This case involves an appeal by the Town of Barnet from findings of fact, conclusions and judgment rendered by the Caledonia Superior Court with respect to the valuation of property within the town owned by New England Power Company (NEPCO). A cross-appeal was taken by NEPCO challenging the lower court’s findings and conclusions as to
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the lack of comparable property within the town and the court’s order listing NEPCO’s property at fifty per cent of fair market value. The nature and extent of the property which is the subject of this appeal may be ascertained by reference to an earlier opinion of this Court involving the same parties and property.
Town of Barnet
v.
New England Power Co.,
In 1969, the Town of Barnet undertook a general reappraisal of the properties within its boundaries, as a result of which the appraisal of the NEPCO property was substantially increased. The present controversy between these parties relates to the proper valuation of this property for the years 1969 through 1973. The appraised value of the property for the years in question was as follows: 1969 — $5,122,078; 1970— $7,500,000; 1971 — $6,605,800; 1972 — $6,579,800; and 1973 — $6,579,800. The challenge by NEPCO of the 1969 valuation was the subject of an earlier appeal, Town of Barnet v. New England Power Co., supra, in which we remanded the case to the Commissioner of Taxes. The parties by stipulation agreed that the 1969 valuation was to be consolidated with the valuation for the years 1970-1973 for hearing and determination by the Caledonia Superior Court. De novo hearings were held by that court in accordance with 32 V.S.A. § 4467.
After numerous days of testimony and the introduction of many exhibits, the court found that the fair market value of the total NEPCO property located in Barnet and Monroe, New Hampshire (this property is located on the Connecticut River, with major portions of the facilities being located in the Town of Monroe, New Hampshire) was, for all years in question, $17,500,000. The court ultimately found that the fair market value of NEPCO’s taxable property in Barnet was as follows: 1969 — $4,217,500; 1970 — $4,200,000; 1971— $4,182,500; 1972 — $4,112,500; and 1973 — $3,955,000. Neither of the parties challenges the correctness of the court’s findings with respect to the percentage of the NEPCO property located in Barnet. It also found that there were no other properties in the town comparable to NEPCO’s property and was therefore unable to find that the listed value of the NEPCO property at fifty per cent of fair market value would not correspond to the listed value of comparable properties within the town.
*502 The town on appeal argues that the superior court failed to make proper findings with respect to fair market value, that it erred in permitting a company officer to testify as to fair market value, that its motions for directed verdict should have been granted, and that the court improperly refused to reopen the case to allow it to present evidence tending to impeach the testimony of one of NEPCO’s experts. In its cross-appeal, NEPCO contends that the lower court erred in ruling that there were no properties within the town comparable to the NEPCO property and that it also erroneously refused to list NEPCO’s property at a value corresponding to the listed value of other properties in the community.
With respect to the town’s contention that the superior court failed to expressly and specifically set forth the criteria and factors it employed in determining the fair market value of the property, we note upon examination of the record that the findings below, while both painstaking and extensive, are largely mere recitals of the testimony given. As we held in
Krupp
v.
Krupp,
The lower court findings indicate that the town’s expert witness on fair market value, Mr. Blackburn, based his determination of fair market value upon a capitalization of income approach, with numerous calculations, assumptions, factors and estimates being included in his equation. It also found that NEPCO’s rebuttal expert witness, Mr. Rose, set forth numerous adjustments, eleven in number, which in his opinion should have been included in the Blackburn formula. On the basis of the testimony of these two expert witnesses, the court concluded that “Blackburn omitted some necessary factors in his calculation, but that Rose’s adjustments were excessive.” It then found that “Based on the evidence presented, it is the Court’s best judgment that the fair market value of the Plaintiff’s property in the Towns of Barnet, Vermont, and Monroe, New Hampshire, for each of the years under review was $17,500,000.”
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In arriving at this ultimate conclusion, the court did not specify which of Mr. Blackburn’s factors it discounted or which of Mr. Rose’s adjustments it considered. There is also no indication as to whether or not it gave any consideration to NEPCO’s testimony that the fair market value of the property was within a range of ten per cent below to ten per cent above net book value. The court may have had a basis for arriving at its fair market figure, but the findings of fact do not disclose it. As made, its findings of value are open to the suggestion made by the town that the court relied solely upon net book value, which, as we stated in our earlier opinion, is not a controlling factor.
Town of Barnet
v.
New England Power Co., supra,
“The purpose of findings is to make a clear statement to the parties, and to this Court if appeal is taken, of what was decided and how the decision was reached.”
Wells
v.
