This is an appeal by Foxboro Associates (taxpayer), pursuant to G. L. c. 58A, § 13, from the Appellate Tax Board’s (board) determination of the fair cash value
The New England Harness Raceway is the only harness racetrack in Massachusetts. The property consists of 200 acres of land and over ninety buildings. It has been operated as a raceway for approximately thirty years and is licensed and regulated by the State Racing Commission. The taxpayer purchased the property from Bay State Harness Horse Racing and Breeding Association, Inc., on November 30, 1976, and was thus the assessed owner of the property on January 1, 1977, the relevant date for purposes of the challenged tax assessment.
On January 1, 1977, the assessors assessed the property at $3,508,305. The parties stipulated before the board that “the ratio of assessment to full value was 52 V2 % for fiscal year 1978.” When this ratio is recognized, the assessed value translates to a fair cash value of $6,682,486. In its petition to the board, the taxpayer alleged that its property had been both overvalued and disproportionately assessed. The issue of disproportionate assessment was disposed of by a stipulation.
Three witnesses testified on the issue of valuation. The taxpayer’s witness, a real estate appraiser, relied on the sale of the property to the taxpayer, and “considered” the income capitalization approach to valuation to reach a fair cash value of $3,354,000 for the property. The assessors relied on the depreciated reproduction cost (DRC) method of calculating real estate value. A licensed civil engineer testified for the assessors on the cost of reproducing the buildings. The assessors’ real estate appraiser set a value for the taxpayer’s land and added it to the engineer’s figure for reproduction cost to arrive at an over-all value of $9,593,480 for both the land and buildings.
The taxpayer’s principal contention is that the board erred by admitting and relying on the DRC evidence offered by the assessors. This contention is set forth in several subsidiary arguments which we discuss in more detail below. The taxpayer also argues that the board’s determination of value was not supported by substantial evidence and that the board “wrongfully rejected” the opinion of the taxpayer’s witness on fair cash value.
1. The taxpayer’s evidence. It is clear, as argued by the taxpayer, that decisions of the board must be supported by “substantial evidence.” We discussed the substantial evidence test at length in New Boston Garden Corp. v. Assessors of Boston,
As previously noted, the taxpayer’s expert witness set the fair cash value of the property, including both land and buildings, at $3,354,000. In arriving at this figure he placed “great weight” on the price of $3,600,000 recited in a deed to the taxpayer dated November, 1976, of a large parcel including the subject property. This deed was given as part of the sale to the taxpayer of the entire raceway business for a total price of $9,650,000. The witness rejected the DB.C method of valuation because of the age of the buildings and, while he gave “some weight” to the income capitalization method of calculating value, “the weightiest approach” in his mind “was the price paid for the property by the present owners.”
The board found that the price of $3,600,000 appearing on the deed was “unilaterally determined by the seller” and that there was no agreement between the parties to the sale as to what portion of the total purchase price was allocable to the real estate. As a consequence, the board was “not persuaded that the $3,600,000 of consideration recited on the deed was the actual purchase price of the real estate.” For this reason the board gave no weight to the expert’s opinion of value based on this sale.
It is true, as the taxpayer argues, that actual sales of property usually furnish strong evidence of market value, provided they are arm’s-length transactions and thus fairly represent what a buyer has been willing to pay for the property to a willing seller. New Boston Garden Corp. v. Assessors of Boston,
In these circumstances, the board had objectively adequate reasons for disregarding the opinion of value offered by the taxpayer as evidence “substantially lacking in probative force.” New Boston Garden Corp., supra at 468. “The board was not required to accept the opinion expressed, or the valuation principles used, by [the taxpayer’s] expert witness.” Assessors of Nahant v. Costin,
The taxpayer’s expert testified that he gave “some weight” to the income capitalization method of valuation. The board gave no weight to this approach because it found that he did not in fact rely on it to reach his estimate of the value of the taxpayer’s property. This finding is supported by this witness’s testimony that he believed the recent sale of the property would yield a more accurate indication of value than the capitalization of income method. He stated that he considered income data but did not use it in reaching his opinion. He indicated that the income capitalization method would produce a very low figure (apparently $1,600,000) which he believed did not accurately reflect the
The taxpayer objects to some statements in the board’s report which are critical of the income and expense figures introduced in its behalf. Since its expert never reached an opinion of value based on income capitalization principles, the taxpayer was not prejudiced by any error in the board’s understanding of these figures.
