areas constituting each phase.

With just the first phase, the assessor assessed each of the initial five units as

the value of the unit itself and each unit’s percentage share of the common elements.

Each unit owner had a one-fifth interest in the common elements. The assessor

assessed the unannexed portion of the parcel to the prior developer.

From 2014 through 2016, the prior developer recorded four separate

amendments to the master deed annexing additional phases. When the prior

developer annexed a phase, the assessor placed the units in the phase on the tax rolls,

including each unit’s share of the common elements, and decreased the assessment

on the remaining unannexed portion of the parcel. The prior developer annexed a

5 total of four additional buildings in four phases totaling twenty-eight units.

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