Prime Accounting Department v. Township of Carney's Point

58 A.3d 690, 212 N.J. 493, 2013 WL 173964, 2013 N.J. LEXIS 11
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedJanuary 17, 2013
StatusPublished
Cited by51 cases

This text of 58 A.3d 690 (Prime Accounting Department v. Township of Carney's Point) 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
Prime Accounting Department v. Township of Carney's Point, 58 A.3d 690, 212 N.J. 493, 2013 WL 173964, 2013 N.J. LEXIS 11 (N.J. 2013).

Opinion

Justice PATTERSON

delivered the opinion of the Court.

In this case, the Court considers whether a tax appeal complaint that was timely filed pursuant to N.J.S.A. 54:3-21, but named as [496]*496the plaintiff an entity that was not an aggrieved taxpayer within the meaning of that statute, should be dismissed for lack of subject matter jurisdiction. The taxpayer in this case, Bocceli, LLC (Bocceli), is the sublessee of a commercial property in the Township of Carney’s Point (the Township). For several years prior to the filing of Bocceli’s tax appeal, the Township’s tax assessment list and notices incorrectly listed Prime Accounting Department (Prime Accounting) as the property owner. Prime Accounting is not a legal entity, but an office that had processed property taxes on behalf of a prior lessee, Prime Management Company, Inc. (Prime Management). Prime Accounting and Prime Management are not affiliated with either the property’s current owner or Bocceli, the taxpaying sublessee.

In a complaint filed by its counsel in the Tax Court shortly before the April 1, 2009 deadline for tax appeals, Bocceli designated Prime Accounting, rather than the current owner of the property or Bocceli itself, as the plaintiff. In the early stages of the litigation, the Tax Court learned that Prime Accounting was not a party authorized by N.J.S.A. 54:3-21 to file a tax appeal regarding the property at issue, and questioned the named plaintiffs standing. Bocceli sought leave to amend the complaint and name itself as the plaintiff.

The Tax Court denied Bocceli’s motion to amend and dismissed the tax appeal. It reasoned that by virtue of the defect in the original complaint, the Tax Court lacked subject matter jurisdiction, and accordingly the proposed amendment would be futile. The Appellate Division affirmed, agreeing with the Tax Court that Bocceli had failed to file a timely complaint in the name of the true party in interest, and that its omission warranted dismissal on jurisdictional grounds.

We reverse the Appellate Division panel’s judgment. We agree with the panel and the Tax Court that Bocceli’s complaint designated the wrong entity as the plaintiff, and improperly omitted any reference to Bocceli itself. We hold, however, that given the error in the Township’s tax assessment list, and pursuant to the [497]*497liberal amendment of pleadings standard of Rule 8:3-8 and case law construing Rule 4:9-1, the Tax Court improperly denied Bocceli’s motion to amend the complaint. We further hold that the proposed amendment would relate back to the date of the original complaint, thus preserving the Tax Court’s subject matter jurisdiction over Bocceli’s tax appeal, and that the amendment would not be futile. We concur with the panel’s rejection of Bocceli’s equitable estoppel and laches arguments.

I.

The property that is the subject of this appeal is located at 517 South Pennsville-Auburn Road, and designated as Block 218, Lot 12, in the Township of Carney’s Point. The property has been owned by Penns Grove Associates (Penns Grove), a Connecticut corporation, for more than thirty years. In 1978, Penns Grove leased the property to Howard Johnson Company, which constructed a hotel on the site. In 1989, following the expiration of its lease to Howard Johnson Company, Penns Grove leased the property to Prime Management, a New Jersey corporation with offices in Fairfield. Prime Management agreed to “pay and discharge punctually as and when they shall become due and payable, all taxes ... and other governmental impositions and charges of every kind and nature.”

Following the Prime Management lease, the Township’s tax assessor’s office listed Prime Accounting as the property owner in the municipal tax assessment list. Thereafter, the Township sent property tax notices to “Prime Accounting Dept” at Prime Management’s Fairfield post office box address. By 2007, because of a series of transactions and the settlement of a lease dispute, Prime Management’s former interest in the property transferred to a new lessee, WIH Hotels, Inc. (WIH).

On May 17, 2007, the Township sent a certified letter to Prime Accounting, requesting updated income and expense information for purposes of assessing the value of the property, pursuant to N.J.S.A. 54:4-34, an inquiry that is termed a “Chapter 91 re[498]*498quest.” See Davanne Realty v. Edison Twp., 201 N.J. 280, 280, 990 A.2d 639 (2010). The Township’s Chapter 91 request eventually reached WIH, which paid property taxes on the property for tax year 2007, and submitted a late response to the request for information. On July 13, 2007, WIH entered into a sublease with Bocceli, a Maryland limited liability company. Bocceli assumed responsibility for property tax payments for tax year 2008. Notwithstanding these changes, the Township tax assessor’s office’s tax assessment list continued to designate Prime Accounting as the entity responsible for property tax payments. The tax assessor sent tax assessment notices to that entity, which was no longer involved with the property, at Prime Management’s Fairfield address.

On April 25, 2008, Mohammed Zubair, a managing member of Boceeli’s limited liability company, visited the Township’s tax collector’s office, a location separate from the tax assessor’s office. Zubair paid the first tax payment for which Bocceli was responsible. The parties agree that Zubair requested that the tax assessment list designate “Bocceli, LLC” as the owner and that tax notices be sent to the hotel on the property, but dispute the Township tax assessor clerk’s response to that request. Bocceli contends that the clerk assured Zubair that the information would be passed along to the tax assessor, who would make the change. The Township contends, however, that the clerk advised Zubair that he could not effect a change in the tax assessment list without presenting a deed to the tax assessor’s office. Bocceli made no further request to correct the Township’s records and provided no written communication or deed to the tax assessor’s office. Prime Accounting remained on the Township’s tax assessment list.

On April 28, 2008, apparently unaware of Zubair’s visit to the tax collector’s office three days before, the Township tax assessor sent to Prime Accounting the Township’s annual Chapter 91 request for updated income and expense information about the property. When that correspondence was returned undelivered, the Township reviewed its records and discovered that WIH had [499]*499responded to its Chapter 91 request the previous year. It sent another Chapter 91 request to WIH, but WIH did not forward that request to Bocceli. Accordingly, no one responded to the Township’s 2008 Chapter 91 request. The Township continued to list Prime Accounting as the property owner on its tax assessment list notwithstanding the return of its correspondence to Prime Accounting and its awareness of WIH’s interest in the property.

Seven months later, on November 25, 2008, the Township’s tax collector submitted to its tax assessor’s office a “Request for Address Change” form, advising the tax assessor of the address for Bocceli that had been provided by Zubair, but continuing to list Prime Accounting as the property owner. The tax assessor notified Bocceli in early 2009 of the annual tax assessment for the property.

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Bluebook (online)
58 A.3d 690, 212 N.J. 493, 2013 WL 173964, 2013 N.J. LEXIS 11, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/prime-accounting-department-v-township-of-carneys-point-nj-2013.