NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE
APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION
This opinion shall not "constitute precedent or be binding upon any court." Although it is posted on the
internet, this opinion is binding only on the parties in the case and its use in other cases is limited. R. 1:36-3.
SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
APPELLATE DIVISION
DOCKET NO. A-2275-19
CITY OF NEWARK, COUNTY
OF ESSEX, a Municipal
Corporation of the State of
New Jersey,
Plaintiff-Respondent,
v.
CLAIM: 99
BLOCK/LOT: 1818/13
ADDRESS: 237 S. 11 TH ST.
ASS'D OWNER(S): IMJ1, LLC,
CLAIM: 111
BLOCK/LOT: 1876/44
ADDRESS: 66 4 TH ST.
ASS'D OWNER(S): IMJ1, LLC,
CLAIM: 113
BLOCK/LOT: 1897/11
ADDRESS: 9 S. 12 TH ST.
ASS'D OWNER(S): IMJ1, LLC,
Defendant-Appellant.
____________________________
Argued March 10, 2021 - Decided June 4, 2021
Before Judges Accurso and Vernoia.
On appeal from the Superior Court of New Jersey,
Chancery Division, Essex County, Docket No.
F-003634-19.
Adam S. Kessler argued the cause for appellant
(Kessler Law, LLC, attorneys; Adam S. Kessler, on the
briefs).
Ariadna Peguero, Assistant Corporation Counsel,
argued the cause for respondent (Kenyatta K. Stewart,
Corporation Counsel, attorney; Ariadna Peguero, on the
brief).
PER CURIAM
In this in rem tax foreclosure, IMJ1, LLC, former assessed owner of the
three Newark properties listed in the caption, appeals from an order denying its
Rule 4:50 motion to vacate the default judgment vesting title to the properties
in plaintiff City of Newark. Because we agree with the chancery judge that
Newark properly served the notice of foreclosure on IMJ1 in accordance with
Rule 4:64-7, and IMJ1 failed to carry its burden on the motion to justify relief
from the judgment, we affirm.
The material facts are few and undisputed. In January 2017, IMJ1
purchased the three properties, which its counsel described to the trial judge as
"abandoned," and thereafter failed to pay any property taxes. Newark auctioned
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tax sale certificates in December 2017, and was itself the purchaser at the sale
in the absence of other bids.
In February 2019, the City filed a complaint to foreclose the certificates
pursuant to the In Rem Tax Foreclosure Act, N.J.S.A. 54:5-104.29 to -104.75,
and served notice in accordance with Rule 4:64-7(c), by publishing it in the Star
Ledger, posting it in the offices of the tax collector, the county clerk, and the
City clerk, as well as the Newark public library, the Newark Municipal Court
and on pubic bulletin boards at three health and community wellness centers in
the City, and sending it by regular and certified mail to IMJ1 at its address on
the last municipal tax duplicate, 16192 Coastal Highway, Lewes, Delaware
19958, the same address listed in IMJ1's deed to the properties. The City also
served a copy of the notice by regular and certified mail on IMJ1's registered
agent, Registered Agents, Inc., at its address in Marlton, to IMJ1's former
counsel in New York, to each of the properties, and to IMJ1's "main business
address" in Brooklyn as listed in its certificate of registration on file with the
Department of Treasury. IMJ1 failed to answer, and default judgment was
entered. The City recorded the judgment on July 8, 2019.
Jakov Telyas, IMJ1's "sole member and authorized representative," claims
in a certification filed in the trial court that he learned of the judgment the
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following October after he was under contract to sell the properties. When the
City refused his request to redeem the properties, he filed a motion to vacate the
default judgment. Telyas acknowledged the City served IMJ1's registered agent,
but claimed the agent never forwarded the documents to him. He also claimed
the notice "was never received by [IMJ1] at the main business address" in
Brooklyn.
IMJ1's counsel argued it was entitled to have the judgment vacated under
Rule 4:50-1(a) due to Telyas' excusable neglect, Rule 4:50-1(d) because the
judgment was void based on improper service, and Rule 4:50-1(f) because IMJ1
had been denied due process based on the City's failure to serve the notice at its
Brooklyn business address. Counsel also argued the City managed to serve
IMJ1 in Brooklyn with "a municipal property maintenance complaint, . . .
several months after final judgment by default had been entered." He claimed
the City acted in bad faith by negotiating and accepting a reduced fine for the
violations in municipal court without ever advising IMJ1 it no longer owned the
property.1 Telyas claimed that had IMJ1 "been properly noticed of the
1
We cannot tell from the few pages of the appendix on this issue whether the
violations covered a period when IMJ1 was the owner of the properties. If not,
it may have a basis to reopen that judgment, but it does not support reopening
this one.
