City of South Amboy v. Karpowicz

28 N.J. Tax 324
CourtNew Jersey Tax Court
DecidedMarch 25, 2015
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 28 N.J. Tax 324 (City of South Amboy v. Karpowicz) 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 South Amboy v. Karpowicz, 28 N.J. Tax 324 (N.J. Super. Ct. 2015).

Opinion

SUNDAR, J.T.C.

Plaintiff (“City”) appeals the judgments of the Middlesex County Board of Taxation (“County Board”) which reversed the City’s omitted assessments placed only on the value of the improvement on defendants’ (“Taxpayers”) property, a two-family home, for tax years 2010 and 2011. For tax year 2007, the County Board had, in a regular’ tax appeal by the Taxpayers, reduced the value of the fire-damaged home from $164,900 to $0 but affirmed the land value of $86,500. These values continued for 2008 and 2009 due to the Freeze Act. For tax years 2010, and 2011, the same values continued as of the respective assessment dates of October 1, 2009 and October 1, 2010. The City then imposed omitted assessments of $164,900 as improvement value in late 2011 for each tax year. The County Board reduced the same to $0.

The City contends that the County Board erred because the building, although fire damaged, did not have a $0 value for 2010 and 2011. Therefore, it was improperly “omitted” from the tax lists when the building’s value was placed at $0 as of the relevant valuation dates. According to the City, the improvement value for each tax year under the sales comparison approach, and after deduction for repair costs, should be $129,100 and $125,700 respectively.

For the reasons stated below, the court finds that the City’s omitted assessments were improperly placed. Therefore, this [326]*326opinion does not address the valuation evidence offered by the City. The County Board’s judgments reducing the value of the improvements to $0 are affirmed. The City’s complaints are dismissed with prejudice.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

(A) Background

Taxpayers own property located in the City identified as Block 43, Lot 13 (“Subject”). It is improved by a four-storied, split-level two-family home. The first unit has three bedrooms and three full bathrooms. The second unit has two bedrooms and two full bathrooms. The property record card indicates the Subject had a partially finished full basement (813 square feet (“SF”) of the 1,451 SF area), a “livable area” of 2,376 SF, and a lot size of 2,700 SF (27’ x 100’). It is about 90 years old. Until a fire in 2005, the Subject was being leased out, thus, was income-producing property.

Sometime in February 2005, there was a major fire on the adjacent property which was improved with a liquor store. As a result, that property was completely destroyed. Although the two-family home on the Subject remained standing, it was significantly damaged by the effects of the fire. The vinyl siding on the left side of the building on the Subject (adjacent to, thus closest to the next-door building which caught fire) melted. Water from the fire-hoses flooded the Subject’s basement and damaged the windows and walls. The Subject’s interior walls were also damaged due to the fire-fighters efforts to ensure containment of the fire and that the residual embers were not burning within the interior walls. Due to the damage, the fire department disconnected basic utilities such as water and power supply to the Subject. The existing tenants had to be evicted from the premises.

Taxpayers then boarded up the windows and “wrapped” the building to protect it from the cold. They claimed that mold developed due to water in the basement caused by the firefighting, and spread during the Subject’s vacancy.

A Building Code enforcement official inspected the Subject’s interior soon after the fire, but did not get a clear view because of [327]*327the fire, smoke and water damage. He was thus unable to gauge the extent or quality of the damage. He speculated that about 20% of the interior walls looked to be damaged. He thereafter posted a placard on the Subject indicating it as “Unsafe.”

Sometime in November 2007, the same official noticed that the exterior of the Subject was unchanged with the effects of the fire damage still visible. He claimed that the windows were boarded up at this point but did not know the interior condition. He thereafter issued a “Notice of Unsafe Structure; Notice of Imminent Hazard” to the Taxpayers stating that pursuant to a November 5,2007 inspection, the building on the Subject was “unsafe due to structural issues.” The Notice required the Taxpayers to (a) vacate the Subject; and (b) “demolish [the] structure” no later than December 5,2007.

During the period between 2006 and 2011, the City’s officials and the South Amboy Redevelopment Agency had approached Taxpayers with several redevelopment proposals for the Subject. These included proposals for Taxpayers to purchase and develop the adjacent fire-destroyed property; sell the Subject to the adjacent property owner; or redevelop the Subject as part of the redevelopment project for the area. Taxpayers submitted, at their expense, plans proposing the demolition and redevelopment of the Subject in this regard. Talks eventually failed in 2011. During the entire time, the Subject lay vacant causing it to be vandalized and burgled by vagrants.

Sometime toward the end of 2011, the Building Code official procured an order from the municipal court for enforcement of his November 2007 notice of repair, due to Taxpayers’ alleged noncompliance with the same. Thereafter, Taxpayers applied for a permit through their contractors. The permit application noted the scope of work as repairing the roof framing; replacing sheathing; repairing the siding and roofing; and insulating walls and sheetrock. On March 14, 2012 the City issued a permit to Taxpayers, through their contractor, for making “alterations - fire damage repair” to the building at an estimated cost of $6,000 for its “rehabilitation.”

[328]*328Taxpayers had also provided the City with their engineer’s sketch dated March 1, 2012 of the proposed areas of repair to only the rear upper left portion of the roof (the side exposed to the fire). Although a notation on the sketch copy stated “No interior work proposed [at] this time. Exterior work only,” the sketch proposed insulation and sheetrock addition to interior walls within that roof area. The City approved the plan on March 7, 2012.1

During a subsequent inspection by the Building Code enforcement staff in connection with the issued permit, it was discovered that Taxpayers were making additional renovations and repairs to the interior including electrical and plumbing.2 Therefore, Taxpayers were required to procure additional permits. Another permit dated August 8, 2012 was issued for repairs, replacements or renovations to building, electrical, plumbing, fire protection, furnace, water heaters, and the like, based upon applications of four different contractors, totaling an estimated cost of $19,200. The City issued a Certificate of Occupancy on May 9, 2013.

(B) Tax Assessments

In 2005, and pursuant to a revaluation for that year, the Subject was assessed at $303,000 ($86,500 allocated to land and $217,200 allocated to improvements). The assessor claimed that due to the fire, he reduced the subsequent years’ improvement value allocation by about 24% to $164,900 (which thus reduced the total assessment to $251,500). He stated that this amount was subjective because he could not find sales of other fire-damaged build[329]*329ings, and in any event, due to the minor damage to the exterior of the Subject, he felt a 20% reduction to the previously allocated improvement value was appropriate.

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Bluebook (online)
28 N.J. Tax 324, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-south-amboy-v-karpowicz-njtaxct-2015.