Presidential Towers v. City of Passaic

6 N.J. Tax 406
CourtNew Jersey Tax Court
DecidedApril 4, 1984
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 6 N.J. Tax 406 (Presidential Towers v. City of Passaic) 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
Presidential Towers v. City of Passaic, 6 N.J. Tax 406 (N.J. Super. Ct. 1984).

Opinion

CRABTREE, J.T.C.

This is a consolidated group of local property tax cases wherein 72 condominium owners seek review of judgments of the Passaic County Board of Taxation affirming the 1982 assessments on their units located in a high-rise complex known as Presidential Towers, 180 Lafayette Ave., Passaic, New Jersey.

[410]*410At issue are the true value of the properties and whether plaintiffs, or any of them, are entitled to statutory relief from discriminatory assessments pursuant to chapter 123. More specifically, the eases involve the application of cash-equivalency principles to property tax assessments.

The subjects of the controversy are 72 units in a 120-unit 12-story high-rise apartment complex converted from rental apartments to condominiums in 1980. All the units are separately assessed for tax purposes in accordance with the New Jersey Condominium Act. N.J.S.A. 46:8B-19.

Under the sponsor’s offering plan the condominium units vary in price according to size, floor level, whether the unit has a balcony, number of bedrooms and baths and exposure (northern or southern). All the units in issue were sold by the sponsor to the individual plaintiffs at various times between May 1981 and April 1982 for prices uniformly discounted 25% from the prices stated in the offering plan.

The seller-sponsor offered purchase-money financing for all sales in an amount equal to 88% of the sale price. While most buyers took advantage of the low down payment of 12%, some made larger down payments. In any event, all buyers gave purchase-money mortgages to the seller. Purchasers in occupancy as tenants at the time of conversion (“insiders”) were allowed mortgages at 9% interest, while purchasers who were not prior tenants (“outsiders”) were permitted mortgages at 10% interest. All mortgages were self-liquidating over 29 years.

As an additional inducement, the seller-sponsor permitted an assumption of the purchase-money mortgages for the first 60 resales, conditioned only upon a 10% principal reduction at the time of resale.

The interest rate charged by institutional lenders in northern New Jersey for mortgage loans on cooperative apartments, condominiums and single-family residences ranged from 17% to 19% around October 1981 and at the times of the sales involved in this proceeding. Mortgage interest rates for new and used [411]*411residences were between 14% and 15% in April and May of 1981. Some economists and bankers felt that mortgage interest rates peaked in October and November 1981 and that a decline to 13% in the near future was foreseeable. Their prophecy was fulfilled when residential mortgage rates fell to a range of 11% to 13% in November 1983. See The Appraiser January 1984 at 11.

The prevalent mortgage loan position for residential mortgages issued by institutional lenders in northern New Jersey around October 1981 was 75%. Put differently, those lenders required a 25% down payment.

Plaintiffs’ expert confined himself to the market data approach in developing his estimate of the true value of each condominium unit under review. His analysis began with the actual sale price for each unit, which he then adjusted by application of cash-equivalency principles with respect to the purchase-money first mortgage taken by the seller. He posited a prevailing mortgage interest rate of 15%, notwithstanding the fact that actual interest rates on mortgages for residential properties (including condominiums and cooperatives) were substantially higher on the assessing date as well as the sales dates. He acknowledged the temporary character of the higher rates and selected the lower figure as the more enduring level and thus more consistent with the desideratum of assessment stability. He then calculated the present value of the purchase-money mortgages taken by the seller, assigning one value for the 10% mortgages and another value for the 9% mortgages. In all instances he assumed, in the interest of assessment uniformity, a 12% down payment even though some of the plaintiffs paid more. His computations at this point produced discounts from the face amounts of the mortgages of 32% for the 9% mortgages and 27% for the 10% mortgages. The expert’s next adjustment was designed to account for the difference between down payments then required in the marketplace (25%) and the down payment required by the seller with regard to the sales of the subject condominiums (12%). This adjustment took shape as a hypothetical second mortgage, [412]*412to which he assigned an interest rate of 18%. That rate was selected in accordance with the same principles that led to the expert’s choice of a 15% rate for the first mortgage. The computations under these assumptions produced an additional discount, applicable to all mortgages taken by the seller, of 3%. The total discounts then amounted to 35% for the 9% mortgages and 30% for the 10% mortgages. The expert then added the 12% cash down payment to the discounted value of the purchase-money mortgage, thereby arriving at his final estimate of true valué for each property.

Defendant’s expert, who also confined his analysis to the market data approach, relied almost entirely upon the prices stated in the sponsor’s offering plan in developing his true value estimate. He concluded that such prices represented the market values of the condominium units before adjustments for favorable financing. In his view the 25% discount from the original offering prices, reflected in actual sales of the units, plus an additional 10% constituted an adequate allowance for the financing terms offered by the seller-sponsor. He offered no support, documentary or otherwise, for his conclusions.

The court’s primary duty is to ascertain the true value of the subject condominium units on October 1, 1981. The ultimate fact to be determined is the full and fair value of the property — more specifically, the price a willing buyer would pay a willing seller. New Brunswick v. Tax Appeals Div., 39 N.J. 537, 189 A.2d 702 (1963); Sage v. Bernards Tp., 5 N.J.Tax 52 (Tax Ct.1982); N.J.S.A. 54:4-23.

■[2-4] Market value, a synonym for true value or full and fair value, is defined in the leading authoritative work in the appraisal field as follows:

The most probable price in cash, terms equivalent to cash, or in other precisely revealed terms, for which the appraised property will sell in a competitive market under all conditions requisite to fair sale, with the buyer and seller each acting prudently, knowledgeably, and for self-interest, and assuming that neither is under undue duress. [American Institute of Real Estate Appraisers, The Appraisal of Real Estate (8 ed. 1983) 33; emphasis supplied]

[413]*413The concept of cash equivalence, expressed in the quoted passage, implicitly requires that adjustments be made for favorable financing. Comparable sales and, indeed, sales of the subject property, have been rejected as proof of value where the expert failed to account for favorable financing. Petrizzo v. Edgewater, 2 N.J.Tax 197 (Tax Ct.1981); Bloomfield v. Parkway Industrial Center, 3 N.J.Tax 220 (Tax Ct.1981).

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Related

Mori v. Town of Secaucus
15 N.J. Tax 607 (New Jersey Tax Court, 1996)
Schwam v. Township of Cedar Grove
9 N.J. Tax 406 (New Jersey Tax Court, 1987)
U.S. Life Realty Corp. v. Jackson Township
9 N.J. Tax 66 (New Jersey Tax Court, 1987)
Presidential Towers v. City of Passaic
7 N.J. Tax 655 (New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 1985)

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Bluebook (online)
6 N.J. Tax 406, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/presidential-towers-v-city-of-passaic-njtaxct-1984.