There is no basis for the taxpayer’s further claim that the board “rejected” or “ignored” the evidence introduced through its expert. The taxpayer’s evidence of value was admitted and given full consideration by the board. Moreover, the board gave some weight to the opinion of the value of the land offered by the taxpayer in reaching its own determination of fair cash value.
In an appeal to the board from the denial of a tax abatement, the taxpayer bears the burden of proof on the issue of overvaluation. Schlaiker v. Assessors of Great Barrington,
2. The assessors’ evidence and the DRC method. The assessors’ evidence of fair cash value (which, it should be noted, exceeded by more than $6,000,000 the assessed valuation and approached the price paid for the real estate, personal property, leases and licenses when the taxpayer acquired the property in 1976) was based on the DRC method. A licensed civil engineer testified that the estimated reproduction cost of the buildings, less depreciation, was $6,610,980.
A real estate appraiser called by the assessors used the “comparable sales” approach to set a value of $2,982,500 (or about $15,000 an acre) for the taxpayer’s land. He added this figure and the engineer’s figure to arrive at a total value of $9,593,480 for the land and buildings. No allowance was made for functional or economic obsolescence. The assessors’ appraiser gave his opinion that, in the event the taxpayer’s facilities were destroyed, reproduction would be both physically possible and economically feasible. He testified further that he did not use the comparable sales approach with respect to the buildings because of a lack of comparable sales, and he rejected the capitalization of income approach because the income generated by the racetrack was strongly affected by factors unrelated to value (for example, the quality of management and the number of racing dates allowed by the State Racing Commission).
The taxpayer offered the testimony of several witnesses to the effect that its facility was badly deteriorated and out-of-date. The president and general manager of the taxpayer testified that many of the barns and the paddock area were in very bad condition and that repairs were needed in the three major improvements, the grandstand, the clubhouse, and the hall of fame building. The presiding judge of the track testified that about seventy-five per cent of the stable area consisted of extremely run-down original stalls. The president of New England Harness Raceway, Inc. (the operator of the track), testified that the taxpayer’s facility was
Each of these three witnesses testified, on direct examination by counsel for the taxpayer, that, if the facility were destroyed, it would not be rebuilt in precisely the same form. On cross-examination, however, each testified that it would be rebuilt.
The taxpayer also introduced in evidence the 1978 Report of the Governor’s Select Committee on Racing concerning the state of the racing industry in Massachusetts. The report notes the poor condition of the stable area at the taxpayer’s track and the decline in attendance.
On this and other evidence (including its own view of the property) the board found that the DRC approach was the best method of determining the value of the property. It accepted the cost estimates offered by the assessors but increased the allowance for physical depreciation “because of the age and condition of the property.” The board added an allowance for functional obsolescence to take account of declining attendance and the resulting waste of space at the racetrack. In the board’s opinion, “a somewhat smaller facility would be more appropriate.” The board deducted a total allowance of $3,165,163 for depreciation and obsolescence from the assessors’ cost estimate of $8,065,163 to reach a value of $4,900,000 for the buildings.
