The New Jersey Tax Court rejected a taxpayer’s due process claim finding that the Division of Taxation properly issued the notice of assessment. The taxpayer made three arguments: (1) that the Division issued the assessment in the name of the predecessor corporation instead of the successor corporation, (2) that the assessment was addressed to the wrong zip code, and (3) that the taxpayer’s third-party mailroom routed the assessment to the wrong location. In addressing each of these claims, the court reasoned that the taxpayer’s officer executed prior statute waivers in the name of the predecessor corporation and that the assessment was delivered to the proper address where agents of the taxpayer accepted and signed the mail return receipt card. Although there was evidence that the taxpayer’s mailroom routed the assessment to a different location, the court found that the taxpayer’s neglect was not excusable and that it was responsible for its organization’s failure to take prompt action to respond to the assessment. (Merrill Lynch Credit Corporation v. Division of Taxation, Dkt. No: 004230-2017 (NJ Tax Ct. Sep. 28, 2018) WL 4718875).