Newark City v. Cedar Grove Township

7 N.J. Tax 66
CourtNew Jersey Tax Court
DecidedNovember 9, 1984
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 7 N.J. Tax 66 (Newark City v. Cedar Grove Township) 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
Newark City v. Cedar Grove Township, 7 N.J. Tax 66 (N.J. Super. Ct. 1984).

Opinion

HOPKINS, J.T.C.

These are consolidated appeals from judgments of the Essex County Board of Taxation which affirmed the assessments on nine tax lots for the years 1976 and 1977.

The subject property, totaling 171.48 acres, is located along the east and west sides of Ridge Road and along the east side of Reservoir Drive in the Township of Cedar Grove, Essex County, New Jersey. It is improved with a reservoir covering [69]*69approximately 93 acres, as well as the typical support and maintenance facilities associated with that use. The reservoir extends to the north into the Township of Little Falls. However, the value of that part of the tract is not an issue.

The property is divided into nine lots on the tax maps. However, for descriptive and valuation purposes, it can be considered as three separate parcels:

East side of Ridge Road West side of Ridge Road East side of Reservoir Drive

112.44 ± acres 53.60 ± acres 5.44 ± acres

East Side of Ridge Road

Block 231, Lot 1 Block 240, Lot 1 Block 260, Lot 1

17.43 ± acres 34.10 ± acres 60.91 ± acres 112.44 ± acres

This parcel contains both the reservoir proper, which covers 93 ± acres, and an upland perimeter of 19.44 ± acres which is mostly wooded or covered with scrub growth. The tract is bordered by Ridge Road to the west, Reservoir Drive to the south and east and the Township of Little Falls to the north. The topography of this tract is such that it forms a natural “bowl” which slopes upward toward its outside perimeter. This “bowl” is completed by a large concrete and earthen dam at the northwestern section of the tract along Ridge Road and a smaller concrete and earthen dam at the southern end of the tract along Reservoir Drive. The topography of the central portion of the tract, which is under water, is relatively flat since prior to its use as a reservoir it was composed of small farms. The large dam occupies approximately 11.2 acres of the tract and the smaller dam occupies approximately 1.4 acres of the tract. It was completed as a holding or balancing reservoir for the Newark water supply system in 1905 and its capacity is 675 billion gallons of water or approximately a nine-day supply.

[70]*70West Side of Ridge Road

Block 250, Lot 37 Block 250, Lot 81 Block 250, Lot 101 Block 250, Lot 141

5.56 ± acres 3.36 ± acres 4.26 ± acres 40,42 ± acres 53.60 ± acres

The southern corner of this parcel along Ridge Road, to the extent of 9.13 acres, is improved with various support and maintenance facilities for the reservoir, including a laboratory building, supervisor’s house, supervisor’s office and garage building. The tract is bordered by Ridge Road to the east, residential properties on Lakewood Avenue to the south, Bow-den Road and the Caldwell Branch of the former Erie Lackawanna Railroad to the west and residential properties on Briar-wood Terrace, The Fairway and The Glen to the north. The major portion of this tract slopes sharply downward in an easterly direction from Bowden Road toward Ridge Road and is unimproved, heavily wooded and covered with scrub growth. The land is clear and relatively level at the small improved area at the southern corner of the tract along Ridge Road. The entire parcel is traversed east-to-west by a water pipeline running from Ridge Road to Bowden Road.

East Side of Reservoir Drive

Block 261, Lot 1

5.44 ± acres

This is a long, narrow parcel of unimproved land bordered by Reservoir Drive to the west, Normal Avenue to the south, the Township of Little Falls to the north and other vacant and unimproved lands to the east. The topography of this tract generally slopes upward from Reservoir Drive in an easterly direction, with severe slopes and sharp outcroppings of rock in some sections. The entire parcel is heavily wooded and covered with scrub growth.

In addition to the three parcels above, there is a small triangular plot formed by the intersection of Ridge Road and [71]*71Reservoir Drive designated by the township as Block 232, Lot 101. Because of its size and location, this parcel has virtually no utility and both parties considered it to have only nominal value.

The entire property is zoned for use as a reservoir or for single family residential housing. Public utilities are available to all parcels.

The following schedule details, for both 1976 and 1977, the total assessed values, as affirmed by the county board, as well as the claimed values by both Newark and Cedar Grove.

Assessment

Newark’s Claimed Value

Cedar Grove's Claimed Value

$2,660,900

$1,176,000

$3,400,000

In concluding a value of $1,176,000 for the subject lots, Newark’s appraisal expert stated that the highest and best use of the property was for residential development. On that basis, he reduced the number of acres which could be utilized for that purpose by subtracting the 12.6 acres on which the dams were located and valued the remaining 158.88 acres. In so doing, he concluded, on the basis of six comparable sales of acreage, that the 99.84 acres which were under water had a value of $10,000 an acre. He reduced that value by $467,125, which represented the estimated cost of restoring the land to its original condition by removing the dams, pipelines, gatehouses and riprap. The 53.60 acres on the west side of Ridge Road were valued at $10,200 an acre and the 5.44 acres on the east side of Reservoir Drive were valued at $18,000 an acre. He gave the small triangular lot a nominal value of $100.

Cedar Grove’s expert testified to a value of $3,400,000 based upon having the property considered either completely residential or, alternatively, having the underwater portion deemed a reservoir and the upland part residential. In the event that the total acreage was to be considered reservoir property, his value was $3,000,000. In reaching his values, he used both a trending of original cost approach as well as the comparative approach. [72]*72His trending value was computed by first determining the cost per acre of the land when it was acquired by Newark and adding thereto a figure representing improvements which he estimated to be 20% of the cost of the land. He then added another figure, representing 30% of the former figures, which represented the increased value between 1900 and 1910. The resulting figure of $808, rounded to $800, was then used as a base to which he applied a percentage increase, obtained from the Engineering News Record Construction Cost Index for the year 1913, to the average of that index for the tax years 1975 and 1976. The resulting figure attributed a value of $17,500 an acre to the land, or $3,000,000 for the total acreage. In his comparative approach, he utilized six sales to conclude a value of $22,500 an acre, or $3,856,800 for the total tract. From this he subtracted $467,125 as the cost to prepare the site for residential development, including the removal of portions of the dams. The adjusted value of $3,389,675 was rounded to $3,400,000. The cost for site preparation was the same as that used by Newark’s expert and was based on a report prepared by the Cedar Grove Department of Engineering.

The assessment of reservoir lands owned by municipal waterworks is governed by N.J.S.A.

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Bluebook (online)
7 N.J. Tax 66, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/newark-city-v-cedar-grove-township-njtaxct-1984.