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NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE APPROVAL
OF THE TAX COURT COMMITTEE ON OPINIONS
TAX COURT OF NEW JERSEY
DOCKET NO. 003045-95
ROLLING HILLS OF HUNTERDON :
LP, :
:
Plaintiff, :
:
v. :
:
CLINTON TOWNSHIP, :
:
Defendant. :
:
Decided: September 29, 1995
Michael A. Vespasiano for plaintiff.
Pamela Lee Matarrese for defendant
(Vaida & Manfreda, attorneys).
HAMILL, J.T.C.
This is a motion to dismiss the complaint for failure to
respond to a request for income information pursuant to N.J.S.A.
54:4-34, L. 1979, c. 91, known as "chapter 91."
The assessment at issue involves a nursing home. The
assessment for the 1995 tax year was $1,938,000. It is undisputed
that the Clinton Township assessor sent a timely request for income
and expense data to plaintiff and that plaintiff did not respond.
Plaintiff claims that it was not obliged to respond because chapter
91 applies only to income-producing property and the nursing home
is not income-producing property.
The home is a skilled care nursing facility providing 24
hour nursing care. The home has 28 rooms for patients, a kitchen,
dining room, recreation rooms for patients, and administrative
offices. Included in the 28 rooms are 68 beds, 66 of which are
filled currently. On entering the home a patient signs an
agreement for a room and nursing care. Although not in the
agreement, the home has a policy of not moving a patient from a
particular room unless it is medically necessary to do so.
There are four registered nurses, six licensed practical
nurses, and a total of 45 nurse's aides, 10 to 13 of whom are on
duty at a time. The nurses see to the patients' medical needs,
while the aides are responsible for their personal care and
hygiene. Medical doctors are on call 24 hours a day.
Patient fees cover nursing care, medications, a bed,
meals, and administrative costs of the home. Patient population
consists of approximately 49" Medicaid patients, 5" Medicare, and
the balance private pay. The percentage of Medicaid patients has
remained relatively stable. The percentage of private pay patients
has dropped slightly as the percentage of Medicare patients has
increased.
The Medicaid reimbursement rate is set annually. The
lowest private pay rate is approximately $20 more then the Medicaid
reimbursement rate. The private pay rate varies depending upon
whether a patient has a single or double room.
N.J.S.A. 54:4-34 provides in relevant part:
Every owner of real property of the
taxing district shall, on written
request of the assessor, made by
certified mail, render a full and
true account of his name and real
property and the income therefrom,
in the case of income-producing
property ... No appeal shall be
heard from the assessor's valuation
and assessment with respect to
income-producing property where the
owner has failed or refused to
respond to such written request for
information within 45 days of such
request.
[emphasis added.]
In Monsanto Co. v. Kearny,
8 N.J. Tax 109, 111 (Tax
1986), this court held that an owner-occupied manufacturing plant
was not income-producing property for purposes of chapter 91.
Confirming Judge Crabtree's analysis in Monsanto, the Appellate
Division in Great Adventure, Inc. v. Jackson Tp.,
10 N.J. Tax 230
(App. Div. 1988), held that, in the context of chapter 91, the
"term income-producing property is generally limited to property
producing rental income." Id. at 232. The court went on to hold
that admission fees paid by patrons of an amusement park were not
rental income because "[t]he fee is not paid by the patron for the
use of the property in any tenancy sense but rather for the
entertainment package offered." Id. at 233-34.
Plaintiff maintains that the nursing home is operated by
the partnership that owns the property and is thus owner-occupied.
Additionally, according to plaintiff, patient fees are paid for
services, not for a tenancy in real estate. Lastly, citing Twin
Oaks Assoc. v. Morristown,
9 N.J. Tax 386 (Tax 1987), aff'd o.b.
per curiam,
11 N.J. Tax 94 (App. Div.), certif. denied,
117 N.J. 155 (1989), plaintiff maintains that nursing homes are generally
valued by the cost approach.
Defendant responds that the home is not owner-occupied.
