Procedural requirements at the Appellate Tax Board
It is very important that property owners who are seeking tax abatements comply with all procedural requirements.
We are now in fiscal 2011, which began on July 1st, 2010, and ends on June 30th, 2011. The procedural requirements for the timely filing of an application for abatement and an appeal to the Appellate Tax Board (ATB) are not the only procedural requirements.
The 38D Request is a good example. Assessors routinely send out a request for information under Massachusetts General Laws, Chapter 59, Section 38D. A property owner must respond to a 38D Request within sixty (60) days. In the event the property owner fails to respond within that time, the assessors may file a motion to dismiss together with an affidavit of the assessor regarding the failure to comply with Section 38D.
The ATB will grant the motion. The property owner has lost on a procedural requirement. The assessors make the point that they can not put a value on income producing property without having the income and expenses. The 38D Request applies to all real property, not just to income producing property. It is a simple matter to comply with a 38D Request. Property owners must calendar this as well as the deadlines for the application and the appeal and, in each instance, comply on time.
Saul Feldman is a real estate attorney with Feldman & Feldman, P.C., Boston.
Boston, MA Newmark has completed the sale of 10 Liberty Sq. and 12 Post Office Sq. Newmark co-head of U.S. Capital Markets Robert Griffin and Boston Capital Markets executive vice chairman Edward Maher, vice chairman Matthew Pullen, executive managing director James Tribble,
Coming out of the pandemic, a client with three hotels in Provincetown, Mass., needed ways to let the world know his properties were open for business for the 2021 tourist season.
Many real estate investors do not understand the specific requirements that must be met to secure the benefits of a tax-deferred 1031 exchange. For example, the replacement property must be identified within 45 days of the closing date of the relinquished property.
To say that the effects of COVID-19 has transformed office leasing is an understatement. When COVID-19 was at its peak, office spaces were practically abandoned either through governmental mandates or through actions taken by businesses themselves.
While there is some flexibility when structuring a like-kind exchange, some important requirements must be met. A mistake can ruin your exchange. Here are five mistakes to avoid: