Fairleigh Dickinson University v. Florham Park Borough

5 N.J. Tax 343
CourtNew Jersey Tax Court
DecidedMay 3, 1983
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 5 N.J. Tax 343 (Fairleigh Dickinson University v. Florham Park Borough) 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
Fairleigh Dickinson University v. Florham Park Borough, 5 N.J. Tax 343 (N.J. Super. Ct. 1983).

Opinion

LASSER, P.J.T.C.

These consolidated local property tax eases involve Fairleigh Dickinson University’s (FDU) claim for tax exemption for its Florham Park-Madison campus under the N.J.S.A. 54:4-3.6 exemption for educational institutions. Exemption of the land is the sole issue. It was stipulated that FDU owns 148 acres in Florham Park and 30.4 acres in Madison.1

Florham Park granted exemption for 50 acres for tax year 1981 and assessed the remaining 98 acres at $1,479,000. The University contested this denial of exemption for the 98 acres by filing a direct complaint with the Tax Court.

Madison granted exemption for one acre for tax year 1980 and assessed the remaining 29.4 acres at $793,800. FDU appealed to the Morris County Board of Taxation which granted exemption [347]*347for the entire 30.4 acres. Madison sought review of this action in the Tax Court.

I

The Florham Park-Madison campus, hereinafter “FP-M campus,” was formerly the Twombly estate. The mansion has been preserved and converted to college use and remains a focal point of the property. The formal gardens, lawns and trees have been preserved and adapted to student activities.

Dr. James B. Griffo, Provost of the FP-M campus testified that the FP-M campus is a total community campus. FDU’s educational program is not limited to classroom experience. The parklike setting and beauty of the campus aid the college in attracting students, and the entire campus contributes to the academic and personal growth of the students. Dr. Griffo testified in detail to the physical nature of the campus. He described the land, its topography and vegetation, the buildings and the activities of the students and faculty on the campus.

The central portion of the campus is devoted to an academic loop, around which are grouped most of the academic and administration buildings. Within the academic loop, a forested area containing specimen trees has been preserved as a nature trail.

Student dormitory areas and recreational areas are outside the academic loop. The uses of recreational areas in Florham Park and Madison vary from traditional varsity and intramural sports to sunbathing and frisbee playing. Other areas in Florham Park and Madison are devoted to picnicking, nature walks and outdoor botany and entomology classes.

Dormitories are located in the southeast area of the Florham Park portion of the campus. Facilities for dining and student activities are nearby. There is ample parking for faculty, resident and commuter students and visitors. Planted areas provide buffer zones to shield the buildings from parking areas, public roads and boundary areas.

[348]*348There is no master plan for development of the college. Present plans give priority to additions to the gymnasium and the library.

Student enrollment overall has not changed over the last ten years although the undergraduate-graduate and resident-commuter mix has changed. The campus meets the college’s needs at the present time, but Dr. Griffo is unable to predict whether it will in the future because of changing needs in education. Dr. Griffo testified that in his opinion, all of the land is necessary for the use of the buildings for university purposes.

Dr. Griffo described 43 buildings in Florham Park, identifying them as follows:

Description of Buildings Building Nos.2

1. The original Twombly mansion 1

2. Dormitories located in the dormitory village. Of 2-10 these nine buildings, eight are attached in pairs, with a small area of common wall, but they are otherwise physically separate buildings

3. A men’s dormitory 11

4. A dormitory lounge building 12

5. A women’s dormitory 13

(Buildings 11, 12 and 13 are separate buildings joined by small areas of common wall and fire doors)

6. Infirmary 14

7. Student center 15

8. Library 16

9. Student personnel services building attached to 17 the library by a small area of common wall with a fire door

10. Equal Opportunity Fund building 18
11. Counseling center 19

[349]*34912. Psychology classroom building 20

(The counseling center and the psychology classroom building are joined by a small area of common wall)

13. Maintenance building 21
14. Earth science building 22
15. Lecture hall/seminar hall building 23
16. Greenhouses 24
17. Storage building at the athletic field 25
18. Dreyfus College classroom building 26
19. Recreation building and gymnasium 27
20. Storage building 28
21. West cottage classroom, lab and office building 29

22. East cottage classroom, lab and office building 30 (Buildings 29 and 30 are attached at one corner)

23. Science building 31
24. Office building north of psychology classroom 32 building
25. Boiler room and carpentry shop 33
26. North gazebo 34
27. South gazebo 35 (The gazebos contain faculty offices)
28. Mail room 36
29. Pump houses 37, 38 & 39
30. Boiler room 40
31. Guard houses 41, 42 & 43

The three buildings and parking area in Madison are used for the university press, public relations, capital campaign, alumni activities, counseling senior citizens and records storage. Utility lines servicing the buildings are to be found throughout the FP-M campus.

[350]*350The Madison and Florham Park portions of the campus are separated by the tracks of the Erie Lackawanna Conrail Railroad. These tracks are elevated and an underpass connects the two portions of the campus. There is a road from the main entrance on Madison Avenue (Route 24) in Madison to the Florham Park portion of the campus.

Malcolm Kasler, a qualified city planner, testified on behalf of FDU that the original estate was designed and built in the 1890s. Stanford White was the architect and Frederick Olmstead was the landscape designer. Their design of the estate set the pattern for the adaptive reuse by the University.

Kasler divided the land use into eight categories and calculated the land areas in these categories in acres as follows:

1. Land for buildings, light and air
2. Roads, pathways and parking areas
3. Formal recreation areas (football, baseball, tennis, etc.)
4. Buffer areas

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Bluebook (online)
5 N.J. Tax 343, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fairleigh-dickinson-university-v-florham-park-borough-njtaxct-1983.