Twin Lakes Realty, LLC v. Township of Aberdeen

CourtNew Jersey Tax Court
DecidedJune 17, 2024
Docket002975-2018 007352-2019 009610-2020 008256-2021
StatusUnpublished

This text of Twin Lakes Realty, LLC v. Township of Aberdeen (Twin Lakes Realty, LLC v. Township of Aberdeen) 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
Twin Lakes Realty, LLC v. Township of Aberdeen, (N.J. Super. Ct. 2024).

Opinion

NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT APPROVAL OF THE TAX COURT COMMITTEE ON OPINIONS

TAX COURT OF NEW JERSEY

Mala Sundar R.J. Hughes Justice Complex PRESIDING JUDGE P.O. Box 975 25 Market Street Trenton, New Jersey 08625 Telephone (609) 815-2922 taxcourttrenton2@judiciary.state.nj.us June 7, 2024

David B. Wolfe, Esq. Skoloff & Wolfe, PC Attorney for Plaintiff

Matthew Goode, Esq. Arbus, Maybruch & Goode, LLC Attorney for Defendant

Re: Twin Lakes Realty, LLC v. Township of Aberdeen Block 154 Lot 10 Docket Nos. 002975-2018; 007352-2019; 009610-2020; 008256-2021 Dear Counsel:

This opinion decides plaintiff’s summary judgment motion and defendant’s similar cross-

motion. Plaintiff asks the court to find that the assessment of $18,670,700 imposed on the above-

referenced property (Subject) for tax year 2018 be declared an unconstitutional spot assessment.

This is because, plaintiff argues, the assessment increased by over 100% from the prior tax year

and (1) the magnitude of the increase was solely due to sale of the Subject, an apartment complex,

on November 29, 2016, for $26,960,000; (2) the assessment changes for tax year 2018 to the other

apartment complexes in defendant taxing district were only between 2% to 20%; and (3)

defendant’s assessor had no independent basis or new information to justify the magnitude of

increase to the Subject’s 2018 assessment. Plaintiff seeks an Order restoring the Subject’s 2018

assessment to the 2017 assessment amount of $9,029,400. Defendant, Township of Aberdeen (Township), contends that it is in Monmouth County

which participates in the Assessment Demonstration Program (ADP). The Monmouth County

Board of Taxation (County Board) implemented the ADP under certain policies, one of which, the

Township notes, is that its assessor must annually reassess every property at 100% of its purported

market value. The assessor here, the Township contends, performed this exercise for the Subject,

and for all the apartment complexes in the Township for tax year 2018, using owner-provided

information in estimating income, and applying the same income-approach methodology with

uniform adjustments in setting their assessments. Therefore, per the Township, the Subject’s 2018

assessment is not, and cannot be, constitutionally infirm, and its complaints should be dismissed.

For the reasons more fully stated below, the court agrees with the Township that its assessor

did not single out, nor discriminate against, the Subject when reassessing it for tax year 2018. That

the reassessment resulted in a higher assessment amount for the Subject, as compared to other

apartment complexes in the Township, does not state, nor demonstrate, a case of spot assessment.

The court denies plaintiff’s summary judgment motion. It partially grants the Township’s cross-

motion for summary judgment as the complaints will not be dismissed but will proceed to trial.

FACTS

The facts are those undisputed in each party’s pleadings, and the undisputed documents in

support thereof, plus as obtained from the testimony of the Township’s assessor adduced at his

depositions and at the court-scheduled plenary hearing.

The Subject is a 9.08-acre lot improved by a 148-unit garden-style, two-story brick

apartment complex, comprising of 13 buildings, built in 1970. It is classified 4C (multifamily)

2 and is one of ten apartment complexes in the Township. 1 According to the property record card

(PRC), the total gross building area (GBA) of the ground floor was 214,480 square feet (SF)

(107,200 SF ground floor times two). 2

Plaintiff, Twin Lakes Realty, LLC (Twin Lakes), purchased the Subject for $26,960,000

on November 29, 2016 (thus after the October 1, 2016, assessment date for tax year 2017). The

sale was deemed to be an arms-length transaction by the Township’s assessor (i.e., he did not deem

it unusable under N.J.A.C. 18:12-1.1).

