196 A.D. 451 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1921
The commissioners of estimate and the commissioner of assessment were appointed by an order of the Supreme Court on the 31st of July, 1913. The proceeding embraced 254 damage parcels and the awards therefor aggregated the sum of $5,971,635.67. On the 18th of February, 1918, the commissioners signed and filed with the bureau of street openings of the law department their abstract of damages; and notice of the filing thereof was duly given as required by law. With respect to the parcel in question, although the lease had been' proved before the commissioners and evidence had been given in behalf of the lessee tending to show that the actual rental value was considerably more than the rent reserved and that, therefore, the lease had a substantial value and this evidence was uncontroverted, the commissioners made no award to the tenant, but made the entire award for the parcel to the executors. To this the tenant, pursuant to the notice, filed objections, and thereupon the commissioners reopened the hearing and received the testimony of another witness in behalf of the tenant. The executors were represented at the hearing and neither cross-examined the witness nor' offered any further evidence. The commissioners thereafter considered the evidence originally offered in behalf of the tenant and the additional evidence and the arguments made in behalf of the tenant and the executors and prepared and filed new awards for this parcel increasing the total award therefor by $3,000, but reducing the award of $98,913.20 originally made to the executors by $2,000 and awarding to the tenant $5,000. The commissioners then formally summoned the executors before them to show cause why the original award to them should not be reduced by $2,000, and heard arguments in behalf of the executors, who, however, offered no further evidence. The original report as thus amended was duly presented for confirmation. No objection was filed to the award to the tenant, but the executors filed objections to the award to them. With the exception of the award to the executors for this parcel and a small award for damage parcel No. 117-A, the report was confirmed and acquiesced in.
The city contends on the appeal that the award to the executors should have been confirmed; but it further contends
The theory on which the court remitted the award to the executors back to the commissioners as shown by the opinion is that the commissioners did not make the award to the tenant and to the executors as owners of the fee subject to the lease on the same theory, as required by Matter of City of New York (Delancey Street) (120 App. Div. 700). We are of opinion that the record does not show that the awards to the tenant and to the executors were made in violation of the rule prescribed by that decision and that the award to the owners should have been confirmed. The record presents for review no point with respect to the reception or exclusion of evidence, for no evidence received was objected to, with the exception that-the city objected generally to the commissioners so reopening the hearing and receiving the further testimony of the witness for the tenant and no evidence offered was excluded on objection interposed thereto.
The theory on which counsel for the executors asked that the award to them be remitted to the commissioners and on which he endeavors to sustain the order in that respect, is that the awards as finally made show that the award to the tenant for the value of the unexpired leasehold was based on an assumed rental value of $10,224 per annum and the award to the executors was based on the assumption that the annual rental of $8,750 reserved in the lease was the fair rental value of the premises and that the value of the whole parcel was determined by capitalizing the rent reserved in the lease at seven per cent. That contention is not borne out by the record and is predicated wholly on speculation.
The damage parcel in question was known as Nos. 131-137 Franklin street, having a frontage on the southerly side of
On the original hearing an expert for the executors testified that the reasonable market value of the property as a whole when title to part of it vested in the city was $193,113, and that the value of the land alone was $112,813, and that the value of the building was $80,300, and the value of the land not taken was $31,240, giving the total damages as $161,873. He valued the land without the building at $16 per square foot. On the total valuation of the parcel as given by him the rent reserved in the lease was only four and one-half per cent. An expert builder called by the executors testified that the value of the building less machinery and elevators was $74,012.28. A machinery expert called by them testified, in substance, that the damage to the machinery was $5,678. An expert for the tenant testified, in substance, that the market value of the lease for the unexpired term over and above the rent reserved was $15,000, and that the fair annual rental value was $13,500 per annum. It appeared on his cross-examination that he arrived at his opinion with respect to the annual rental value by estimating the total value of the property at $192,000, the land at $98,568 and the building
An expert called by the city gave as his opinion that the market value of the parcel as a whole including the building was $113,700; and he estimated the value of the land as $77,700 and of improvements as at $36,000 and the value of the land remaining as $25,578. According to his opinion, the total damages were $88,122 which was made up of $52,122 for the land taken and the damages to the remainder and $36,000 for improvements. He took as a unit of valuation $14 per square foot of the land, thus differing $2 per square foot from the expert called by the executors. He was of opinion that the land alone was worth $14 per square foot and on that basis by computation he ascertained the value of the land without the improvements; but in order to ascertain the value of the improvements he went through a theoretical process of reasoning which manifestly would not be applicable to all cases. He considered that the property should yield a gross rental of eight per cent on its valuation and he assumed that the rent reserved was the reasonable rental and, therefore, capitalized it on an eight per cent basis and concluded that the result thus attained would show the market value of the premises as a whole, and from that he deducted what he considered to be the market value of the land at $14 per square foot and concluded that the remainder thus obtained showed the value of the improvements. It is manifest that the correctness of that process of reasoning depends primarily on whether the rent reserved should net a landlord eight per cent on the value of the premises and whether it is and will be the fair annual rental value for the use of the premises, not only for the time being but for a considerable time to come. The fact that-a tenant has agreed to pay a specified annual rental for a short period, as here, does not prove this. It would seem that evidence based on general rentals of similar property in the neighborhood would
It was the duty of the commissioners first to determine the market value of the property taken at the time title thereto vested in the city and the damages to the remainder of the parcel in consequence of being separated from the parcel as a whole; and the total of the awards made for the parcel could in no event exceed the two amounts thus to be ascerrained. (Matter of City of New York [Delancey Street], supra.) Were it not for the lease this would have ended the duties of the commissioners with respect to awards for this parcel; but proof having been made that this lease was outstanding and evidence having been offered with respect to the value of the lease for the unexpired term, it became the duty of the commissioners to determine its value and to deduct the amount thereof from the total of the awards for the parcel as a whole and to award it to the tenant. (Matter of City of New York [Delancey Street], supra.) Whether for some unexplained reason they failed to do this originally, or whether they were of opinion that the lease had no value over and above the rent reserved, does not appear. But when objection in that regard was interposed to their tentative report they reopened the hearing and this they were authorized to do (Greater N. Y. Charter [Laws of 1901, chap. 466], §§ 981, 984, as amd. by Laws of 1906, chap. 658, and Laws of 1909, chap. 394; now §§ 1011, 1013, as added by Laws of 1915, chap. 606);
It follows that the order in so far as it confirmed the award as to the leasehold interest should be affirmed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements to the respondent The Duval Company, and in so far as it denies the motion for the confirmation of the award to the executors it should be reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and the award confirmed, with ten dollars costs.
Dowling, Page, Merrell and Greenbaum, JJ., concur.
Order affirmed as to award for leasehold interest, with ten dollars costs and disbursements to respondent The Duval Company, and reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, so far as it denies motion for confirmation of award, to owners of the fee and building, and said award confirmed, with ten dollars costs to appellant against respondents Welsh and others, as executors, etc.
See Laws of 1915, chap. 606, §§ 1, 3.— [Rep.