Beneficial Facilities Corp. v. Peapack & Gladstone Borough

11 N.J. Tax 359
CourtNew Jersey Tax Court
DecidedOctober 25, 1990
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 11 N.J. Tax 359 (Beneficial Facilities Corp. v. Peapack & Gladstone Borough) 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
Beneficial Facilities Corp. v. Peapack & Gladstone Borough, 11 N.J. Tax 359 (N.J. Super. Ct. 1990).

Opinion

LASSER, P.J.T.C.

Taxpayers contest the 1988 and 1989 real property tax assessments on the ten-building headquarters complex of Beneficial Management Corporation on the east side of Route 206 in Peapack & Gladstone Borough.

These actions are direct appeals to the Tax Court pursuant to N.J.S.A. 54:3-21. A municipal-wide revaluation was adopted for 1988, and it was stipulated that the level of assessment to be applied for 1988 and 1989 is 100% of market value. Valuation only is in issue.

Taxpayers’ complaints seek reductions in the 1988 and 1989 assessments, and taxing district’s counterclaims seek increases in the 1988 assessments.

In issue are the assessments on Block 20, Lot 10, a 71.272-acre parcel, a portion of which is the site of the headquarters buildings, and Block 33, Lot 13, the 9.345-acre parcel on the [362]*362west side of Route 206 upon which has been constructed the highway interchange and underpass providing the headquarters complex with access to Route 206.

The assessments in issue are:

[[Image here]]

Of the 71.272 acres in Lot 10, 60.272 acres are zoned office research/light industry, and 11 acres are zoned R-4 residential and are undeveloped. The Lot 13, 9.345-acre parcel is vacant land improved only with the interchange and underpass.

The subject property, the worldwide headquarters of Beneficial, is a single-user corporate headquarters complex of Italian Palladian architecture. It is a unique village-style grouping of brick two- and three-story office buildings on a beautifully landscaped campus-type rolling hillside site. The complex also includes two multi-level garage structures, a co-generation energy building, an employee gasoline service station, two tennis courts, a guard house, a clock/water tower, underground garages and brick-lined underground corridors (with light wells) connecting the buildings. The buildings are used principally as office space for the financial services and insurance business of Beneficial. The improvements include an executive office building, cafeteria, company store, barber shop, bank, workout room and medical facilities, all for the comfort and convenience of the approximately 1,100 employees.

Construction of the complex commenced in 1979, and it was ready for occupancy in 1981. The project included the construction of an interchange on Route 206, with an underpass providing ingress and egress to Route 206 in north and south directions. An interior ring road circles the complex.

[363]*363The headquarters complex comprises over one million square feet of buildings. See attached schedule 1 for detailed area breakdown.

There are a number of unusual architectural features, the Italian Palladian style, the extensive use of brick (2y2 million bricks), the arched shape of many of the windows, the approximately 50 false chimney structures, the octagonal shape of the executive office building, the 88-foot-high clock tower (campanile) which conceals the water tower, the light wells for the underground corridors, covered brick archways and arcades, brick patios, fountains, copper roofs and dormers, cobblestone piazzas, balconies, ornamental gates, 5,000 linear feet of telelift track for an electronic mail system throughout the complex, classic columns, television studio, fire protection and life safety and security systems with a security monitoring room.

Of the total 80.617 acres (Lots 10 and 13), approximately 30 acres are utilized by the headquarters complex. Limestone caverns under the 30 acres required 1,800-2,000 piles to support the subject buildings. The balance of the land is undeveloped.

The cost of the Route 206 interchange and underpass, referred to as “the trumpet,” has been included in the land value by taxpayers’ and taxing district’s appraisal experts. Its cost included the relocating and widening of Route 206, removal of the Brady Drive overpass and construction of the access roads. The direct cost of construction of the trumpet by Turner Construction Company (Turner), the general contractor, was $6,464,630. This is exclusive of the cost and/or value of the 9.345 acres on the west side of Route 206 used solely for the trumpet. An additional improvement cost contended by taxpayers to be included in the land value is for pilings, alleged by taxpayers to cost $4,500,000 but which Turner listed as piles and predrilling at $1,584,147.