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foreclosure action," he would have paid the outstanding taxes and redeemed the
properties.
The City countered that it served notice of the foreclosure on IMJ1 by
regular and certified mail at its address listed on the municipal tax duplicate and
on its registered agent, both of which were received in accordance with the
signed conformations of delivery filed with the court. Although acknowledging
the City never received confirmation of delivery of the certified mail it sent to
IMJ1's Brooklyn business address, it noted the regular mail was never returned.
The chancery judge denied the motion, finding IMJ1 was properly served.
The judge noted a limited liability company is required to have an agent for
service of process, and IMJ1 was required to provide the tax assessor with its
"most recent address." The City served IMJ1 at the address it provided to the
tax assessor as well as its registered agent and received signed acknowledgments
of service on both. As the judge stated, "if . . . the owner of the three properties
had some failure between itself and these registered agents, that's not the City's
responsibility to ferret out." 2 The judge also found that no one being able to
2
IMJ1's counsel argued before the trial court that "even though [notice of the
foreclosure] was signed for," IMJ1 never received notice because "[a]n attorney
set up the certification of formation for my client, but he never paid these
companies." Counsel claimed "[n]obody ever paid these companies. So I called
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receive process at IMJ1's Brooklyn "office at 6:30 in the morning to sign for a
certified mail receipt for one of the notices that was apparently attempted" 3 did
not establish exceptional circumstances so as to warrant relief from the judgment
given defendant was properly served at the address it provided and via its
registered agent.
IMJ1 appeals reprising the arguments it made to the trial court, none of
which we find has sufficient merit to warrant discussion in a written opinion.
See R. 2:11-3(e)(1)(E). IMJ1 does not deny service was properly made at the
them and I said, 'What happened here? I don’t understand.' And they said,
'You’re not in the system.'"
3
IMJ1's counsel argued to the trial court, and maintains here, that the postal
service attempted delivery of the notice at defendant's business address in
Brooklyn at 6:17 a.m., before anyone was present, and thereafter "the delivery
got lost in the system, and it was never actually delivered" to IMJ1. Leaving
aside that the USPS tracking document in IMJ1's appendix on which it relies for
that argument does not appear, at least as far as we can tell, to have been the
subject of a certification on personal knowledge in accord with Rule 1:6-6, it
also doesn't appear to support defendant's argument. The document states the
item departed the USPS Brooklyn Distribution Center at 4:38 a.m. on March 10,
2019, was "in transit to next facility" on March 11, 2019, "arrived at unit
Brooklyn, NY 11211," at 6:17a.m., and was "out for delivery Brooklyn, NY
11249" at 10:11 a.m. As IMJ1 claims its Brooklyn business address is located
on 4th Street in the 11249 zip code area, the document does not support that
delivery was attempted at 6:17 a.m. as IMJ1 asserts. We also note, however,
that the tracking number on the document does not appear to match any of those
on the postal services' print out of the certified mailings made in connection with
this action in the City's appendix.
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address it provided on the municipal tax duplicate and on the registered agent it
identified in its certificate of registration. As Judge Cohen explained more than
thirty-five years ago, "municipalities are not constitutionally required to search
out taxpayers in foreclosure suits to see if they have furnished up-to-date
addresses." Brick Twp. v. Block 48-7, Lots 34, 35, 36, 202 N.J. Super. 246, 252
(App. Div. 1985). It is immaterial that the City has used a different address to
communicate with the property owner in another context. Ibid. "Due process
does not require tax collectors, municipalities and their staffs to examine the tax
rolls to search for outdated or incorrect addresses supplied by property owners,
or to communicate with property owners to ascertain whether their addresses
remain correct." Ibid.
We reject IMJ1's claim that the City has received a "windfall" at its
expense. The City and its residents depend on property tax revenues for the
City's operations and its residents' welfare. See Route 88 Office Assoc. Ltd. v.
Twp. of Brick, 13 N.J. Tax 14, 20 (Tax 1992) (noting "[a] municipality's
revenues depend on local property taxes . . . ."). Defendant owned these
properties for two-and-a-half years, incurred code violations for failure to
maintain them and never paid property taxes over the course of eight quarters
on any of them. It apparently also never paid the entities it retained to act as its
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registered agents. While IMJ1 is, of course, free to conduct its business affairs
as it sees fit, we find no basis to relieve it of the consequences of its decision to
shirk its obligations to the City in light of the City's punctilious adherence to the
Rules.
Affirmed.
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