9 Plaza Court L.L.C. v. City of Long Branch

CourtNew Jersey Tax Court
DecidedJuly 31, 2017
Docket002745-2011, 000693-2012, 016991-2012, 001046-2013, 000770-2014
StatusUnpublished

This text of 9 Plaza Court L.L.C. v. City of Long Branch (9 Plaza Court L.L.C. v. City of Long Branch) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Tax Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
9 Plaza Court L.L.C. v. City of Long Branch, (N.J. Super. Ct. 2017).

Opinion

NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT APPROVAL OF THE TAX COURT COMMITTEE ON OPINIONS

TAX COURT OF NEW JERSEY

Mala Sundar R.J. Hughes Justice Complex JUDGE P.O. Box 975 25 Market Street Trenton, New Jersey 08625 Telephone 609.815.2922 x54630 TeleFax: 609.376.3018 taxcourttrenton2@judiciary.state.nj.us July 26, 2017 Pablo Kim, Esq. Amber Heinze, Esq. The Irwin Law Firm 80 Main Street, Suite 410 West Orange, New Jersey 07052

Frederick Raffetto, Esq. Ansell Grimm & Aaron, P.C. 1500 Lawrence Avenue Ocean, New Jersey 07712

Re: 9 Plaza Court L.L.C. v. City of Long Branch Block 60, Lot 6 Docket Nos. 002745-2011, 000693-2012, 016991-2012, 001046- 2013, 000770-2014 Dear Counsel:

This is the court’s opinion following trial in the above captioned matters. Plaintiff1 contests

the local property tax assessments on the above captioned property (“Subject”) for the above tax

years which include an added assessment for tax year 2012. The issue parsed during trial was the

value of the Subject’s site (i.e., land value) for all tax years at issue. For the reasons set forth

below, the court affirms the assessments for all years at issue.

1 Plaintiff is a single-member entity owned by Mrs. Shalom. Isaac Shalom, her husband, testified as a fact witness.

* FACTS

The Subject is located in the affluent Elberon section of defendant (“City”). Per plaintiff’s

expert’s report, the area used to be a famed beach resort area, and currently has well-maintained

single-family dwellings on landscaped lots. Marketability of the area has been favorable although

the expert claims that oceanfront properties have suffered stigma due to recent storms.

The Subject is an oceanfront site measuring 19,562 square feet (“SF”) and zoned for

residential use. The ocean side (eastward measuring about 120 feet) had a bulkhead owned by the

City.

In April 2006, plaintiff purchased the Subject as a vacant lot for $4,300,000. Plaintiff’s

sole owner (wife2) and her husband had owned another home in the Elberon section of the City,

and purchased the Subject due to ocean proximity and presence of their religious community,

friends, and family. Mr. Shalom (husband who is involved in property management and

commercial realty buy/sell transactions) testified that he tracked down the property owner and

offered to purchase the same. The couple intended to, and used, the Subject as their summer home.

Mr. Shalom applied for and received a bulk variance in June of 2006 to build a single-family

residence. The variance was for lot depth (since the ordinance required 175 feet and the Subject’s

depth was 120 feet), rear yard and driveway setbacks, and lot coverage. Mr. Shalom stated that he

considered Deal, Loch Arbor, and Allenhurst as comparable neighborhoods for oceanfront

properties. He agreed that he would not purchase a home in Manasquan or Bayhead, nor Spring

Lake or Sea Girt due to lack of his community and friends.

Plaintiff commenced construction of a single-family residence in summer of 2010 after

entering into a building loan agreement with a bank for $3,916,056. According to Mr. Shalom,

2 However, on the mortgage for the Subject, the signatory for plaintiff, who was stated to be the sole member, was not the wife.

2 the time-gap since the 2006 purchase was due to the market crash in 2008. Hurricane Irene

damaged the Subject during its construction in August of 2011. Plaintiff then began repairing and

constructing the Subject. Construction was complete in July of 2012, at which time the City issued

a temporary certificate of occupancy. The home comprised of 5,124 SF of gross living area

(“GLA”) per plaintiff’s expert who inspected the Subject in August 2014, and 5,570 SF (“luxury

oceanfront residence”) per the City’s expert who inspected the Subject in September 2015.

