Brown v. Borough of Glen Rock

19 N.J. Tax 366
CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedJanuary 3, 2001
StatusPublished
Cited by94 cases

This text of 19 N.J. Tax 366 (Brown v. Borough of Glen Rock) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brown v. Borough of Glen Rock, 19 N.J. Tax 366 (N.J. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

The Supreme Court summarily remanded this Tax Court matter to us on October 20, 2000 for our consideration of issues that the prevailing plaintiffs, William J. Brown, Jr. and Irene E. Brown1 (the taxpayers), raised on appeal which the Tax Court had decided against them but which we did not address in our prior unpublished opinion. Brown v. Borough of Glen Rock, A-4279-98 (June [370]*37013, 2000).2 Those issues relate to the taxpayers’ claim of “discrimination” and the “true value” of the property. Accordingly, we address these issues now.

The taxpayers filed this challenge to the Bergen County Board of Taxation’s affirmance of them 1997 tax assessment in the Small Claims Division of the Tax Court. R. 8:11. The taxpayers’ property was assessed at $235,000, allocated $164,000 to the land and $71,400 to the improvements.

The property in question is designated on the tax map of the Borough of Glen Rock as block 76, lot 2 and is known as 675 Lincoln Avenue (the property). We described the property and the circumstance that triggered plaintiffs’ challenge to the assessment in our prior opinion, as follows:

The property consists of a .252 acre parcel of land, with fifty-five feet of “front footage,” and contains a one and one-half story residence consisting of 2,231 square feet of livable space. The lot is located in the A-2 residential district. The zoning ordinance governing that district requires front footage of eighty feet. Hence, the residence is on an undersized non-conforming lot. The 1997 valuation assessed the property for the deficiency of the front footage by increasing the assessed value of the land by $30,000.

In their appeal to the Tax Court, the taxpayers sought a determination that their property was assessed at greater than the fail- market value and at a ratio which exceeded the common level of assessments in the taxing district (commonly referred to as •discrimination).3 The Tax Court judge rejected the four adjusted comparable sales relied on by the taxpayers, concluded that the taxpayers had failed to prove the “true value”, i.e., fan- márket value of then- property, and determined that the presumption of [371]*371correctness which attaches to the county board’s judgment had not been overcome. The Tax Court judge also determined that even if the taxpayers had demonstrated the “true value” of their property, they had failed to present sufficient proof to sustain a challenge to the assessment based on discrimination. In particular, the Tax Court judge determined that the taxpayers’ proof of discrimination was insufficient and their comparable sales analysis flawed. Accordingly, he affirmed the county board judgment which had affirmed the original assessment.

On appeal, we determined that the presumption which normally attaches to assessments and county board judgments was not warranted because the Borough of Glen Rock had not adequately explained the factual basis for its having increased the assessment on all undersized lots by $30,000. We, therefore, determined that the assessment of the property should be reduced by $30,000.4

Following the remand by the Supreme Court, and pursuant to our request, by letter dated November 1, 2000, the taxpayers identified the specific issues of which they seek “further review” as Points VIII, IX and X in our unpublished opinion. We reproduce the point headings here.

POINT VIII

EVEN WITHOUT A COMPREHENSIVE ANALYSIS OF SALES OF PROPERTIES AS COMPARED TO ASSESSMENTS, THE GENERAL COEFFICIENT OF DEVIATION INDICATES THE ABSENCE OF A COMMON LEVEL IN 1997, THE YEAR OF GLEN ROCK’S REVALUATION.

POINT IX

THE IMPLICATIONS OF THE TAX COURT’S RULING THAT RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY OWNERS WITHOUT EXPERT WITNESSES MAY ONLY USE THE SALES COMPARISON APPROACH DEPRIVES SUCH TAXPAYERS OF THE BENEFIT OF “UNIFORM RULES” AVAILABLE TO INCOME PRODUCING PROPERTY OWNERS. (Not raised below)

POINT X

[372]*372BASED UPON THE DISCRIMINATORY ASSESSMENT OF THE APPELLANTS’ PROPERTY, RELIEF SHOULD BE PROVIDED BY APPLICATION OF THE DIRECTOR’S 1997 SCHOOL AID RATIO FOR GLEN ROCK.5

We have carefully considered the taxpayers’ contentions in light of the record and applicable law and conclude they are of insufficient merit to warrant a detailed opinion. R. 2:11-3(e)(1)(E). However, in light of the remand, we deem it appropriate to add the following observations.

A. The Taxpayers’ Claim of Discrimination (Point VIII).

The taxpayers claimed the Borough had discriminated against them and those similarly situated (those with undersized lots in the A-2 residential district, whose assessments had been increased on “phantom land”). The taxpayers asserted they were relying on M.I. Holdings, Inc. v. Jersey City, 12 N.J.Tax 129 (Tax 1991), to support them claim.

In rejecting the taxpayers’ discrimination claim in this case, the Tax Court judge stated:

[e]ven if a true value had been proved, because chapter 123 is not applicable in revaluation years and the exception recognized in MR [sic] Holdings versus Jersey City that allows the application of a ratio in a revaluation year requires very extensive proof to demonstrate first that the revaluation did not across the board result in assessments at true value, and secondly, that the evidence would demonstrate an appropriate ratio of assessment to true value that could be applied. But we don’t have that kind of proof in this case.

We agree with the Tax Court judge that the taxpayers’ proofs do not support their claim of discrimination.

The taxpayers misapprehend the meaning of the term “discrimination” in the context of a tax appeal. It does not involve bad motive or malice. As noted by the Tax Court judge at trial, the term “discrimination” in a revaluation year means only a claim that the revaluation resulted in assessments generally at levels below true value.

[373]*373 When a taxpayer seeks discrimination relief, the courts generally apply the rules set down in N.J.S.A. 54:51A-6 (L. 1973, c. 123) (commonly referred to as “Chapter 123”). See generally Pannaic Street Realty v. Garfield, 13 N.J.Tax 482, 484-86 (Tax 1994). This statute provides for a presumptive common level of assessment, i.e., the Director’s average ratio. As recognized by the court in M.I. Holdings, however, “the statute by its own terms ... is inapplicable in a revaluation year. N.J.S.A. 54:51A-6(d).” 12 N.J.Tax at 142. As that case states, the reason that Chapter 123 does not apply in a revaluation year is that there is a presumption that in a revaluation year all properties are assessed at true value, i.e., 100% of fair market value. The year 1997 was a revaluation year in the Borough of Glen Rock.

Relief from a discriminatory assessment may be afforded under Chapter 123 in a revaluation year but only in “the most extreme or severe circumstances.” Ibid, (quoting Murnick v. City of Asbury Park, 95 N.J. 452, 463,

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Bluebook (online)
19 N.J. Tax 366, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-borough-of-glen-rock-njsuperctappdiv-2001.