By the Court,
The property owner appeals from a final judgment in a condemnation case contending that any of four assigned errors requires remand for another trial. The claimed errors: first, a ruling which precluded a certified public accountant from expressing his opinion on the market value of property; second, allowing the jury to view the premises; third, forbidding rebuttal testimony; fourth, the court’s refusal to give certain instructions. In the context of this case it is our judgment that none of the assigned errors has merit. Accordingly, we affirm. We consider the assignments in sequence.
1. The property involved embraces six lots in Block N, Sparks, Nevada, and is located about three blocks west of the Nugget Motel. The state condemned it for highway purposes. The owner had constructed a 12 unit trailer park on the property, and a cement block building which housed an awning, blind and drapery business. The trailer park units were normally filled and rented. A certified public acсountant was called as an expert witness for the property owner and asked to give his opinion on market value based solely upon a caрitalization of the net income realized from the property. He had estimated a net rental income for the cement block building, and, as the certifiеd public accountant for the owner, knew the net rental income from the trailer park. He combined those figures, and in line with our opinion in State v. Shaddock,
In the case at hand, the witness knew the annual net rental income from the trailer park and estimated the annual net rental income from the cement block building. However, the record is silent as to his knowledge of the appropriate capitalization rate to be applied to this type of invеstment risk. Instead, he was questioned about the “average rate of return on investments in Washoe County” to which he replied, “6%.” That rate of return may be considerаbly different from the rate of return to be expected from the rental of trailer park spaces and a cement block building.
The property owner suggests that his expert witness was shown to possess greater testimonial qualifications than an owner, and that if the latter is a competent witness to market value, so was his witness. The suggestion does not persuade us. The certified public accountant was called as аn expert witness to give his opinion on market value based solely upon the capitalization of income technique. Essential foundation information wаs not supplied for that opinion. No attempt was made to qualify him on any other basis. He was not the owner. We do not hold that a certified public accountant may never be a competent witness to express an expert opinion on market value by use of the income approach. We hold only that here, the witness was not shown to possess essential information
2. The court in its discretion may allow the jury to view the condеmned property. NRS 16.100. The view is not evidence, but may enable the jury to more fully appreciate the evidence received during trial. Love v. Mt. Oddie United Min. Co.,
3. The record on appeal is deficient with regard to the claim that error wаs committed when the trial court precluded rebuttal testimony. It shows only that the property owner presented his case in chief, the state then presented its case, and the evidence was then closed. Rebuttal witnesses were not called to the stand, nor did counsel make an offer of proof. NRCP 43(c); Charlеston Hill National Mines, Inc. v. Clough,
Affirmed.
Notes
We have doubt about the propriety of the testimony allowed in State v. Shaddock, supra, since the appropriate capitalization rate to be used in the income approach to market value depends upon the nature of the investment risk. It seems to us that some evidence on that point may be necessary before а witness may capitalize income. However, that question is not presented for decision here.
For example: $10,000 annual net income capitalized at 1 percent is $1,000,000; at 2 percent, $500,000; at 4 percent, $250,000; at 5 percent, $200,000; at 10 percent, $100,000.
E.g., investors may require a 12 percent return on buildings, though satisfied with 4 percent on stocks.
For worthwhile reading see: 1 Orgel, Valuation Under Eminent Domain, p. 697 et seq. (2d ed. 1953); Comment, 12 Stan.L.Rev. 766 (1960).
Cases concerning a jury view of the premises in a condemnation case are collected at
