ALCATEL-LUCENT USA INC. VS. TOWNSHIP OF BERKELEY HEIGHTS (TAX COURT OF NEW JERSEY) ( 2019 )


Menu:
  •                NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE
    APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION
    SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
    APPELLATE DIVISION
    DOCKET NO. A-0743-16T1
    ALCATEL-LUCENT USA INC.,
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    APPROVED FOR PUBLICATION
    v.                                               July 18, 2019
    APPELLATE DIVISION
    TOWNSHIP OF BERKELEY
    HEIGHTS,
    Defendant-Respondent.
    _____________________________
    Submitted March 6, 2019 – Decided July 18, 2019
    Before Judges Fuentes, Vernoia and Moynihan.
    On appeal from the Tax Court of New Jersey, Docket
    No. 6661-2015.
    Riker Danzig Scherer Hyland & Perretti LLP,
    attorneys for appellant (Stuart M. Lederman, of
    counsel and on the brief; Rudy Randazzo, on the
    brief).
    DiFrancesco, Bateman, Kunzman, Davis, Lehrer &
    Flaum, PC, attorneys for respondent (Sandra Belli, on
    the brief).
    The opinion of the court was delivered by
    MOYNIHAN, J.A.D.
    Plaintiff Alcatel-Lucent USA Inc. (Alcatel),1 is the owner of real
    property in the Township of Berkeley Heights on which is located its North
    American headquarters. The Tax Court found there are approximately 1.5
    million square feet of improvements on the 153.4 acre Berkeley Heights
    property – of which Alcatel contends 53 acres are woodlands – designated on
    the Township's tax map as block 3701, lot 1. 2       Alcatel appeals from that
    portion of the Tax Court's order, later confirmed as a final judgment,
    dismissing its complaint that challenged the Township's 2015 denial of a
    farmland assessment for the woodlands portion of the property because Alcatel
    failed to respond to a request sent by the Township's tax assessor pursuant to
    1
    The property was conveyed by Lucent Technologies, Inc. (Lucent) to LTI NJ
    Finance LLC (LTI), which simultaneously entered into a twenty-year
    agreement with Lucent, the sole member of LTI, pursuant to which Lucent was
    considered the "beneficial owner." Lucent merged with Alcatel, a French
    company, in 2006, to form Alcatel-Lucent USA Inc. The agreement between
    LTI and Lucent was terminated in 2013 and LTI was merged into Alcatel. We
    are informed by Alcatel's merits brief that it is now known as "Nokia."
    2
    Alcatel contends in its merits brief there are approximately 1.2 million
    square feet of improvements on 151 acres. A 2010 Forest Management Plan
    prepared for LTI indicates the total property – including that extending into the
    neighboring Borough of New Providence – "encompasses 195.63 acres, of
    which 57.27 acres are woodland. The balance of the property consists of
    138.36 acres associated with the [Alcatel] corporate campus."                The
    discrepancy between those measurements and those found by the Tax Court
    judge have no bearing on our decision.
    A-0743-16T1
    2
    N.J.S.A. 54:4-34. Following our de novo review, we affirm substantially for
    the reasons set forth in Judge Joshua D. Novin's cogent written opinion.
    N.J.S.A. 54:4-343 requires, in part, every real property owner, "on
    written request of the assessor . . . [to] render a full and true account of his
    name and real property and the income therefrom, in the case of income -
    producing property." The Township's tax assessor forwarded by certified mail,
    return receipt requested, a Chapter 91 request for income and expense data to:
    Block: 3701      Lot: 1       4A
    Property Location:
    600 MOUNTAIN AVENUE
    BERKELEY HEIGHTS, NJ
    ALCATEL-LUCENT USA/ATN.CORP.COUNSEL
    600 MOUNTAIN AVE-REAL EST
    MURRAY HILL, NJ         07974
    It is undisputed that Alcatel received and did not respond to the Chapter 91
    request. Fifty-four days after the Township sent the Chapter 91 request, LTI
    submitted an application for farmland assessment, a woodland data form and a
    Forest Management Plan to the assessor seeking an assessment for the 2015
    tax year pursuant to the Farmland Assessment Act of 1964 (the Act), N.J.S.A.
    54:4-23.1 to -23.23, for the woodland portion of the property. The assessor
    denied the application asserting the "[a]gricultural use is not [dominant] use."
