Kazanchy v. Borough of Sea Bright

6 N.J. Tax 353
CourtNew Jersey Tax Court
DecidedMay 4, 1983
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 6 N.J. Tax 353 (Kazanchy v. Borough of Sea Bright) 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
Kazanchy v. Borough of Sea Bright, 6 N.J. Tax 353 (N.J. Super. Ct. 1983).

Opinion

RIMM, J.T.C.

Once again, as happens all too frequently in local property tax matters, this court is asked to substantially reduce a taxpayer’s tax burden on the basis of unsupported expert opinion evidence. And once again there is no basis for a finding of value, and the complaints are dismissed.

For the tax years 1976 through 1980, inclusive, the borough assessed the property at values established in its revaluation program originally effective for the 1974 tax year as follows:

Land $ 62,850

Improvements 830,000

$ 893,850 Total

For the tax year 1976 the Monmouth County Board of Taxation judgment fixed the assessment as follows:

Improvements 780,800

Total $ 843,650

[356]*356For the tax years 1977, 1978 and 1979 judgments were entered by the county board of taxation in the same amount as follows:

Land $ 62,850
Improvements 830,800
Total $ 893,650

Petitions for 1976,1977 and 1978 were filed with the Division of Tax Appeals and transferred to the Tax Court by operation of law. N.J.S.A. 2A:3A-26. The complaints for 1979 and 1980, which latter year was a direct appeal pursuant to N.J.S.A. 54:3-21, were filed with the Tax Court, and all matters were consolidated for trial.

The subject property, Block 234, Lot 13A, known as 1382 Ocean Avenue and Yacht Harbor Apartments, is a two-story brick, garden-type apartment complex: It contains 52 apartments on a lot 150 feet by 480 feet, with frontage on Ocean Avenue and extending to the Shrewsbury River. There is ample open parking on a paved parking area. Construction was completed in 1971. The tenants pay for their own electricity for heating and cooking. There is laundry equipment on the premises on a concession basis. Each apartment is furnished with certain appliances and full carpeting, and each has a wood-framed terrace. There are garbage dumpsters, concrete walks and landscaping. The complex is in good condition and is located in a neighborhood which has similar garden-type apartment projects. The property’s net operating income was stipulated as $108,289 for 1976; $113,764 for 1977; $120,209 for 1978; $124,740 for 1979 and $131,283 for 1980.

The present owner testified that he purchased the property on March 1, 1978 for $1,100,000: the price was increased to get' a favorable second mortgage loan from the seller and in recognition of the assumption of the first mortgage obligation at less than market interest; the assumed first mortgage obligation had a balance of $757,047.27 and was payable monthly with interest at 9V4% a year; the second mortgage for $165,000 had a term of ten years at 6% interest a year without principal amortization, and the amount of cash paid was $177,952.73. Without objection, he testified that, in his opinion, the purchase [357]*357price was increased by $150,000 to $200,000 to reflect the favorable financing obtained at the time of purchase.

Plaintiffs’ appraisal expert testified that he relied almost exclusively on the income approach to value except for his use of the sale of the subject property as a comparable sale. Based on this sale only, the property had a value of $970,000. In arriving at this opinion he adjusted the price, based on market interest rates, as follows:

Item Sale Expert’s Opinion
First mortgage 757,047 $ 700,000
Second mortgage 165,000 90,000
Cash at settlement 177,953 180,000 (rounded)
1,100,000 $ 970,000

His testimony on the interest rates used in adjusting the first and second mortgages is set forth as an example of an extensive opinion lacking substance and acceptable factual support for the witness’ conclusion:

... The sale also included a purchase money second mortgage carrying an interest rate of 8% with a five-year 1 life and that mortgage had a written amount — was in the written amount of $165,000. Total of the three items gave the purchase price of one million one. I’ve made my own analysis of the sale, and, based upon the sale only, I found value in the amount of $980,000 [sic ]. I did this by taking the cash at its rounded value of $180,000. I used the first mortgage and felt that normally at that time, from my own experience and from data submitted in the appendix of my report 2 as to other interest rates for first mortgages on apartment houses during that time period, generally a 10% interest rate prevailed. Altering the first mortgage to 10%, rather than the 974% the interest rate that it was written on and it is written for in 1973, when it was originally written, I would discount that mortgage to a value of $700,000. As to the second mortgage, this is a little bit harder to approximate the true value of that mortgage, but I feel that because of the large amount of the first mortgage, the second mortgage has a very risky position and I believe that second mortgage money, in fact I know that fir — the second mortgage money available at that time in 1978, was requiring a interest rate in the [358]*358neighborhood of 14 to 15% minimum to be on a conservative basis. To discount that mortgage to a 15% interest rate, it would give a value of $90,000. Again, I would discount the sale, therefore, to $180,000 cash, $700,000 value of the first mortgage, $90,000 value to the second mortgage, for a total of $970,000.

An adjusted purchase price without any basis for the interest rates used in the adjustments is of no help to the court in determining value. Brick Assoc. v. Brick Tp., 4 N.J.Tax 510, 517 (Tax Ct.1982). An opinion, no matter how extensively presented in the witness’ testimony, must be supported by facts in the record.3

For each year the expert also used the building residual technique in the income approach to value. He used the same land value of $104,000 for each of the five years under appeal. The testimony relating to land value was as follows:

I arrived at a land value by taking 52 apartments times $2,000 per apartment. Therefore the land value would be $104,000. This is in contrast to the actual assessment of $62,850. I felt that a more realistic land value should be used even though I was using a building residual approach.

No basis was given for the opinion of land value. Yet, it is clear that “[i]n the building residual technique the land is valued separately,____” American Inst. of Real Estate Appraisers, The Appraisal of Real Estate, (7 ed.), 403. In Brick Associates the court said: “The building residual method in the income approach used by the plaintiff’s expert is rejected because there is no basis for the land value used.” 4 N.J.Tax at 513. The method is similarly rejected in this case.

Even though the building residual method is rejected, if a value can be determined from all the evidence, the court should determine the value and use it as the basis for a judgment fixing the assessment. Samuel Hird & Sons, Inc. v. Garfield, 87 N.J.Super. 65, 208 A.2d 153 (App.Div.1965); Rek Investment Co. v. Newark, 80 N.J.Super.

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Related

Kazanchy v. Borough of Sea Bright
6 N.J. Tax 622 (New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 1984)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
6 N.J. Tax 353, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kazanchy-v-borough-of-sea-bright-njtaxct-1983.