Case ID: f-appx_38/html/0835-01.html
Source: Caselaw Access Project
Author: {"author": "PER CURIAM:", "license": "Public Domain", "url": "https://static.case.law/"}
Date Created: 2024-08-24T03:29:51.129683

NEDMAC ASSOCIATES, INC., Appellant, v. CITY OF CAMDEN.
    No. 01-4534.
    United States Court of Appeals, Third Circuit.
    Submitted July 15, 2002.
    Decided July 19, 2002.
    
      Before: SCIRICA, ALITO, and FUENTES, Circuit Judges.
   OPINION OF THE COURT

PER CURIAM:

This case arises from a Chapter 11 petition for bankruptcy relief filed by Nedmac Associates, Inc. (“Nedmac”). Nedmac operates the Parkade Building in the City of Camden (“City”), pursuant to a fifty-year ground lease with the City that was executed on September 27, 1954 (“Lease”). To recover money that was allegedly overpaid in real estate taxes, Nedmac filed an adversary complaint against the City. The Bankruptcy Court dismissed Nedmac’s adversary complaint, and the District Court affirmed. Nedmac appeals from this ruling. As the parties are well aware of the history of these proceedings and the facts involved, we need not repeat them here.

On appeal, Nedmac alleges that the District Court erred in: (1) the ruling that the City did not breach Article 4 of the Lease; (2) the ruling that Nedmac was entitled to no remedy notwithstanding the City’s breach of Article 10 of the Lease; (3) the refusal to set aside the 1995 Tax Sale Certificate issued and purchased by the City; and (4) the refusal to set aside the Notice of Unsafe Structure issued by the City.

Our review of the District Court’s determination is plenary. In re O’Brien Environmental Energy, Inc., 188 F.3d 116, 122 (3d Cir.1999). “In reviewing the decision of the Bankruptcy Court, we exercise the same standard of review as the District Court, that is, we review the Bankruptcy Court’s legal determinations de novo, its factual findings for clear error, and its exercise of discretion for abuse thereof.” Id.

First, Nedmac alleges a breach of Article 4 of the Lease, which sets forth Nedmac’s obligations to pay property taxes. The Bankruptcy Court concluded that the City did not breach Article 4 of the Lease because Article 4 imposes no positive obligations on the City to appeal property assessments on Nedmac’s behalf. Bankr.Ct. Memop. at 18, in App. at 59a. Article 4 of the Lease provides:

LESSEE TO PAY TAXES, ETC. Lessee agrees that as additional rent it will pay and discharge all taxes, charges and assessments, water and sewer rents assessed, charged, imposed or levied, whether by the nation, state, city or any other public authority, upon so much of the demised premises or the buildings or improvements that may be constructed thereon and devoted to a use other than for the parking of automobiles, on or before the date or dates that the same become due and payable, and within ten (10) days thereafter produce and deliver to Lessor for inspection proper and sufficient receipts therefor, and to pay all water and sewer rents for services furnished for any part or portion of said building notwithstanding its use.

Lease, in App. IV at 443a. Thus, Nedmac is required to pay real estate taxes on the portion of the building devoted to non-parking uses.

It is clear that Article 4 does not impose any obligations on the City, but “merely sets forth the responsibilities of the tenant to pay all property taxes.” Dist. Ct. Mem-op. 10, in App. at 25a (“Nedmac appears to argue that Article 4 requires the City, as Nedmac’s landlord and as the record owner of the Parking Lot, to correct an excessive tax assessment based on an allegedly improper apportionment of space contained in the 1992 Librizzi appraisal. The plain language of Article 4 cannot support such a strained reading of the 1954 Lease.”). Nedmac argues that the Bankruptcy Court’s analysis was flawed because it treated the issue as a dispute between a real estate taxpayer and a taxing municipality instead of as an issue between a tenant and landlord. However, Nedmac provides no legal reasoning supporting this argument. Without citing any basis in law, Nedmac asserts that Article 4 of the Lease somehow obligated the City as a landlord to ensure that the methodology used by the tax assessor was proper. As the District Court observed, the proper procedure for pursuing this claim was to file an appeal with the Tax Board". Dist. Ct. Memop. at 10-11, in App. at 25a-26a. Instead of appealing the tax assessments to the Tax Board, Nedmac simply stopped paying its property taxes, and now attempts to raise this issue by alleging a breach of Article 4 of the Lease. This argument has no merit, and we agree with the Bankruptcy Court’s and District Court’s holdings on this issue.

Additionally, regarding Nedmac’s third argument that the Bankruptcy Court should have set aside the 1995 Tax Sale Certificate, Nedmac concedes that “if this Court upholds the District Court’s affir-mance of the Bankruptcy Court’s determination under Point I above, no grounds will exist for setting aside the 1995 Tax Sale Certificate.” Br. of Appellant at 31. Having determined that the District Court properly agreed with the Bankruptcy Court on this point, we also agree that there is no basis to set aside the 1995 Tax Sale Certificate. In any case, Nedmac was time-barred from challenging the validity of the Certificate. See Dist. Ct. Memop. at 13, in App. at 28a.