    3
    The statute is commonly referred to as "Chapter 91" because the Legislature
    last amended it with L.1979, c. 91, § 1. Cascade Corp. v. Twp. of Middle, 
    323 N.J. Super. 184
    , 185, n.* (App. Div. 1999).
    A-0743-16T1
    3
    Judge Novin dismissed Alcatel's complaint challenging the denial
    pursuant to that portion of Chapter 91 that provides that if the property owner
    fails or refuses
    to respond to the written request of the assessor within
    45 days of such request . . . the assessor shall value his
    property at such amount as he may, from any
    information in his possession or available to him,
    reasonably determine to be the full and fair value
    thereof. 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.
    [N.J.S.A. 54:4-34.]
    Alcatel contends the Tax Court erred in: extending the application of the
    Chapter 91 preclusion penalty to its farmland assessment appeal; applying the
    Chapter 91 preclusion penalty to the woodland property because it is not
    income producing; and formulating a new rule that misinterprets our prior
    holding and undermines the legislative purpose of Chapter 91 and the Act. It
    also argues that technical deficiencies in the Township's Chapter 91 request
    bar preclusion of its claim. 4
    4
    Alcatel does not contest the dismissal – also based on its failure to respond
    to the Chapter 91 request – of its complaint challenging the 2015 tax
    assessment of the entire property. See H.J. Bailey Co. v. Neptune Twp., 
    399 N.J. Super. 381
    , 382-83, 386 (App. Div. 2008) (holding, although owners of
    both income-producing and non-income-producing properties must respond to
    A-0743-16T1
    4
    Although our review of a Tax Court decision is deferential, Estate of
    Taylor v. Dir., Div. of Taxation, 
    422 N.J. Super. 336
    , 341 (App. Div. 2011),
    because "judges presiding in the Tax Court have special expertise," Glenpointe
    Assocs. v. Twp. of Teaneck, 
    241 N.J. Super. 37
    , 46 (App. Div. 1990), we
    review a Tax Court's legal determinations de novo, United Parcel Serv. Gen.
    Servs. Co. v. Dir., Div. of Taxation, 
    430 N.J. Super. 1
    , 8 (App. Div. 2013),
    aff'd, 
    220 N.J. 90
    (2014). "Statutory interpretation involves the examination of
    legal issues and is, therefore, a question of law subject to de novo review."
    Saccone v. Bd. of Trs. of Police & Firemen's Ret. Sys., 
    219 N.J. 369
    , 380
    (2014); see also Twp. of Holmdel v. N.J. Highway Auth., 
    190 N.J. 74
    , 86
    (2007).
    Our goal in interpreting Chapter 91 and the Act, especially since they
    deal with "taxation or exemption therefrom," is to determine and effectuate the
    Legislature's intent. Pub. Serv. Elec. & Gas Co., v. Twp. of Woodbridge, 
    73 N.J. 474
    , 478 (1977). "[T]he best approach to the meaning of a tax statute is to
    give to the words used by the Legislature 'their generally accepted meaning,
    unless another or different meaning is expressly indicated.'" 
    Ibid. (quoting N.J. Power
    & Light Co. v. Twp. of Denville, 
    80 N.J. Super. 435
    , 440 (App.
    an assessor's Chapter 91 request, the appeal preclusion provisions apply only
    to owners of income-producing properties who fail to respond to a request).
    A-0743-16T1
    5
    Div. 1963)).     We seek "further guidance only to the extent that the
    Legislature's intent cannot be derived from the words that it has chosen."
    Pizzullo v. N.J. Mfrs. Ins. Co., 
    196 N.J. 251
    , 264 (2008).
    Our Supreme Court noted the "clear and unambiguous" language of
    N.J.S.A. 54:4-34 precludes a taxpayer who fails to make any response to a
    Chapter 91 request from pursuing an appeal.5 Ocean Pines, Ltd. v. Borough of
    Point Pleasant, 
    112 N.J. 1
    , 7, 9 (1988); see also Lucent Technologies, Inc. v.
    Twp. of Berkeley Heights, 
    201 N.J. 237
    , 248 (2010). We recognized in SKG
    Realty Corp., v. Township of Wall, 
    8 N.J. Tax 209
    , 211 (App. Div. 1985), the
    purpose of Chapter 91's mandatory response provision "is to afford the
    assessor access to fiscal information that can aid in valuing the property. The
    purpose of the provision outlawing appeals by non-responding owners is to
    encourage compliance with the accounting requirement." As we noted in H.J.
