198 A. 49 | Pa. | 1938
Appellant's property is located partly in the Borough of Millbourne in Delaware County, and partly in the City of Philadelphia. The local assessor for the borough fixed the assessment on that part of the property located therein at $280,000. This was approved by the Board of Assessment and Revision. It is the assessment figure which has been placed on the property for a number of years. The hearing judge, on appeal by the borough from the decision of the board, raised the assessment value to $580,300, which he reduced to $348,180, as being the prevailing average assessment basis in the county of 60%. This he did without having before him any competent evidence which warranted the increase. From this action the property owner appeals.
The borough called but two witnesses to establish its contention that the assessment was too low. One of them based his conclusion as to the value of the property upon his estimate of the depreciated reproduction cost of the building erected on the premises, plus an estimate of the value of the land. This method of estimating the value of the property is contrary to our decision in Metropolitan Edison Company'sAppeal,
The other witness called by the borough based his estimate of value exclusively on the capitalization of his estimated rental value of the property. While rental value may be taken into account, it never can constitute the exclusive standard for fixing the market value of property: Forster v. Rogers Bros.,
The proper way to fix the assessment value of property is to determine its actual value, which means its market value. This is provided by the very terms of the Act of May 22, 1933, P. L. 853, Sec. 402,
We have had before us in recent years many cases involving the appraisal of real estate for the purpose of taxation. In all of them we have announced the same rule, that the appraised value of the property is to be fixed by the opinion of competent witnesses as to what the property is worth in the market at a fair sale: Lehigh Wilkes-Barre Coal Company'sAssessment, *324
There being no competent proof before the court below to warrant the finding which it made, the finding must be set aside.
The decree of the court below is reversed and the assessment fixed by the Board of Assessment and Revision is reinstated. Costs to be paid by appellee.