Nutley Township v. Anzalone

16 N.J. Tax 304
CourtNew Jersey Tax Court
DecidedDecember 3, 1996
StatusPublished

This text of 16 N.J. Tax 304 (Nutley Township v. Anzalone) 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
Nutley Township v. Anzalone, 16 N.J. Tax 304 (N.J. Super. Ct. 1996).

Opinion

SMALL, J.T.C.

These nineteen tax appeals are before me on remand from the Appellate Division of the Superior Court “for reconsideration of the trial testimony.”

For the tax year 1993, each of the nineteen named defendants appealed the tax assessment on his or her residence in the Township of Nutley to the Essex County Board of Taxation. It appears that the testimony before the county board was perfunctory. Mr. Pandolfi, the municipal superintendent of parks and superintendent of recreation of the Township of Nutley testified that he was present at the hearing before the Essex County Board of Taxation, no appraiser or real estate broker appeared for the plaintiffs, and no market data was presented to the county tax commissioner hearing the matter. It appears that what the county board heard were the complaints of the taxpayers about the increased traffic, noise, litter, parking, and other activities in their neighborhood, resulting from the construction and opening of the creative playground in Nichols Park, which is adjacent to their [307]*307homes. The record before the county board is not before me, is not evidence in these cases, and is irrelevant as a matter of law, because the proceeding in the Tax Court is a trial de novo. N.J.S.A. 2B:13-3b. Nevertheless, what appears to have taken place is recited in order to give a complete picture of the history of the appeals of these assessments. At the conclusion of the county board hearing, the commissioners issued judgments reducing the tax assessments on each of the nineteen appealed properties by 10%. These actions are summarized in the table which constitutes the appendix to this opinion.

Nutley filed nineteen separate complaints in the Tax Court of New Jersey challenging each of the nineteen county board judgments. At the conclusion of the bench trial, I affirmed each of the nineteen judgments of the Essex County Board of Taxation, not because I found that the county board’s decisions were correct, but because I found that the plaintiff, Township of Nutley, had failed in each of the nineteen cases to meet its burden of proof by showing that the quantum of each of the nineteen reduced assessments ordered by the county board was wrong.1

Nutley took a consolidated appeal from the nineteen Tax Court judgments. In an opinion dated October 11, 1996, the Appellate Division found that the presumption of correctness of the Essex County Board of Taxation judgments had been properly rebutted, reversed those nineteen judgments, and remanded the matter to this court “for reconsideration of the trial testimony.” This is my opinion on remand.

[308]*308I.

The Evidence Before The Tax Court

The trial testimony before this court described, in detail below, centered on: (1) the construction and subsequent use of the creative playground and, in particular, what the taxpayers and the municipality viewed as its impact on their neighborhood; (2) the fact that the Essex County Board of Taxation had heard no valuation testimony; (3) the fact that the county board action in reducing the assessments by 10% was not consistent with certain paired sales data; and (4) the conflicting opinions of the plaintiff municipality’s, and the defendants homeowners’ experts that the creative playground either had no impact on the value or reduced the value of the properties which are the subject of this appeal. On the key piece of evidence in any real property tax appeal, the value of the subject property (in this case, nineteen properties) on October 1st of the pre-tax year, there was absolutely no evidence. See Rabstein v. Princeton Tp., 187 N.J.Super. 18, 22, 453 A.2d 553 (App.Div.1982) (citations omitted) (stating that on appeal to the Tax Court from a local property tax assessment, it is the function of the Tax Court to conduct a de novo hearing in which the ultimate fact sought to be determined is the full fair value of the property). The testimony of the only two witnesses qualified to give an opinion of value is clear. Mr. Marashlian, the municipal expert, testified:

Q I take it you were not asked and therefore you don’t have an opinion on the specific values of the properties under appeal.
A I have no knowledge of any of the properties under appeal. I didn’t make a specific appraisal of any property.

Mr. Bate, the defendants taxpayers’ expert testified:

Q Okay. And at the time you were retained in order to make your observations and give your opinion with regard to this park, what was asked of you with regard to that job? What job were you asked to perform?
A Well, as the record show [sic], the case was heard before the Essex County Board of Taxation, they rendered a decision reducing the assessed valuations on all properties involved, 10 percent of assessed valuation. I was asked to come in and sort of review the judgments issued by the County Board of Taxation and asked in my opinion whether or not I felt the reductions were justified, if they were fair, and that’s what I did.
[309]*309Q Okay. What was your conclusion with regard to your review of the value of the homes subject to this appeal?
A Well, in my opinion, the majority of them were — I thought were reasonable.
[ (Emphasis added).]

When asked whether he had done a full appraisal with respect to each of the 19 properties, Mr. Bate replied:

“No, your honor, we did not.”

The experts expressed no independent opinion of the fair market value of the nineteen subject properties (see appendix). Their only opinion was of the impact of the creative playground and whether it was appropriate for the Essex County Board of Taxation to have made adjustments to the original assessments based on the opening of that playground.

The plaintiff called four witnesses: Thomas A. Pandolfi, the superintendent of parks of the Township of Nutley; Louis Constantine, a real estate broker active in Nutley; Richard Marashlian, the municipal appraisal expert; and Joseph F. Reilly, the tax assessor of the Township of Nutley and the defendant in one of the nineteen eases before me. Mr. Pandolfi testified at length about the planning and construction of the creative playground in 1992, about the town’s efforts to deal with the parking and other problems created by the increased traffic resulting from the opening of the playground, about what happened at the county board hearing, and about the general level of upset of the neighbors because of the increased traffic resulting from the opening of the playground. He indicated that, although the traffic was substantial on the opening of the playground, it has declined somewhat. He also indicated that a parking problem was created. Mr. Constantine testified principally about the sale of a property at 46 Funston Place, the sale of which was intended to close on August 1, 1995, after the trial, for $147,000. Although not an expert appraiser, he testified that the park had no influence on the value of the houses in the neighborhood and that there has been a steady decline in values in Nutley since 1987. He also testified that “I wouldn’t want to live in Joe’s house,” meaning the house of Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
16 N.J. Tax 304, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nutley-township-v-anzalone-njtaxct-1996.