Chesapeake Hotel LP v. Saddle Brook Township

22 N.J. Tax 525
CourtNew Jersey Tax Court
DecidedOctober 26, 2005
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 22 N.J. Tax 525 (Chesapeake Hotel LP v. Saddle Brook Township) 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
Chesapeake Hotel LP v. Saddle Brook Township, 22 N.J. Tax 525 (N.J. Super. Ct. 2005).

Opinion

PIZZUTO, J.T.C.

Separate complaints have been filed by taxpayer Chesapeake Hotel LP and taxing district Saddle Brook Township contesting the 1999 property tax assessment of taxpayer’s 12-story, 221-room hotel located within the taxing district on Pehle Avenue near the intersection of Interstate Highway 80 and the Garden State Parkway. The property is designated as Block 1003, Lot 1, in the Township’s tax records. During the tax year at issue, the hotel was known as the Saddle Brook Marriott. The property was assessed at $15,000,000, of which $2,717,000 was allocated to land and $12,283,000 to improvements. For a period including the subject tax year plaintiff, the owner of the real property, contracts ed with Marriott Corporation to manage and operate the hotel. Plaintiffs income from the property consisted of the net operating income of the hotel after the payment of various fees to Marriott under the management and operating agreement.

The income that the property owner received is not income from the rental of the real estate, but rather the net income of a business conducted at the facility. Therefore, valuation of the fee simple interest in the real property by capitalization of income is a more complicated exercise than it is in cases where there is a lease [527]*527of real estate to the operator of a business. It requires the separation of the income attributable to the use of the realty out of the total income generated by the operation of the business before capitalization of the realty income. This process is generally treated in the discussions of going concern value and business enterprise value in The Appraisal Institute, The Appraisal of Real Estate, 27-28, 641-644 (12th ed.2001). The treatise notes that income is derived from the total assets of the business (TAB) which can include real property, tangible personalty, and intangible elements. It concludes:

In the income capitalization approach, because the capitalized income stream will most likely reflect income to TAB, all components of net operating income not attributable to the real estate must be removed. I Id. 643].

Although the treatise identifies hotel operation as a business presenting this pattern, it does not discuss particular methods for the determination of realty income, either for hotel operations or generally.

The employment of the income approach to appraise hotel property and the question of the identification of income not attributable to real property and its extraction from total income were the subject of Judge Crabtree’s opinion in Glenpointe Assocs. v. Teaneck, 10 N.J. Tax 380 (Tax 1989), aff'd 12 N.J. Tax 118 (App.Div.1990). In Glenpointe, the court accepted the conclusions of an expert appraisal witness, Stephen Rushmore, concerning the particular adjustments that are necessary to extract non-realty income from total income so as to compute the income to be capitalized into real estate value. Rushmore is the author of Hotels, Motels, and Restaurants: Valuations and Market Studies (1983). He has established a national reputation in hotel valuation, and the procedure he employed is often described as the Rushmore method.

Rushmore considered that all payments to the entity that manages and operates the hotel constitute business income generated by the exercise of management and entrepreneurship. Accordingly, he excluded these payments in the computation of realty income subject to capitalization. In addition, Rushmore considered that a portion of the overall income was realized by the [528]*528employment of furniture, fixtures, and equipment (often referred to as “FF & E”). Since these items are (generally speaking) personal property rather than real estate, the income attributable to them, under Rushmore’s method, is also excluded from realty income. Separate adjustments are made to provide for the periodic replacement of the personal property (the return of FF & E) and also for a yield on the investment in personal property (the return on FF & E). This method has been employed by experts in other hotel valuation eases and followed in reported decisions in New Jersey and other jurisdictions. Prudential Ins. Co. v. Parsippany-Troy Hills Tp., 16 N.J. Tax 58 (Tax 1995), aff'd 16 N.J. Tax 148 (App.Div.1996); Westmount Plaza v. Parsippany Troy Hills Tp., 11 N.J. Tax 127 (Tax 1990). See also Marriott Corp. v. Bd. of County Comm’rs of Johnson County, 25 Kan.App.2d 840, 972 P.2d 798 (1999) (collecting cases).

The task of extracting real estate value from total asset value has attracted considerable attention in appraisal literature and practice. The expert who testified in taxpayer’s case in this matter, David C. Lennhoff, is the editor of a collection of articles entitled A Business Valuation Anthology (Appraisal Institute, 2001), and is one of the developers of Appraisal Institute Course 800: “Separating Real And Personal Property from Intangible Business Assets”. Applying the theories he has developed to hotel valuation, Lennhoff concludes that, in addition to the adjustments of the Rushmore method, several additional adjustments must be made to arrive at an accurate valuation for the real property used in a hotel operation. Lennhoff has given expert appraisal testimony in hotel valuation matters before tax tribunals in several states, and taxpayer in this action has pointed to decisions of the Arizona Tax Court, the Tennessee State Board of Equalization, and the Circuit Court of Loudoun County, Virginia, in which Lennhoffs approach and value conclusions were accepted. See, e.g., WXIII/Oxford-DTC Real Estate, L.L.C. v. Loudoun County Bd. of Supervisors, 64 Va. Cir. 317, 2004 WL 2848543, 2004 Va. Cir. LEXIS 157 (Loudoun County 2004).

The additional adjustments that Lennhoff proposes in this case are designed to deal with value attributable to: (a) personal [529]*529property; (b) the hotel franchise or “flag” (in this case the Marriott affiliation); (c) various residual intangibles, including goodwill and business and credit relationships; and (d) developmental and start-up outlays associated with the initiation of the hotel business.

In regard to personal property, Lennhoff makes the deductions from operating revenue provided in the Rushmore method both for a replacement allowance for FF & E and for an investment return on the depreciated cost of FF & E. In the case of the subject, his replacement allowance is 5% of gross income ($610,-583), and his investment return is 9.5% of original cost depreciated by 60% ($143,606). He considers these adjustments to reflect operating conditions and to provide for replacement of FF & E, but does not consider that they serve to exclude the value of personal property from the capitalization of income after all the deductions he allows. In addition to those deductions, Lennhoff considers that it is necessary to subtract the depreciated cost of FF & E ($1,511,649) from the amount arrived at after capitalization [adjustment (a) ] in order to exclude the value of personalty actually in use on the valuation date from the result of capitalization.

Taxpayer’s appraiser also considers that the subject hotel realizes “revenues that consistently exceed comparable hotel business operations conducted at similar real estate.” He considers the excess revenue to be earned not by the real property but by the Marriott flag.

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22 N.J. Tax 525, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chesapeake-hotel-lp-v-saddle-brook-township-njtaxct-2005.