Source: http://nj.findacase.com/research/wfrmDocViewer.aspx/xq/fac.19960726_0003.nj.htm/qx
Timestamp: 2017-03-28 21:54:49
Document Index: 214305716

Matched Legal Cases: ['§ 3', 'art. 8', '§ 1', '§ 7', '§ 1', '§ 1', '§ 3']

| General Motors Corp. v. City of Linden
GENERAL MOTORS CORPORATION, PLAINTIFF-APPELLANT,v.CITY OF LINDEN, DEFENDANT-RESPONDENT.
Approved for Publication July 26, 1996.
Before Judges Pressler, Wefing and Kole. The opinion of the court was delivered by Pressler, P.j.a.d..
Plaintiff General Motors Corporation (GM) and intervenor State of New Jersey appeal, on leave granted, from a partial summary judgment entered by the Tax Court declaring that N.J.S.A. 54:4-1(b), as amended by L. 1992, c. 24, § 3, in implementation of the Business Retention Act (BRA), N.J.S.A. 54:4-1.13 to -1.16, is unconstitutional as a violation of the uniformity requirement of art. 8, § 1, par. 1 of the New Jersey Constitution. We disagree and reverse.
The procedural events leading to this appeal began with GM's filing of complaints in the Tax Court contesting the 1983, 1984, and 1985 real property assessments by the City of Linden. The original complaints were tried in 1989, resulting in a reported decision, General Motors Corp. v. Linden, 12 N.J. Tax 24 (Tax Ct. 1991). GM appealed to this court from that judgment, and we reversed sub nom. GMC v. City of Linden, 268 N.J. Super. 230, 13 N.J. Tax 324 (App. Div. 1993). The basis of our reversal and remand for virtually de novo reconsideration of the assessments was the occurrence of two significant developments while the appeal was pending. The first was the Supreme Court's decision in Ford Motor Co. v. Township of Edison, 127 N.J. 290, 604 A.2d 580 (1992), which had rejected the Tax Court's rationale, employed as well in the GM case, that an automobile assembly plant is a special-purpose property requiring assessment on the basis of its use. The other was the Legislature's adoption of the BRA, expressly made applicable to pending appeals by L. 1992, c. 24, § 7, and the implementing amendment of N.J.S.A. 54:4-1(b), which redefined "fixtures" for purposes of local taxability of business property. On remand, all GM's pending tax appeals, from 1983 to 1993, were consolidated. Linden then moved for partial summary judgment declaring the BRA and N.J.S.A. 54:4-1(b) unconstitutional. The State was accorded the opportunity to intervene pursuant to R. 4:28-4 and did so. The summary judgment motion was granted, and we then granted GM's motion, joined in by the State, for leave to appeal.
Some preliminary comment is in order. Analysis of the facial unconstitutionality argument asserted in the Tax Court by defendant City of Linden requires a careful review of the well-documented legislative history of the BRA, which represents the most recent effort by the Legislature to mediate between the economic interests of the industrial and manufacturing community of this State and the budgetary concerns of the municipalities, which must look increasingly to residential real estate as business and commercial ratables are reduced. It is, of course, immediately apparent that the crux of the problem is this State's extraordinary degree of reliance on the local property tax base as the source of financing governmental services. That tax base burdens all owners of real property, homeowners no less than commercial owners, and the relief of one group is necessarily at the expense of the other. Nevertheless, this much is clear. The 1947 New Jersey Constitution mandates taxation of real property "under general laws and by uniform rules." N.J. Const. art. VIII, § 1, P 1(a). See generally Switz v. Kingsley, 37 N.J. 566, 182 A.2d 841 (1962). The Legislature does, however, have "broad discretion in the classification of personal property for exemption or preferential treatment." Id. at 586 (emphasis added). Consequently, the legislative classification of personal property for tax purposes must be upheld "if any set of facts can reasonably be conceived to support it." Ibid. See also Zito v. Kingsley, 92 N.J. Super. 37, 222 A.2d 130 (App. Div. 1966).
