The opinion of the court was delivered by
In Housing Authority of the City of New Brunswick v. Suydam Investors, L.L.C., 177 N.J. 2, 23-24, 826 A.2d 673 (2003), the Court held that contaminated property acquired in an eminent domain action must be valued as if the contamination had been remediated and that the portion of the condemnation award required to pay the costs of remediation should be deposited into a trust-escrow account. The question presented by this appeal is whether this special methodology for valuing contaminated property applies in an eminent domain action for acquisition of property containing a landfill that has been closed with the approval of the Department of Environmental Protection (DEP). We conclude that the Suydam valuation methodology does not apply in such a case because the condemnee, having already obtained approval of its plan for closure of the landfill, is not subject to any additional liability for remediation of the site and thus will receive the full fair market value of its property as determined by ordinary valuation methodologies.
The condemnor involved in this appeal is the Borough of Paulsboro in Gloucester County. The condemnee is Essex Chemical Company. The property is a sixty-seven-acre riverfront tract, with frontage on the Delaware River and Mantua Creek, which includes a closed seventeen-acre landfill. The closure of the landfill, which consists of a forty-foot high mound of gypsum, was approved by the DEP.
In 2002, Essex entered into a forty-year lease of the part of the property where the landfill is located with BP Products North America, Inc. (BP), which has constructed a solar energy facility on that site. Under the terms of the lease, BP assumed responsibility for performing the monitoring and maintenance activities required under the DEP's approval of Essex's plan for closure of the landfill.
The condemnation of the property was the subject of a prior appeal by Essex from the judgment for possession and appointment of condemnation commissioners.
We also observed that Paulsboro's appraisal of the subject property, which was then $1,215,000, "provided the basis for a bona fide fair market value offer for the property as if remediated, including the landfill." (slip op. at 15).
Following our affirmance of the judgment for possession, Paulsboro filed a declaration of taking and deposited its $1,215,000 estimate of fair market value into court. Essex filed a motion to withdraw the deposit, and Paulsboro responded by a motion to escrow those funds for future use in "remediating" the landfill. Relying partly on the previously quoted statement in our prior opinion that the cost of leveling the closed landfill would not appear to fall within the concept of the remediation costs contemplated by Suydam, the trial court denied Paulsboro's motion and granted Essex's motion allowing it to withdraw the deposit.
The condemnation commissioners appointed pursuant to the judgment determined that the property had a fair market value of $1,268,122. Essex appealed this award to the Law Division.
Before the valuation trial, Paulsboro's expert filed a new appraisal report, which valued the property at $1,249,000, based on a valuation date of May 4, 2006, which was the date its complaint had been filed, rather than the earlier valuation date he had used in his original appraisal. In addition, the DEP issued a letter of interpretation before trial, which determined that the property had negligible wetlands rather than the eight acres both parties' experts had assumed in their original appraisals. After receiving this information, Paulsboro's expert again increased his appraisal of the property, this time to $1,337,500.
Based partly on the DEP's determination that the property contained negligible wetlands, Essex's expert also issued a revised appraisal report before trial, which valued the property at $2,200,000.
At a bench trial, the experts' appraisal reports were introduced into evidence, and both experts testified. With one exception, the experts relied upon the same comparable sales in valuing the subject property. However, they made different adjustments of those sales prices in their determinations of fair market value. Moreover, they used different valuation methods. In addition, Paulsboro's expert did not attribute any additional value to the four buildings on the property, while Essex's expert assigned a value of $190,000 to those buildings.
Based on this evidence, the trial court determined that the property had a fair market value of $1,518,750. In reaching this conclusion, the court determined that a per acre value of $22,500 was appropriate and that this value should be applied to the entire sixty-seven-and-a-half acres, including the seventeen acres containing the closed landfill. The court gave particular weight in its valuation to a comparable sale of another property, on Crown Point Road, which also contained a sizeable closed landfill.
On appeal, Paulsboro's arguments are not directed at the details of the trial
We conclude that the method of valuation of contaminated property set forth in Suydam does not apply to a case such as this in which any contamination caused by the landfill formerly located on Essex's property has already been remediated with the DEP's approval. We also conclude that the trial court properly applied ordinary principles of valuation of real property subject to eminent domain in determining its fair market value.
In Suydam, the property obtained by eminent domain contained environmental contamination that subjected the condemnee to liability under the Spill Compensation and Control Act, N.J.S.A. 58:10-23.11 to -23.50, and perhaps other environmental legislation. 177 N.J. at 8, 17-19, 826 A.2d 673. The issue presented by the appeal was whether, under those circumstances, "environmental contamination is an appropriate consideration in determining the fair market value of property" in an eminent domain action. Id. at 20, 826 A.2d 673. The condemnee argued that "devaluing its property for contamination when it is still subject to the costs of a remediation action constitutes an unfair double taking." Ibid. The Court accepted this argument and held that when a condemnee is subject to liability for the cleanup of the property that is the subject of a condemnation action, the property should be valued "as if remediated," the portion of the property's value representing the estimated cost of remediation should be deposited into a trust-escrow account, and the entitlement to the money in that account should be determined in a separate cost recovery action. Id. at 22-27, 826 A.2d 673. In reaching this conclusion, the Court stated:
Thus, the prerequisite for use of the special valuation methodology established in Suydam, under which the subject property is valued as if remediated and the estimated cost of remediation is deposited
In this case, the gypsum landfill on Essex's property was closed in 1994 with the DEP's approval.
In arguing that the entire amount it deposited into court as an estimate of the fair market value of the property should be held in a trust-escrow account, Paulsboro claims that Essex was required to "remediate" the closed landfill by razing it to ground level, which Paulsboro's expert estimated would cost nearly $60 million. Although the removal of the landfill undoubtedly would increase the property's value, the removal is not required under any environmental statute, and it is not what the Court in Suydam meant by remediation of environmental contamination. Rather, the forty-foot high closed landfill is essentially the same as a natural mound with similar dimensions, which the Court in Suydam characterized as an "immutable condition of land" that may be properly taken into consideration in determining a property's fair market value under ordinary valuation methodologies. 177 N.J. at 22, 826 A.2d 673. Therefore, the trial court correctly concluded that the special valuation methodology established in Suydam was not applicable.
Furthermore, it is clear that both parties' experts and the trial court attributed a lower value to the property because approximately seventeen of its sixty-seven-and-a-half acres is occupied by a closed landfill rather than being flat, easily developable, land, as would be the case if the landfill were removed. Paulsboro's valuation expert, Allen G. Black, expressed the opinion that "[a]s we consider the mound and capped area of the subject property [i.e., the encapsulated seventeen-acre landfill], we recognize that for all intents and purposes this portion of the property lacks meaningful utility." Similarly, Essex's valuation expert, Michael P. Hedden, testified that "when a purchaser would buy the subject property, they would see it for what it is, ... a — 67-acre tract ... with a 17-acre leased landfill that has solar panels on it and that given the context in which the property was being bought ..., I don't think that that would
Moreover, the comparable sale to which the court assigned the greatest weight in valuing the property was a sale of another property, referred to as the Crown Point Road comparable, which also contained a sizeable closed landfill. Thus, the essential premise of Paulsboro's argument — that the experts and trial court valued the property as if the landfill had been removed — is contradicted by the trial record.
Finally, Paulsboro argues that the trial court erred in failing to reduce its valuation of the property because the landfill area was encumbered by a long-term lease to BP. However, the trial court correctly concluded that the lease should be disregarded in valuing the property because it includes a "condemnation clause," under which the lease automatically terminated upon acquisition of the property by eminent domain.
Affirmed.