Settlements and Awards


A New Jersey appellate court recently reversed a trial court’s dismissal of a tax appeal, and found that the City of North Wildwood failed to act fairly in litigation with the property owner.  The property at issue is improved with a seven-story mixed-use tower, a 160-slip marina and a 3900 square-foot marina services building, and a one-story restaurant.  Plaintiff Beach Creek owns the land underlying the Towers but not the condominium units. The owner of the tower has a ninety-nine-year lease for the land underlying the Towers, and the rent is income to Beach Creek.  Following a revaluation in 2006, the City increased the assessed value of Beach Creek’s property from $1,526,200 for 2005, with an equalized value of $3,225,247, to $14,612,900 for 2006. The City assessed the property at $14,288,900, for 2007 and 2008. Beach Creek filed a timely challenge to its 2007 assessment on March 15, 2007 and a timely challenge to its 2008 assessment on March 24, 2008.  Beach Creek filed tax appeals for 2007 and 2008, and an action in the Chancery Division to challenge the 2006 assessment.

In connection with the pending Tax Court actions, the City obtained an appraisal report from its expert on March 12, 2009 which concluded that the “retrospective market value of [Beach Creek's] property for 2006-2009 tax years” was $4.6 million.  The City provided its appraisal to Beach Creek in discovery and filed it with the Tax Court.  As of March 2009, the City had information that the full and fair value of the property in 2007 and 2008 was nearly $10 million lower than the assessed value for those years, and the City thereafter assessed the property at $4.6 million for 2010.

At trial before the Tax Court, Beach Creek’s expert separately valued the different uses on the property after determining that the most reliable appraisal would be one reached by using the valuation method most appropriate for each of the property’s several components.  Beach Creek’s expert used the income approach in valuing the marina and the land underlying the Towers, the cost approach to value the marina services building, and the sales comparison approach to value the restaurant. The value he assigned to the entire property for 2007 and 2008 is the total of the separate values of the components in each of those years.

At the conclusion of Beach Creek’s case, the Tax Court granted the City’s motion to dismiss concluding that Beach Creek had not produced evidence sufficiently definite, positive and certain in quality and quantity to overcome the presumption of validity that attaches to the assessment under New Jersey law. R. 4:37-2(b); Pantasote Co. v. City of Passaic, 100 N.J. 408, 412-14 (1985).  The court first determined that the hybrid approach used by Beach Creek’s expert of “taking one approach for each of the three or four aspects of the property and then somehow just adding them together and coming up to value,” was unprecedented.  Next, the court found Beach Creek’s expert’s application of the cost and comparable sales approaches flawed, and therefore the court had no basis for assigning a true value to the property based on Beach Creek’s evidence.

On appeal, the Appellate Division found Beach Creek’s evidence was adequate to withstand the City’s motion. As to a lack of precedent for the hybrid valuation approach, the Appellate Division cited to Livingston Mall Corp. v. Livingston Twp., 15 N.J. Tax 505, 508-09 (Tax 1996), where the court was faced with valuing a mall that included three anchor department stores and non-anchor mall stores that were leased. The Livingston Mall court concluded that the income approach failed to capture the value of the anchor stores because of a lack of data, and therefore it would be appropriate to use the cost approach for the anchor stores, and the income approach for the non-anchor stores which were leased.

Finally, the Appellate Division found the City’s moving for dismissal based on Beach Creek’s failure to overcome the presumption of validity raised a serious question about the City’s performance of its obligation under F.M.C. Stores Co. v. Borough of Morris Plains, 100 N.J. 418, 426 (1985), to “turn square corners” in litigation.  The City, intending to rely on the $4.6 million appraisal at trial, was in possession of evidence that the 2007 and 2008 assessments were grossly erroneous. The Appellate Division found the City’s actions were inconsistent with its obligation to “comport itself with compunction and integrity.”  Thus, the Appellate Division rejected the court’s conclusion that Beach Creek failed to overcome the presumption of the validity afforded to the quantum of these $14.3 million assessments for 2007 and 2008.  The undisputed evidence in the City’s report established that the $14.3 million assessments for 2007 and 2008 were well off the $4.6 million report value, and that sufficient to overcome any presumption that the assessments’ quantum was valid.

As outlined in F.M.C. Stores, the square corners doctrine requires that no government action be taken in litigation with the aim of gaining an unfair advantage over a private citizen.  Thus, the government may not “conduct itself so as to achieve or preserve any kind of bargaining or litigational advantage” over a member of the public.  As the F.M.C. Court observed, this means that “government may have to forego the freedom of action that private citizens may employ in dealing with one another.”Litigation strategies and actions that may be expected in litigation between two private parties will be scrutinized when taken on behalf of a government agency in litigation with a provide citizen.