For tax year 2018, the Township’s assessor imposed an assessment of $18,670,700 on the

Subject. This amount was approximately 100% greater than the prior year’s assessment of

$9,029,400. Twin Lakes challenged the assessment before the County Board, and then appealed

its judgment affirming the assessment to this court. Twin Lakes form complaint to the Tax Court

only alleged that the assessment was not the Subject’s true value. The Township counterclaimed. 3

1 Apartments “designed for the use and enjoyment of five families or more” are classified as 4C. N.J.A.C. 18:12-2.2(g). 2 The PRC was created by a third-party entity as part of its inspection process for the Township’s 2009 district-wide revaluation. It itemized the total ground floor area of each of the 13 buildings, and their sum total as 107,200 SF. However, Twin Lakes is correct that the sum total should be 62,520 SF, which times two (for the second floor) would provide a GBA of 125,040 SF. The PRC set the Subject’s assessment at $14,579,100 (allocated $5,920,000 to land and $8,659,100 to improvements), and $40,000 per apartment, noting that there was no “I&E” (income and expense, also at times called Chapter 91) information. The $40,000 per apartment appears to be the land value per unit ($5,920,000 ÷ 148 units).

3 Twin Lakes also directly appealed the assessments for tax years 2019 through 2021 (subject of the instant motions) which were $20,052,000; $20,052,000; and $20,178,800 respectively, to this court alleging only that the assessments were not reflective of the Subject’s true value. The Township did not file counterclaims.

3 Parties then engaged in discovery including two depositions of the Township’s assessor.

The instant motions followed. The court scheduled a plenary hearing, wherein the Township’s

assessor testified (subject to direct and cross-examination). Almost all of his testimony mirrored

his deposition testimony except for a few clarificatory answers to the court’s questions.

As noted above, there are ten Class 4C properties in the Township. The parties agreed that

three are most similar to the Subject in terms of age (circa 1970s) and condition (average), and of

the three, two are additionally similar as to number of units. They are: (1) Tree Haven (Block 154,

Lot 16), a 140-unit apartment complex built in 1964 on an 8.81-acre lot, with a GBA of 126,296

SF; (2) Chelsea Village (Block 154, Lot 18), a 160-unit apartment complex built 1966 on a 10.58-

acre-lot with a GBA of 131,620 SF; and (3) Heritage (Block 117, Lot 17), a 66-unit complex built

in 1974 on a 6.8-acre lot with a GBA of 61,896 SF. Their assessments were as follows: 4

Property 2016 2017 2018 2019 1 Subject (148-unit) $ 8,825,000 $ 9,029,400 $18,670,700 $20,052,000 2 Tree Haven (140-unit) $10,071,600 $10,369,400 $12,397,900 $11,512,300 3 Chelsea Village (160-unit) $ 9,871,500 $ 9,975,400 $11,670,300 $ 9,377,100 4 Heritage (66-Unit) $ 6,475,900 $ 6,593,500 $ 7,056,100 $ 6,515,100

The assessor stated that while he was aware of the Subject’s sale, he did not use it for tax

year 2017 because it was “too late” (i.e., it was post-assessment). He noted that a sale is usually

the best indicator of the market, therefore, he would not ignore it, however, he would use an income

approach in setting its assessment if a commercial property. He clarified that he would not analyze

a property “solely with respect to” its sale unless there was something about the property which

4 The 2009 revaluation-generated PRC for Tree Haven set its assessment as $9,549,900 (allocated $5,600,000 to land and $3,949,900 to improvements), and $40,000 per apartment.

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Bluebook (online)
Twin Lakes Realty, LLC v. Township of Aberdeen, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/twin-lakes-realty-llc-v-township-of-aberdeen-njtaxct-2024.