Second, Nedmac claims that the City breached Article 10 of the Lease and therefore that it is entitled to damages from the City equivalent to the excess real estate taxes it paid. That is, Nedmac claims that it is entitled to the amount of damages that it would have received had the hearing before the Tax Board occurred. Article 10 of the Lease provides:

LESSEE MAY CONTEST THE VALIDITY OF TAX LIENS. It is agreed that the Lessee, upon giving written notice thereof to the Lessor, shall not be required to pay, discharge or remove any tax, assessment, tax title, or any judgment or lien against the demised premises ... so long as the Lessee shall in good faith and with diligence, at his own expense, contest the same or the validity thereof by appropriate legal proceedings, and that pending any such legal proceedings, the Lessor shall not have the right to pay, remove or discharge the taxes, assessments, tax lien, tax title, mechanics’ lien or judgment thereby contested unless necessary to protect the title to said premises, and that such delay of the Lessee in paying the same until final determination of such disputed matter shall not be deemed a default in the conditions of this lease: Provided that, on demand of the Lessor, the Lessee shall furnish indemnity satisfactory to the Lessor against any loss or damage on account thereof.

Lease, in App. IV at 447a-448a. Thus, Article 10 allows Nedmac not to pay assessed taxes pending an appeal of a real estate tax assessment.

Nedmac filed its tax appeal with the Tax Board on March 28, 1998. At the hearing in June 1998, the appeal was dismissed pursuant to N.J.S.A. 54:3-27 because Ned-mac had not paid its real estate taxes for 1994, 1995, and 1996. The Bankruptcy Court agreed that the City had breached Article 10 of the Lease by raising Ned-mac’s non-payment of taxes before the Tax Board, which prompted the Tax Board to dismiss Nedmac’s 1996 tax appeal. The Bankruptcy Court concluded, however, that Nedmac was not entitled to recover damages because it could have entirely mitigated any damages by appealing the dismissal to the New Jersey Tax Court. Bankr.Ct. Memop. at 25-26, in App. at 66a-67a. To go forward with an appeal to the Tax Board, an appealing taxpayer must present evidence that is “definite, positive and certain in quality and quantity to overcome the presumption” given to an initial tax assessment. Pantasote Co. v. City of Passaic, 100 N.J. 408, 412-13, 495 A.2d 1308 (1985) (citation omitted). Inadequacies in the assessment methodology are insufficient to defeat this presumption of validity. Id. at 415, 495 A.2d 1308. Therefore, the District Court determined that “the Bankruptcy Court was justified in concluding from the absence of evidence in the record that Nedmac did not raise the issue of the City’s breach of Article 10 at the hearing, did not possess its own appraisal at the time of the hearing, and did not request an adjournment of the proceedings so that it could procure such an appraisal.” Dist. Ct. Memop. at 18, in App. at 33a.

Because of the deference given to determinations of evidentiary sufficiency and witness credibility by trial courts, we do not disturb the findings of the Bankruptcy Court that Nedmac did not submit an appraisal and did not raise the Article 10 provision at the County Board. Bankr.Ct. Memop. at 32, in App. at 73a (“There is no indication in the record that the debtor ... argued the issue of Article 10 of the lease.... [T]he debtor apparently did not have an appraisal to demonstrate true value at the time of its 1996 tax appeal. The debtor does not even allege that it had any evidence of value at that time.”). The Bankruptcy Court considered the evidence that Nedmac had in 1996 and concluded that Nedmac did not have sufficient appraisal evidence for the 1996 appeal to proceed. That is, Nedmac failed to show that it would have prevailed before the Tax Board in 1996. Therefore, it could not have suffered any damages as a result of the Article 10 breach. Id. at 74a. Thus, the Bankruptcy Court properly found that Nedmac was entitled to no damages as a result of the City’s breach of Article 10 of the Lease.

Finally, Nedmac contends that the Notice of Unsafe Structure issued by the City to Nedmac on January 20, 1998 should be set aside. Because this argument challenges the Bankruptcy Court’s findings of fact, our review is for clear error. The District Court concluded that the Bankruptcy Court’s findings of fact were not clearly erroneous. The inspection on Martin Luther King Day may or may not have occurred, but the record is not clear enough to conclude that the Bankruptcy Court plainly erred. The Morabito report confirmed the unsafe conditions in the building. The City’s failure to act on the Notice does not go to the issue of whether the Notice was originally issued in bad faith. In sum, the facts are not unambiguous about the propriety of the issuance of the Notice of Unsafe Structure, but the lower courts’ conclusions were not plainly in error in determining that the issuance of the Notice did not constitute a breach of the duty of good faith and fair dealing. Therefore, the Bankruptcy Court properly refused to set aside the Notice of Unsafe Structure.

For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the District Court’s order affirming the Bankruptcy Court’s dismissal of Nedmac’s adversary complaint.