In this tax certiorari proceeding the issue presented for review is the proper method of valuation of appellant’s property, one of the world’s largest food processing plants. Respondent tax officials contend that the property is a specialty and thus the reproduction cost-less depreciation method should be utilized in establishing the value of the property for tax assessment purposes, while appellant maintains that the traditional market value approach will yield its true legal and full value.
The subject property is located in the Town of Horseheads, Chemung County, in that area of New York State known as the "Southern Tier”. The structure was designed and constructed for appellant to accommodate its food processing, warehousing and shipping operations on a regional scale; and the plant, which has a floor area of 1,544,916 square feet, serves a large portion of the eastern United States. It contains 73 truck loading docks, several interior railroad sidings, laboratories, offices, cold storage and refrigeration facilities, in addition to other fixtures utilized in appellant’s food processing enterprise. The building is divided into large open areas on the main floor while mezzanine walkways above the main floor provide employee access to working areas, and tunnels beneath it furnish utility services.
In 1973, respondents fixed the assessment of the property in the amount of $4,683,000 at an equalization rate of 21%, thus yielding a full value of $22,300,000. Appellant commenced this proceeding to declare the assessment void, or in the alternative to have it reduced to a proper level. At trial, real estate appraisers and experts produced by appellant, espousing the market value approach, testified that the value of the prop
Without disturbing the trial court’s findings, the Appellate Division reversed and held that the property should be valued as a "specialty” because of the above-described features adapting it to appellant’s use and, further, because no sales of similar property in the immediate locale could be found. The Appellate Division thus remitted the matter for a further hearing in which the value of the property was directed to be determined by the reproduction cost-less depreciation method of valuation. Following this hearing, the trial court fixed the value of the property, according to the method mandated by the Appellate Division, at $16,700,000. This latter determination, of course, is not subject to review on this appeal, as we are here concerned only with the original, nonfinal order of the Appellate Division from which this appeal is taken pursuant to CPLR 5601 (subd [d]) (see
First Westchester Nat. Bank v Olsen,
Section 306 of the Real Property Tax Law requires that all property be assessed at its full value and, generally, it is "market value” which provides the most reliable valuation for assessment purposes (see
People ex rel. Parklin Operating Corp. v Miller,
On the other hand, property does not qualify as a specialty where it possesses certain features which, while rendering the property suitable to the owner’s use, are not truly unique to his business but, in fact, make the property adaptable for general industrial use. Thus, if no great expense would be entailed in converting the property from the present owner’s use to other business and industrial uses and if a market value may be ascertained, property should not be valued as a specialty merely because it contains such features as interior railroad sidings, truck loading docks or other amenities and fixtures which are not truly unique to the owner’s business (see
McDonald v State of New York, 52
AD2d 721, 722, affd
In the instant case, those facilities such as utility tunnels, employee walkways, truck loading docks, refrigeration facilities or the like do not render the subject property a specialty incapable of valuation according to the normal market value method. There was testimony by witnesses on both sides that these so-called "special features” would not interfere with the use of the property for other industrial purposes and, indeéd, respondents concede that the property may be so used. Moreover, the features relied upon by the Appellate Division in categorizing the plant as a specialty could be utilized in a wide variety of industrial uses and, in fact, there was testimony that some of them such as utility tunnels, employee walkways and temperature control systems made the plant more flexible and adaptable. The property, therefore, was not so uniquely suited to appellant’s business as not to be reasonably adaptable to other industrial uses; and this conclusion finds further support in the trial court’s finding, not disturbed by the Appellate Division, that the property could be converted to general industrial use without a substantial expenditure of funds.
The Appellate Division reasoned that the reproduction costless depreciation method of valuation should be utilized since there were no reliable indicia of market value because of the lack of evidence of comparable sales in the immediate area. That court also rejected the trial court’s reliance on appellant’s out-of-State comparable sales. While it is generally true that comparable sales should not be too remote in location from the subject property (see Lee & Le Forestier,
op. cit,
§ 1.19, p 15), we have previously stated that "Receiving evidence of sales of property beyond the immediate vicinity of the subject property is a matter resting in the sound discretion of the trial judge”
(Levin v State of New York,
Finally, with respect to the Appellate Division’s objection that no adjustments were made by the appraisers for differences in the localities in which the out-of-State comparable sales were located, it should be noted that there was testimony indicating that conditions such as business climate, labor, transportation and availability of public utilities were taken into account, and, in certain cases no adjustments were necessary. There was also testimony that if adjustments were made for differing conditions, the result would have been a reduction in value since conditions in the localities of the comparables were all more favorable than those in the Town of Horseheads, the location of the subject property.
Accordingly, the order appealed from should be reversed and the order of Supreme Court, Chemung County, entered July 3, 1974, reinstated, with costs.
Chief Judge Breitel and Judges Jasen, Jones, Wachtler, Fuchsberg and Cooke concur.
Order reversed, with costs, etc.
Notes
Of course, reproduction cost-less depreciation may always be introduced to establish the upper limit of value (see
G.R.F., Inc. v Board of Assessors of County of Nassau, supra,
p 514;
People ex rel. Manhattan Sq. Beresford v Sexton,