The property owner in Livingston Mall Corp. v. Livingston Twp., 15 N.J. Tax 505, 508-09 (Tax 1996) was represented by Thomas Olson, Esq. of McKirdy & Riskin, P.A.

A copy of the Tax Court’s opinion in Beach Creek Marina v. North Wildwood City may be found here.

For more blog posts on appraisal report issues, please see the following:

Experts’ Opinions Accepted Over Town’s Objections

Real Estate Tax Appeal Evidence: Admissible in Eminent Domain Case?

Expert’s “Gut Feeling” on Costs Survives Dismissal Claim

Court Disapproves Averaging of Comparable Sales

Plaintiff Route 21 Associates challenged the assessments imposed by Defendant Township of Belleville on vacant land for tax years 2008, 2009, and 2010. The matter was scheduled for trial where the Tax Court accepted each party’s two witnesses as experts, one in real estate appraisal and one in environmental remediation, and admitted their reports into evidence. Both valuation experts agreed that the subject property’s unimpaired value should first be determined by using the sales comparison approach and that the unimpaired value should be reduced by the costs of remediation. The environmental experts agreed that a 6% discount factor should be applied to the subject property’s 10 year remediation costs and that the unimpaired value should be reduced by the discounted costs, plus the actual or already expended environmental costs, plus 10% for entrepreneurial risk. They differed in the method of offsetting the actual and projected costs for the unimpaired value.

At the close of proofs, Belleville moved to dismiss Route 21’s complaints pursuant to R. 4:37-2 on the grounds that Route 21’s experts each provided an impermissible “net” opinion.  Specifically, Belleville argued that Route 21’s valuation expert was unfamiliar with his sales, his adjustments to the sales was too great and rendered the information meaningless, and his reliance on the environmental experts opinion rendered his opinion a net opinion because the environmental report was a net opinion.

The Tax Court denied the motion. First, the court found the opinion was not flawed and inadmissible when some particular facts or conditions were not accounted for there were other substantive bases of support therein.  Similarly, the court noted that excessive adjustments went to the question of the expert’s credibility, and the weight to be given such adjustments depended on the facts and reasons supporting the appraiser’s conclusions.  Finally, the court found that Route 21’s environmental expert supported the conclusions in his report, and adequately explained the facts supporting those conclusions.

After reviewing all of the evidence presented to the court, the subject property’s fair market value as impaired was determined for each of the tax years under appeal, and an assessment was established by applying the Chapter 123 ratio as required.

A copy of the Tax Court’s opinion in Route 21 Associates v. Township of Belleville may be found here.

For more blog posts on environmental issues and appraisal report issues, please see the following:

“Special” Valuation Rules N/A To Environmentally Remediated Property

City of Elizabeth Ordered to Pay Motel Owner from Environmental Escrow

Environmental Impacts in Real Estate Valuation Litigation

Expert’s “Gut Feeling” on Costs Survives Dismissal Claim

Court Disapproves Averaging of Comparable Sales

The families who owned the Mother’s Park and Ridelot in Wayne, New Jersey were awarded $2.6 million in just compensation by  Passaic County jury last week for the taking of their property through eminent domain by NJ Transit.

Courtesy of bing.com

The property was originally acquired by DJ Properties to be converted to a restaurant, but the owner instead leased the property to the New Jersey Department of Transportation in 2002 for the park and ride use.  In a trial in Paterson where New Jersey Superior Court Judge Philip Mizzone, Jr. presided, the jury deliberated two and a half hours before awarding twice the $1.3 million offered by NJ Transit for the property three years ago.  The appraiser for the property owners, DJ Properties, estimated the property’s value at $2.9 million.  For more on this story, please click here for Nick Clunn’s article on NorthJersey.com.

The property owners in this matter were represented by McKirdy & Riskin’s John H. Buonocore, Jr., who was recently named as “Newark Area Best Lawyers Eminent Domain and Condemnation Lawyer of the Year” for 2012 by “Best Lawyers”.  For more on Mr. Buonocore’s designation by Best Lawyers, click here for an article on the Morris News Bee.

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As reported by Donna Weaver in this Press of Atlantic City article, beachfront property owners in Harvey Cedars have recently been paid constitutional just compensation for the taking of their private property rights — private beachfront – by the government.

Harvey Cedars is located on Long Beach Island.  As part of a beach replenishment project designed to provide a benefit to all shore visitors, the municipality needed to take property from the owners of beach-front homes.  Given the necessity of the takings, the New Jersey Constitution mandates payment of just compensation.  Some of the cases have been resolved without the necessity of jury trials, but as noted in the cited article, a jury recently awarded a property owner a substantial sum for the taking of their private property.

