Township of Pennsville v. Director, Division of Taxation

16 N.J. Tax 47
CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedOctober 16, 1996
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 16 N.J. Tax 47 (Township of Pennsville v. Director, Division of Taxation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Township of Pennsville v. Director, Division of Taxation, 16 N.J. Tax 47 (N.J. Ct. App. 1996).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

The Township of Pennsville successfully argued before the Tax Court that the Director of the Division of Taxation erred in excluding a January, 1994 real estate sale in Pennsville from the sales ratio study used to develop the October 1, 1994 Table of Equalized Valuations promulgated by the Director pursuant to N.J.S.A. 54:1-35.1. As a result, the Tax Court judge ordered the Director to include the contested sale in compiling the 1994 Table. The Director appeals. We reverse.

The case arose out of the following facts which were established at the trial in the Tax Court. The property at issue is a sixty-two acre parcel made up of a five acre front lot and a 57 acre rear lot. The front lot adjoins the highway. A Ford auto dealership is located on it. The rear lot consists primarily of landlocked wet lands. All the real property (i.e., land and buildings) was owned by Dalessio Motors, Inc.; the personal property of the Ford dealership on the front lot was owned by Dalessio Ford, Inc. John Dalessio was the sole stockholder of both corporations.

In early 1993, Dalessio decided to sell the dealership business, because he was tired of all the pressures from the manufacturer, state and federal governments, the general public, and the employees. He contacted the Ford Dealer Development Program, a division of the Ford Motor Company, which program (among other things) buys Ford dealerships and transfers them to other would-be Ford dealers.

While Dalessio testified that his Ford dealership could have been listed on the open market through an automobile realtor broker, he explained why he had never considered “going out on the open market”:

[50]*50I chose ... dealing with the company approach through Ford’s Dealer Development Division because I thought it would be easier. I knew there wouldn’t be any surprises at settlement. I knew Ford Motor Company would have the money, the check would be there, and I felt it was a more reliable situation than going out on the open market.

Dalessio testified that “Ford wasn’t really interested in purchasing the real estate at the beginning,” because Ford generally preferred to “lease it rather than tie up their money in it.” However, at Dalessio’s insistence, Ford eventually agreed to purchase both the underlying real estate and the assets in the dealership.

In July, 1993, Dalessio and Ford negotiated on the basis of 1.2 million dollars just for the dealership and the five acres of frontage. However, Dalessio testified that “I called back on that and asked them to give me another hundred thousand [for the] fifty-some acres to the rear, [because] I didn’t want to sit with the real estate, a lot of which was wetlands.” Because Dalessio thought the rear lot had no value separate from the front lot, he “just threw that in to get rid of it.”

In any event, Dalessio testified that this was “how we arrived at the 1.3 million dollar figure” for the real estate. Dalessio testified that thereafter (i.e., after the $1.3 million purchase price for the real estate was “established”) he and Ford negotiated a “completely separate” purchase price of $2,025,000 for the personalty.

In 1990, Delassio had the real property appraised for a divorce proceeding. In 1993, Dalessio based his asking price of $1.3 million on the 1990 appraisal. He testified that he believed the $1.3 million price was fair and that he would be able to sell it if he was willing to “not be too greedy.” The 1990 divorce appraisal was not admitted into evidence; there is no indication that anyone except Dalessio was aware of the 1990 appraisal or its contents.

The parties’ purchase agreement provided for a January, 1994 closing date, and for a post-agreement appraisal of the real estate. Such agreement provided that, if such appraisal indicated that the value of the premises was less than $1,300,000, the buyer had the option to terminate the agreement. This post-agreement appraisal, performed by Norman LeGore, an appraiser secured by the [51]*51purchaser, valued the real property as being worth at least $1.3 million.

From the outset it was understood by all involved that, while Ford initially negotiated to buy Dalessio’s business, eventually Ford would form a corporation (e.g., Riverview Ford) and assign its right to buy Dalessio’s business to that corporation. This eventually took place, and Riverview Ford-Lincoln Mercury, Inc. ultimately took title to Dalessio’s real and personal property in January, 1994.

Curtis Bunche, the president of Riverview Ford, previously owned a Ford dealership in Pennsylvania. He found out about the opportunity to purchase Dalessio’s dealership via the Ford Dealer Development Program. Thereafter, Bunche participated with Ford in the 1993 negotiations to purchase the real estate and the automobile dealership. Bunche agreed to purchase the assets and separately purchase the real property as well. Bunche felt that $1.3 million was a fair price because he considered $1.3 million to be the fair market value of the real estate. However, Bunche acknowledged at trial (1) that the $1.3 million purchase price in the real estate agreement was set before the LeGore appraisal was done, and (2) that he had agreed to the $1.3 purchase price “[without [his having] physically look[ed] at an appraisal.”

The Division witnesses testified as to why the January, 1994 real estate sale from Dalessio Motors, Inc. to Riverview Ford had been rejected by the Director as a usable sale for inclusion in the sales ratio study. They stated that this sale was not an “open market transaction” because Dalessio’s property was never exposed to any buyer on the open market, except Ford and River-view Ford, which was controlled by Ford. The Director, in looking for usable sales, was only interested in “normal open market real estate transactions.” The Director also rejected the Dalessio property sale because, other than Dalessio’s having an [52]*52idea of what it was worth based on a 1990 divorce appraisal,1 there was nothing to indicate why Ford and Bunche had negotiated the $1.3 million purchase price for the real property in 1993.

It was not the Director’s position that sales of a dealership should be considered nonusable in every case. On the contrary, a sale of a dealership could be a usable sale

[I]f, in fact, the land and the building were advertised separately or listed separately with a broker devoid of any inventory, not taking in account good will, the dealership’s name, and that was marketed [as] free-standing real estate and it sold on the open market, it was exposed on the open market for a reasonable amount of time, Ford didn’t buy from Ford, Chevy didn’t buy from Chevy, John Doe bought from Mrs. Smith, they didn’t know each other, they had no relationship prior to the transaction ... [then] we’d have a usable sale.

On January 14, 1994, the real estate was sold by Dalessio Motors to Riverview Ford for $1.3 million. The two sites were assessed at a value of $1,589,500 as of October 1, 1993, for the 1994 reevaluation year. However, Dalessio apparently received the assessment for 1994 after the $1.3 million purchase price was agreed upon in July, 1993.

On appeal, the Director contends that the Tax Court judge erred both in her interpretation of the law and in her application of the facts to the law. In order to evaluate these contentions, it is necessary to understand the statutory scheme.

Pursuant to

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Related

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16 N.J. Tax 47, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/township-of-pennsville-v-director-division-of-taxation-njsuperctappdiv-1996.