Princeton Research Lands, Inc. v. Upper Freehold Township

4 N.J. Tax 402
CourtNew Jersey Tax Court
DecidedJune 16, 1982
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 4 N.J. Tax 402 (Princeton Research Lands, Inc. v. Upper Freehold 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
Princeton Research Lands, Inc. v. Upper Freehold Township, 4 N.J. Tax 402 (N.J. Super. Ct. 1982).

Opinion

RIMM, J. T. C.

These local property tax matters are before the court on petitions of taxpayer to the Division of Tax Appeals seeking farmland assessment qualification for the tax year 1976. The original assessments of the three lots involved were as follows:

Block 43, Lot 23
Land $ 47,200
Improvements -0-
Total $ 47,200
Block 24, Lot 13
Land Improvements $ 29,200 -0-
Total $ 29,200
[405]*405Block 24, Lot 13-3
Land Improvements $ 16,900 -0-
$ 16,900 Total

On appeal to the Monmouth County Board of Taxation each assessment was sustained. The matters are in the Tax Court by virtue of N.J.S.A. 2A:3A — 26 transferring all pending Division of Tax Appeals matters to the court. Plaintiff claims that the subject property is entitled to favored tax treatment under N.J.S.A. 54:4-23.1 et seq. as land devoted to the production for sale of trees and forest products.

Block 43, Lot 23, consists of 27 acres and is located on the south side of Route 539 east of Allentown. Block 24, Lot 13, consisting of 12 acres and Block 24, Lot 13-3 consisting of 7 acres, are located on the north side of Route 539 directly opposite Block 43, Lot 23.

At one time the subject lots were part of a farm known as Barclay Orchard purchased by plaintiff in 1967. The farm then consisted of two lots separated by Route 539. One of the lots was the same as the subject Block 43, Lot 23, consisting of 27 acres. The other lot was Block 24, Lot 13, then consisting of approximately 25 acres. Following purchase by plaintiff, the original Block 24, Lot 13, was subdivided into three lots, all fronting on the north side of Route 539. The middle lot of the three-lot subdivision contained the farmhouse and other buildings of the farm. This lot was sold by plaintiff and is not before the court. As a result of the subdivision and the sale, the other two lots are not contiguous. They are now designated as Block 24, Lot 13, and Block 24, Lot 13-3, and are also the subject of this appeal.

The apple trees, located almost entirely on Block 43, Lot 23, were cut and sold as firewood, and income from the three lots was $610 in 1974 and $1,680 in 1976, all realized from the sale of firewood. There was no evidence of income for the year 1975. In addition, there was income of $600 from the sale of trees in 1980, which trees were planted in 1975.

[406]*406In 1975 the plaintiff planted 6,000 “Christmas trees” for resale in accordance with a Woodland Management Plan prepared by the Bureau of Forestry, Forest Management Section. According to the plan, the planting operation was divided into three main parts: preparation, planting and maintenance. The preparation recommendations included killing the orchard trees by girdling or injection with a herbicide; maintenance included mowing weeds when needed to reduce weed competition. In addition, the plan notes that “the maintenance phase is as important as the others. Semi-annual checks should be made to determine maintenance needs.”

Although the apple trees were being cut for firewood, the plan of the Bureau of Forestry, dated March 1975, recommended further action be taken with regard to those trees. There was no evidence of such preparation in accordance with the plan. The evidence of maintenance was not credible, and there was no evidence of semi-annual checks.

One of plaintiff’s witnesses was an expert on tree nurseries and evergreen tree farming who testified that he was not acquainted with the property. He had only visited it on the day of trial for about half an hour, having walked in “a hundred— hundred and fifty feet from the road for about 500 feet of parallel footage along the road.” “There had been quite a bit of mortality of much of the original planting.” The trees were “very open” and would not have a market as Christmas trees although there was a landscaping market for the type of open trees he saw. His testimony also indicated that there had been no maintenance of the trees.

A neighboring farmer testified that plaintiff had not trimmed around the trees since they were planted. The neighbor has owned and lived in a farmhouse next to the subject property for the past 18 years. He testified that he traveled by the property approximately ten times a day and has hunted on it. During the past five years he never saw anyone trimming the trees or mowing the area. On November 20,1980, the date plaintiff had pictures taken on the property, which pictures were marked in evidence, he noticed that there had been some mowing of the [407]*407grounds. No evidence contrary to his testimony was produced. The court finds that following the planting of the trees in 1975, nothing was done until 1980 when there was some mowing in preparation for trial.

In order to meet the income requirements for farmland assessment the taxpayer must show either (1) gross sales which have averaged $500 a year during the two-year period immediately preceding the tax year in issue, or (2) clear evidence of anticipated yearly gross sales amounting to at least $500 within a reasonable time. Plaintiff has not shown the requisite income. The income for 1974 was $610. For 1975 there was no evidence of income. Therefore the taxpayer’s land does not qualify for farmland assessment on the basis of at least $500 of sales a year during the two years immediately preceding the tax year in issue, 1976.

Although there was testimony that $600 worth of trees were sold in 1980, there was no clear evidence of anticipated yearly gross sales within a reasonable time. There was no evidence of a plan to market the trees which would indicate anticipated earnings to satisfy the statutory income requirements. The testimony of the expert only gave the present value of the trees as landscaping trees, not the purpose for which the trees were planted in accordance with plaintiff’s own interpretation of the Bureau of Forestry Plan. He said nothing at all about anticipated yearly gross sales, even though specifically asked three times about such sales by counsel for the plaintiff. The witness only gave a value based on “one out and out sale.” Such testimony was apparently sought to be elicited under N.J.S.A. 54:4-23.5, which provides in part as follows:

Land, five acres in area, shall be deemed to be actively devoted to agricultural or horticultural use when . . . there is clear evidence of anticipated yearly gross sales and such payments amounting to at least $500.00 within a reasonable period of time. [Emphasis supplied]

While the total value given by the witness was substantial, the court is unable to determine whether the statutory requirement was met. In addition, the witness was candid in saying that his testimony as to the total number of trees was a “gut” feeling. Findings of facts cannot be based on an expert’s “gut” feelings. [408]*408The weight to be given to an expert’s opinion depends on the facts and reasoning which are the basis of the opinion. Consequently, “[a]n expert’s opinion may be adopted in whole or in part or completed rejected. Middlesex Cty. v. Clearwater Village, Inc., 163 N.J.Super.

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4 N.J. Tax 402, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/princeton-research-lands-inc-v-upper-freehold-township-njtaxct-1982.