Trap Rock Industries, Inc. v. Franklin Township

4 N.J. Tax 445
CourtNew Jersey Tax Court
DecidedAugust 24, 1981
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 4 N.J. Tax 445 (Trap Rock Industries, Inc. v. Franklin 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
Trap Rock Industries, Inc. v. Franklin Township, 4 N.J. Tax 445 (N.J. Super. Ct. 1981).

Opinion

CONLEY, J. T. C.

This action is a valuation and discrimination appeal for the years 1975, 1976, 1977 and 1978, although only Block 1, Lot 2, was appealed in the year 1975. The property consists of nine contiguous lots used as a quarry. The assessments placed upon the lots for 1976,1977 and 1978 (and including Block 1, Lot 2, for 1975) were as follows:

Block Lot Land Improvements Total
1 1 $ 16,300 $ 16,300
1 2 1,704,900 $300,200 2,005,100
1 3 23,100 23,100
5 1 324,500 900 325,400
5 5 378,100 378,100
5 14 58,500 58,500
5 173-2 54,900 54,900
5 174 396.000 396.000
5 175 473.000 473.000
Total $3,429,300 $301,100 $3,730,400

As can be seen from these figures, the aggregate assessment of all the lots involved in this appeal was $3,730,400. The individual assessments were all affirmed by the Somerset County Board of Taxation each year.

Plaintiff’s expert contends that the fair market value of the subject property for all years in question was $2,452,000. Defendant township’s expert contends, in a supplement to his appraisal, that the fair market value of the subject property for the years in question was $4,438,400. The appraisal experts for both plaintiff and defendant were of the opinion that for [448]*448assessment purposes the fair market value of the property should be adjusted by application of a ratio (or an average of ratios) promulgated by the Director of the Division of Taxation for purposes of distribution of State school aid.

Issues

Plaintiff did not challenge the two assessments on improve-ments and neither party offered any proofs on the valuation of improvements. Accordingly, the only issues to be resolved by the court are the appropriate valuation of the nine parcels of land constituting the subject property and the appropriate ratio to be applied for discrimination relief for each of the years in question.

Physical Description

The nine lots in question constitute two separate portions of the property, known as the west quarry and the east quarry. The lots known as the west quarry are:

Block 1, Lot 1 1.90 acres
Block 1, Lot 2 178.90 acres
Block 1, Lot 3 2.30 acres
Total - 183.10 acres

The six lots known as the east quarry are:

Block 5, Lot 1 32.45 acres
Block 5, Lot 5 58.20 acres
Block 5, Lot 14 6.00 acres
Block 5, Lot 173-2 5.49 acres
Block 5, Lot 174 39.60 acres
Block 5, Lot 175 49.00 acres
Total - 190.74 acres

All nine lots together total 378.84 acres. The property is located in the southern portion of Franklin Township, approximately 3.5 miles northeast of the center of Princeton. The surrounding area is one of the less-developed portions of Franklin Township. The subject property is not presently serviced by [449]*449water and sewer connections but these systems could be extended to the site in the foreseeable future.

A quarry has been located on the site since approximately the turn of the century. Originally, the west quarry was the location of almost all mining activity. During the years in question all nine lots were capable of being mined, but since the original mining had taken place in the west quarry and it was to a considerable extent depleted, most of the mining activity during the years in question took place in the east quarry. Stone extracted from the east quarry was transported through a tunnel under a public road to the west quarry where there was a crushing machine, a concrete and asphalt plant, a scale house, machine shops, central receiving facilities and garages.

The mining process undertaken on the subject property consists of the blasting and extraction of diabase trap rock, which in its finished form is crushed stone used as a base in roadways, asphalt mixtures and ready-mixed concretes. At the beginning of the process, holes are drilled into the solid rock of the quarry floor about every 15 feet to a depth of approximately seven feet. Explosives placed into the holes break up the rock. The rock debris is then crushed into gravel by machine.

As the rock in the floor of the quarry is extracted for use as trap rock, the topography of the property obviously changes. What was originally an outcropping of rock is gradually blasted away within a circumscribed area, leaving a perpendicular edge or face to the remaining rock. In the east quarry at the time of trial one area of excavation had a face of 160 feet and above that another area that had been excavated previously had a sheer face of 65 feet. As excavation progresses outward as well as downward, the rock face is moved outward, although a buffer zone is left between the ultimate face of the quarry and the boundary of the property.

Highest and Best Use

The parties differ in their analyses of the highest and best use of the subject property. In plaintiff’s expert’s view, the highest [450]*450and best use is a continuation of its current use as a quarry, but only for its remaining economic life which he estimates to be about 15 years. He stated that after the quarry ceased being used, plaintiff would implement its reclamation plan, which would consist essentially of grading and planting, leaving a safe property with a lake filling the excavated area. After reclamation, the highest and best use of the property in the expert’s view would be for conservation or passive recreation in accordance with the site plan approved by Franklin Township. .He said the property would not be suitable for any other uses. The expert said most abandoned quarries were “swimming holes” that were never reclaimed. He said that even after reclamation of the subject property, there would be virtually no market for it for light manufacturing, as permitted under the township’s ordinance, because there is a huge surplus of industrial land in Central New Jersey with better location, topography and access.

Defendant’s expert did not deal with the issue of highest and best use in his appraisal report but he did not suggest a better use for the property than as a quarry. He said that upon depletion of the quarry the land would revert to some other use, as permitted by the township zoning ordinance. It was his opinion that a goodly portion of the land would ultimately be usable for light industrial or office use, although he conceded that it would not be the best site in Franklin Township for these uses.

It is my conclusion that the highest and best use of the property is its present use as a quarry. At such time as the quarry becomes depleted or it becomes uneconomical to continue the quarry operation, the highest and best use of a relatively small portion of the property would be for light industrial development. The larger portion of the property, the portion actually quarried, would be developable for industrial use only at considerable expense not adequately established in this court.

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Related

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Bluebook (online)
4 N.J. Tax 445, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/trap-rock-industries-inc-v-franklin-township-njtaxct-1981.