The land is owned by Beneficial Facilities Corporation, having been acquired by Beneficial interests in 1978. The headquarters complex was constructed on this land by Beneficial Management Headquarters, Inc. Hamilton Associates, a limit-

[364]*364ed partnership in which subsidiaries of Paine Webber, Incorporated and Merrill Lynch & Co., Inc. were the general partners, was formed for the purpose of acquiring the headquarters complex from Beneficial Management Headquarters, Inc., leasing from Beneficial Facilities Corporation the 30 acres of land upon which it is constructed, and then leasing the complex and subleasing the land to Beneficial Management Corporation. The lease to Beneficial Management Corporation was for an initial term of 28 years beginning July 1, 1982, with lease renewal options which could extend the term for a total of 75 years from July 1,1982. The improvements were purchased by Hamilton Associates from Beneficial Management Headquarters, Inc. in June 1982 for $134,400,000, and, in addition, the partnership paid acquisition fees to the general partners totaling $8,870,400, for a total cost to the partnership of $143,-270,400 for improvements. A mortgage loan of $133,056,000 on the leased premises was made by California State Teachers Retirement System, secured by the improvements and the 30 acres of leased land.

I.

Taxpayers’ First Appraisal Expert.

Taxpayers presented an appraisal expert, Rinaldi, who valued the improvements by estimating their reproduction cost by the segregated cost method. This expert did not value the land.

Relying on two construction cost estimating services (Marshall Valuation Service and R.S. Means Company, Inc.) this expert applied unit construction cost figures from these cost-estimating services to the subject improvements and then adjusted these figures to October 1, 1987 and October 1, 1988. These costs were calculated for each construction item from excavation and site preparation through the roof structure for the ten buildings, and the underground corridors, the two parking decks, the co-generation building and the yard improvements. For depreciation purposes, this expert was of the opinion that, as of October 1, 1987, the complex had an effective age of four [365]*365years and, as of October 1,1988, an effective age of five years, and he posited a useful life of 60 years for structural components and 30 years for nonstructural components.

A summary of this expert’s cost estimates follows:

October 1, 1987 October 1, 1988

Total cost of buildings and yard improvements before depreciation and obsolescence $ 94,316,0001 $101,201,000*

Building reproduction cost $ 83,610,0002 $ 89,713,000*

Less physical depreciation (1987 average 9.9%) (1988 average 11.6%) -8,296,000** -10,361,000**

Less functional obsolescence due to excess construction of fiberglass ceiling panels - 530,000 - 570,000

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

R Realty LLC v. Little Falls Township
New Jersey Tax Court, 2018
Wellmark, Inc. v. Polk County Board of Review
875 N.W.2d 667 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 2016)
Regent Care v. Hackensack City
27 N.J. Tax 138 (New Jersey Tax Court, 2013)
Westwood Lanes, Inc. v. Garwood Borough
24 N.J. Tax 239 (New Jersey Tax Court, 2008)
Metuchen I, LLC v. Borough of Metuchen
21 N.J. Tax 283 (New Jersey Tax Court, 2004)
Best Foods v. Englewood Cliffs Borough
19 N.J. Tax 266 (New Jersey Tax Court, 2001)
American Cyanamid Co. v. Wayne Township
17 N.J. Tax 542 (New Jersey Tax Court, 1998)
Brae Associates v. Park Ridge Borough
17 N.J. Tax 187 (New Jersey Tax Court, 1998)
Hull Junction Holding Corp. v. Princeton Borough
16 N.J. Tax 68 (New Jersey Tax Court, 1996)
Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. v. East Amwell Township
13 N.J. Tax 24 (New Jersey Tax Court, 1992)
Beneficial Facilities Corp. v. Borough of Peapack & Gladstone
13 N.J. Tax 112 (New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 1992)
General Motors Corp. v. City of Linden
12 N.J. Tax 24 (New Jersey Tax Court, 1991)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
11 N.J. Tax 359, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beneficial-facilities-corp-v-peapack-gladstone-borough-njtaxct-1990.