Warren v. Township of Jackson

1 N.J. Tax 536
CourtNew Jersey Tax Court
DecidedSeptember 30, 1980
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 1 N.J. Tax 536 (Warren v. Township of Jackson) 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
Warren v. Township of Jackson, 1 N.J. Tax 536 (N.J. Super. Ct. 1980).

Opinion

RIMM, J. T. C.

This local property tax case presents two issues to the court: one is the value of the taxpayer’s property; the other is the right of a taxpayer of the age of 65 or more years to a deduction against the taxes assessed against his property.

The property involved is Lot 13 in Block 154-26, located on Route 537 and Alyson Road. It consists of 10.17 acres, with 483 feet of frontage on Route 537 and 1,015 feet of frontage on Alyson Road. It is zoned highway development B3 and is improved with a single-family residence. For the tax year 1975 the assessment was:

[539]*539Land $ 80,500
Improvements 35,500
Total $ 116,000

By judgment of the Ocean County Board of Taxation, the assessment was reduced as follows:

Land $ 45,800
Improvements 35,500
Total $ 81,300

The same original assessment was made and the same judgment, reducing the assessment, was entered by the board for the tax year 1976.

The taxpayer appealed to the Division of Tax Appeals seeking a further reduction of the assessment for the year 1975. The municipality filed a petition for the year 1975 seeking a reinstatement of the original assessment. Both parties similarly filed petitions with the division for the tax year 1976, each seeking the same relief sought for the tax year 1975. In addition, the municipality filed a petition for the tax year 1976 seeking to rescind the senior citizen deduction granted to the taxpayer. The matter was tried before the division but transferred to the Tax Court, N.J.S.A. 2A:3A-26, for determination on the record made in the division. R. l:12-3(a).

Both the taxpayer and the municipality are appellants bound by the rule that a presumption of correctness exists in favor of a county board’s judgment and an appellant has the burden of ultimate persuasion to upset such judgment. River-view Gardens v. North Arlington Borough, 9 N.J. 167, 87 A.2d 425 (1952); Glenwood Realty Co., Inc. v. East Orange, 78 N.J.Super. 67, 187 A.2d 602 (App.Div.1963).

The taxpayer was his only witness. During his testimony, certain exhibits were marked in evidence. One was a list of alleged comparable sales and copies of some of the deeds referred to in the list. Another was a residential appraisal report prepared by an appraiser for an area bank for a proposed mortgage application. The appraiser did not appear at the hearing to testify and no weight is given to the appraisal. The [540]*540comparable sales, 11 in number, referred to in the exhibit and in the taxpayer’s testimony were all at some distance from the subject property. The sales data were for dates earlier than October 1 of the pretax year for each year under appeal, the dates of the sales varying from June 19, 1973 to April 4, 1974. Each comparable sale was in a residential zone, some indicated as “Residential-15” and some indicated as “Residential-20.” The comparable sales varied in size from three acres to 783 acres. Some of the properties referred to in the list of comparable sales did not have road frontage similar to the subject property. Finally, the list of comparable sales was prepared as part of a “Market Data Approach” by an appraiser for two completely different and unrelated properties and is so noted, in spite of the taxpayer’s testimony that he and his wife gathered the data contained in the exhibit from information at the county seat and that his brother typed it. Based on these comparable sales the taxpayer stated that, in his opinion, his property was worth $50,000 on October 1, 1974. In giving this opinion, the witness did not discuss the factors to be used in sales comparisons, namely, time of the sale, location of the property, physical characteristics of the property, or the terms and conditions of the sale, nor explain adjustments made, if any, for these factors in formulating his opinion of the value of the subject property based on the comparable sales.

Although, the so-called “presumption” has no artificial probative force once substantial evidence to the contrary is adduced, Samuel Hird & Sons, Inc. v. Garfield, 87 N.J.Super. 65, 208 A.2d 153 (App.Div.1965), there is no substantial, competent and credible evidence before the court on behalf of the taxpayer to make a finding of true value.

On behalf of the municipality, its assessor testified that the market value of the property is $108,750. He arrived at that value by dividing the subject property into three parts:

(a) The front 2.3 acres may be used for commercial purposes. The assessor said that this area has a value of $28,750. The value is based on comparison with two sales in the adjoining [541]*541township in a similar zone approximately one mile from the subject. The comparable sales reflected values of $23,000 per acre and $45,000 per acre, or, as the assessor said, “$25,000 an acre.” The land was regarded by the assessor as “100% at least better than the land in Jackson,” that is to say, the taxpayer’s land.

(b) An area behind the taxpayer’s house can be developed into six residential lots. Based on a number of sales, not identified, described or analyzed for the court’s benefit, the assessor testified that a residential lot’s value in Jackson Township is in a range from $7,300 to $8,300 a lot. He then discounted the value to $6,000 per lot to allow for the cost of improvements and overhead and concluded that this part of the subject property had a value of $36,000.

(c) Finally, the residence itself on a one-acre lot was valued at “about $44,000.” This value was based on four comparable sales ranging from $41,000 to $60,000, after adjustments. Again, the comparable sales were not identified, described nor analyzed, and the nature and amount of the adjustments were not indicated.

The assessor’s testimony did not describe his comparable sales; he did not give any information concerning them on the basis of which his adjustments could be evaluated; and he did not indicate the relationship of the comparable sales to the subject property by way of the times of the sales; the locations of the properties; the physical characteristics of the properties, and the terms and conditions of the comparable sales. He also did not indicate the basis of his discounting the comparable sales to the value of the six residential lots nor how much land would be lost from use for streets or other ingress and egress to and from the six lots. No consideration was given to any problems which might be encountered in rezoning the subject property or in obtaining a variance; the loss in value of each residential lot because of its close proximity to a commercial use; and absorption time into the market for residential lots in that location. In [542]*542fact, there is no evidence that the area is in a transitional state to indicate that valuation based on residential use is at all realistic. The assessor stated that the basis of his opinion was his attempt to resolve what is the highest and best use of the property.

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Bluebook (online)
1 N.J. Tax 536, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/warren-v-township-of-jackson-njtaxct-1980.