With respect to the value of the land, the board noted that the assessors’ appraisal of $15,000 an acre was based on a comparison with land sales in nearby areas which had involved much smaller parcels. Similarly, the board pointed out that the taxpayer’s appraisal of $4,000 an acre was based solely on its expert’s general knowledge and not on comparison with other sales. On this evidence the board set
“Reproduction cost, less accrued depreciation and a reasonable deduction for obsolescence” has long been a recognized method of estimating the fair cash value of property in this Commonwealth. Assessors of Quincy v. Boston Consol. Gas Co.,
Under the circumstances of this case we cannot say that the board erred by admitting and relying on the DRC evidence introduced by the assessors. The board was amply justified in concluding that no other reliable data were available to assist it in its determination of the value of the taxpayer’s improvements. Witnesses for both parties testi
The taxpayer further argues that the board erred in failing to make a finding, based on substantial evidence, that reproduction of the taxpayer’s facility would be economically feasible. The rule established in our cases is that DRC evidence may be received “where the structures . . . remai[n] reasonably well adapted to the special purposes for which they [are] employed and [have] not been shown to . . . [be] in such condition as to make reproduction unlikely or imprudent . . . .” Correia v. New Bedford Redevelopment Auth.,
We find the board’s treatment of the feasibility of reproduction adequate. The board stated explicitly that it did not consider the age of the taxpayer’s buildings to be a bar to use of DRC evidence. It noted testimony offered by the taxpayer that reproduction was feasible. Finally, the board took a significant allowance for depreciation and obsolescence expressly because of the “age and condition” of the property and the fact that it was larger than current demand required. There was substantial evidence to support the implicit finding that reproduction was feasible.
The taxpayer, who bore the burden of proving overvaluation, is hardly in a good position to complain, as it does, that the allowance for depreciation and obsolescence taken by the board was neither adequately explained nor supported by substantial evidence. The board’s decision to deduct from the assessors’ replacement cost figure a much larger allowance for depreciation and obsolescence than the assessors had suggested was, in all likelihood, a response to the taxpayer’s evidence of physical deterioration at the racetrack. None of the taxpayer’s witnesses offered the board a detailed analysis of deterioration at the racetrack or suggested an appropriate figure for an allowance. The evidence, however, did support a conclusion that parts of the facility were badly deteriorated, that many buildings were in need of modernization, and that the facilities for patrons were as much as one hundred percent larger than necessary. “We have not in the past required the board to specify the precise manner in which it determined the fair cash value of the subject property.” New Boston Garden Corp. v. Assessors of Boston, supra at 467. We cannot say that the board’s allowance of almost forty percent of the reproduction cost for depreciation and obsolescence was not supported by the record in this case.
The taxpayer claims that the assessors’ appraiser was not qualified “as an expert in racing” to give an opinion on the feasibility of reproducing the subject improvements. At the hearing before the board, counsel for the taxpayer stipulated
The taxpayer argues that it was error for the board to allow the assessors’ engineer to testify as an expert on the cost of reproducing the taxpayer’s buildings. The assessors correctly point out that the qualifications of witnesses is essentially a question of fact for the board and the board’s decision can be reversed only if there is no evidence to support it. Boston Gas Co. v. Assessors of Boston,
The taxpayer also contends that the assessors’ engineer should not have been allowed to testify unless he had knowledge of construction costs in Foxborough itself. It cites Assessors of Lynnfield v. New England Oyster House, Inc.,
We recognize, in conclusion, that special purpose properties such as the taxpayer’s pose unusual problems of valuation and that no particular method of valuation may be entirely satisfactory. Nevertheless, the owner of such property is not thereby relieved from the burden of introducing credible evidence of value in a proceeding before the board to obtain an abatement of taxes. Given the type of evidence relied on by the taxpayer in this case, the board might have been warranted in sustaining the original assessment on the ground that the taxpayer had not met its burden of proof under Schlaiker v. Assessors of Great Barrington,
The decision of the Appellate Tax Board is affirmed.
So ordered.
Notes
Fair cash value or fair market value is “the price an owner willing but not under compulsion to sell ought to receive from one willing but not under compulsion to buy.” Boston Gas Co. v. Assessors of Boston,
“The standard of ‘fair cash value’ used in tax assessment cases is ordinarily the same as that used to fix damages for a taking by eminent domain.” Mashpee Wampanoag Indian Tribal Council, Inc. v. Assessors of Mashpee,
