Heller Construction Co. v. City of Newark

1 N.J. Tax 423
CourtNew Jersey Tax Court
DecidedAugust 6, 1980
StatusPublished

This text of 1 N.J. Tax 423 (Heller Construction Co. v. City of Newark) 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
Heller Construction Co. v. City of Newark, 1 N.J. Tax 423 (N.J. Super. Ct. 1980).

Opinion

HOPKINS, J. T. C.

The subject case involves appeals and cross-appeals from judgments of the Essex County Board of Taxation with respect to property located at 910-920 18th Avenue in the City of Newark and designated as Block 4041A, Lot 3, on the tax maps of said taxing district.

The original assessments and County Board judgments are as follows:

[425]*4251975 through 1978:
Original County Board
Assessment Judgment
Land ........... $20,000 $20,000
Building......... 36,800 29,300
Total ........... $56,800 $49,300

The taxing district’s position is that the original assessments were correct. The taxpayer’s position is that the assessments for the years involved should total as follows:

1975 ..........................$35,600
1976 .......................... $36,000
1977 .......................... $33,200
1978 .......................... $31,700

The parties have agreed that the correct assessed values should be obtained by applying the Director’s ratios to the true values as herein found.

The subject property is a one story brick building containing approximately 9,200 square feet, no basement, irregular plot of approximately 135 foot frontage on 18th Avenue between Carolina Avenue and Melrose Avenue. A portion of the lot, approximately 39 feet in width, extends to and fronts on Carolina Avenue. The tax lot has an area of 15,004 feet, of which 13,164 feet were leased to Acme Markets, Inc., a supermarket, during the period August 1972 to August 1977. Said tenant leased that portion of the subject premises, together with an adjacent lot which was used for parking, at an annual rental of $17,000, plus all real estate taxes in excess of $5,220 annually. Tenant paid basic liability insurance, fuel and all utilities. Owner was responsible for fire and extended coverage insurance and structural, mechanical and exterior repairs.

Acme Markets closed the store in 1972 and, since that time, it has been unoccupied.

The building has brick on the front elevation, an aluminum framed entrance and window areas, minimum porcelain veneer, wood framed roof, 12-foot high ceiling, generally open area with few framed partitions, old-fashioned metal ceilings and [426]*426fluorescent lighting. It has an oil fired Kawanee boiler and a small loading area with access from the adjoining lot. It has no sprinkler system.

The building is in generally good condition, except that the owner has failed to make repairs during the period of time when it has been unoccupied. This has caused some leaking from the roof.

Plaintiff has testified that, since the store was vacated by Acme Markets, Inc., both the owner and Acme Markets, Inc., have attempted to obtain another tenant. However, they have been unsuccessful to date. The rent, however, has been paid during the full term of the lease, which expired in August 1977.

Plaintiff introduced the testimony of an expert witness who testified that, as of the assessing dates for the tax years 1975, 1976 and 1977, the true value of the property, improved with the building, was $49,600. With respect to the tax year 1978, he testified that the true value was $44,700.

Plaintiff’s expert utilized the income approach to reach the true values to which he testified and did not utilize either the cost approach or the market approach to test the accuracy of his computations.

In his computations for the first 3 years, plaintiff’s expert relied upon the lease which was in effect as of the assessing dates. That lease called for a rental of $17,000 plus payment of all real estate taxes by the tenant which were in excess of $5,220. Further, the landlord was to pay for fire and extended coverage insurance, as well as to be responsible for structural, mechanical and exterior repairs. Plaintiff’s expert computed total deductions of $9,058 which included the real estate taxes for which the owner was liable, as well as insurance, maintenance and repairs, reserve for alterations and replacements, leasing commissions, management costs and professional fees and miscellaneous. This left a net income to the property of $7,092. As the lease arrangement included the parking lot adjacent to the subject property, plaintiff’s expert, in effect, permitted a 9 percent rental payment on the assessed value of [427]*427the property, which was $16,000. He also then subtracted, as a return to the land of the subject property, a 9 percent return. The above computation resulted in the amount of $3,852 being attributed to the building. This amount was capitalized at a rate of 13 percent, which included a 9 percent return and a 4 percent recapture. The resulting value attributed to the building was $29,600 which, together with the $20,000 attributed to the land, resulted in a value of $49,600.

For the year 1978, the plaintiff’s expert assumed an economic rent of $12,000 with a 10 percent vacancy and collection loss. From the resulting $10,800 he deducted insurance of $2,000 together with estimated costs of maintenance and repairs, reserve for alterations and replacements, leasing commissions of 5 percent, management of 3 percent, and professional fees and miscellaneous. This resulted in a deduction of $4,040 or a net income to the property of $6,760. Assuming a return of 9Vz percent, after taxes, to the subject land as well as to the adjacent parking lot, he deducted from the net income the amount of $3,420, leaving a net income to the building of $3,340. This was capitalized at a rate of 13.5 percent, of which 9.5 percent was deemed a return on investment with a 4 percent recapture rate. This resulted in a value attributable to the building of $24,700 which, when added to the value of $20,000 attributed to the land, came to a true value of $44,700.

Defendant introduced the testimony of an assessor who valued the subject property as of the critical date for all four years at $95,100, divided between $75,100 for the building and $20,000 for the land. In so doing, she utilized the market data approach in comparing the subject property with 3 allegedly comparable properties in the area which were sold in the period 1975 through 1978.

The property at 1109-1115 South Orange Avenue, which was deemed to be similar, was sold for $80,000 on January 23, 1975. It had a brick and concrete block exterior, was 50 years old, and had 12,000 square feet of land area with 9,600 square feet of building area. It sold at $8.33 a square foot of building area, [428]*428which the witness adjusted upward by 10 percent because it was older than the subject building, and another 10 percent because there was no offstreet parking as compared with the limited offstreet parking of the subject building. This resulted in an adjusted comparable price of $10.07 per square foot of building area.

The second comparable was property located at 432-40 South Orange Avenue and 410-422 South 14th Street. It was deemed to be in an inferior location. It sold at $125,000 on October 12, 1978. It was used by a wholesale food distributor and was a brick and steel frame building, 70 years of age. The land area was 30,750 square feet, with a building area of 11,725 square feet.

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Related

City of New Brunswick v. State of New Jersey Division of Tax Appeals
189 A.2d 702 (Supreme Court of New Jersey, 1963)
Samuel Hird & Sons, Inc. v. City of Garfield
208 A.2d 153 (New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 1965)

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Bluebook (online)
1 N.J. Tax 423, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/heller-construction-co-v-city-of-newark-njtaxct-1980.