BLOG: Property Tax Appeal

Failed Redevelopment Site Succeeds in Tax Appeal

by: Anthony F. Della Pelle
29 Jul 2015
Property tax issues arise commonly when a property designated for redevelopment fails to become a reality as originally proposed.  In Seaboard Landing, LLC (“Seaboard”) v. Borough of Penns Grove (“Borough”), the Borough envisioned a redevelopment plan to revive a struggling commercial area along the waterfront on the Delaware River.  In 2003, the Borough issued final site plan... Read More

South Plainfield’s Income and Expense Requests Ruled Defective

by: Anthony F. Della Pelle
16 Jul 2015
As discussed many times on this blog, Chapter 91 motions are frequently wielded by municipalities in hopes of dismissing tax appeals on income-producing properties.  However, given the extraordinary relief of dismissing a tax appeal, courts have consistently ruled that municipalities must fully comply with all the requirements of N.J.S.A. 54:4-34 (“Chapter 91”) in order to warrant... Read More

Credit agency watching hospital tax exemption case

by: Anthony F. Della Pelle
10 Jul 2015
When we last wrote about the recent decision by the New Jersey Tax Court that stripped Morristown Memorial Hospital of its property tax exemption we said that municipalities and other hospitals across the State would watch closely for the next move in this ongoing battle.  Most observers believe that the hospital will most certainly appeal,... Read More

Property tax exemption stripped from Morristown Memorial Hospital

by: Anthony F. Della Pelle
1 Jul 2015
Finding that Morristown Memorial Hospital (the “Hospital”) is a for-profit enterprise, the New Jersey Tax Court upheld the denial of a local property tax exemption on all but a few areas of the Hospital’s facilities located in the Town of Morristown. The Town denied the exemption for tax years 2006 through 2008, previously granted pursuant... Read More

The Dos & Don’ts of Chapter 91 Requests

by: Anthony F. Della Pelle
30 Jun 2015
Every year motion practice heats up in the Tax Court with municipalities armed with “Chapter 91” motions.  As previously mentioned many times on this blog, N.J.S.A. 54:4-34, also known as “Chapter 91,” requires income-producing property owners to respond to the assessor’s request for income and expense information.  Under the statute, failure to provide the information... Read More

Sewer Issues Make Tax Appeal a Messy Affair!

by: Anthony F. Della Pelle
16 Jun 2015
The New Jersey Tax Court recently tried a dispute between a property owner and a town that began in 2006.  In William G. Orpin, Jr. v. Tp. Of Monroe, plaintiff argued that the Township’s deed restriction requiring the subject property to have a functioning sewer connection, coupled with the Township’s refusal to provide the correct cost estimate of a sewer connection... Read More

“Oh Sandy” – No relief from Superstorm’s destruction on residential assessment

by: Anthony F. Della Pelle
11 May 2015
Two and one-half years after Superstorm Sandy, many New Jerseyans are still wrestling with the destruction wrought by that storm.  Thousands of New Jersey property owners received some relief from reduced property tax assessments to reflect the damage to their properties, although some local assessors were more realistic in assessing the damage to property values. ... Read More

Stick to the facts (but first, know them!)

by: Anthony F. Della Pelle
16 Mar 2015
In Gravers v. Scotch Plains Township, a residential tax appeal, we are reminded of the importance of hiring appraisers with experience in tax appeals and to ensure that they are familiar with the facts relevant to the subject property and the comparable property sales. Here – on appeal from a judgment of the County Board... Read More

One Step Forward, Two Steps Back for West Orange Taxpayer

by: Anthony F. Della Pelle
4 Mar 2015
Last week, the Tax Court of New Jersey dismissed a multi-year tax appeal filed by a commercial property owner in the Township of West Orange that challenged the assessment on a retail property in that municipality, which assessment had been set by a town-wide revaluation in 2011.  The plaintiff WKJ Realty Co., Inc. relied upon... Read More

Contaminated property is worthless (almost)

by: Anthony F. Della Pelle
2 Feb 2015
In an opinion that has been approved for publication, the New Jersey Tax Court has ruled that for purposes of real property taxation, a heavily contaminated property warranted only a nominal assessment. In Methode Electronics, Inc. v. Township of Willingboro, the subject property is a small parcel improved with a 6,800 square foot concrete slab... Read More