    
    Bailey, 399 N.J. Super. at 387
    , the Court in Ocean Pines recognized the need
    for such compliance was necessitated by "the difficulties faced by tax
    assessors when property owners fail or refuse to respond to reasonable
    requests for information,"
    5
    Even if the taxpayer is precluded from appealing, the assessor's valuation is
    still subject to the court's review of the data considered and the methodology
    used by the assessor at a reasonableness hearing. Ocean 
    Pines, 112 N.J. at 11
    .
    Final judgment was entered in this matter after Alcatel waived its right to that
    hearing.
    A-0743-16T1
    6
    the very problem that [Chapter 91] was designed to
    remedy. It is the local tax assessor, and not the county
    board or Tax Court, that is charged with the
    responsibility of valuing and assessing real property.
    If the economic data are to be of any use in the
    valuation process, they must be submitted in timely
    fashion to the assessor, and not to a tribunal on a
    subsequent appeal.
    [Ocean 
    Pines, 112 N.J. at 7-8
    (citation omitted).]
    We reject Alcatel's argument that the Act provides the sole framework
    for assessing farmland properties, and that Chapter 91 has no applicability.
    That parochial view ignores a more global view of tax assessments that was
    recognized by the Court in McMahon v. City of Newark, 
    195 N.J. 526
    , 541
    (2008):
    Taxation of real property in New Jersey is of
    constitutional dimension. In addition to requiring that
    "[p]roperty shall be assessed for taxation under
    general laws and by uniform rules[,]" N.J. Const. art.
    VIII, § 1, ¶ 1(a), New Jersey's Constitution requires
    that "[a]ll real property assessed and taxed . . . shall be
    assessed according to the same standard of value,
    [and] shall be taxed at the general tax rate of the
    taxing district in which the property is situated, for the
    use of such taxing district." 
    Ibid. A comprehensive statutory
    scheme seeks to
    implement that constitutional mandate. Thus, the
    Legislature has required that all real property taxes in
    New Jersey be assessed annually at the local or
    municipal level. See N.J.S.A. 40A:9-146 (requiring
    that municipal governing body or chief executive
    "shall provide for the appointment of a tax assessor
    and such deputy tax assessors as it may determine
    A-0743-16T1
    7
    necessary"); N.J.S.A. 54:4-23 (providing that "[a]ll
    real property shall be assessed to the person owning
    the same on October 1 in each year").
    [(alterations in original).]
    Pursuant to that statutory scheme, a tax assessor is mandated to "make a
    list in tabular form of the names of the owners . . . of each parcel . . . and the
    taxable value of each parcel as determined by him." N.J.S.A. 54:4-24; see also
    Young v. Bergen Cty. Bd. of Taxation, 
    5 N.J. Tax 102
    , 106 (Tax 1982).
    Assessors are obliged to keep the tax rolls current by assessing each property
    at its full and fair value each year. Regent Care Ctr., Inc. v. Hackensack City,
    
    362 N.J. Super. 403
    , 415 (App. Div. 2003). Even tax exempt properties must
    be valued as if they were not exempt. N.J.S.A. 54:4-27; Cascade, 323 N.J.
    Super. at 188.      "Once a tax assessor completes the assessments for the
    municipality, the assessment roll is submitted to the county board of taxation
    and, based in part on the assessments provided by all assessors in that county,
    the county board sets the tax rate for the municipality." 
    McMahon, 195 N.J. at 542
    (citations omitted).
    The Act is part of the warp and weft woven into a comprehensive tax
    scheme created by the Legislature which we determine must be viewed, not
    separately, but in pari materia with Chapter 91. We thus heed the Court's
    prescription that
    A-0743-16T1
    8
    [s]tatutes must be read in their entirety; each part or
    section should be construed in connection with every
    other part or section to provide a harmonious whole.
    When reviewing two separate enactments, the Court
    has an affirmative duty to reconcile them, so as to give
    effect to both expressions of the lawmakers' will.
    Statutes that deal with the same matter or subject
    should be read in pari materia and construed together
    as a unitary and harmonious whole.
    [In re Petition for Referendum on Trenton Ordinance
    09-02, 
    201 N.J. 349
    , 359 (2010) (citations omitted).]
