Salt & Light Co. v. Mount Holly Township

15 N.J. Tax 274
CourtNew Jersey Tax Court
DecidedNovember 8, 1995
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 15 N.J. Tax 274 (Salt & Light Co. v. Mount Holly 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
Salt & Light Co. v. Mount Holly Township, 15 N.J. Tax 274 (N.J. Super. Ct. 1995).

Opinion

HAMILL, J.T.C.

In these matters the Salt and Light Company seeks exemption from local property taxes for seven properties in Mount Holly Township.1 Salt and Light claims that the properties qualify for exemption because they are used for the charitable purpose of providing temporary housing and counseling services to the homeless. In addition, Salt and Light objects to the township’s procedure for revoking the exemptions. Mount Holly maintains that the properties are taxable largely because Salt and Light is compensated on a fee-for-service basis by the State. Mount Holly further argues that the company’s sizable net income and sizable cash balance for 1994 demonstrate that Salt and Light operates as a business rather than on a nonprofit basis.

[278]*278First to be addressed is the manner in which the exemptions were revoked.

During 1994 the Mount Holly assessor determined that Salt and. Light’s properties did not qualify for tax exemption. The assessor based his determination on answers to a questionnaire sent to all private, charitable, and religious organizations in the township. The questionnaires were triggered because the assessor noted that Salt and Light had completed two exemption applications (for properties not involved in these appeals) indicating that the properties were not being leased when the township solicitor knew that this was not the case. When the questionnaires were returned for the seven properties confirming that rent was being received, the assessor returned the properties to the tax rolls for the 1994 tax year.

Salt and Light received notice of the revocations of exemption by way of tax bills issued in October 1994 and appealed the determinations to the Burlington County Board of Taxation. The county board upheld the assessor’s revocation of tax exemption but returned the properties to the tax list commencing January 1, 1995, rather than January 1, 1994, as requested by the assessor.

The county board’s judgments, rendered on December 15, 1994, and mailed on January 6, 1995, specify that they are with respect to the 1994 tax year and include amended memoranda of judgment explaining that the tax exempt status of the properties is revoked as of 1994 but that the omitted assessments will not be placed on the tax books until January 1,1995.

Salt and Light appealed to the Tax Court challenging the county board’s judgments for the 1994 tax year denying tax exemption beginning with the 1995 tax year.

Mount Holly filed timely counterclaims asserting that the properties should have been returned to the tax list for all of 1994 as requested by the assessor rather than as of January 1, 1995, as found by the county board.

Consistent with the county board’s judgments, the properties were assessed as taxable for the 1995 tax year. Salt and Light [279]*279did not appeal those assessments, apparently in the belief that its appeals of the 1994 judgments sufficed to protect it for the 1995 tax year.

There is some question whether the assessor had the authority to revoke the exemptions for the 1994 tax year.2 However, since the county board in fact did not revoke the exemptions for 1994, the question is important only as bearing on whether there is any case properly before me. That is, if the 1994 assessments were improper for procedural reasons, arguably the county board should have dismissed on that basis and refused to deal with 1995 since no appeals were before it for that year.

Assuming, without deciding, that the 1994 assessments were procedurally defective and should have been dismissed for that reason, I believe I must nevertheless hear the matters as they pertain to the revocation of exemption for the 1995 tax year. Having received 1994 judgments in its favor that nevertheless revoked its exemptions for 1995, Salt and Light was left with no choice but to appeal the 1995 denials based on the 1994 judgments. Had it not done so, the company would have risked the possibility that any 1995 appeals would have been dismissed on the basis that the company had not timely appealed the 1994 judgments. Due to the peculiar circumstances of this case, I will therefore address the county board’s judgments on the merits as they pertain to the 1995 tax year.

[280]*280The applicable exemption statute is N.J.S.A. 54:4-3.6. It includes an exemption for “buildings actually and exclusively used in the work of associations and corporations organized exclusively for ... charitable purposes____” In addition to the requirements of charitable organization and use, the' statute requires that the entity claiming the exemption own the property in question, be authorized to carry out the purposes for which the exemption is claimed, not be operated for profit, and not operate the buildings for which the exemption is claimed on a for-profit basis.

There is no question that Salt and Light meets some of the statutory requirements for exemption. The company’s amended certificate of incorporation establishes that it is organized exclusively for charitable purposes. It is equally clear that Salt and Light owns the properties in question, and is authorized to carry out the purposes for which exemption is claimed. The questions to be decided are whether Salt and Light’s buildings are used for a charitable purpose and whether the company and the buildings are operated on a nonprofit basis.

Salt and Light was incorporated under the nonprofit corporation law in 1986. The notes to the company’s financial statements and the opening paragraph of the company’s agreement with residents describe the company as a nonprofit organization that provides emergency housing and a “supportive self-help program for homeless people” including single women and men and families with dependant children. The self-help program includes “assistance in seeking job training, employment, education, transportation, child care, medical services and permanent affordable housing.” Salt and Light does not actually provide job training, education, child care, etc. Rather, its staff provides advice and assistance to the residents in obtaining these benefits.

During 1994 Salt and Light operated approximately twenty-four residences for the homeless. The residences were purchased with United States Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) monies or Federal Home Loan grant monies and renovated through a combination of government grants and funds generated by Salt and Light (presumably foundation grants and charita[281]*281ble contributions). Of the seven properties in Mount Holly at issue in these appeals, four provide housing to single adult males, one provides housing to women with or without children, and two provide housing to families.

Approximately two-thirds of the 127 residents in Salt and Light’s program receive public assistance. One type of public assistance is temporary shelter aid for the homeless. Under this program Salt and Light receives $36 per day per single adult, $33 per day for an adult with children, $16 per day for a school age child, and $11 per day for a preschool child. The fees are set by the county and distributed by the municipal welfare director. The remaining one-third of the residents are not eligible for public assistance. To the extent they are able, these residents pay up to 30% of their income to Salt and Light as rent. The rental payments are below market.

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Bluebook (online)
15 N.J. Tax 274, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/salt-light-co-v-mount-holly-township-njtaxct-1995.