City of Newark v. Newark & Essex Building Corp.

52 A.2d 541, 25 N.J. Misc. 228, 1947 N.J. Misc. LEXIS 16
CourtNew Jersey Tax Court
DecidedMarch 25, 1947
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 52 A.2d 541 (City of Newark v. Newark & Essex Building Corp.) 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
City of Newark v. Newark & Essex Building Corp., 52 A.2d 541, 25 N.J. Misc. 228, 1947 N.J. Misc. LEXIS 16 (N.J. Super. Ct. 1947).

Opinion

Kreamer, Commissioner.

These are appeals hy the City of Newark .from judgments of the Essex County Board of Taxation granting reductions on land and building for the years 1943, 1944 and 1945. The subject property is located at 736-752 Broad Street and is more specifically designated [229]*229as Block 145, Lot 1. Erected thereon is a thirty-six story store and office building. The property lies on the east side of Broad Street between Clinton and Commerce Streets. The frontage on Broad Street consists of 187.55 feet. It has side line depths along Clinton Street of 191.50 feet and along Commerce Street of 189.13 feet. The rear line is 176.52 feet.

The city by these appeals seeks the restoration of the original assessment for land and building. In each of the cases the assessment was the same. The County Board judgments granting reductions were the same for 1943 and 1944. The judgment for 1945 differed slightly. The figures are as follows:

19J/A-19U 19Jf5
County County
Assessment Board Board
Land ............ $1,751,300 $1,315,000 $1,315,000
Improvements ..... 4,200,000 3,700,000 4,000,000
$5,951,300 $5,015,000 $5,315,000

The respondent accepted the reductions granted by the County Board and filed no appeals for further reductions except in the 1945 case and this appeal was withdrawn by respondent at the hearing.

In each of the appeals John A. Linnett and Morris Goldfarb appeared for the city and Eranklin Hannoch and George Goldstein for the respondent, all witnesses testifying as to valuation.

The experts maintained their respective valuations on the land, exclusive of improvement, for each of the years 1943, 1944 and 1945, thus indicating no change in value thereon. Consequently their testimony with respect to land valuation and the final determination of value by this body as to land may be applied to all three cases.

Mr. Goldfarb and Mr. Linnett, for the city, testified to a value of $1,525,000 and $1,561,000, respectively, for the [230]*230land, where as Mr. Hannoch and Mr. Goldstein, for the respondent, testified to a value of $1,315,000. The difference between the estimates on behalf of the city and the respondent resulted mainly from the application of a $6,000 per unit foot value by the city and a $5,000 per unit foot basis by the respondent with respect to the Broad Street frontage.

There was introduced into evidence in the 1943 ease a certified copy of a judgment of the Mew Jersey Supreme Court in connection with the 1942 appeal of the taxpayer. This judgment was rendered April 11th, 1945, in the matter of Newark and Essex Building Corp. v. The City of Newark et al., and recited that on January 4th, 1944, the State Board of Tax Appeals entered a judgment reducing the assessment, allocating $1,560,500 to land and $4,200,000 to building. The Supreme Court modified the determination of the State Board of Tax Appeals and entered a judgment which allocated $1,527,000 to land and $3,200,000 to building. See Newark and Essex Building Corp. v. City of Newark et al., 132 N. J. L. 574; 41 Atl. Rep. (2d) 894.

Both Mr. Goldstein and Mr. Hannoch testified in the certiorari proceedings before the Supreme Court in the 1942 case. The reported opinion of that tribunal, which may be found at the foregoing citation, reveals that the court based the decision on the testimony of Mr. Hannoch, stating: “All the facts considered, we can only conclude that the assessment should be reduced to comply with the views expressed by Mr. Hannoch.”

Mr. Hannoeh’s present estimate of land value, however, differs from the valuation given by him in 1942 case. In that case Mr. Hannoch testified to a valuation of $1,527,000 for the land whereas his estimate in the 1943 case is $1,315,000, a decline of over $200,000 in the opinion of this witness. The principal reason for this was that in the 1942 case Mr. Hannoch ascribed $6,000 as the unit foot valuation for the Broad Street frontage, whereas in the appeals now pending he ascribes a valuation of $5,000 per unit foot for [231]*231the same frontage. This despite the fact that both Mr. Hannoeh and Mr. Goldstein have testified that no physical or economic change in the subject property took place between the assessing date for 1942 and the assessing date for 1943 such as would justify any change in valuation.

What may be accomplished by a manipulation of figures has already been commented upon by the courts. Haworth v. State Board, 127 N. J. L. 67; 21 Atl. Rep. (2d) 309; City of Plainfield v. State Board, 19 N. J. Mis. R. 313; 19 Atl. Rep. (2d) 195. We shall proceed first to examine the testimony of the experts for the respondent and ascertain whether there is anything to be found therein to justify the change in the basis of their valuation of the land for these two years.

The factors which, according to the witness Eannoch prompted him to change his land valuation from $6,000 per unit foot on Broad Street in 1942 to $5,000 in 1943, may be summarized as follows:

(1) That the $6,000 unit figure used in the 1942 case was “more or less arbitrarily set;” that since the time of Ms previous testimony this Division had rendered a judgment with respect to other property in a different block on Broad Street at $5,000 per unit foot. The witness further stated that in coming to his conclusion he had sought to make his present valuation uniform with the base set in that decision;

(2) that the market value of the land had declined to $5,000 per unit foot “by reason of the improvement that’s on it;”

(3) that where a building thirty-six stories in height improves a plot of land of this size there is a much greater ratio as between building and land value than a ratio of two to one; and

(4) that there was a sale of comparable property which indicated a $5,000 per' unit foot valuation.

With reference to the first factor it is interesting to note that in his testimony before this Division and before the Supreme Court in the 1942 case this witness made no state[232]*232ment that his $6,000 unit foot valuation was “arbitrarily set.” , In his deposition before the Supreme Court the witness stated that his estimate of the land value was “based on my physical estimate of the land value of $6,000 per front foot for 189. feet of frontage on Broad Street.” As to the judgment which purportedly entered into his calculations, the witness admitted on cross examination that he had ar- ' rived at his present opinion of value before the rendering of the determination and, therefore, it could not have influenced him. Mr; Hannoch admitted that as of the assessing date a hypothetical buyer could not divine what this Division’s judgment was going to be.

As to the second factor we are at a loss to understand the process of reasoning which caused the witness to conclude that the market value of the property had declined from $6,000 to $5,000 per unit foot by reason of the “improvement that’s on it.” The same improvement in the same economic and physical condition as of the assessing date for 1943 existed as of the assessing date for 1942.

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52 A.2d 541, 25 N.J. Misc. 228, 1947 N.J. Misc. LEXIS 16, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-newark-v-newark-essex-building-corp-njtaxct-1947.