Julius Roehrs Co. v. DIV. OF TAX APPEALS, DEPT. OF TREASURY

109 A.2d 611, 16 N.J. 493, 1954 N.J. LEXIS 243
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedNovember 22, 1954
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 109 A.2d 611 (Julius Roehrs Co. v. DIV. OF TAX APPEALS, DEPT. OF TREASURY) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Julius Roehrs Co. v. DIV. OF TAX APPEALS, DEPT. OF TREASURY, 109 A.2d 611, 16 N.J. 493, 1954 N.J. LEXIS 243 (N.J. 1954).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Jacobs, J.

The plaintiff operates a commercial nursery at 375 Paterson Avenue in the Borough of Wallington, New Jersey. It makes daily sales of plants, vines and shrubs at wholesale and owns 125 greenhouses which occupy an area of 300,000 square feet. Its greenhouse stock consists of plants set in trays and pots placed on benches several feet high. In 1952 the borough made a personal property assessment in the sum of $52,000 on the plaintiff’s greenhouse stock, horticultural machinery, furniture, office fixtures, and *495 pottery. On appeal the assessment was reduced by the Bergen County Board of Taxation- to $40,000. As thus reduced the assessment was sustained by the Division of Tax Appeals and the plaintiff appealed to the Appellate Division. We certified under R. R. 1:10-1 (a).

The issue presented by the parties turns on the proper scope of the tax exemption in R. S. 54:4r-3.28 which provides that no commercially planted and growing crops, trees, shrubs or vines “while in the ground” shall be listed for taxation as personal property and that the assessment of real- property shall be made without regard to any enhancement in value because of any commercially planted and growing crops, trees, shrubs or vines while in the ground. A proviso in the statute sets forth that nothing therein shall prohibit taxation of the crops, trees, shrubs and vines after severance from the ground. The appellant contends that since the greenhouse stock is planted in soil it is in the ground within the meaning of the statute and is not subject to personal property taxation until it is actually set aside for daily sales. On the other hand, the borough contends that the statutory exemption refers to stock commercially planted and growing in the open fields and does not in anywise embrace greenhouse stock which is not planted in the ground, as that term is widely understood, but in receptacles placed on bench surfaces several feet above the ground. Its position is that such greenhouse stock is taxable in the same manner as other types of personal property “consisting of stocks in trade.” See R. S. 54:4-11; General Motors Corp. v. State Bd. of Tax Appeals, 125 N. J. L. 574 (E. & A. 1940).

The statute providing for the tax exemption was enacted in 1943, shortly after the decision of the Board of Tax Appeals in Bobbink & Atkins v. City of Clifton, 20 N. J. Misc. 149 (1942). There the Board had held that nursery stock consisting of evergreen and deciduous trees, and deciduous shrubs and vines, was taxable as personal property under the legislation then in effect. There are numerous decisions, in fields other than taxation, which bear on the question of whether growing plants and crops are to be dealt *496 with as personalty or realty; in Whitmer v. Atchison, T. & S. F. Ry. Co., 90 F. Supp. 253, 256 (D. C. Mo. 1950), the court appropriately remarked that the question had become involved “in a mystic maze of uncertainty and contradiction.” It has been said that the determination will in each case rest upon the particular character of the plants and crops, the relation and intention of the parties, and the nature of the transaction presented (15 Am. Jur. 195 (1938); and the effectuation of the intention of the parties would generally seem to be the paramount consideration. See 5 American Law of Property 64, 66 (1952); 1 Thompson, Real Property, 193, 351 (1939). Cf. Haddonfield Safe Deposit, etc., Co. v. Liggit, 11 N. J. Misc. 269 (Ch. 1929); Story v. Christin, 14 Cal. 2d 592, 95 P. 2d 925, 125 A. L. R. 1402 (1939).

