This past weekend Ro & I were privileged to be taken on a tour of Featherbed Lane and Mannington Marsh by Karl Anderson and his wife. While not in the Pines, these places are in West Jersey Province. Saw roosting Bald Eagles, maybe a White Fronted Goose, several Harriers, and up close a pair of Sandhill Cranes. Went on line this morning to NJ tax map site <http://njgin.state.nj.us/oit/gis/NJ_TaxListSearch/>, (mucho thanks to whomever posted that earlier on this forum) to see exactly where public and preserved lands are in that area. Shocked to discover that Mannington Marsh, the tidal water area, is divided into irregularly shaped, privately owned, taxable lots. Only non-taxable area was what appears to be the course of a stream thru it.
Since when has property under tidewater been deeded and taxed?
Property lines end at waters edge on Delaware Bay, which is the state boundary.
The rivers leading inland are not taxable property, but the tidewater streams and ponds bordering them are taxable, privately owned. How do “they” decide where to start and stop tax lines?
How do they survey irregularly shaped lots in Mannington Marsh that are completely surrounded by other taxable lots, all of them under water - i.e., who knows who owns what - how do you put boundary stones on underwater land, how do they do deed descriptions?
Since when has property under tidewater been deeded and taxed?
Property lines end at waters edge on Delaware Bay, which is the state boundary.
The rivers leading inland are not taxable property, but the tidewater streams and ponds bordering them are taxable, privately owned. How do “they” decide where to start and stop tax lines?
How do they survey irregularly shaped lots in Mannington Marsh that are completely surrounded by other taxable lots, all of them under water - i.e., who knows who owns what - how do you put boundary stones on underwater land, how do they do deed descriptions?