Metuchen I, LLC v. Borough of Metuchen

21 N.J. Tax 283
CourtNew Jersey Tax Court
DecidedMarch 29, 2004
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 21 N.J. Tax 283 (Metuchen I, LLC v. Borough of Metuchen) 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
Metuchen I, LLC v. Borough of Metuchen, 21 N.J. Tax 283 (N.J. Super. Ct. 2004).

Opinion

SMALL, P.J.T.C.

Plaintiff filed a direct appeal of the property tax assessment on two parcels of land for the 2000 tax year: an unimproved parcel, Block 69, Lot 125.7, and a parcel presently improved with a 197,000 sq. ft. industrial building, Block 71, Lot 37. The parcels are located at Middlesex and Factory Avenues in the Borough of Metuchen. The original appeal included two other parcels but the appeals on those parcels have been withdrawn. The original assessments on the two appealed parcels were as follows:

2000 Assessments
Block 71 Land $ 66,400
Lot 37 Imp. $2,093,500
Total $3,059,900
Block 69 Land $ 30,000
Lot 125.7 Imp. $ -0-
Total $ 30,000

[286]*286For the 2000 tax year, the Chapter 123 ratio for Metuchen was 91.95% with an upper limit of 100% and a lower limit of 78.16%. N.J.S.A. 54:51A-6.

I.

FACTS

The subject properties are currently owned by plaintiff, Metu-chen I, LLC, which purchased the properties from Oakite Realty on June 29, 1999 for $100. Plaintiff assumed all environmental cleanup costs. Oakite Realty used the facility as a manufacturing plant from 1960 to 1990, during which time the properties became contaminated with industrial pollutants. The parties are agreed that the fair market value of the properties as of October 1, 1999 (the valuation date for the 2000 assessment), clear of contamination, was $1,800,000. The only issue for determination is how that value should be reduced to take into account the contamination.

Plaintiff established that the cleanup costs net of demolition totaled $1,460,177, and submitted an appraisal report by Brian Chester, MAI valuing the properties at $1,800,000 unimpaired. Plaintiff submitted an appraisal report by Michael Hedden, MAI, who valued the properties as contaminated as of October 1, 1999. Mr. Hedden’s valuation began with the unimpaired $1,800,000 market value. He then deducted a 10% stigma factor, the $100 purchase price, $393,069 in acquisition costs, $1,460,177 in cleanup costs, and a 25% entrepreneurial incentive. These calculations resulted in a residual value of ($638,346)1. After these deductions, Mr. Hedden derived the value of the two parcels as of October 1, 1999 by adding together the $100 purchase price, $393,069 in acquisition costs, and the residual value of ($638,346) for an indicated value of ($245,177).

Mr. Hedden offered an alternative valuation method. He took the unimpaired market value of $1,800,000 and adjusted it by the [287]*287estimated rate of appreciation at 9% per annum and entrepreneurial profit of 25%. This approach considered the cost of remediation of $1,460,177 over a two-year period, arrived at an estimated future unimpaired value of $1,909,620, deducted an allowance of 10% for stigma and concluded that the estimated fair market value “as is” was $1,718,658. This amount was then reduced to the present contaminated value of $1,099,941. Plaintiff then deducted the current cleanup costs of $1,284,299 from the clean present value and found a residual value of ($184,358).

Defendant has conceded that the unimpaired true market value of the properties is $1,800,000 and that the remediation costs for the cleanup of the properties is $1,460,177. Defendant, however, contends that cleanup on the property will take significantly more time than two years, pointing out that at the time of trial more than two years had passed since the assessing date of October 1, 1999 and cleanup had barely begun. Defendant also contends that the 25% entrepreneurial incentive and the 10% stigma adjustment presented by plaintiffs expert are too high and are unsupported by evidence in the record. Defendant does not offer alternative percentages.

II.

STIGMA

I begin by concluding that the value of the subject properties should not be diminished by any stigma value.

While it is theoretically possible to construct a definition of environmental stigma, quantifying the effects of environmental stigma is indeed a daunting task. In re Custom Distribution Services, 216 B.R. 136, 154 (Bankr.D.N.J.1997), aff'd in part, rev’d in part on other grounds, 224 F.3d 235 (3d Cir.2000). Those variables influenced by stigma include rental income, occupancy, operating expenses, and capitalization rate. Ibid. The Supreme Court of New Jersey has recognized the potential for the impact of stigma on the valuation of environmentally contaminated property. Inmar Assoc., Inc. v. Borough of Carlstadt, 112 N.J. 593, 609, 549 A.2d 38 (1988). In Inmar, the Court stated that although [288]*288it was not reasonable to conclude that contaminated property is not marketable, stigma of contamination and other factors suggest that the capitalization rate may have to be altered to reflect the contaminated condition. Ibid. The Court did not foreclose the use of alternative methods of adjustment for the purposes of stigma, but instead left the means employed to the sound discretion of the Tax Court:

We are frank to recognize the difficulty of evaluating such market data [including data relating to stigma], but we have recently reaffirmed the unique capability and responsibility of the Tax Court to exercise its power, in circumstances where the presumption of validity of the local assessment does not apply, to use the information available to make an independent determination of value. Ibid.

In re Custom Distribution Services, (“CDS ”) offers an in-depth discussion of stigma. In CDS, a Chapter 11 debtor brought a proceeding to determine, modify, and reduce real property taxes assessed against its property on the ground that the tax assessor, in determining the property’s value, had failed to properly account for the effects of environmental contamination. The debtor, Custom Distribution Services (“CDS”), contended that at the end of the ten-year projected remediation period, it was entitled to take a 20% deduction from the value of the property to account for effects of environmental stigma continuing after remediation had taken place. 216 B.R. at 155. CDS conducted a market analysis by submitting comparable properties that it argued showed an average 55% reduction in value for environmentally contaminated sites. Ibid. The municipality argued that there should be no stigma reduction because CDS had not provided adequate proof to support its claims that the property would suffer a diminution in value from environmental stigma. Ibid. The municipality did not offer any independent analysis of what the stigma reduction should be, other than to state that the concept was too ephemeral to quantify. Ibid.

The court found that the property was contaminated with such metals as lead, arsenic, and mercury and volatile hazardous organic compounds throughout the soil and down into the groundwater, and noted that the property was identified by the Environmental Protection Agency as a “Superfund Site”. Ibid.

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Bluebook (online)
21 N.J. Tax 283, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/metuchen-i-llc-v-borough-of-metuchen-njtaxct-2004.