Schnitzer v. Rinderer

17 N.J. Tax 136
CourtNew Jersey Tax Court
DecidedJanuary 14, 1998
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 17 N.J. Tax 136 (Schnitzer v. Rinderer) 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
Schnitzer v. Rinderer, 17 N.J. Tax 136 (N.J. Super. Ct. 1998).

Opinion

RIMM, J.T.C.

This case involves the validity of a tax sale certificate sold by the municipality more than twenty years before an attempt to redeem the property from the tax lien. The matter was instituted in the Superior Court of New Jersey, Chancery Division, General Equity, Ocean County, under docket number F-7452-95, by way of a complaint filed on June 2, 1995 to foreclose the tax sale certificate. Nathan R. Schnitzer was the plaintiff and Rudolph F. Rinderer, Jr. and Sandra Rinderer were the named defendants.

On July 14,1995, plaintiff filed a “First Amended Complaint” in which he named Rudolph F. Rinderer, Jr. and Sandra Rinderer as defendants and added Christine R. Dehnz, Tax Collector of Beach-wood, and the Borough of Beachwood as defendants. In addition to the relief sought in the original complaint, plaintiff sought relief against the two additional defendants for damages and for an order declaring that a certificate of redemption for the subject tax sale certificate was a “nullity and of no force and effect.” All defendants filed answers seeking a dismissal of the first amended complaint.

Thereafter, defendants, Rinderer, filed a motion for summary judgment, with which motion defendants, Dehnz and Beachwood, joined. Plaintiff filed a cross-motion for summary judgment. Following a hearing on the motions on February 15, 1996, the Chancery Division judge entered an order fixing the amount, time, and place for redemption. The order provided that the amount required to redeem the premises from the tax lien' evidenced by the certificate is $14,174.34. Although the certificate of redemption is not referred to in the order, the effect of the order was to [139]*139nullify the certificate of redemption. On the same day, the judge also signed an order directing the payment of monies into court and granting a stay pending appeal. A timely notice of appeal was then filed, and a deposit in the sum of $14,174.34 was made with the Clerk of the Superior Court.

On appeal to the Appellate Division, defendants, Rinderer, contended that N.J.S.A. 54:5-79 required a reversal of the trial court’s judgment setting aside the certificate of redemption. The statute reads as follows:

The title of a purchaser at a sale shall cease and determine and the certificate of sale except as otherwise provided in this section shall be void at the expiration of 20 years from the date of the sale, unless the purchaser, his heirs or assigns shall, before the expiration of that term, foreclose the right to redeem it by notiee or by a civil action in the nature of a proceeding in equity and record the evidence thereof, as provided in this chapter; provided, however, that this act shall not apply to titles acquired by a municipality under certificates of tax sales purchased and held by it at tax sales conducted therein which titles so acquired and certificates of tax sales are hereby expressly exempted from said limitation period of 20 years. The limitation period of SO years of this section shall not apply to a title and the certificate of tax sale acquired by a purchaser, his heirs or assigns when that purchaser, his heirs or assigns establish that all property taxes have been paid by him, his heirs or assigns in each year since the purchase of the certificate.
[Emphasis added.]

The emphasized part of the statute applicable to the case now before me was amended by L.1987, c. 79, § 1, effective March 11, 1987.

By an opinion dated October 15, 1996, under docket number A-3815-95T3, the Appellate Division reversed and remanded the matter for further proceedings consistent with its opinion. The Appellate Division also exercised its original jurisdiction and transferred the matter to the Tax Court. Schnitzer v. Rinderer, 294 N.J.Super. 241, 683 A.2d 207 (App.Div.1996). Defendants, Rinderer, then petitioned the Supreme Court for certification, which petition for certification was denied. Schnitzer v. Rinderer, 147 N.J. 579, 688 A.2d 1054 (1997).

In its opinion, the Appellate Division said:

In our view, however, the critical inquiry in resolving the parties’ dispute requires consideration of the statutory redemption procedures that we think the record, sparse though it may be, plainly shows were employed by both the tax collector and the Rinderers prior to the discharge of the tax certificate. If those [140]*140procedures complied with the redemption statutes, the certificate was properly discharged in 1995 by the tax collector and defendants would be entitled to summary judgment. If not, plaintiff is entitled to proper redemption. Resolution of that issue, however, requires facts that are not sufficiently fleshed out in the present record.
Whether there was sufficient compliance with the redemption procedures was, however, simply not addressed below. We do not fault the trial judge, for the action initially was one by plaintiff to foreclose. A subsequent amendment did raise the tax collector’s discharge, and, thus, the redemption procedures as issues. But none of the parties focused on those issues either below on their respective motions for summary judgment or, in deed, before us____
Those are the critical issues raised by the particular circumstances here.
[Schnitzer v. Rinderer, supra, 294 N.J.Super., at 244, 251, 683 A.2d 207.]

After noting the critical issues, the Appellate Division went on to say that

[t]hey do not require an analysis of N.J.S.A 54:5-79 where a tax certificate holder is precluded from continuing to pay taxes where the owners recommence those payments outside of the context of the statutory redemption procedures. Most assuredly, as of 1994 plaintiffs right to have his tax lien redeemed for the amounts he paid was still effective since the tax payments had continued to that time.
[Schnitzer v. Rinderer, supra, 294 N.J.Super. at 251, 683 A.2d 207.]

Accordingly, the Appellate Division has concluded that,, since the taxes were paid without any break whatsoever in the continuing payment of the taxes, the lien remained valid and enforceable, requiring proper redemption by the property owner. Indeed, the latter issue, that of proper redemption, is the essential issue on which the Appellate Division focused and on which I must focus as the trial judge.

The matter was tried in the Tax Court on June 17, 1997. Plaintiff testified on his behalf and four exhibits were marked by plaintiff. Thereafter, all defendants rested without calling any witnesses. Following a discussion with counsel, I then called plaintiff back to the stand as the court’s witness. I also called defendant tax collector, Christine R. Dehnz, as the court’s witness. In addition, although no witnesses were called by defendants, Rinderer, they had twenty-six exhibits marked in evidence by agreement among counsel.

Custer Construction Company purchased tax certificate number 38-69 covering block L-37, lots 31 through 34, in the Borough of [141]*141Beachwood.

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Related

Schnitzer v. Rinderer
723 A.2d 1000 (New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 1999)

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Bluebook (online)
17 N.J. Tax 136, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schnitzer-v-rinderer-njtaxct-1998.