The Legislature, at least since the 1966 enactment of the Business Personal Property Tax Act (BPPTA), N.J.S.A. 54:11A-1 to 21, repealed by L. 1993, c. 174, § 1, has acted consistently with its conviction that the State's economic health, at least in terms of the continued viability of its industrial and manufacturing sectors, requires the "creation of a fiscal climate in New Jersey that would be attractive to corporations and industry generally." City of Bayonne v. Port Jersey Corporation, 79 N.J. 367, 378, 399 A.2d 649 (1979). The basic mechanism by which the Legislature has sought to create this climate vis-a-vis the local tax burden has been by narrowly defining "fixtures" to the end that, to the extent practical and reasonable, business personal property to some degree affixed to the real property will maintain its original character as personal property for local taxation purposes. As most recently explained by the Legislature in N.J.S.A. 54:4-1.14:
The Legislature finds and declares that since 1979 New Jersey has lost a major share of its manufacturing jobs and manufacturing plants and this trend has persisted throughout periods of economic recovery and periods of recession. The Legislature also finds that New Jersey's manufacturing sector, notwithstanding the recent losses, continues to be an important source of relatively high-paying employment for a large portion of the work force and an essential foundation for the rest of the economy, serving as a larger multiplier of jobs in the economy than any other sector. The Legislature further finds that in order to retain manufacturing jobs it is in the interest of the business community, municipalities and the State of New Jersey to maintain a policy regarding the taxation of business personal property which is historically consistent, equitable and competitive with neighboring states and which creates and maintains reasonable incentives for manufacturing interests to exist and thrive in New Jersey. The Legislature, therefore, declares that it is the policy of the State, through this act, to refine the definitions of real property and personal property in order to reaffirm the broad exclusion from local property taxes of business personal property used or held for use in business.
It is obviously not within the court's prerogative to address the wisdom of the Legislature's policy or its implementing allocation of the tax burden. Our sole inquiry is whether the Legislature's action offends the State Constitution. We conclude that it does not because the subject of its action is not real property, as to which the constitutional Uniformity Clause applies, but rather personal property, to which only the general equal protection test of reasonableness of classification applies.
A brief historical review suffices to make the reasons for our Conclusion clear. First, as explained by City of Bayonne, (supra) , 79 N.J. at 378-380, the BPPTA sought to contribute to an attractive business climate by removing business personal property from municipal taxation altogether, eliminating disparate rates and other inequities, and subjecting that category of personal property to a system of state taxation. See further Report of the Governor's Committee on Local Property Taxation submitted December 15, 1965 (substantially relied on by Bayonne). The immediate question, of course, was how to define fixtures, since, obviously, the broader the definition, the more expansive would be the scope of business personal property nevertheless subject to municipal taxation as real estate. In order to accommodate the legislative purpose in having adopted the BPPTA, the Court in Bayonne enunciated the restrictive "material injury" test, rejecting the broader formulations applicable in other contexts.
During the ensuing years, the Legislature's delicate balance between business-community interests and the preservation of the municipal tax base was threatened by decisions of the Tax Court construing the material-injury test with extreme restrictiveness and, finally, so narrowly as to characterize large storage tanks as business personal property exempt from municipal taxation. Stem Bros., Inc. v. Alexandria Tp., 6 N.J. Tax 537 (Tax Ct. 1984). The Legislature, after extensive Discussions with business, industry, and municipal representatives, responded by enacting Chapter 117 of the Laws of 1986. See generally Legislative Survey, The Business Retention Act: An Act Concerning the Taxation of Certain Business Property, 18 Seton Hall Legis. J. 873 (1994). And see Statement Accompanying Assembly Amendments to S.1858 (202d N.J. Leg., 1st Sess. 1986); Statement of Assembly Appropriations Committee to A.2251 with Assembly Committee Amendments (202d N.J. Leg., 1st Sess. 1986).
Chapter 117, § 3, codified as N.J.S.A. 54:4-1.12, added to the BPPTA the express provision that storage tanks having a capacity in excess of 30,000 gallons were to be deemed real, not personal, property. The heart of Chapter 117, however, was the addition of a provision to N.J.S.A. 54:4-1 undertaking to define fixtures for purposes of local taxation, a definition declared by the Assembly Appropriations Committee in its Statement to A.2251, (supra) , to be "a version of the 'material injury' test" of Bayonne. Two tests were provided, denominated as (a) and (b). Personal property avoided the fixture, ...