Free-Will LLC Etc v. City of Wildwood

CourtNew Jersey Tax Court
DecidedApril 24, 2017
Docket06799-2008
StatusUnpublished

This text of Free-Will LLC Etc v. City of Wildwood (Free-Will LLC Etc v. City of Wildwood) 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
Free-Will LLC Etc v. City of Wildwood, (N.J. Super. Ct. 2017).

Opinion

NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT APPROVAL OF THE TAX COURT COMMITTEE ON OPINIONS

TAX COURT OF NEW JERSEY

Patrick DeAlmeida R.J. Hughes Justice Complex Presiding Judge P.O. Box 975 25 Market Street Trenton, New Jersey 08625-0975 (609) 292-8108 Fax: (609) 984-0805

April 21, 2017

Amber N. Heinz, Esq. The Irwin Law Firm, P.A. 80 Main Street, Suite 410 West Orange, New Jersey 07052

Douglas M. Long, Esq. Long, Marmero & Associates, LLP 44 Euclid Street Woodbury, New Jersey 08096

Re: Free-Will, LLC c/o Stardust Motel v. City of Wildwood Docket No. 006799-2008 Docket No. 009191-2009 Docket No. 017714-2009

Dear Counsel:

This letter constitutes the court’s opinion after trial in the above-referenced matters

challenging the assessments on real property for tax years 2008 and 2009, as well as an added

assessment prorated over seven months of tax year 2009. For the reasons stated more fully below,

the assessments for tax years 2008 and 2009 are reduced and the added assessment prorated over

seven months of tax year 2009 is vacated. I. Procedural History and Findings of Fact

The following findings of fact and conclusions of law are based on the evidence and

testimony admitted at trial.

During the relevant tax years, plaintiff Free-Will, LLC was the owner of real property in

the City of Wildwood, Cape May County. The parcel is designated in the records of the City as

Block 148, Lot 16 and is commonly known as 3900 Ocean Avenue.

The subject property is approximately .36 acres in downtown Wildwood. The parcel,

which is one block from public access to the boardwalk and the Atlantic Ocean beach, is located

on the west side of Ocean Avenue with 80 feet of frontage on that roadway and on the south side

of Spicer Avenue with 177 feet of frontage on that roadway. On the property sits the Stardust

Motel, a two-story, circa 1960’s structure with 23 hotel rooms and a manager’s apartment. Each

unit contains a living room with a kitchen, bedroom, and bath. Eight of the units are standard

rooms, six are two-room units, and nine are one-room efficiencies. The hotel has an in-ground

pool and on-site parking for 29 vehicles. Patrons access the second floor via exterior-mounted

wooden stairs with a handrail. There is no elevator on the premises. Typical of the genre of

establishments in the Wildwoods known informally as “Doo Wop” motels, the Stardust Motel has

limited amenities and is occupied primarily during the summer months by guests enjoying the

nearby boardwalk and beach. The motel has no restaurant, bar, shopping, or entertainment

facilities, and is open from May to October. The property includes a detached, two-story, unheated

cottage used to house motel staff.

The subject property is located in the City’s hotel/motel zoning district. The principle

permitted uses within the district are hotels, motels, resort facilities, restaurants, taverns, bars,

specialty, novelty, and seashore-related retail, and residential dwelling units above ground floor.

2 In the mid-2000’s, Wildwood zoning officials approved a master plan that incorporated in the

subject property’s zone a conditional use allowing for a limited high-rise hotel/condominium

district centered around the Wildwood Convention Center and intended for year-round occupancy.

This plan, if realized, would constitute a fundamental change in the nature of downtown

Wildwood, which, at the time that the master plan was approved, was comprised primarily of low-

rise motels offering relatively modest accommodations for short-term vacationers.

On April 3, 2006, the Wildwood Zoning Board of Adjustment issued a resolution

conditionally approving the construction of a hotel/condominium project consisting of two

integrated 23- and 24-story towers on twenty-two lots spanning two blocks of the City along Ocean

and Atlantic Avenues. The subject property is one of three motels included in the planned

development that is the subject of the resolution. The application for approval of the development

was brought by Riviera Holding Company, LLC, the then contract purchaser of the twenty-two

lots, including the subject property.

One proposed tower would include 67 hotel rooms, 138 residential dwelling units, 2,000

square feet of retail space, a pool, health club, and on-site parking. The other proposed tower

would include 50 hotel rooms, 119 residential dwelling units, 2,640 square feet of retail space, a

pool, health club, juice bar, spa, and on-site parking. The proposed 257 residential units would be

either condominiums or townhouses, with the condominium units eligible to participate in a rental

pool that would allow those units to be rented as additional hotel rooms. The proposed hotel rooms

would be “first-class” units for customers attending events at the nearby convention center.

The proposed development of the subject property and twenty-one other lots did not take

place. Plaintiff’s 2006 federal from 1065, U.S. Return of Partnership Income, reports income of

$300,000 from “cancelled sales contract – deposit penalty.” That return was filed on February 13,

3 2007, prior to the first valuation date at issue here. Plaintiff’s 20007 federal form 1065 reports

income of $420,000 from “cancelled sales contract – deposit penalty.” That return was filed on

February 10, 2008, prior to the second valuation date at issue here.1

The failure of the proposed development of the subject property and other parcels is

indicative of the fact that master plan’s vision of high-density development of downtown

Wildwood has not materialized. As of the relevant valuation dates, no high-rise hotel/

condominium development had taken place in Wildwood. It is not clear from the record whether

the lack of high-rise development is the result of the economic forces that ultimately resulted in a

serious downtown in the national economy, particularly in the real estate sector, in late 2008, or

from other factors.

The municipality’s expert testified that the Zoning Board of Adjustment’s conditional

approval was a single step in a multi-phase process of approvals necessary to construct the high-

density development envisioned for the subject property and other parcels. There is no evidence

in the record with respect to whether the developer sought necessary approvals from county, State,

and environmental authorities with jurisdiction over the proposed development, including

approvals necessary under the Coastal Area Facility Review Act, N.J.S.A. 13:19-1 to -21. Nor

1 During trial, the court granted a motion to bar admission into evidence of the amount of consideration agreed upon in the contract or contracts for the purchase of the subject property that resulted in the forfeited deposits reported on plaintiff’s federal tax returns. See Township of Little Egg Harbor v. Bonsangue, 316 N.J. Super. 271, 281 (App. Div. 1998). There are a number of reasons why the consideration in the contract or contracts is unreliable as evidence of value, including that title to the subject property was to be conveyed by the contract or contracts as part of an assemblage of properties and that the purchaser or purchasers sought to use the subject property for a purpose other than the highest and best use found most credible by the court. In addition, no witness offered testimony with respect to the arms-length nature of the transaction memorialized in the contract or contracts.

4 does the record contain any evidence with respect to whether it was reasonably probable that any

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