This сase involves the valuation of cranberry marshes for purposes of local real estate taxation. The issue is whether the village assessor, in determining the value of the taxpayers’ сranberry beds under sec. 70.32(1), Stats., 1 was required to accept as the fair market value the allocations of sales prices between beds and vines made in sales of comparable сranberry marshes. The issue arises because cranberry vines are exempted from general property taxes. Secs. 70.11(30) 2 and 70.111(4). 3 We conclude that the assessor was not required to accept such allocations and that the assessments comply with sec. 70.32(1). *883 We therefore reverse the court’s order remanding this case to the village board of review.
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BACKGROUND OF THE CASE
The taxpayers are three cranberry companies owning cranberry marshes in the Village of Biron. They filed objections to the 1986 assessments on their marshes. The assessments were confirmed by the village board of review. Thе taxpayers obtained review of the decisions of the board of review by writ of certiorari pursuant to sec. 70.47(13), Stats. The court set aside the assessments and remanded the cases to the board with directions to assess the property based upon six comparable sales, giving effect to the allocation of the sales prices between beds and vines made in those salеs.
II.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
The standard of review in the trial court and in this court of the decision of the board of review is set forth in
Darcel v. Manitowoc Review Bd.,
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Wе must consider the evidence of value before the board of review in the light of the presumption of correctness of the assessor’s valuation. Sec. 70.49(2), Stats;
State ex rel. Markarian v. Cudahy,
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BASIS OF VALUATION
Real estate is to be valued for purposes of assessment of local real estate taxes from actual view or from the best informаtion that the assessor can practicably obtain, "at the full value which could ordinarily be obtained therefor at private sale.” Sec. 70.32(1), Stats. Commonly stated, sec. 70.32(1) requires real estatе to be assessed at its fair market value. Fair market value is consistently defined as the amount the property will sell for upon arm’s-length negotiation in the open market, between an owner willing but nоt obligated to sell, and a purchaser willing but not
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obligated to buy.
Darcel,
The "best information” from which fair market value of real estate may be derived is a sale of the property or if there has been no such sale, then sales of reasonably comparable property.
Markarian,
> HH
VALUATION OF THE CRANBERRY BEDS
The taxpayers contend that thе fair market value of their cranberry beds was established by the comparable sales and that the assessor’s reliance on factors outside those sales was contrary to sec. 70.32(1), Stats.
The assessor’s task was to determine the fair market value of the taxpayers’ cranberry beds exclusive of the tax-exempt vines. To determine the fair market value of the beds and vines, she used six rеlatively contemporaneous sales of marshes reasonably comparable to the taxpayers’ marshes. However, she refused to accept the allocations by the parties of the sales prices between the beds and the vines. Instead, she determined the value of the vines by a combined income approach, cost approach and market data approach. She deducted that value from the sales *886 prices to determine the true purchase price of the beds in each comparable sale.
The taxpayers do not quarrel with the validity of the assessor’s approach in the absence of comparable sales. 4 They contend that because the comparable sales were arm’s-length transactions, the assessor and the board made errors of law in refusing to accept the allocations of the purchase prices made by the parties to those sales.
The parties agree that the six sales used by the assessor meet the test of "reasonable comparability.”
Rosen v. Milwaukee,
It does not follow from the general comparability rule that the fair market value of the assessable part of the property is set by the allocation by the parties of the purchase price between the taxable and tax-exempt parts of the property. Internal comparability may be destroyed by a factor or factors which allocate too much of the purchase price to one part of the property and too little to another part. "It is ... important to consider the conditions of sale, including ... its general mode and character insofar as they tend
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to indicate an arm’s-length transaction.”
Rosen,
The assеssor testified that her investigations established values for vines which were considerably less than the values allocated to the purchase price of the vines by the parties to the comparable sales. 5 She investigated through growers, builders of cranberry marshes, financial institutions, a national firm which develops cost data and factors for appraisers, appraisal assоciations, the federal land bank, the county agricultural agent, the Wisconsin Department of Revenue, and the University of Wisconsin Agricultural Department. She testified that she relied on the Wisconsin prоperty assessment manual.
The assessor did not accept the parties’ allocations of the purchase prices of the comparable sales as being fair attributions to the real and personal property involved in each sale. She testified that the individual who negotiated the six comparable sales stated that there was more allocation applied to the exempt and personal property.
We conclude that the assessor reasonably concluded that the allocations were influenced by considerations which madе questionable their use to determine the fair market value of the constituent elements of the sales. The assessor was not required, however, to reject the comparables in their entirety because the internal allocations were suspect. It was proper for her to accept the sales insofar as they exhibited reasonable comparability but to determinе *888 by other methods the value of that part of the property in each sale whose price did not accurately reflect fair market value.
The taxpayers rely on
State ex rel. Keane v. Board of Review,
We conclude that the method of assessing thе taxpayers’ cranberry marshes was in accordance with sec. 70.32(1), Stats. The board of review acted according to law in affirming the assessments.
By the Court. — Order reversed with directions to enter judgment affirming thе board’s determination.
Notes
Section 70.32(1), Stats., provides in part:
Real property shall be valued by the assessor in the manner specified in the Wisconsin property assessment manual provided under s. 73.03(2a) from actual view or from the bеst information that the assessor can practicably obtain, at the full value which could ordinarily be obtained therefor at private sale.
Section 70.11, Stats., provides:
Property exempted from general proрerty taxes is: (30) All perennial plants that produce an annual crop.
Section 70.111, Stats., provides:
The property described in this section is exempted from general property taxes:
(4) Growing and harvested crops,... including ... perennial plants that produce an annual crop ....
The trial court stated: "If, as a matter of law, the assessor and the board of review should adopt the allocated valuеs, then it would be error to go to all of these other factors and all of these other approaches_It’s either [you] use the allocation or you don’t. If you don’t have to use them, what she did was proper.” The board has adopted the court’s statement of the issue.
Some of the assessor’s testimony as to information she had been given was disputed by the alleged sources. The credibility of the witnesses was for the board to weigh.
See State v. Teynor,
