Deadline to File Real Estate Tax Appeals in New Jersey is Rapidly Approaching

The deadline to file real estate tax appeals in New Jersey to challenge the assessment of real property is April 1 (or 45 days from the bulk mailing of assessment notices, whichever is later). Given widespread declines in market values in recent years, there may be an opportunity for property owners — particularly owners of multifamily, commercial and industrial property — to reduce their assessments, and hence their property taxes, by filing a tax appeal.

A tax appeal may be advantageous not only because of the opportunity to achieve a reduction in the property’s assessment for the present year, determined based on the property’s value as of the preceding October 1, but under the Freeze Act, the new assessment cannot be changed for the next two years. Therefore, the savings arising from a successful tax appeal can be substantial assuming the tax rate remains relatively constant. However, there is also some risk in that if during the appeals process the current assessment is determined to be below the acceptable range, the assessment can be increased.

Note also that if this is the first tax year following implementation of a municipal-wide revaluation or reassessment, the deadline for filing a tax appeal is May 1.

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Gibbons Real Property & Environmental Law Alert Nominated for LexisNexis Top 50 Environmental Law & Climate Change Blogs for 2011

For the first time, the LexisNexis Environmental Law & Climate Change Community is honoring a select group of blogs that they believe set the online standard for the practice area. This Real Property & Environmental Law Alert is among the nominees.

According to LexisNexis, they selected the nominees based on timely topics, quality writing, frequent posts and that certain something 'extra' that keeps a web audience coming back for more. They described our blog as follows:

“A rotating group of contributors writes about transactional real estate, development and redevelopment, and environmental law. Although there is some focus on developments in New Jersey, New York, Philadelphia and Delaware, the content is also national in scope.”

Readers are invited to comment and support their favorite nominees. We urge you to click here and give us your support for this blog and our postings. The deadline for comments is February 28, 2011.

Jennifer Porter to Speak at New York CLE Program on State Environmental Quality Review Act (SEQRA) Litigation Issues

Jennifer M. Porter, Esq., an Associate in the Gibbons Real Property & Environmental Department, will be a speaker at Lorman’s New York CLE Program, SEQRA, on Thursday, March 10, 2011, in Latham, New York.

The all-day program will provide a comprehensive overview of New York’s State Environmental Quality Review Act (SEQRA) including specific discussion on regulatory requirements, the integration of SEQRA with the project review process, cumulative impacts and segmentation and the benefits and uses of a generic environmental impact statement. Ms. Porter will be part of the afternoon panel and will be discussing SEQRA litigation issues including the statute of limitations, standing to sue, defending or attacking negative declarations and procedural and substantive judicial review.

The program is designed for attorneys, engineers, architects, city and county planners, environmental professionals, presidents, vice presidents, water resource specialists, public works directors, surveyors and project managers. For more information and to register for the program, click here.

Howard Geneslaw to Serve as a Panelist at NJICLE's 2011 Land Use Update

Howard Geneslaw, a Director in the Gibbons Real Property & Environmental Department, will be a panelist at the 2011 Land Use Update event on February 16, 2011, sponsored by the New Jersey Institute for Continuing Legal Education. This all day program will provide in-depth coverage and discussions of recent developments in New Jersey land use law.

Focusing on the latest trends and strategies in land use law, topics of discussion include:

  • Case Law “Year in Review” Update
  • Legislative Update
  • Regulatory Update
  • COAH/Affordable Housing Update

The program will run from 9:00 am to 4:00 pm and is being held at Mayfair Farms in West Orange. Click here to register.

NJDEP Site Remediation Implements Steps to Increase Permit Efficiency

One perennial criticism leveled at the Department of Environmental Protection (“NJDEP”) is that it takes too long to issue permits. There have been a long list of initiatives intended to ensure that the NJDEP makes permit decisions which are predictable and timely. Indeed, Commissioner Martin has repeatedly commented on the need to ensure that NJDEP perform efficiently and focus on servicing all stakeholders - including applicants, and included this goal in his 2010 Vision Statement for the department. At long last, NJDEP appears to be taking concrete steps to implement efficiencies in the permit process. On January 27, 2011, NJDEP announced that it would begin to tackle this problem by changing the way it processes the most common land-use permits for contaminated sites and landfill closures.

Effective February 1, 2011, applications for land use permits such as Freshwater Wetlands, Flood Hazard and CAFRA will be processed by a special unit within the Site Remediation Group. The Office of Dredging and Sediment Technology has dealt with many of these issues over the years and will now process all land use permits for remediation projects ranging from site clean-up to landfill closure.

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Court Better Defines "Completion" Under New Jersey's Five-Year Exemption and Abatement Law

Crucial to New Jersey’s Five-Year Exemption and Abatement Law is the time within which an application for the tax exemption or abatement must be filed with the municipal tax assessor. A recent Tax Court of New Jersey decision provides the first published opinion interpreting a crucial provision of the statute used to calculate such period of time. Under N.J.S.A. 40A:21-16, written application for a tax exemption or abatement must be made to the municipal tax assessor within 30 days (including Saturdays and Sundays) following the completion of an improvement, conversion alteration, or construction on the property for which tax abatement or exemption is sought. The statute defines “completion” of a project as the date on which same is “substantially ready for the intended use”.

In Lowe’s Home Centers, Inc. v. City of Millville, decided last November, defendant City of Millville rescinded plaintiff’s tax abatement and exemption more than two years after it had been approved by the municipal tax assessor on the grounds that plaintiff’s application for the abatement and exemption was received by the tax assessor after the statutory deadline. The facts show that plaintiff constructed a retail store, together with infrastructure improvements that included sanitary sewer facilities, water lines and public street improvements, on property located in an area of rehabilitation. The construction was undertaken in accordance with a development agreement with the city and with the expectation that the property would receive a five-year tax exemption and abatement. A few days after the issuance of the certificate of occupancy for plaintiff’s project, the Millville tax assessor sent plaintiff a letter that incorrectly advised plaintiff that it had 30 days from the date of the letter within which to submit a completed application for the tax abatement and exemption. Plaintiff sent its application within the deadline set forth in the assessor’s letter, and also within 30 days from plaintiff’s soft opening for employees and family, which plaintiff stated was the date the building was completed. More than two years later, on the advice of a new tax assessor, Millville rescinded plaintiff’s tax abatement and exemption, claiming its application was late because it was not received within 30 days of the issuance of the certificate of occupancy for the project.

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