R.M.P. Holding Co. v. City of Passaic

1 N.J. Tax 359
CourtNew Jersey Tax Court
DecidedMay 29, 1980
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 1 N.J. Tax 359 (R.M.P. Holding Co. 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
R.M.P. Holding Co. v. City of Passaic, 1 N.J. Tax 359 (N.J. Super. Ct. 1980).

Opinion

CRABTREE, J. T. C.

This is a local property tax case wherein the plaintiffs seek review of judgments of the Passaic County Board of Taxation (County Board) reducing the assessments with respect to property located at 67-73 Hoover Avenue, Passaic, New Jersey (Block 4124, Lot 14) and 212-214 Madison Street, Passaic, New Jersey (Block 4124, Lot 24) for the tax years 1975 through 1978. The defendant counterclaims, seeking restoration of the original assessments. The assessments and the County Board action thereon were as follows:

[362]*3621976-1978
Assessment County Board Judgment
Land $ 39,600 $ 39,600
Improvements 86,900 75,900
Total $126,500 $115,500

Separate petitions were filed, one for each separately assessed parcel. The plaintiffs’ expert aggregated them for appraisal purposes and the cases embraced by the petitions were consolidated for trial, briefs and decision. The parcels will be considered together throughout this opinion, but the fair assessable values will be stated for each lot at the conclusion.

The two lots in question are contiguous and they form a single economic unit. The land consists of 25,248 square feet and the improvements thereon constructed total 40,278 square feet. Lot 24 contains a 2-story and basement masonry commercial building constructed in 1929. Lot 14 contains a one, two, three, and four story and partial basement masonry commercial building erected in 1948. Both buildings were in fair condition on the applicable assessing dates.

Prior to August 1974 the property was leased to Sears, Roebuck & Co. and devoted to commercial use as a retail store. The tenant vacated the premises in August 1974 and the property remained vacant thereafter until it was sold in July 1975 to Edgar and Armand Bartolucci, partners trading as Barto who occupied the property and converted it to light industrial use. The premises were not leased during any of the tax years in issue.

The selling price in July 1975 was $160,000, which represented the entire consideration involved in the sale. The seller took back a purchase money mortgage for $135,000 at 8V4% per annum, due August 1, 1990.

[363]*363At issue are the true value of the subject property and whether the assessments were discriminatory.

Plaintiffs’ expert determined the true value of the property to be $160,000 for all tax years under review. He relied principally upon the July 16,1975 sale of the property from R.M.P. Holding Company to Barto, a sale which he was satisfied was an arms’length transaction. I find, from the credible testimony of both the expert and one of the principals of the seller, that the sale was indeed an arms’-length transaction. The property was exposed for sale upon the open market through a number of brokers for almost a year before Barto’s offer of $160,000 in January 1975. That offer was substantially higher than any prior offers and was conditioned upon the seller’s acceptance of a purchase money mortgage of $135,000 and the granting of a use variance to be applied for by the seller.

Plaintiffs’ expert also found support for his true value conclusion by use of the economic approach. He calculated the gross rent potential by reference to the square foot rental produced by the neighboring property at 216 Madison Street, which he found comparable to the subject property for economic rent purposes after appropriate adjustments for size, time, depth, space, location and vacancy. He estimated effective gross income as $31,109. Expenses were stabilized for all tax years at $7,923, resulting in an imputed net income of $23,186. The expert then applied the building residual method, attributing $8,738 of net income to the land for 1975, 1976 and 1977 and $8,984 of net income to the land for 1978. His capitalization rate for the years 1975-1977 consisted of a 9% interest rate, a 3% recapture rate, and an effective tax rate of 4.12% for a total rate of 16.12%. His capitalization rate for 1978 was composed of a 9.5% interest rate, a 3% recapture rate and an effective tax rate of 3.99% for a total rate of 16.49%. The defendant’s land assessment was accepted as the true value for all years.

The expert indicated that his basis for the return and recapture rates was an analysis of comparable risk factors and long term investments. He testified that he arrived at his rates of [364]*364return upon the basis of (1) such investments (2) his knowledge of the short and long term money markets and (3) his estimate that the downtown business area of Passaic was an area of lesser investment desirability and greater risk than many of the comparable long term investments upon which he relied.

Plaintiffs’ expert capitalized income pursuant to aforementioned rates to arrive at a true value of $156,000 for the years 1975 through 1977 and $152,700 for 1978.

The expert also found support for his true value determination in 3 arms’-length sales of comparable properties, all located within one block of the subject, occurring during the tax years in issue. These sales all took place after the sale of the subject and at a lower sales price per square foot. The expert stated that these sales not only supported his value for the subject property but also reflected a decline in commercial property values in Passaic throughout the tax years under review.

Finally, plaintiffs’ expert rejected the reproduction cost approach as a valuation method because, he averred, such approach would merely have mirrored the income and market data approaches if properly used.

The defendant’s expert, its Chief Assessor, found the true value of the subject property to be $255,000 and relied principally on the reproduction cost and income approaches to valuation. In his income approach he postulated gross rent potential of $39,217, using the same square foot rental assumptions as the plaintiffs’ expert with the exception of the first floor, which he calculated at $2 per square foot compared to the $1.60 per square foot utilized by the plaintiffs’ expert. The Assessor applied a 5% vacancy and collection loss factor to his gross rent potential to arrive at effective gross income of $37,257. His deduction of the same expenses claimed by the plaintiffs produced imputable net income of $31,107 to which he applied a total capitalization rate of 12.4% for all years in issue. That rate was allocated on the basis of 7.5% return, 0.8% recapture and 4.1% effective tax rate. Using the building residual method, the Assessor allocated $7,792 to land income, capitalizing the residu[365]*365al income at 12.4% to arrive at a true value of the building. This exercise produced a total value for land and building of $255,000, an amount exceeding the assessments for all years.

While the selling price of real property involved in a judicial determination of its assessable value is a “guiding indicium” of fair value and ordinarily is merely evidential, such price under certain circumstances might become controlling. Hackensack Water Co. v. Div. of Tax Appeals, 2 N.J. 157, 162, 65 A.2d 828 (1949). The statutory criterion is the consideration of the market value at a fair and bona fide sale by private contract. N.J.S.A. 54:4-23.

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