    The Act implemented a 1963 amendment to our Constitution 6 that
    responded to the Court's ruling in Switz v. Kingsley, 
    37 N.J. 566
    (1962), which
    declared unconstitutional a statute that prohibited the inclusion of "prospective
    value for subdivisions or nonagricultural use" in the assessment of land
    devoted to agricultural use, L. 1960, c. 51, § 23. The Act mandates that land
    devoted to agricultural or horticultural uses, that otherwise meets statutory
    requirements, be valued for those uses. N.J.S.A. 54:4-23.2.
    "The primary purpose of the Act . . . was to preserve the 'family farm'
    by providing farmers with some measure of economic relief by permitting
    farmland to be taxed on its value as a continuing farm and not on any other
    basis." Hovbilt, Inc. v. Twp. of Howell, 
    138 N.J. 598
    , 619 (1994) (quoting
    Urban Farms, Inc. v. Twp. of Wayne, 
    159 N.J. Super. 61
    , 67 (App. Div.
    6
    N.J. Const. art. VIII, § 1, ¶ 1(b).
    A-0743-16T1
    9
    1978)). Incidental benefits that were significant factors in the passage of the
    Constitutional amendment were "maintenance of open spaces and the
    preservation of the beauty of the countryside." 
    Ibid. As Judge Novin
    recognized, the assessment of farmland pursuant to the
    Act is analogous to a tax exemption. Soc'y of the Holy Child Jesus v. City of
    Summit, 
    418 N.J. Super. 365
    , 378 (App. Div. 2011); see Cheyenne Corp. v.
    Twp. of Byram, 
    248 N.J. Super. 588
    , 592 (App. Div. 1991).             The Act's
    favorable tax rates "favor[] certain taxpayers at the expense of the remaining
    taxpayers in the taxing district," Dep't of Envtl. Prot. v. Franklin Twp., 3 N.J.
    Tax 105, 119 (Tax 1981), aff'd o.b., 
    5 N.J. Tax 476
    (App. Div. 1983),
    diverging from the tenet that "[a]ll real property within New Jersey is subject
    to taxation unless expressly exempted by the Legislature," N.J. Highway
    
    Auth., 190 N.J. at 87
    (citation omitted). Contrary to Alcatel's argument that
    tax laws are to be construed against the State, the preferential treatment
    accorded owners of assessed farmland, although derived from a Constitutional
    amendment, requires strict construction against the party claiming the tax
    benefit. See Pruent-Stevens v. Toms River Twp., 
    458 N.J. Super. 501
    , 514
    (App. Div. 2019) (holding doubts regarding a statutory veteran's property tax
    exemption, stemming from Article VIII, Section 1, Paragraph 3 of the New
    Jersey Constitution, are resolved against the party seeking the exemption).
    A-0743-16T1
    10
    Considering these statutes together, we conclude Judge Novin did not err
    in applying our holding in Cascade when he dismissed Alcatel's complaint. If
    the judge created a new rule of law as Alcatel contends, it is a good one,
    especially apropos where a portion of the property is not subject to preferential
    tax treatment.
    Judge Novin recognized that, in Cascade, we held the owners of income-
    producing properties must respond to a Chapter 91 inquiry even if the owner
    claims the property is 
    exempt. 323 N.J. Super. at 189
    . We reasoned,
    [i]f the tax assessor denies the exemption, he or she
    must be prepared to go on to make an appropriate
    assessment in a timely fashion, subject, of course, to
    judicial review. The submission of Chapter 91 data
    permits the assessor to discharge his or her overall
    responsibilities based upon current information
    regarding income-producing property. If the data can
    be withheld pending separate evaluation of the
    exemption claim, assessors may well be impeded in
    discharging their essential functions as required by
    law. Certainly, they will be delayed, at least to some
    extent, as they become involved in two proceedings
    rather than one.
    [Ibid.]
    The assessor's need for data "is essential" where the property may be
    partially free from full assessment in order to determine what portion is fully
    taxable. 
    Ibid. Split-use property may
    or may not qualify for special treatment
    A-0743-16T1
    11
    such as a farmland assessment. Twp. of Wantage v. Rivlin Corp., 
    23 N.J. Tax 441
    , 448 (Tax 2007).
    [I]f the separated or split off portion of the lot is
    appurtenant to agricultural activities on the balance of
    a tax lot, reasonably required for the maintenance of
    those activities, and used for the benefit of the
    agricultural activities, then the separated or split off
    portion of the tax lot will qualify for farmland
    assessment as will the remainder of the lot. If,
    however, a portion of a tax lot is used for
    "independent commercial operations not conducted for
    the benefit of the farm or the farmer but as a
    completely separate business activity," then that
    portion of the tax lot cannot qualify for farmland
    assessment even if the non-farming use is not the
    predominant use of the entire lot.
