Intercare Health System, Inc. v. Cedar Grove Tp.

11 N.J. Tax 423
CourtNew Jersey Tax Court
DecidedDecember 14, 1990
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 11 N.J. Tax 423 (Intercare Health System, Inc. v. Cedar Grove Tp.) 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
Intercare Health System, Inc. v. Cedar Grove Tp., 11 N.J. Tax 423 (N.J. Super. Ct. 1990).

Opinion

HOPKINS, J.T.C.

This is an appeal from the denial of a claimed local property tax exemption of a nursing home located on Block 330, Lot 1, in the taxing district of Cedar Grove. The assessments were in the amount of $1,765,100 for each of the tax years 1988 and 1989.

Hartwyck West, Inc. (HW), is a nonprofit corporation organized under N.J.S.A. 15A:1-1 et seq. Its sole member is Inter-care Health Systems, Inc. (Intercare), which is also a nonprofit corporation organized under New Jersey law. The sole members of Intercare constitute HW’s board of directors. Intercare also controls, in the same or similar manner, other nonprofit organizations, all of which, in some manner, relate to health care. They include the Community Hospital Group, Inc. (trading as John F. Kennedy Medical Center) which operates a [425]*425hospital (JFK); Robert Wood Johnson, Jr., Lifestyle Institute; Hartwyck Nursing, Convalescent and Rehabilitation Centers; Hartwyck West Nursing Home, Inc. (the subject); Hartwyck at Cedar Brook, Inc., in Plainfield; Hartwyck at Oak Tree, Inc., in Edison; Medishare Health Services, Inc. and the John F. Kennedy Medical Center Foundation, Inc.

HW owns and operates a 113-bed facility on the subject property. Its function can be defined as the operator of a nursing home under N.J.S.A. 30:11-8, a skilled nursing facility under N.J.A.C. 10:63-1.2, and a longterm care facility under N.J.A.C. 8:39-1.2 and 10:63-1.2. As self-described, HW is a skilled intermediate care facility providing such services as physical, occupational, recreational, and other rehabilitative therapies. Care is provided on a 24-hour basis. All patients have their own personal physicians.

Prior to 1984, the subject property was owned by Hartwyck West Nursing Home, Inc., a business corporation organized under the laws of the State of New Jersey. On January 4, 1984, its shareholders sold their stock to Intercare for approximately $7,342,000. At that time, HW operated the subject property, as well as the nursing home in Plainfield. Subsequently, pursuant to a plan of conversion filed with the secretary of state on February 17, 1984, the business corporation was converted to nonprofit status, at which time the purposes of the corporation were restated to include, among other things, the establishment, creation, ownership and operation of “such nursing, convalescent and rest homes and allied activities for the care of the sick, injured, disabled and aged as the Board of Trustees may, from time to time, deem appropriate.” Its bylaws provide that it “is organized and shall be operated exclusively for charitable, educational and scientific purposes,” as defined in the organization’s articles of incorporation. After conversion, no part of HW’s earnings were distributed to any individual. However, its financial statements for 1986 and 1987 showed distribution of surplus revenues to Intercare in the amount of $200,000 and $250,000, respectively.

[426]*426Prior to the date upon which Intercare acquired the stock in the business corporation operating the subject property, the property had been used as a nursing home and had been able to maintain maximum capacity in the utilization of its facilities. Subsequent to its conversion to nonprofit status, it accepted more Medicare and Medicaid patients. This was to take advantage of the increased market of available patients. HW continues to maintain a satisfactory rate of patient capacity in its current operation.

HW maintains transfer agreements with ten different community hospitals. All such hospitals, except JFK, are located in the same general geographical area as HW. JFK, as previously stated, is also a “subsidiary” of Intercare, and is located in Edison, approximately 35 miles from Cedar Grove. Transfer agreements provide for the efficient and expeditious transfer of patients and information between the institutions. Each agreement specifically provides for a cooperative program of patient transfer. However, in so doing, the agreements also provide that the affected institutions have exclusive control of their own policies, institutions, management and affairs. Such transfer agreements are deemed appropriate in establishing standards and guidelines for planning and certificate-of-need reviews of longterm care facilities. N.J.A.C. 8:33H-3.1 et seq. A request for expansion of such facilities requires evidence of transfer agreements. N.J.A.C. 8:33H-3.3(a) III(4) and IV(2). This latter regulation is directed toward having the longterm care facilities assure the reviewing authority that there is a licensed hospital to which specialized patients may be transferred within 30 minutes total transit time. As such, the mandated agreements are directed toward meeting the needs of the patient, rather than the needs of a hospital.

In 1987 and 1988, HW maintained close relations, through its personnel, with hospitals to which and from which its patients were transferred. During 1988, patient admissions to HW totalled 170, of which 137 were from hospitals and, in 1989, admissions totalled 114, of which 94 were from hospitals. The balance of admissions came from private residences or boarding [427]*427homes located in the surrounding communities. The nonhospital source patients were generally admitted for custodial care, including meals, and assistance in walking, washing and dressing. Of all hospital admissions during this period, only one was from JFK, in Edison. Most activity was with the Montclair Community and Mountainside Hospitals, both located in Montclair, an adjacent community to Cedar Grove.

When transferring from a hospital to a nursing home, the decision to enter a nursing home is made by the patient or the patient’s guardian. This decision is usually based on the availability of a bed, as well as the proximity of the facility to the family and the patient’s attending physician.

While HW has a medical director, he is not a full-time staff member. His duties include giving advice and recommendations with respect to the overall medical facilities. This service takes approximately three hours a week. He has his own patients in the facility and is not responsible for other patients, all of whom have their own personal physicians. HW does maintain a list of physicians from which a patient may select when he or she is without a personal physician or when the personal physician does not wish to follow the case during the patient’s confinement in the nursing facility. The retention of a listed physician is optional with the patient, since he or she will be personally charged for the physician’s services. However, the patient must have a private physician.

HW is licensed by the State of New Jersey as a skilled nursing facility and not as a hospital. It has no full-time doctors on its staff or who maintain offices in the facility. Its full-time medical staff includes registered or licensed practical nurses.

There is no dispute that HW provides a medical service to patients who are transferred from hospitals and that an expeditious patient discharge permits a hospital to make more efficient use of its facilities. It is further recognized that the method by which hospitals in New Jersey are compensated for medical services is subject to rigid controls by both the State [428]*428and federal governments. The New Jersey Legislature has promulgated, and the Department of Health enforces, strict limitations on the rates which a hospital may charge for its services. See N.J.S.A. 26:2H-1 et seq.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
11 N.J. Tax 423, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/intercare-health-system-inc-v-cedar-grove-tp-njtaxct-1990.