Van Wingerden v. Lafayette Township

15 N.J. Tax 475
CourtNew Jersey Tax Court
DecidedMarch 22, 1996
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 15 N.J. Tax 475 (Van Wingerden v. Lafayette 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
Van Wingerden v. Lafayette Township, 15 N.J. Tax 475 (N.J. Super. Ct. 1996).

Opinion

DOUGHERTY, J.T.C.

Procedural History

Leonard Van Wingerden (Taxpayer) appeals from judgments of the Sussex County Board of Taxation, affirming Lafayette Township’s (the Township’s) assessments of Block 5, Lot 7.03 for tax years 1993 and 1994. The Township asserts the exemption in N.J.S.A 54:4-23.12 violates N.J. Const. art. VIII, § 1, ¶ 1(a).1 The Attorney General, Deborah T. Poritz, intervenes (R. 4:28-4(d)) to defend the statute on behalf of the State of New Jersey.

The Issue

The pivotal issue is whether Taxpayer’s greenhouse is real property which must, by constitutional mandate, be subject to taxation under N.J.S.A. 54:4-1 or, whether it is personal property which may be classified as nontaxable under N.J.S.A. 54:4-23.12. This issue was advanced only in the 1994 matter.2 For the [480]*480reasons which follow, it is held that: (1) the greenhouse is “real property”; (2) it is subject to taxation as “real property taxable” under N.J.S.A. 54:4-1; (3) N.J.S.A. 54:4-23.12 applies to exempt it from that tax; and (4) that exemption is void because it confers a private benefit, a preference, and is an impermissible classification of real property. N.J. Const. art. VIII, § 1,111(a).

For both Tax Years 1993 and 1994 Taxpayer also seeks a determination of a “reasonable depreciation deduction”. True value, Taxpayer contends, equals cost to construct the greenhouse, minus the depreciation deduction. Taxpayer concludes true value under this approach will require an assessment reduction in both years. Taxpayer fails, however, to offer evidence sufficient to overcome the presumption of correctness which attaches to the original assessments. The assessments must, then, be affirmed.

Findings of Fact

Block 5, Lot 7.03 is a twenty-two acre parcel, improved with a personal residence and a greenhouse used in Taxpayer’s business. For Tax Years 1993 and 1994 the property was assessed as follows:

Land $ 52,500
Improvements 797,500
Total $ 850,000
The parties stipulate to the following allocation of the assessment: 22 4- acres of land $ 52,500
Residence 215,500
Greenhouse 582,000

Taxpayer challenges only that portion of the assessment, allocated to the greenhouse — $582,000.

[481]*481In 1988 Taxpayer opened a horticultural business, which he conducts as a sole proprietorship. The business consists of the cultivation of cut flowers, roses, and anthurium for sale at wholesale. The flower business is conducted year round. In New Jersey this requires a greenhouse. Taxpayer’s greenhouse is glass, covering approximately an acre and a half of land.

Taxpayer purchased the greenhouse (sometimes herein referred to as a “house”) from the catalogue of V. & V. Noordland, Inc. Noordland is a major supplier in the industry of “Dutch” houses. The Dutch house is far different in design from the traditional “American Widespan” greenhouse. The Widespan is built on heavy foundations and walls. Its glass panels are welded together. Its roof has a single peak, and is supported by a heavy interior structure of trusses and beams. As the ground area covered by the Widespan expands, the height of the roof must rise. The higher the roof the greater the structure necessary to support and distribute its weight, and the weight of the glass paneled walls.

The Dutch style house is prefabricated in Holland in modular units (“houses”). Houses may be purchased in several different widths. The most common width (and that chosen by Taxpayer) is twenty-one feet. The roof of each house is low and has twin peaks. A drainage gutter lies between the peaks. Steel columns, evenly spaced throughout the interior as well as around the perimeter permit the weight of the structure to be evenly distributed throughout, rather than shifted to the perimeter walls alone as occurs with the American Widespan.

Under the Dutch design, houses may be connected to form any overall dimension as may be required by a grower. Houses are connected by sharing a gutter between their peaks. The connection is made on site, by nuts and bolts. The assemblage of multiple houses to cover a greater ground area, requires no greater roof height than for a single house. Each Dutch house is still self supported by its evenly spaced steel columns. The glass panels, which form the roof and walls of the Dutch house, slide into metal channels where they are held in place by a bead of [482]*482caulking material. The channels are bolted to each other and to the steel columns and interior trusses. Unlike the American house, there is no welding. The galvanized steel columns which support the structure of the Dutch house are attached by anchor bolts to concrete piers sunk into the earth. Greenhouses as large in area as thirteen acres and as small as 4000 square feet have been sold and assembled by V. & V. Noordland, Inc. Taxpayer’s consists of sixteen houses, covering an area in excess of 66,000 square feet.

Taxpayer’s sixteen houses are configured to form a “main greenhouse”, measuring 315 feet eight inches wide and 207 feet six inches long and a separate “shipping house”, twenty one feet wide and sixty nine feet nine inches long. These modular units were shipped in pieces to the subject property and assembled there by a specially trained work crew.

A concrete aisle, eight feet wide, is the only flooring installed in the main house. The aisle runs down the center of the house. The bare land is exposed, on each side of it. Taxpayer’s roses and anthurium are planted directly in the soil, in beds approximately three feet six inches wide, set perpendicular to the aisle.

Each individual plant is watered and fed by a tube which drips at intervals set by Taxpayer. The computerized controls for this irrigation system are located on a centralized panel in the shipping house. In addition to the drip tubes, two inch thin wall steel conduit tubing, set on stanchions four inches off the ground, runs along both sides of each bed. Warm water is run through this tubing, producing radiant moist heat. Some heat tubing is also installed above the plants, hanging from the overhead trusses. The computerized controls for the heating system are located on the centralized panel in the shipping house. The hot water boilers and a pump to distribute the water through the heating system are also installed there.

A fabric curtain (the “heat shield”) runs across the top of the main greenhouse. The heat shield, installed under the roof, hangs approximately twelve inches under each gutter. It sits above the [483]*483heating system. The shield can be adjusted to insulate against cold in winter and deflect direct sunlight in the heat of summer.

Some of the glass panels which form the roof and walls of the houses are set to a thermostat. They open automatically to provide ventilation as the temperature rises, and close automatically when the temperature falls. Other panels may be individually opened and shut for ventilation from the control panel. These panels have individual motors installed within them to facilitate their movement. The motors are wired to the main control panel.

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Related

Van Wingerden v. Lafayette Township
18 N.J. Tax 81 (New Jersey Tax Court, 1999)
Van Wingerden v. Lafayette Township
697 A.2d 565 (New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 1997)

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Bluebook (online)
15 N.J. Tax 475, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/van-wingerden-v-lafayette-township-njtaxct-1996.