Whippany Associates & Marine Midland Realty Credit Corp. v. Township of Hanover

1 N.J. Tax 325
CourtNew Jersey Tax Court
DecidedMay 29, 1980
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 1 N.J. Tax 325 (Whippany Associates & Marine Midland Realty Credit Corp. v. Township of Hanover) 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
Whippany Associates & Marine Midland Realty Credit Corp. v. Township of Hanover, 1 N.J. Tax 325 (N.J. Super. Ct. 1980).

Opinion

EVERS, J. T. C.

The subject of these complaints are contiguous industrial zoned properties situated at the intersection of Ridgedale Avenue and East Frederick Place and known as block 2104, lots 2, 8 and 9. The taxpayers appeal the 1974-1975 assessments on lot 2 and the 1975-1976 assessments on lots 8 and 9. All assessments were affirmed by the Morris County Tax Board. In addition to the question of valuation, to be resolved is whether there existed discrimination in assessments as alleged by the taxpayers. The assessment history follows.

Lot 2 Lot 8 Lot 9
Land $ 56,200 $ 78,000 $ 46,100
Improvements 532,600 314,000 -
Total $588,800 $392,000 $ 46,100

[328]*328Lot 2, which contains 5.62 acres, is located at the corner of Ridgedale Avenue and East Frederick Place and is improved with a three story (and penthouse) structure which was constructed in 1948 at a cost of $959,222. It is a concrete and steel structure with brick/masonry and glass block window exterior. On the interior it has 38,150 square feet of concrete floors surfaced with tile, glazed block and sheetrock walls, acoustic tile ceilings, tiled rest rooms, automatic passenger elevator, 150 ton air conditioning system, gas heating and sprinkler system. There is a truck dock. Since its construction the building has been used for various purposes including offices, laboratory and light industrial uses.

Lot 8, which contains 7.79 acres, fronts on East Frederick Place immediately to the rear of lot 9 which separates lot 8 from lot 2, is improved with four buildings and a railroad siding. Building A, the largest of the four structures, is a two story brick, steel and concrete structure built in 1948 and contains 36,562 square feet with brick interior walls and concrete floors. It has 13 inch thick wall partitions, ceiling heights of 20 and 40 feet, sprinklers, multi-paned industrial type windows, 10,000 pound capacity freight elevator, minimal toilet facilities, truck and rail loading facilities. It has been devoted to heavy industry and warehouse uses.

Building B, also constructed in 1948, contains two stories and is constructed of brick, steel and concrete. Having a gross floor area of 13,676 square feet, the structure has concrete floors and roof, sprinklers, freight elevators, 20 foot ceilings, rest room, truck door and truck loading platform. It has been devoted to manufacturing and warehouse uses.

Buildings C and D, also of 1948 vintage, are of brick, concrete and steel construction and contain 2,048 square feet and 2,312 square feet of floor space respectively. Used as a change house, building C contains lockers, showers and lavatories. Building D is a storage building.

Lot 9 is vacant and contains 4.6 acres of land. This lot was termed marginal because of its elevation, shape and wet condi[329]*329tion. The Whippany River forms the southerly boundary of lots 8 and 9.

These structures, as well as additional improved and unimproved properties, were formerly owned and utilized by the Flintkote Company which had been engaged in the manufacture of asbestos products, a use which suggests the need, at least with respect to the buildings on lot 8, for substantial construction. The testimony indicated that Flintkote abandoned the premises in approximately 1970 (leaving only a caretaker in charge of the building on lot 2) and in 1972 the premises and more were purchased by Whippany Associates, an investment group, with Flintkote taking back a purchase money mortgage which mortgage was subsequently sold to the Marine Midland Bank. Apparently, in an effort to develop it into an industrial park, Whippany Associates subdivided the land into various lots and constructed East Frederick Place. Its efforts to sell the premises being to no avail Whippany Associates, in or about 1975, conveyed the premises in question to Marine Midland Realty Credit Corp. in lieu of foreclosure of the mortgage. Marine Midland, in January 1976, sold lot 2 for a consideration of $560,000 and, in March 1977, lots 8 and 9 were sold for $320,000.

The taxpayers’ expert, while utilizing the income approach, primarily relied upon the prices in the Marine Midland conveyances to establish valué. The township contends those sales are suspect and unuseable and not representative of transactions between willing parties, neither being under a compulsion to buy or sell. In fact, in computing his Township of Hanover sales ratio study, the Director of Division of Taxation found the sale of lots 8 and 9 to be unuseable. No reasons were given for the Director’s decision.

A real estate broker who was involved in the two transactions found that the sales were negotiated at arm’s length. While nothing was presented that would suggest otherwise, under the circumstances here present it is obvious that the prices did not, in fact, represent the true value of the premises [330]*330as of the critical assessing date. It is well settled that the sales price of the subject is not controlling as to value but is merely evidential. McCrory Stores Corp. v. Asbury Park, 89 N.J.Super. 234, 235, 214 A.2d 526 (App.Div. 1965); Rek Investment Co. v. Newark, 80 N.J.Super. 552, 559, 194 A.2d 368 (App.Div. 1963). “The Division (Tax Court) [is] thus required to weigh and appraise the factors surrounding the sale to determine whether there were special circumstances which had a tendency to increase or depress the sales price of the property without affecting its true value, or whether, . . . the sale[s] price was controlling”. Id. pg. 560, 194 A.2d pg. 373.

I find the circumstances surrounding these sales indicate the prices were depressed. A bank is generally not in the business of renting and managing real estate holdings and when Marine took title to the properties in lieu of foreclosure, it behooved it to sell the properties in order to cover the mortgage loan as rapidly as possible.

Indeed, on cross examination the broker acknowledged that it was Marine’s policy to liquidate holdings which it had received in satisfaction of mortgage loans. Being aware of these circumstances, a prospective purchaser would naturally offer a price somewhat less than true value. I find the seller here was under a greater economic compulsion to sell than would be the ideal hypothetical “willing seller” and accordingly will assign the sales price no weight in my determination.

I likewise will assign no weight to the taxpayers’ capitalization of income analysis which allegedly was founded on economic rents. However, no actual comparable rents were offered and, in fact, the taxpayers’ expert admitted that he relied only on his general experience in formulating his net rental amounts. Obviously, he was forced to adopt that position as neither he nor the township’s expert could discover comparable rentals of buildings of this type. As earlier noted the subject buildings were vacant as of the assessing date. The court cannot rely on an expert’s unsupported opinion without any foundation to verify its accuracy and reliability. See In Re: Appeal of City of [331]*331East Orange, 103 N.J.Super.

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Bluebook (online)
1 N.J. Tax 325, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/whippany-associates-marine-midland-realty-credit-corp-v-township-of-njtaxct-1980.