Coca-Cola Bottling Co. v. Neptune Township

8 N.J. Tax 169
CourtNew Jersey Tax Court
DecidedJanuary 8, 1986
StatusPublished
Cited by50 cases

This text of 8 N.J. Tax 169 (Coca-Cola Bottling Co. v. Neptune 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
Coca-Cola Bottling Co. v. Neptune Township, 8 N.J. Tax 169 (N.J. Super. Ct. 1986).

Opinion

RIMM, J.T.C.

This local property tax matter involves valuation and discrimination for the tax year 1983. The subject property is designated as Block 233, Lot 1 on the tax map of defendant municipality and contains 13.45 acres. The lot is improved with a one-story, brick and block-over-steel frame industrial building, used by plaintiff for warehouse, distribution, office, vehicle storage and vehicle repair services. The building was built in 1948. According to defendant it contains 41,736 square feet. There are 5,000 square feet of office space in the building. For the tax year 1983 the assessment was:

Land $ 336,300

Improvements 297,700

Total $ 634,000

On appeal by taxpayer to the Monmouth County Board of Taxation a judgment was entered sustaining the assessment. The taxpayer then filed a complaint in the Tax Court seeking a reduction in the assessment.

In valuing the subject property, plaintiffs appraiser used all three conventional approaches to value. It was his opinion that, by the cost approach, the property had a value of $1,099,-400; by the income approach, a value of $1,134,500, and by the market data approach, a value of $970,000. His final opinion of value was that indicated by the market data approach, $970,000. Plaintiff’s expert testified that he relied mainly on the market [172]*172approach to value because there is “an abundance of comparable industrial sales in the area.”

The witness first testified about the cost approach to valuing the subject property. More will be said about this approach hereafter when the improvements are more fully described.

The witness next testified about the income approach. His income approach is rejected for the reason that he was completely unable to support the comparable rentals he used in arriving at economic rent for the subject property. The witness testified to four properties which he said were comparable to the subject property. He testified as to the square foot rent of each of the comparable properties. The rentals were net, but the witness acknowledged that he never looked at the leases and did not discuss with any one involved with any of the rentals what constituted the definition of “net lease.” He was unable to say what payments the tenant made and what expenses the owner paid, and he was otherwise unable to give any of the details of the landlord-tenant relationship on the basis of which a meaningful net rent could be determined for the subject property.

In this regard the comments on lease types in American Institute of Real Estate Appraisers, The Appraisal of Real Estate (8 ed. 1983) must be noted:

Although a lease may be drawn to fit any situation, most leases fall into one of several classifications. Leases can be broadly classified as flat rental, graduated rental, revaluation, index and percentage. Within such classifications, a lease may be on either a gross rental basis, with the lessor paying all operating expenses for the real estate, or a net rental basis, with the tenant paying all such expenses. A lease frequently reflects terms that fall between these extremes, with a specified division of expenses. [Id. at 353]

From this, it is obvious that, without review of a lease, an appraiser is unable to tell precisely what the tenant’s responsibility is and what the owner’s responsibility is. He cannot realistically say whether a given rental payment is the total obligation, in terms of rental expense, which the tenant undertakes.

[173]*173In arriving at his value for the subject property, the witness provided for owner-incurred expenses of management/brokerage fees and structural repairs only. There is no testimony before the court as to whether the owners of the four comparable properties incurred any other expenses. Nor could any such evidence be presented to the court by this witness who never reviewed the leases utilized to establish net rentals.

Parenthetically, aside from his inability to support his conclusion of economic rent, his capitalization rate is completely without any support in the record, and the income approach is rejected on that basis as well.

The market data approach is also rejected. The witness was of the opinion that the property had a value of $970,000 by this approach. In arriving at this opinion the witness used seven comparable sales. He determined a square foot unit price for each comparable sale property. He then adjusted each such price to determine an adjusted unit value, adjusting the unit price to a value for the subject property. Based on this work, the witness was of the opinion that the indicated unit value of the subject property was $16 a square foot for land and building, merged. The land included in this value was 4.5 acres. The witness also valued the excess land, or approximately 8.75 acres, at $35,000 an acre and determined a total value of $970,000, rounded.

At the conclusion of the witness’ testimony on the market data approach, plaintiff rested. Coincidentally with the plaintiff’s resting its case, the trial was adjourned at the end of the first trial day, with defendant to have cross examination on the following day. When court convened on the second trial day, however, plaintiff sought leave of court to produce further direct testimony, particularly with regard to the market data approach. Such leave was granted to plaintiff, and plaintiff’s expert witness proceeded to testify at some length that he had erred in his market data approach and that the error was in the information relating to his comparable sale number three. He had testified on the previous day that the property involved in [174]*174comparable sale number three had 10,220 square feet. He now testified that that was an error and that in fact the property had 27,500 square feet. In addition, as a result of cross examination, and questions by the court, it appeared that the witness had improperly described the physical condition of the property involved as comparable sale number seven. His testimony on direct examination was that the property was in good condition. In fact, at the time of the sale on the basis of which the witness determined a unit price and hence an adjusted unit value, the property was in poor condition. When confronted with this fact from his own testimony on cross examination, the witness conceded that the age and condition adjustment he had made for sale number seven of minus 5% was in error. He testified that, upon reflection, the correct adjustment should have been plus 10%. Nevertheless, he also testified that the swing of 15% in the adjustments for age and condition of sale number seven made no difference as to the adjusted unit value of $14.50 for comparable sale number seven.

The witness also testified that, notwithstanding the corrections in his testimony relating to comparable sale number three and comparable sale number seven, his opinion of value remained precisely the same, namely $970,000. Such an opinion is not believable, and the witness' opinion of value based on the market data approach is rejected.

The witness also used the cost approach in arriving at a value for the subject property. He first used four comparable land sales from which he concluded that the subject property had a value of $35,000 an acre for both the land necessary for the building and the excess acreage, drawing no distinction in value between these two areas.

The witness measured the cost of the improvements by using Marshall and Swift’s

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Bluebook (online)
8 N.J. Tax 169, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coca-cola-bottling-co-v-neptune-township-njtaxct-1986.