54 A.2d 98 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1947
Argued April 22, 1947. The subject of this appeal is a three-story brick building known as Mifflin Apartments, on land approximately 95 x 127 feet, abutting Broad, Mifflin and North Streets in the City of Butler. The city assessor in 1945 valued the property at $79,000 for the triennium beginning with 1946, but his assessment was reduced to $75,000 by the board of tax revision. On appeal to the lower court, the assessment was further reduced to $62,500. The city has appealed contending that the valuation found by the board of tax revision was sustained by the weight of the testimony at the hearing in the court below, and that the court erred in reducing the assessment.
About 25 years ago Pullman-Standard Car Manufacturing Company built two apartment houses in the City of Butler, the Mifflin apartment building and an almost identical structure known as Jefferson Apartments. Both were located on lots of comparable size in the same residential section of the city. The buildings were substantial and were of fireproof construction. In addition to janitor's quarters in the basement, there were 24 living apartments in each building with little difference in layout or plan. The Jefferson building, however, contained several more seven-room apartments and its total floor area was somewhat greater than that of the Mifflin building. There is some evidence that the original cost of construction of each of these buildings was about $300,000.
In September 1944 Oliver C. Herold and Earl F. Herold, his brother, after some negotiations, entered into an agreement with the owner to buy both the Mifflin and the Jefferson apartment properties for a total cash consideration of $125,000. On delivery of deeds each paid $62,500 of the purchase price. Title to the Mifflin Apartments was taken by Oliver C. Herold and wife; Earl F. Herold took title to the Jefferson property. *224
Assessments in Butler were on the basis of full actual or market values. Appellant, at the hearing below, called two local real estate dealers, both qualified to express opinions as to value. One of them testified that $90,000 was the value of the Mifflin property. In arriving at his conclusion, he considered the character and type of construction of the building as well as its location, and the accumulated depreciation from obsolescence and other causes not compensated by replacement and repairs. Information that the gross annual rentals from the buildings were somewhat in excess of $13,000 also influenced his opinion as to value, although he did not know the cost of maintenance and operation nor the amount of the remaining annual net income. The second real estate dealer called by appellant valued the property at $95,000. Against this testimony, a real estate broker (who formerly had served as city assessor in Butler) called by appellees, testified that the actual value of the Mifflin property at the time of the assessment was but $62,000. His qualifications were admitted and his testimony, as a whole, was impressive.
Under the statute (Act of June 23, 1931, P.L. 932, as amended, 53 PS 12198-2501 et seq.) the court of common pleas, hearing the matter de novo, is made the fact finding body on appeal from the board of revision of taxes. The findings of the lower court, therefore, have great force and, when supported by the weight of the evidence, will not be disturbed on review by an appellate court. Westbury Apartments, Inc., Appeal,
Determination of the value of land in assessment appeals usually rests upon opinion evidence and in typical cases there is often a wide variance in the testimony even among real estate dealers who qualify as experts. Testimony of this class is received only for want of better evidence; the ground of its admissibility is necessity, and even expert opinion evidence has no compelling probative force. In the present case the hearing judge alone was in position to appraise, with any degree of accuracy, the extent of the experience, skill and other attainments of the expert witnesses and, in the light of their qualifications, to determine the weight to be given the testimony of each of them as to value. The finding that the actual value of the property was $62,500 not only is entirely consistent with the opinion of the real estate expert called by appellees, but that finding is supported by other reasonable inferences from the testimony. That the value so found was the purchase price paid for the property by appellees is coincidental merely; the court considered purchase price but did not accept it as controlling. There is evidence that the Mifflin apartment building had been on the market for some years and for a time at a price as low as $60,000. The assessed valuation determined by the court is comparable in amount with the assessments of four other somewhat similar apartment buildings in Butler. Market value of a single purpose building such as the Mifflin apartments is peculiarly affected by the income it can be made to produce. For the year 1945 the gross rentals of Mifflin Apartments amounted to $13,624. The total cost of janitor service, maintenance and repairs, insurance, heat, light and taxes, was $9,001.26, resulting in *227 a return of $4,622.74, or about 7 1/2% on the cost of the property. Considering the age and present condition of the building, it is probable that its remaining future profitable economic life will not exceed 20 years and that $3,000 claimed by appellees as the amount of annual depreciation is not unreasonable. Depreciation charged by appellees in that amount reduced the actual net profit for the year to $1,622.74. True, rentals may be increased in the future but the prospect at the time of the assessment was that Federal rent control would continue throughout the triennium.
The sale of the Jefferson Apartments shortly after its purchase is a disturbing fact but in our opinion does not affect the result in this case. Earl F. Herold resold the Jefferson property in May 1945 for a total consideration of $112,000. The sale apparently was bona fide; at least $20,000 of the purchase price was paid in cash and a purchase money mortgage for $80,000 was given by the buyer; the terms of payment of the remaining purchase price do not appear. Earl F. Herold had improved the property after he purchased it but the cost of a new roof and other repairs and replacements made by him did not materially increase the market value of the property. The sale price of the Jefferson property cannot be justified on any rational basis from the testimony in this record. Present earnings, though slightly higher than the income from the Mifflin Apartments, return less than 2% on the investment after depreciation.
Sale price of land while always considered an important element of market value has never been held controlling in determining value for assessment purposes. Hickey's Appeal, supra. The Act of May 25, 1939, P.L. 225, as well as the amendment of April 10, 1945, P.L. 167, 53 PS 12198-2504 (in providing that ". . . the price at which any property may bona fide actually have been sold, shall be considered, but shall not be controlling") merely codified the rule laid down by the courts and in *228
this respect provided no new basis for assessment. Barry TaxAssessment Case,
The conclusion of the lower court is sustained by the weight of the evidence and the present record does not disclose error of law in the proceedings below.
Order affirmed.