Street Partners, LLC v. Town of Guttenberg

CourtNew Jersey Tax Court
DecidedMarch 14, 2019
Docket013622-2017, 013624-2017
StatusUnpublished

This text of Street Partners, LLC v. Town of Guttenberg (Street Partners, LLC v. Town of Guttenberg) 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
Street Partners, LLC v. Town of Guttenberg, (N.J. Super. Ct. 2019).

Opinion

TAX COURT OF NEW JERSEY

JOSEPH M. ANDRESINI, P.J.T.C. 125 State Street, Suite 100 PRESIDING JUDGE Hackensack, NJ 07601 Tel: (609)815-2922 ex. 54570 Fax: (201)996-8052

NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT APPROVAL OF THE TAX COURT COMMITTEE ON OPINIONS

March 12, 2019

Michael I. Schneck, Esq. Schneck Law Group LLC 301 South Livingston Ave, Suite 105 Livingston, New Jersey 07039

Michael Wilkos, Esq. Florio Kenny Raval LLP 5 Marine View Plaza, Suite 103, P.O. Box 771 Hoboken, New Jersey 07030

Re: Polk Street Partners, LLC v. Town of Guttenberg Docket No. 013622-2017 and 013624-2017

Dear Counsel:

This letter constitutes the Court’s findings of fact and conclusions of law regarding Polk

Street Partners, LLC’s motions for summary judgment seeking to invalidate the Town of

Guttenberg’s omitted added assessment for tax year 2016 and omitted assessment for tax year

2017. For the reasons stated more fully below, Polk Street Partners, LLC’s motions are denied. I. FINDINGS OF FACT AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

The Court makes the following findings of fact based on the parties’ written submissions

as well as oral argument heard on October 26, 2018. R. 1.7-4. The material facts of this case are

not in dispute.

Plaintiff Polk Street Partners, LLC (“Polk Street Partners”) is the owner of real property

in the Town of Guttenberg (“Town”). The property, an apartment building, is designated by the

municipality as Block 7, Lot 27.01 and is commonly known as 6813-17 Polk Street (“subject

property”).

Polk Street Partners purchased the subject property from a third-party seller on March 17,

2016. Prior to this transfer of ownership, the third-party seller undertook and completed

improvements on the subject property. Namely, an apartment building was erected on the once

vacant land. Construction was completed on January 15, 2016 and the Certificate of Occupancy

for the completed work was issued by the Building Department of the Town on the same date.

The Town tax assessor’s original real property tax assessment on the subject property for

tax year 2017 was $225,000 for land and zero ($0) for improvements. According to the

certification of the Town’s assessor, the Town uses a particular software that is connected to the

Hudson County Tax Board to handle its assessments of parcels. Within that software, whenever

a lot is created, it also creates separate entries for land and improvements. The default value for

those entries is zero. An assessment will continue from prior years unless it is manually changed

by the assessor. The Town’s assessor certifies that the subject property was first assessed as

vacant land before he became the assessor for the Town. Because he did not change the

assessment within the software, the original 2017 assessment was “based on vacant land” and

was “not a result of an intentional decision to assess the improvements of the property at zero.”

2 On October 1, 2017, after “learning that there were substantial improvements to the

property”, 1 the Town’s tax assessor levied against the subject property: (1) an “omitted/added”

assessment for tax year 2016 in the amount of $3,375,000 prorated for nine months; and (2) an

“omitted/added” assessment for tax year 2017 in the amount of $3,375,000 prorated for twelve

months. 2 On November 22, 2017, Polk Street Partners filed direct appeals to this Court

challenging both assessments.

On April 30, 2018, plaintiff filed a motion for summary judgment seeking an order from

this Court voiding the assessment levied on the subject property for tax year 2017. Plaintiff

argues that because the completion of the construction on the subject property occurred in

January 2016, before October 1, 2016, an “added” assessment intended to “remedy” the

assessor’s “mistake” of failing to consider the full value of the subject property for tax year 2017

could only be levied by the assessor on October 1, 2016 either by changing the 2017 assessment

to reflect the completion of the construction on the property prior to January 10, 2017 or through

filing an appeal challenging the 2017 assessment by April 1, 2017. As the Town’s assessor

attempted neither, the assessor’s levying of the 2017 added assessment in October 2017 should

be voided as untimely and unauthorized.

The Town submitted a letter reply brief on October 16, 2018 rejecting plaintiff’s

characterization of the assessment in question as an “added”, instead arguing that Guttenberg

imposed a valid “omitted” assessment for tax year 2017. Defendant asserts that the “omitted”

assessment was proper because the Town’s assessor “inadvertently omitted or overlooked

1 The Town’s assessor states that he does not remember receiving a copy of the Certificate of Occupancy after it was issued. The assessor suspects that the Building Department may have “forgotten” the process to transmit the Certificate of Occupancy to him due to the rarity of new construction in the Town. 2 The Town’s assessor uses the phrase “omitted/added” in his certifications to describe both the 2016 and 2017 assessments. The Town’s counsel argues that the 2016 assessment is valid as an “omitted added” assessment and the 2017 assessment is valid as an “omitted” assessment.

3 improvements to vacant land and, as such, never considered the value of the improvements until

the omitted assessment was levied.”

The Court first heard oral argument on October 26, 2018 and afterwards directed that

supplemental briefs be filed concerning statutory notice requirements for omitted assessments.

Furthermore, the Court requested that Polk Street Partners timely submit its impending summary

judgment motion on the assessment for tax year 2016. On December 3, 2018, plaintiff did so,

arguing that the Town is attempting to “[convert]” an “improper added assessment into an

omitted assessment to save it from invalidity” without any statutory authority to do so. 3 Plaintiff

further contends that the assessments levied for tax years 2016 and 2017 on the subject property

must be cancelled due to the failure of the assessor to send notice of the assessments by certified

mail.

The Town submitted a letter reply brief on February 5, 2019. First, the Town contends

that because that assessor did not consider the value of the improvements or have notice of same

until the summer of 2017, the 2016 assessment is valid as an “omitted added assessment” in

accordance with both statute and case law. Second, the Town reiterates its previously argued

position that the “2017 omitted assessment was proper because the Tax Assessor inadvertently

omitted or overlooked improvements and, as such, never considered the value of the

improvements until the omitted assessment was levied.” 4 Third, addressing plaintiff’s position

that the lack of certified mailing renders the “omitted/added” assessment defunct, the town

argues that the lack thereof does not invalidate an omitted assessment where plaintiff did obtain

notice of the assessments, was able to file a timely appeal, and suffered no harm.

3 Plaintiff maintains that there is “no basis for extending the treatment of incomplete improvements to a situation where the tax assessor simply failed to follow the statutory procedures for assessing newly-constructed improvements.” 4 The town asserts that in arguing that omitted assessments can only apply to partial assessments on improvements, plaintiff “seeks to impose requirements that do not exist under the omitted assessment law.”

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Street Partners, LLC v. Town of Guttenberg, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/street-partners-llc-v-town-of-guttenberg-njtaxct-2019.