Local officials in the Press article complain about the payments made to the property owners, but should bear in mind that these owners did not ask for their property rights to be taken, and are constitutionally guaranteed to receive just compensation.

McKirdy & Riskin’s Tom Olson and Jeff Lewis acted as special condemnation counsel to John and Eileen Troast, who own one of the beachfront properties featured in the Press article. 

The New Jersey Schools Development Authority has obtained $6.5 million dollars from three former owners of a 14 acre property in Camden to pay for the cleanup of environmental contamination of the property, which is adjacent to a Camden Elementary School.   The property is the site of the old Stockton Station apartment complex and will be used as a park.

The contamination was alleged to occur more than 50 years ago when various parties were alleged to have dumped hazardous substances there.

The property was acquired by the New Jersey Schools Development Authority in 2007 for $8.1 million through the exercise of eminent domain.   The recent payment for environmental remediation is the result of a settlement between the State of New Jersey and the former owners which was agreed to in May of this year.

For more on this matter, read Matt Katz’s story in the Philadelphia Inquirer.

While the Atlantic Yards project has staved off nearly all of its legal challenges, and last week entered into a settlement with lead activist Daniel Goldstein, several loose ends remain.  Goldstein recently accepted a $3 million settlement to relinquish any remaining claims and will be moving from his residence this summer.  Watch ABC News’ video coverage here:

http://abclocal.go.com/wabc/video?id=7399768&syndicate=syndicate&section=

Even though Goldstein has settled, other disputes remain pending.  Read more about the details in Globe St.com.  Whether these other pending challenges will succeed seems unlikely, as successive earlier claims have been defeated.

A New Jersey appellate court recently rejected a property owner’s claim that it was deprived of just compensation because the jury verdict reflected a discount for the cost of environmental remediation on its property.  New Jersey Schools Construction Corporation v. Warminster Investments Corporation, et als., Docket No. A-5319-07T15319-07T1.  Warminster, the property owner, argued that the jury undervalued its property because the trial judge permitted the jury to consider the cost of lead and asbestos removal, excluded rental value evidence for cell towers on the property, and permitted the condemnor’s expert to testify that Warminster would not receive a parking variance for its proposed use.  The Appellate Division rejected Warminster’s arguments, affirmed the trial court’s decision, and upheld the jury verdict.

 Warminster’s vacant, four-story, industrial building was a pre-existing, non-conforming use in a residential zone in the Town of West New York, and several cellular phone companies leased space on the building for their cell towers.  The condemnor planned to erect a public school on the property.  Warminster argued that the highest and best use of the property was a hypothetical 90-unit residential building and a parking variance, while the condemnor advocated a 75-unit building.

 Warminster’s three experts conceded at trial that they had not considered lead and asbestos removal costs, while NJSCC’s expert testified, over Warminster’s objection, that remediation would cost $1,106,230.  Warminster argued on appeal that the testimony should have been barred under Housing Auth. of New Brunswick v. Suydam Investors, LLC, 177 N.J. 2, 23-24 (2003), because the property should be valued as if remediated.  The Appellate Division disagreed by noting that asbestos and lead were contaminants and not a discharge.  The Appellate Division analogized the situation to the removal of tires and other garbage from the site, rather than a substance like oil that had been discharged into the soil.  Thus, the “double-take” at issue in Suydam was not implicated here.

 The trial judge excluded evidence of the cell tower leases and testimony related to their value because Warminster’s experts had failed to address a municipal ordinance which ordinance prohibited cell towers in residential districts unless they were located on municipal property, but did recognize the existence of towers like Warminster’s that pre-existed the ordinance.  These were permitted to continue under the ordinance “absent any enlargement or structural modification or the addition of any structure. . . .”  Reconstruction required a conditional use permit or variance, and structures not on municipal property were considered principal, not accessory, uses.  The Appellate Division agreed with the trial judge that Warminster’s expert planner lacked knowledge of the ordinance and therefore had no factual basis to testify about the likelihood of a variance being granted.  Further, Warminster’s appraiser had relied on the planner’s report which assumed the cell tower was a permitted use, and was therefore based on unsupported conclusions.

 Warminster additionally argued the trial court should have barred NJSCC’s testimony that approval of Warminster’s 90-unit project as speculative, although Warminster’s experts conceded that Warminster’s 2004 plan for 75-units had been criticized by Town officials for violating parking requirements.  The Appellate Division found the jury had sufficient evidence to conclude that Warminster’s proposal was speculative and unproven, while NJSCC’s proposal was more probable and feasible.

 The Appellate Division’s holding may further impact the way properties are valued during condemnation proceedings.  An article from the New Jersey Law Journal by Thomas M. Olson and Anthony F. Della Pelle from the law firm McKirdy & Riskin, PA on valuation considerations following the Suydam case and its progeny can be found in the New Jersey Condemnation Law Blog here.