Hurricane Sandy damaged the Subject on October 27, 2012. Although Sandy did minor

damage to the second floor of the home where bedrooms and four full baths were located, it

rendered the entire first floor (including the kitchen) uninhabitable. The Subject site was deemed

unsafe in the aftermath of Sandy and thus could not be immediately boarded up. The Subject was

then vandalized. Post-Sandy, plaintiff had to obtain another variance as to building height because

the zoning now deemed the Subject to be in a flood hazard zone, and required the home to be

raised on pilings. The Subject was therefore raised on pilings, with the former second floor

reconfigured as the first floor, and the new third floor as the former second floor. The former first

floor is now used to house utilities and the HVAC system.

The home was completed only in September 2015. It has an in-ground concrete pool with

mosaic tiles, attached sandstone patio, and a concrete driveway with access for five automobiles.

Windows are floor-to-ceiling, tinted and insulated, and slider doors are also floor-to-ceiling and

tinted.

ASSESSMENTS

For each tax year, the City imposed the following assessments: Tax Year Assessment Average Ratio Implied Value 2011 $3,586,900 85% $4,219,882 2012 $3,586,900 87.91% $4,080,195 2012 (Added) $ 969,000

3 2013 $4,212,100 90.6% $4,649,117 2014 $4,212,100 92.5% $4,536,216 For each of these tax years, the value allocated to land was $3,573,600. For tax years 2011 and

2012, the value allocated to improvements was $13,300. After the added assessment in 2012, the

value allocated to improvements for tax years 2013 and 2014 was $638,500.

PARTIES’ EXPERTS’ OPINIONS

Each party presented an appraisal expert witness, whose reports were admitted into

evidence without objection. Plaintiff’s expert concluded that the highest and best use (“HBU”) of

the Subject as vacant and as improved was for a single-family residence, and post-Sandy to “repair

the property to a single-family residential building.” The City’s expert concluded the Subject’s

HBU for tax years 2011 and 2012 (when it was a vacant lot) was for development of a single-

family residence. He then concluded the Subject’s HBU as of 10/1/2012 “was as a new completed

single family residence,” and thereafter on 12/31/2012 and 10/1/2013 as “a partially completed

residence.” Each expert’s value conclusion was as follows:

Tax Year Plaintiff’s Expert City’s Expert 2011 $2,800,000 $4,500,000 2012 $2,800,000 $4,500,000 2012 (AA) $1,334,800 2013 $7,629,000(as of 10/1/12) 2013 $3,400,000(as of 1/10/13) $5,368,000(as of 12/31/12) 2014 $3,450,000 $5,368,000

During trial, plaintiff conceded that it was not challenging the valuation aspect of the 2012 added

assessment.

Tax Years 2011 and 2012

Each expert’s value conclusion was as to land only. Plaintiff’s expert used three sales, all

of which were oceanfront and one outside the City. She converted the sale prices to a per SF

4 (“PSF”) value, made adjustments thereto, concluded a value of land PSF, and multiplied the same

with the Subject’s total SF. The comparables’ details were as follows:

Sale Address Date Size (SF) Price Price PSF Net Adj.3 Net PSF 1 6 Adams St, Long Branch 12/14/2011 39,150 $5,000,000 $127.71 5% $134.10 2 10 Plaza Ct, Long Branch 11/03/2011 36,720 $5,342,122 $145.48 2% $148.38 3 627 East Ave, Bayhead 01/28/2010 34,560 $4,950,000 $143.00 6% $151.58

Land value for Sale 2 (next door to the Subject) was an extracted amount. She used a bank

appraisal which had appraised the property for $5,000,000, her knowledge due to personal

inspection (“excellent condition” when inspected in 2011), and cost estimates from Marshall &

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