According to defendant, the home serves as a patient's residence.
Thus, in defendant's view, patient fees pay for tenancies in real
estate and are tantamount to rent. Additionally, defendant points
out that there is a private residence on the same tax lot that was
leased during 1994. The residence was occupied through the first
half of 1994, and apparently was vacant thereafter. The chapter 91
request was sent in early July 1994 and requested income and
expense data for the 1993 calendar year.
I agree with defendant that the subject nursing home is
income-producing property. Patients pay not only for nursing care
but also for lodging. Although some patient stays are brief, the
average stay is 13 months. For this period of time the home
constitutes a patient's residence. The fact that the private pay
fee varies depending upon whether a patient has a single or double
room further suggests a payment, at least in part, for the use of
real estate.
Undoubtedly, a large portion of patient fees is paid for
services in the form of nursing and personal care, as opposed to
lodging. Much the same can be said, however, for payments by hotel
patrons, and it is well accepted that hotels are income-producing
properties to be valued by the income approach. See, e.g., Glen-
Pointe Assocs. v. Teaneck Tp.,
10 N.J. Tax 380, 389-90 (Tax 1989),
aff'd,
12 N.J. Tax 118 (App. Div. 1990). See also Westmount Plaza
v. Parsippany-Troy Hills Tp.,
11 N.J. Tax 127 (Tax 1990). As a
portion of a nursing home patient's fee is paid for lodging, the
payment is at least partially attributable to a tenancy in real
estate. Cf., Great Adventure, Inc. v. Jackson Tp., supra, 10 N.J.
Tax at 233-34.
The fact that the home may be operated by its owners does
not make it owner-occupied in the sense that a manufacturing
facility owned and operated by the same entity is owner-occupied.
Cf., Monsanto Co. v. Kearny, supra. As in the case of an owner-operated hotel, a nursing home receives payments that are partially
for the use of real estate. A manufacturer that owns and operates
its own manufacturing plant receives payments for manufactured
goods rather than payments for the use of real estate. The only
user of the real estate is the manufacturer.
The income approach may ultimately not be chosen to value
a particular nursing home, but this does not mean that nursing
homes are not income-producing properties. Thus, in Twin Oaks
Assoc. v. Morristown, supra,
9 N.J. Tax 386, the court recognized
that nursing home "[i]ncome is produced by a combination of the
real estate, the personal property, which includes furniture,
fixtures and equipment, and the services rendered by the staff
including food, 24-hour nursing services and activities for the
patients [and that] ... [t]he ability of the nursing home property
to produce income is the source of the value of the real estate
...." Id. at 394. Nevertheless, the court declined to use the
income approach because the income stream included a changing mix
of private pay and Medicaid patients, and there was no record
evidence of economic rent "unencumbered by governmental rate
restrictions." Id. at 395. As neither party produced evidence of
comparable sales of nursing homes, the court ultimately concluded
that only the cost approach could be used in valuing that
particular home. Id. at 395-96. Whether the relative stability of
the private pay/Medicaid patient mix of the subject property would
permit the income approach to be used in valuing the subject
nursing home need not be decided at this stage. The point is that,
as in Twin Oaks, the subject home's income is produced in part by
the real estate.
In summary, payments by nursing home patients are at
least in part attributable to the use of real estate and to that
extent are tantamount to rent. Thus, nursing homes are income-producing properties within the meaning of N.J.S.A. 54:4-34.
Plaintiff was therefore obliged to respond to the assessor's
chapter 91 request, and its failure to do so bars its appeal except
for a challenge to the reasonableness of the data and methodology
used by the assessor. See Ocean Pines Ltd. v. Point Pleasant Bor.,
112 N.J. 1, 11-12 (1988).
Defendant's motion is granted. Plaintiff's challenge to
the assessment will be limited to a reasonableness hearing as
specified in Ocean Pines, supra.See footnote 1
Footnote: 1As I have concluded that the nursing home is income-producing property, I need not address defendant's other argument
that the tax lot included a residence that was leased during the
1994 tax year.
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