Rudd v. Township of Cranford

4 N.J. Tax 236
CourtNew Jersey Tax Court
DecidedMarch 5, 1982
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 4 N.J. Tax 236 (Rudd v. Township of Cranford) 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
Rudd v. Township of Cranford, 4 N.J. Tax 236 (N.J. Super. Ct. 1982).

Opinion

CRABTREE, J. T. C.

This is a local property tax case wherein plaintiff seeks review of judgments of the Union County Board of Taxation affirming the assessment on plaintiff’s property located at 42-44 West Holly Street, Cranford, New Jersey (Block 176, Lot 1) for tax years 1978, 1979 and 1980. The assessment for all years was:

Land $132,500
Improvements 271,300
Total $403,800

At issue are the true value of the property and the sufficiency and exclusivity of the legislative remedy for assessment discrimination.

The subject of the controversy is a three-story brick walk-up apartment complex sited on one acre of land. The buildings contain 31 apartments and the site is also improved with 14 garages and open parking for eight additional automobiles. The landlord provides heat and water as well as stoves and refrigerators in all apartments.

Defendant municipality is a middle to upper-middle income, predominantly residential, suburban community in which 80% of the dwelling units are single-family residences. Cranford has no [241]*241rent control ordinance, although many neighboring communities do have some form of rent stabilization. The tenant population of the subject property is reasonably stable and there are substantial variations among rents charged for identical units. For example, in October 1978 monthly rentals for the eight 216-room apartments ranged from $180 to $215, the monthly rentals for the 16 372-room units varied from $173 to $237 and the monthly rentals for the two 472-room units ranged from $236 to $261. Rents charged for apartments of the same size were increased at disparate rates between 1974 and 1978. For example, the percentage increase in those years in rents for the eight 272-room apartments varied from 43% to 74%, while the rent increases in the same period for the 16 372-room units ranged from 39% to 83%. This pattern of variations and increases supports the inference that annual rent increases for the longer-term tenants were kept to a minimum, whereas rents were substantially increased following tenant turnovers.

Plaintiff acquired the property on February 1, 1978 for $250,-000.

Valuation

Plaintiffs expert estimated the true value of the subject property to be $310,000 for 1978, $320,000 for 1979 and $340,000 for 1980. These estimates were predicated solely upon the income approach to value. He placed no reliance upon the sale of the subject property nor did he employ the comparative or summation approaches. His economic rent for all years was based upon an annualization of October 1 pretax-year rent rolls, and his vacancy factor of 27í¡% reflected the difference between the October 1, 1978 annualized rent rolls and actual rent collections for 1979. He extended the same vacancy factor to the other two years, with respect to which the figures for actual rent collections were not available to him. His postulated [242]*242expenses reflected actual expenses for each year1, except that expenses for fuel, insurance and utilities were stabilized to prevent distortion, and he added reserves for painting and appliance replacements. To the economic net income thus determined he applied the building residual capitalization method, using interest rates of 9%, 9.5% and 10%, a recapture rate of 3.3% for all years and an effective tax rate calculated by multiplying the actual tax rate for each year by the unweighted ratio promulgated by the Director of the Division of Taxation (Director). He adjusted the actual tax rate for 1978 by ten basis points to reflect the impact of the Tenants’ Property Tax Rebate Act, N.J.S.A. 54:4-6.2, et seq., which requires the owner of multi-family residential property to rebate 65% of qualified tax reductions to the tenants.

Defendant’s expert estimated the true value for all years in issue to be $449,800, an average of the values developed by application of all three valuation approaches.2 His income approach began with a calculation of economic rent based upon the highest rent charged for each class of apartment unit on October 1, 1978, to which he added $15 a month for each of 13 garages.3 Deduction of a 1 lh% vacancy and loss factor resulted in effective gross income of $81,924. He then deducted the actual expenses of $25,218 (making no allowance for painting or appliance replacement reserves) and arrived at imputed net income of $56,706. To this amount he applied a capitalization rate, using the building residual method, of 14%, composed of 8.5% return, 2.5% recapture and an effective tax rate of 3%. His postulated tax rate was the product of multiplying the actual [243]*2431979 rate by the chapter 123 ratio of 92% promulgated by the Director for that year. He made no adjustment in the tax rate for the Tenant’s Property Tax Rebate Act. The expert also assumed that the land assessment reflected true value after application of the Director’s chapter 123 ratio. He therefore divided the land assessment by 92% to arrive at the true value of the land.

The income approach is of preponderant influence in the valuation of apartment properties. Parkview Village Ass’n v. Collingswood, 62 N.J. 21, 297 A.2d 842 (1972); Fort Lee v. Hudson Terrace Apts., 175 N.J.Super. 221, 417 A.2d 1124 (App. Div.1980); G & S Co. v. Eatontown, 2 N.J.Tax 94 (Tax Ct.1980). I find the income approach to be the most suitable method for determining the true value of the subject property. In reaching this conclusion I have considered the market data and cost reproduction approaches utilized by defendant and find them, under the circumstances here present, to be unreliable indicators of value.

Defendant’s method of calculating economic rent is most persuasive and I will accept it. While actual rents paid by tenants of a well-managed apartment project are prima facie representative of economic rent, Parkview Village Ass’n v. Collingswood, supra, the evidence in this case persuades me to the contrary. On the basis of the facts hereinabove found with respect to the variations in rents charged for identical units and the wide range of percentage increases in rents over a four-year period, I conclude that the economic rent for each class of apartment is the highest rent charged therefor, as it appears that the landlord favored his long-time tenants with below-market rents, increasing those rents substantially only when the old tenants vacated the premises and new tenants moved in. It is realistic to anticipate, however, that rent increases in all units to reach the level of economic rent herein found will lead to vacancies and collection losses. Accordingly, I accept the 2V2% vacancy and loss rate posited by plaintiff as a reasonable estimate of the quality and durability of the rents.

[244]*244The record discloses an approximate 10% annual increase in gross rental income during the years in issue. I therefore find that the economic rent for the subject property, before allowances for vacancy and collection loss, was $72,750 for 1978, $80,830 for 1979 and $88,910 for 1980.

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4 N.J. Tax 236, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rudd-v-township-of-cranford-njtaxct-1982.