The common law drew a distinction between perennial productions of the earth which were the result of the powers of nature and were to be dealt with as realty, and annual fruits of yearly labor which were the result of industry and were to be dealt with as personal property. See Westbrook v. Eager, 16 N. J. L. 81, 85 (Sup. Ct. 1837); Bloom v. Welsh, 27 N. J. L. 177, 180 (Sup. Ct. 1858). This distinction ordinarily resulted in giving effect to the intent of the parties concerned. See 5 American Law of Property, supra, where the author points out that the common law distinction was for most purposes one of intention “it being only reasonable to suppose that one who plants trees on the land, for example, intends them to be part of it”; however, in discussing commercial nurserymen he properly notes that they do not plant trees for permanent affixation to the realty but for purposes of propagation and sale and that “the better decisions will treat such nursery stock as personalty.” See 5 American Law of Properly, supra, 64, note 1. Cf. 42 Am. Jur. 200 (1942); In re Pennsylvania Nursery Co., 7 F. Supp. 726 (D. C. Pa. 1934). Professor Walsh has expressed the view that within common law concepts annual crops “include nursery stock planted and grown for transplanting and sale elsewhere, though the crop usually requires several years to mature, because a separate planting is required to initiate *497 the crop so that it is entirely the result of the labor and industry of its owner and is not an improvement of the land.” 1 Walsh, Real Property (1947), 483.

In Story v. Christin, supra [14 Cal. 2d 592, 95 P. 2d 927], the court remarked that plants and trees of commercial nurserymen had all the characteristics of stock in trade, “which is a stock of merchandise as that term is ordinarily used among business men.” In Miethke v. Pierce County, 173 Wash. 381, 23 P. 2d 405 (Sup. Ct. 1933), the court stated that there was no reason why the plants and trees of nurserymen should not be assessed and taxed as merchandise in the same manner as the stock in trade of other merchants. And in Bobbink & Atkins v. City of Clifton, supra, the Board held that the trees, shrubs and vines of a commercial nurseryman constituted his stock in trade as fully and realistically as that of merchants and manufacturers generally and should be regarded as personal property for taxation purposes. We agree that apart from explicit statutory exceptions or exemptions, the stock in trade of a commercial nurseryman falls within the terms of the general legislation taxing personal property including merchants’ stock in trade. See R. S. 54:4r-l; R. S. 54:4r-ll. This gives fair and nondiscriminatory effect to the general language used and presumably carries out the legislative intent. Bobbink & Atkins v. City of Clifton, supra, was correctly decided under the statutes then in force and the question remaining is the precise extent of its later modification by the terms of L.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Fields v. Trustees of Princeton University
28 N.J. Tax 574 (New Jersey Tax Court, 2015)
Boyan v. O'Connor
587 A.2d 640 (New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 1991)
Matter of Boyan
587 A.2d 640 (New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 1991)
Hospital Portrait Service Co. v. Taxation Division Director
6 N.J. Tax 305 (New Jersey Tax Court, 1983)
Hoffman-La Roche, Inc. v. Taxation Division Director
5 N.J. Tax 154 (New Jersey Tax Court, 1983)
Kalpin v. Taxation Division Director
5 N.J. Tax 172 (New Jersey Tax Court, 1983)
Ski Haus, Inc. v. Taxation Division Director
5 N.J. Tax 26 (New Jersey Tax Court, 1982)
Department of Environmental Protection v. Franklin Tp.
3 N.J. Tax 105 (New Jersey Tax Court, 1981)
Environmental Protection Dep't v. Franklin Tp.
437 A.2d 353 (New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 1981)
Body-Rite Repair Co. v. Taxation Div. Director
428 A.2d 940 (New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 1981)
Atlantic County New School, Inc. v. City of Pleasantville
2 N.J. Tax 192 (New Jersey Tax Court, 1981)
Washington Cemetery Ass'n v. Township of South Brunswick
1 N.J. Tax 157 (New Jersey Tax Court, 1980)
Commonwealth v. Beatty
376 A.2d 994 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1977)
International Bus. MacH. Corp. v. State, Dept. of Treasury
357 A.2d 292 (New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 1976)
City of Long Branch v. Monmouth Medical Center
351 A.2d 756 (New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 1976)
Salem Nursery, Inc. v. Department of Revenue
497 P.2d 371 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1972)
Salem Nursery, Inc. v. Department of Revenue
4 Or. Tax 482 (Oregon Tax Court, 1971)
City of Amarillo v. Love
356 S.W.2d 325 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1962)
Princeton University Press v. Borough of Princeton
172 A.2d 420 (Supreme Court of New Jersey, 1961)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
109 A.2d 611, 16 N.J. 493, 1954 N.J. LEXIS 243, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/julius-roehrs-co-v-div-of-tax-appeals-dept-of-treasury-nj-1954.