Example 1: During the calendar year, A, who is divorced, worked for two employers in New Jersey. The first withheld the maximum of $ 44.00 for unemployment insurance contributions and $ 44.00 disability benefits fund contributions from A's salary, as required by law. The second employer withheld $ 30.00 from A's wages as contributions to each fund for the total of $ 60.00. A files his or her gross income tax return and pays the tax on February 14 of the subsequent calendar year but fails to make claim for the $ 60.00 excess contributions withheld during the previous calendar year or qualifying alimony payments made in that year.
In December two years after the unemployment contributions and disability benefits fund contributions were made, A files an amended gross income tax return containing New Jersey 2450 for the calendar year two years prior claiming a credit for excess contributions withheld and claiming the alimony deduction that the taxpayer had originally omitted from the return covering the calendar year two years prior. The claim is timely filed with respect to both the contributions withheld and the alimony deduction.
Example 2: Same facts as above, except A files an amended return on January 5 more than two years after the end of the original calendar year when the unemployment contributions and disability benefits fund contributions were made. The claim for contributions withheld is too late since it was filed after the expiration of the two-year period for refund. The claim for refund based upon alimony deductions, however, is timely because the claim was filed within three years from the time the return was filed or two years from the time the tax was paid, whichever was later.
N.J. Admin. Code § 18:35-4.2