The author wishes to acknowledge the assistance of Cory K. Kestner, Esq., of McKirdy & Riskin, PA, in the preparation of this article.

 The Camden City Council amended its Lanning Square Redevelopment Plan during a special meeting on December 29, 2009, to remove two blocks from the property acquisition list.  The amendments were part of a settlement agreement with two of the parties involved in litigation that began in 2008 after the redevelopment plan was announced.  The Camden Redevelopment Agency said it is working to potentially avoid taking property in other contested areas, although the remaining lawsuits are scheduled to be heard together in Superior Court in Camden on February 22, 2010.  More information about the removal of the certain properties and the remaining litigation can be found in the Courier Post here.

McKirdy & Riskin, P.A.’s  Jack Buonocore represented one of the successful property owners in this matter, Carmel Realty, whose interests in the area include a Valu-Plus store, nail salon and restaurant.

 

     Following a settlement agreement that permitted homeowners in the MTOTSA section of Long Branch to remain in their homes (read about it here), the Long Branch City Council is expected to revise the area’s zoning laws to grandfather the use of the remaining homes under the previous code while requiring new construction to follow the redevelopment plan’s guidelines.  An additional resolution prohibiting the use of eminent domain in the Beachfront South area will be introduced January 12, 2010, when the zoning ordinance is expected to be adopted, but the Council members are at odds about whether to limit eminent domain or to prohibit its use altogether.

     The City will also now permit property owners in the ”Beachfront South” redevelopment area to act as redevelopers on their own lots, or to assemble properties with two or three neighbors for larger projects.

      The recent City of Long Branch ordinance and potential redevelopment was the subject of an article by Carol Gorga Williams of Asbury Park Press which is available here.

The City of Long Branch has approved a settlement with several homeowners which dismisses the eminent domain actions the City had instituted against them in 2005.  Under the settlement, the property owners, all of whom own homes in the MTOTSA (Marine Terrace, Ocean Terrace, Seaview Avenue) section of the Beachfront North area of Long Branch,  will also be entitled to receive certain tax abatements to spur reinvestment in their properties and will receive a portion of their attorneys’ fees from the City. 

Read more about the settlement on the website for the Institute for Justice, the Washington D.C. based non-profit agency which represented the MTOTSA group along with their local attorneys.

The MTOTSA area is located along the northern boundary of the massive Oceanfront Broadway Redevelopment Area, which was designated as an “area in need of redevelopment” by the City of Long Branch in the mid-1990s.  The area includes the Beachfront  North section where the MTOTSA properties are located.  Redevelopment efforts, including eminent domain acquisitions by the City of Long Branch and its designated redevelopers, commenced in 2000 and private redevelopment occurred in the Pier Village and Beachfront North sections of the redevelopment area after dozens of properties were taken, resulting in private gain.   The MTOTSA area had been slated for a future phase of redevelopment within the Beachfront North section, but market changes caused the private redevelopment interest to cool, paving the way for the potential settlement.

In 2006, the trial court had ruled summarily in favor of taking the MTOTSA properties, but the owners appealed and, in 2008, a three-judge appellate panel reversed and remanded the cases for a full hearing on the owners’ objection to the taking, based upon a 2007 ruling that had been issued by the New Jersey Supreme Court in Gallenthin Realty Development, Inc. v. Borough of Paulsboro, 191 N.J. 344 (which tightened the criteria for redevelopment designations), as well as a 2008 New Jersey Appellate Division holding in Harrison Redevelopment Agency v. DeRose, 398 N.J. Super. 361 (which extended the time limitation on challenging redevelopment designations and created more stringent notice requirements).

After the MTOTSA cases were remanded, the parties began discussing potential settlement and the recent agreements were made before the trial court conducted its rehearing.

While 43 states have reformed their eminent domain laws in the wake of the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision in Kelo v. City of New London, the New Jersey Legislature has not adopted any legislative reform, and the New Jersey courts have increasingly scrutinized eminent domain abuse, especially in redevelopment matters.

Significantly, these settlements only apply to the MTOTSA owners and property owners in other sections of the Oceanfront Broadway Redevelopment Area are not insulated from eminent domain acquisitions of their properties.  Condemnation cases are currently pending for the taking of properties in the Beachfront North and Broadway Gateway sections of the redevelopment area.  In addition, Long Branch Mayor Adam Schneider has indicated that eminent domain powers still exist, that those powers may be used for the taking of commercial properties, and the Long Branch City Counsel has so far refused to remove eminent domain power from the Beachfront South section of the redevelopment area.

Read more about the status of the Long Branch redevelopment project in a recent Associated Press article in Business Week magazine here or in an Asbury Park Press article  here.

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