    [Ibid. (citation omitted) (quoting Wiesenfeld v. Twp.
    of S. Brunswick, 
    166 N.J. Super. 90
    , 95 (App. Div.
    1979)).]
    Depending on the assessor's determination regarding the applicability of
    an exemption, he would, if provided with the Chapter 91 information, be able
    to assess the property for tax purposes without delay.       Cascade, 323 N.J.
    Super. at 188-89. The property owner's response to the Chapter 91 request
    would "assist the assessor in the first instance, to make the assessment and
    thereby . . . avoid unnecessary expense, time and effort in litigation." Ocean
    
    Pines, 112 N.J. at 7
    (quoting Terrace View Gardens v. Twp. of Dover, 5 N.J.
    Tax 469, 471-72 (Tax 1982), aff'd o.b., 
    5 N.J. Tax 475
    (App. Div. 1983)).
    A-0743-16T1
    12
    Inasmuch as the Chapter 91 data is essential to the valuation of a split -
    use property, and, in turn, to the fulfillment of the assessor's statutory duties
    for the entire municipality, we agree with Judge Novin that the statute's
    preclusion provision should be applied to owners who fail to respond to the
    assessor's request. As the judge astutely noted, the Legislature, which enacted
    Chapter 91 with full knowledge of its farmland legislation, "did not carve out
    exceptions for any property owner group or property class."        See Twp. of
    Mahwah v. Bergen Cty. Bd. of Taxation, 
    98 N.J. 268
    , 279 (1985) (holding the
    Legislature "is presumed to have been aware of existing legislation" when it
    adopts a statute). Judge Novin also concluded,
    to render a request for information under Chapter 91
    inapplicable or irrelevant before a property tax
    assessment has been fixed, or before a property has
    qualified for preferential farmland assessment, or
    before a property has been determined wholly or
    partially exempt from taxation,           would be
    counterproductive to the very goals Chapter 91 sought
    to achieve.
    The judge's logic comports with our holding in Cascade, 323 N.J. Super
    at 190:
    Simply enough, assessors, in order to do their jobs in
    every particular, must be seen to possess the authority
    to require the production of the data sought here. The
    Legislature has recognized this, imposing, as the cost
    of non-compliance, waiver of the right to appeal a
    valuation and assessment arrived at by the assessor in
    an exercise of his or her best judgment in the absence
    A-0743-16T1
    13
    of the information required, which is, after all, in the
    possession and control of the property owner.
    "In any event, the taxpayer cannot just sit by and do nothing until the
    assessment is finalized, as this taxpayer did, and thereafter seek to appeal the
    assessment by plenary review. Such conduct results in 'unnecessary expense,
    time and effort in litigation.'" Tower Ctr. Assocs. v. Twp. of E. Brunswick,
    
    286 N.J. Super. 433
    , 438-39 (App. Div. 1996) (quoting Terrace View 
    Gardens, 5 N.J. Tax at 471-72
    ). As we said in H.J. 
    Bailey, 399 N.J. Super. at 389
    ,
    property owners who fail to respond to Chapter 91 requests run "the risk that
    the property will ultimately be found to be income-producing. In such a case,
    the taxpayer's appeal would properly be limited under Ocean Pines." (footnote
    omitted).
    Preclusion of claims does not hinder any of the Act's objectives. Those
    property owners who comply with Chapter 91's mandate will, if the property
    qualifies, enjoy the benefits of a reduced assessment.       Application of the
    preclusion provision, however, fosters compliance with Chapter 91 so as to
    ensure properties are expeditiously and fairly assessed for all taxpayers.
    We are unpersuaded by Alcatel's argument that preclusion was improper
    because the property was not income-producing as it was "not rented or
    leased." Once more, Alcatel attempts to segregate the woodland property from
    the entire tract which is delineated on one tax map lot. As we have already
    A-0743-16T1
    14
    determined, Alcatel was required to respond to the Chapter 91 request for the
    entire lot in order for the assessor to properly value same.
