Town of Secaucus v. City of Jersey City

20 N.J. Tax 384
CourtNew Jersey Tax Court
DecidedDecember 5, 2002
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 20 N.J. Tax 384 (Town of Secaucus v. City of Jersey City) 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
Town of Secaucus v. City of Jersey City, 20 N.J. Tax 384 (N.J. Super. Ct. 2002).

Opinion

KUSKIN, J.T.C.

Plaintiff, Town of Secaucus, challenges property tax exemptions for tax years 1998 and 1999 granted under the Fox-Lance Law, N.J.S.A. 40:55C-40 to -76, by the City of Jersey City to defendant 101 Hudson Street Associates (properly named 101 Hudson Urban Renewal Associates and hereinafter referred to as “Hudson Urban Renewal”) with respect to a forty story office building and related improvements located at 101 Hudson Street, Jersey City (the “Project”). Plaintiff contends that the Project did not qualify for exemption during the years under appeal for the following reasons:

1. After adoption by Jersey City’s governing body of an ordinance approving the exemption and the signing of a financial agreement by the City and Hudson Urban Renewal, a transfer of the Project occurred without approval by the City;

2. Hudson Urban Renewal is not the entity “enjoying” the tax exemption as required by the New Jersey Constitution and by statute;

3. The financial agreement between Jersey City and Hudson Urban Renewal provides for payment of an annual service charge that does not comply with statutory requirements;

4. The financial agreement requires payment of amounts, in addition to an annual service charge, not permitted by statute; and

5. Jersey City has failed to comply with the statutory requirement for certification that the financial agreement was in effect for the tax years under appeal.

In addition to denying that the tax exemption is in any respect violative of applicable statutes or the New Jersey Constitution, [392]*392defendants contend that plaintiffs appeals are barred under the doctrines of laches and estoppel.

Plaintiff and defendant Hudson Urban Renewal have moved for summary judgment. Jersey City joined in defendant’s motion. The State of New Jersey intervened as a party-defendant to defend the interpretation and constitutionality of the Long Term Tax Exemption Law, N.J.S.A. 40A:20-1 to -20 (the “Long Term Law”), which replaced the Fox-Lance Law in 1992.

Based on the discussion and analysis set forth below, I hold as follows:

A. A transfer of the Project occurred without the approval of Jersey City in violation of the Fox Lance Law and Long Term Law, but the City has the right and authority to ratify the transfer;

B. Under the structure of ownership and operation of the Project, the entity which obtained the tax exemption is sufficiently enjoying the benefits of the exemption so that the Fox-Lance Law, the Long Term Law and the New Jersey Constitution have not been violated. However, for purposes of determining the obligation of Hudson Urban Renewal to make payments of excess profits to Jersey City, revenues generated by the operation and leasing of the Project to third-party tenants must be included in the calculation. Hudson Urban Renewal must redetermine whether it had excess profits for 1998 and 1999, and may avoid invalidation of the Project’s tax exemption by paying any amount due;

C. The annual service charge payable by Hudson Urban Renewal complies with the provisions of the Fox-Lance Law and Long Term Law for the years under appeal;

D. The payments in addition to the annual service charge required by the financial agreement were made before 1998, and, therefore, do not affect the validity of the Project’s tax exemption for 1998 and 1999;

E. Jersey City has failed to comply with the certification requirements of the Fox-Lance Law and Long Term Law, but [393]*393those requirements, as interpreted by this court in Town of Secaucus v. City of Jersey City and TPI Urban Renewal, 19 N.J. Tax 10, 36-39 (Tax 2000), (the “TPI Decision”), do not apply to tax years 1998 and 1999. Town of Secaucus v. City of Jersey City and TPI Urban Renewal, 19 N.J. Tax 538 (Tax 2001) (the “Supplemental TPI Decision”); and

F. Laches and estoppel do not bar plaintiffs appeals.

I.

Pacts

The undisputed (except as otherwise noted) factual background to this matter is as follows. The entity known as 101 Hudson Street Associates (“Hudson Associates”) is the owner of property in Jersey City located at 101 Hudson Street, designated on the City’s Tax Map as Block 38, Lot l.A (the “Subject Land”). Hudson Associates acquired the Subject Land on October 7, 1988 from Colgate-Palmolive Company. On the same date, Hudson Urban Renewal was formed, and, as lessee, entered into a ground lease for the Subject Land with Hudson Associates, as lessor. Also on October 7, 1988, Hudson Urban Renewal, as landlord, and 101 Hudson Leasing Associates (“Hudson Leasing”), as tenant, entered into a master lease for the Project. Hudson Urban Renewal, Hudson Associates, and Hudson Leasing (collectively the “Hudson Entities”) were partnerships and the partners of each were Linpro-Colgate Hudson Street Limited Partnership I (“Lin-pro-Colgate I”) and Linpro-Colgate Hudson Street Limited Partnership II (“Linpro-Colgate II”).

On or shortly after October 7, 1988, Hudson Urban Renewal filed with Jersey City an application for a fifteen-year property tax exemption for the Project pursuant to the Pox-Lance Law, which permitted tax exemptions for projects constructed in blighted areas, but required payment, in lieu of taxes, of an annual service charge, and limited the amount of profit which could be realized from a project. The application described the Project as a forty story office building containing 1,167,000 square feet of commercial space, of which approximately 15,000 square feet would be retail space. In addition, the Project would include an [394]*394indoor parking facility for approximately 1,000 cars. The application identified Hudson Associates as the lessor and Hudson Urban Renewal as the lessee under a ground lease requiring Hudson Associates to make certain site improvements and Hudson Urban Renewal to construct the core and shell of the proposed building. The ground lease rent would be $1,167,000 per year for a term of twenty-five years. The application disclosed that the Project would be subleased to Hudson Leasing, which would finish the lobbies and interior spaces and “be responsible for the leasing, maintenance and operation of the [Pjrojeet.” The major office tenant was to be Merrill Lynch, occupying approximately 324,000 square feet. The application described the rent payable by Hudson Leasing to Hudson Urban Renewal as consisting of (i) base rental of $1,167,000, (ii) an amount sufficient to cover taxes, the annual service charge, and debt service, and (iii) 5% of the total rents collected by Hudson Leasing in excess of $32,016,645.

The application set forth the need for tax abatement on the following basis: “Receiving the property tax relief authorized by Fox-Lance legislation is absolutely essential to this building’s ability to offer competitive rental rates in the New York/New Jersey regional market and insure the successful negotiation of a lease with Merrill Lynch.” The application proposed an annual service charge calculated at 2% of total Project cost, but payable at the rate of 1% per year for each of the first five years of the fifteen year exemption period, 2% per year for the next five years, and 3% per year for the final five years.

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Related

McMahon v. City of Newark
951 A.2d 185 (Supreme Court of New Jersey, 2008)
Town of Secaucus v. City of Jersey City
20 N.J. Tax 562 (New Jersey Tax Court, 2003)

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Bluebook (online)
20 N.J. Tax 384, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/town-of-secaucus-v-city-of-jersey-city-njtaxct-2002.