River Drive Village v. City of Garfield

7 N.J. Tax 632
CourtNew Jersey Tax Court
DecidedSeptember 11, 1985
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 7 N.J. Tax 632 (River Drive Village v. City of Garfield) 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
River Drive Village v. City of Garfield, 7 N.J. Tax 632 (N.J. Super. Ct. 1985).

Opinion

KAHN, J.T.C.

This is a local property tax case wherein plaintiff seeks a reduction of the assessment upon property located at 128 River Drive, Garfield, New Jersey (Block 81, Lot 50) for the tax year 1983. The assessment for 1983 was as follows:

[634]*634Land $140,000
Building $789,300
Total $929,300

The issues are valuation and discrimination.

The property consists of 1.08 acres of land improved with a two-story brick garden apartment building with open parking for 40 ears. The building, completed in 1974, contains 37 units, including the superintendent’s apartment, of which, two contain 4.5 rooms and the balance 3.5 rooms.

All leases are for a one-year term. The landlord provides heat, water, a refrigerator, stove and air conditioner for each apartment. The tenant pays electricity. The building is generally well-maintained and in good condition. The neighborhood is zoned mixed residential and commercial. No rent-control ordinance was in effect as of the assessment date.

Plaintiff’s expert utilized only the income capitalization approach to valuation. He relied upon the existing rental stream, represented by the rent rolls as of the assessment date, October 1, 1982. These figures were obtained and verified by the expert through plaintiff’s accountants. The existing rents for the thirty-four 3.5 room apartments ranged from $370 a month to $450 a month.1 Eight of these rented for less than $400, while ten rented for $450. No calculable adjustments were made to adjust for any locational or physical differences in the individual apartments.

In attempting to bolster his view that the actual rents were economic, the expert examined other allegedly similar apartment buildings in several other communities, including Lodi, Mahwah, Fort Lee, Palisade Park and Leonia. He made specific adjustments, where necessary, for the presence of rent control, location, access to major highways, accessibility to employment areas and the character of the community. These adjustments, which resulted in an average rental of $410, were [635]*635made to bolster the expert’s opinion that the rentals of the subject property, which averaged $400, were economic. The witness concluded from his knowledge of the owner of the subject property, his examination of the financial statements and his review of the comparable rents that the subject was well-managed.

Based upon these considerations, he opined that the monthly income stream as of the assessment date was economic. He annualized this October 1,1982 rental ($15,130 x 12) to derive a rental income for the pretax year in the amount of $181,560. The following constitutes a capsulized view of his projected income and expenses:

GROSS INCOME
Potential Rental Income @ $15,130/mo $181,560
Allowed for Vacancy & Collection Loss (2%) - 3,630
$177,930
Laundry Commissions 864
Miscellaneous Income _200
$178,994
EXPENSES
Insurance $ 2,324
Gas (Fuel) 10,659
Water & Sewer 1,950
Electricity 4,178
Garbage Disposal 1,276
Superintendent
Salary 2,850
Payroll Taxes 300
Maintenance & Repairs 12,000
Painting
Exterior & Halls ($3,000/5 yrs.) 600
Apartments (129.5 rooms at $50/4 yrs.) 1,620
Replacements
Refrigerators (37 at $325/12 yrs.) 1,000
Stoves (37 at $275/15 yrs.) 680
Air Conditioners (37 at $275/10 yrs.) 1,020
Management & Advertising 9.000
Professional Fees & Miscellaneous 2.000
$ 51,457
NET INCOME TO PROPERTY $127,537

[636]*636In determining the appropriate capitalization rate the taxpayer’s witness utilized a mortgage-equity technique consisting of the following findings and recommended computations:

MORTGAGE-EQUITY TECHNIQUE
Mortgage Ratio 75%
Equity Ratio 25%
Mortgage Interest Rate 13.00%
Mortgage Payout Term 25 yrs
Mortgage Annual Constant 13.53%
Equity Return 10.00%
NET INCOME TO PROPERTY $127,537
Capitalization Rate: 75% x 13.53% = 10.15%
25% x 10.00% = 2.50%
12.65%
Effective Tax Rate = 2,38%
15.03%
Value: $848,550 ($127,537 ^ 15.03%) (rounded to $850,000)

Taxpayer’s witness utilized a 2% vacancy-and-collection-loss factor which reflected the difference between the October 1, 1982 annualized rent rolls and the actual rent collected in 1982.

In estimating expenses he utilized both actual and projected expenses. For instance, with respect to maintenance and repairs, including painting, he indicated that the actual expenses were less than the expected projections in the field, which he found from experience averaged from 9.7% to 13% of gross rents. He therefore posited $12,000 as an allowance for maintenance and repairs, before painting. With respect to replacements, he set up reserves, based on his experience managing apartment buildings, for the expected lives of refrigerators (12 years), stoves (15 years) and air conditioners (10 years). He [637]*637also stabilized expenses for management, advertising and professional and miscellaneous fees, which he claimed were supported by the actual expenses and were within normal limits based on his experience.

The municipality produced one witness who was identified in the pretrial proceedings as a proposed expert witness. At the trial he was not qualified by counsel to render an expert opinion and testified only as a fact witness with respect to two comparable sales of garden-apartment complexes located in Garfield. The essence of his testimony was a statement that the sales reflected $11,111 a room for sale number one and $7,812 a room for the second sale mentioned by the witness. The witness rendered no conclusion as to value and his valuation report was not moved into evidence.

The municipality contended that taxpayer failed to produce sufficient evidence to demonstrate that its existing rent roll was economic. In support of this claim, the municipality placed into evidence the rent rolls for October 1, 1980 and October 1, 1981. These rent rolls contained the names of the tenants of the various apartments, and the rent rolls demonstrate that when the same tenant had re-let in 1981, the rent increase was limited to 8% to 12%.

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Bluebook (online)
7 N.J. Tax 632, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/river-drive-village-v-city-of-garfield-njtaxct-1985.