    Alcatel argued to the Tax Court that because it did not market the
    property for rent or seek outside occupants or tenants, any leases "were not
    entered into to generate income" and were de minimus in nature serving only
    as business accommodations to service providers.         Judge Novin, however,
    concluded that Alcatel received rent for leased space and the property was thus
    income-producing.     The judge's findings were based on:      a letter sent by
    Alcatel's managing corporate counsel in response to a 2013 Chapter 91
    request7 in which counsel admitted Alcatel received rent from a company that
    occupied over 17,000 square feet of a building located on the property; other
    documents submitted by counsel to the Township with his letter that identified
    other subtenants of the building; and Alcatel's brief to the Tax Court that
    acknowledged, as Judge Novin found, "the 'only "income" received [by
    Alcatel] is from certain license and lease agreement[s] for less than [one
    percent] of the [p]roperty and for which [Alcatel] received inconsequential
    7
    Judge Novin considered the Township's motions to dismiss Alcatel's 2014
    and 2015 tax complaints and 2014 and 2015 farmland assessment complaints;
    he thus considered evidence relating to the year prior to the case under review.
    A-0743-16T1
    15
    license fees and rent.'" (second alteration in original).    We agree with the
    judge's supported conclusion that the property was income-producing.
    Alcatel contends the woodland property was not income-producing. As
    stated, if that assertion was accurate, Alcatel would still be obligated to
    respond to the Chapter 91 request prior to a determination of its farmland
    assessment application in order to ensure that the assessor could readily value
    the property no matter the outcome of the application. 8
    Further, Alcatel's claim that the woodlands property is not income
    producing is belied by the documents that accompanied its application. The
    Forest Management Plan indicates, "[m]anagement will work to improve the
    quality, health and vigor of the forest, and will additionally aid in the
    generation of periodic income from the harvest and sale of wood products"; the
    generation of income was also listed as one of the objectives of the plan. The
    plan also delineated the yield in terms of board feet and cords for all but two of
    the ten stands of trees located in the woodland. Part of the proposed plan
    called for the select harvest of trees for timber, the timing of which "will be
    [dependent] on the owners' objectives and markets for timber products" and
    8
    Whether the woodland portion of the property meets the statutory criteria for
    a farmland assessment, N.J.S.A. 54:4-23.2 to -23.6, or is disqualified because
    agriculture is not the predominant use, see City of E. Orange v. Twp. of
    Livingston, 
    102 N.J. Super. 512
    , 535-37 (Law Div. 1968), aff'd, 
    54 N.J. 96
    (1969), is not before us. We, therefore, do not address that issue.
    A-0743-16T1
    16
    firewood; and that "[w]ood should continue to be sold as firewood or other
    wood products, such as mulch and chipwood." The plan concluded that "[t]he
    productivity of this woodland can meet the fiscal requirement of the Farm Tax
    law," a seeming reference to the requirement that the property generate a
    minimum amount of "yearly gross sales, payments, fees, and imputed income"
    in order to qualify for a farmland assessment, N.J.S.A. 54:4-23.5(a).
    Moreover, the woodland data form sets forth a dollar amount under the
    "[i]ncome received" section for the commercial harvest of forest products.
    We determine Alcatel's argument – the application of Chapter 91's
    preclusion provision is inequitable because the Township failed to: "properly
    identify the property for which it was seeking a response"; "identify the
    specific information it required"; and "identify the time frame for which the
    information was necessary" – is without sufficient merit to warrant discussion
    in this opinion. R. 2:11-3(e)(1)(E). We add only that Alcatel received the
    same request the year prior, to which its counsel responded, albeit by letter.
    And this is not the case where an unsophisticated property owner may have
    been confused by an ambiguous request. See ML Plainsboro Ltd. P'ship v.
    Twp. of Plainsboro, 
    16 N.J. Tax 250
    , 257 (App. Div. 1997). Further, the
    Township's submissions to Alcatel – the request letter for "income and expense
    data," copy of N.J.S.A. 54:4-34, "Annual Statement of Business Income and
    A-0743-16T1
    17
    Expenses Commercial Properties" form, "Instructions for Completion of
    Schedule A" form, and a rental schedule form titled "Schedule A" – provided
    sufficient information to compel Alcatel to respond in whole or part or at least
    pose any questions or complaints about deficiencies; it could not, as it did,
    "just sit by and do nothing." Tower 
    Ctr., 286 N.J. Super. at 438
    .
    We perceive no reason why Chapter 91's preclusion should not apply to
    Alcatel's farmland assessment complaint and affirm Judge Novin's dis missal.
    A-0743-16T1
    18