Village of Orleans, Inc.,
Before proceeding to the claims of error raised by the cross-appeal, we will take this opportunity to discuss certain other issues raised in the town’s brief. The first question relates to fair market value and the methods of determining such value where specific purpose, or so-called unique prop *504 erty is involved. The town by its motions to dismiss, for directed verdict and new trial, as well as by objections to evidence introduced by NEPCO, focused upon the methods utilized by the company to prove fair market value. Particular attention was directed to NEPCO’s use of net book value (original cost less depreciation) and the failure of NEPCO to present testimony as to the price a willing seller would agree to in an arms-length transaction. Testimony by a company official reflected his belief that single purpose property such as a public utility is rarely bought and sold in the market. This witness offered his expert opinion that fair market value lay within a range of ten per cent below to ten per cent above the net book value of the company property. Our review of the record convinces us that NEPCO presented other evidence in addition to this opinion testimony bearing upon value which could have been utilized by the court in its determination of fair market value. The failure of the witness to take into consideration the price a seller would agree to sell the property for does not warrant the striking of his opinion testimony regarding the price a purchaser would pay for the property at a given time.
This type of testimony is admissible as evidence of fair market value to aid the trier of fact in arriving at its ultimate determination of value. The opinions of well informed persons based upon the purposes for which the property is suited are to be considered in arriving at fair market value. The weight to be given such testimony is, of course, for the court.
Public Service Co.
v.
New Hampton,
NEPCO strongly contends in its brief that original cost less depreciation is an important, if not controlling, factor in determining fair market value. We previously held, with respect to this same property, that this is not a controlling factor as a matter of law.
Town of Barnet
v.
New England Power Co., supra.
Such a method was approved for valuation of water rights involved in a rate-making case.
Latourneau
v.
Citizens Utilities Co.,
Valuation for purposes of taxation is something vastly different. Under the statute, 32 V.S.A. § 4467, it is to be at fair market value, reduced or increased if necessary to correspond to valuations of comparable properties. As we suggested in
Village of Morrisville Water & Light Department
v.
Town of Hyde Park,
The establishment of market value as a test for valuation purposes presupposes a market. In instances such as this, where only a part of an integrated system is involved and where the owner enjoys a lawful monopoly, the difficulty, if not the impossibility, of finding an actual buyer is obvious. Yet to hold that there is no market value would mean that valuable property would entirely escape its just share of the burden of taxation. Courts recognizing this have acted accordingly and have considered all factors calculated to influence an assumed buyer and seller in a free market. See
Kittery Electric Light Co.
v.
Assessors of Town,
We do not here attempt to outline all the elements and appraisal approaches which may be utilized in arriving at fair market valuation. They are appropriate subjects for expert testimony to be properly evaluated by the trial court. The court has noted that the cost approach, the income approach, and the market data approach offer the parties means of determining fair market value.
Town of Barnet
v.
Central Vermont Public Service Corp.,
The production capacity of the facility, as limited by size or applicable regulation, and the market value of the power it produces, would be limiting factors on valuation, since no one would buy or construct a facility whose product could not be sold at the price dictated by its cost. Similarly, if the site is unique and the demand for the power produced is high, the market value to a hypothetical buyer (hypothetical because of the monopoly enjoyed by the owner) might well be enhanced beyond reproduction costs. Distance from market, with resulting transmission costs, could also be a factor. So could the nature of the taxing community itself. A very rural, perhaps unorganized, community with few fiscal demands could be expected to produce lower tax demands than a more urban community. This could well affect fair market value.
There is no rigid formula which can be used to arrive at the correct valuation of NEPCO’s property, situated as it is in two states and being a part of a large integrated system. Nor is specific weight required to be allocated to the several appraisal approaches or a combination of them which may be utilized in arriving at fair market value. Judgment is the keystone. If the court has considered and assigned such weight to each value indicator as appears to be fair, just and equitable according to the evidence presented, this Court will not disturb its conclusions on appeal absent errors of law. See
New England Power Co.
v.
Town of Littleton,
Although we reverse and remand on the basis of the insufficiency of the lower court’s findings of fact, we nevertheless take this opportunity to address certain other issues which
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have been raised by the parties on appeal and cross-appeal. The town claims that NEPCO failed to sustain its burden of proof as required in a 32 V.S.A. § 4467 hearing. In
Village of Morrisville Water & Light Department
v.
Town of Hyde Park,
This Court has recognized that a presumption of validity and legality attaches to the actions of the listers.
Fayetteco, Inc.
v.
City of South Burlington,
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It is to be emphasized, however, that the burden of persuasion as to the contested issues in a § 4467 hearing remains at all times with the taxpayer.
New Haven Water Co.
v.
Board of Tax Review,
The town also contends that the lower court erroneously allowed a certain NEPCO witness to testify as an expert witness regarding fair market value. The record shows that this witness held a position of high corporate responsibility with NEPCO, that he had been in the taxpayer’s employ for over twenty-five years, that he was familiar with the financial and other accounting aspects of public utilities, and that he was thoroughly familiar with the property which was the subject of litigation. The decisions of this Court clearly establish that questions relative to the qualifications of a witness to be considered an expert witness are matters properly left to the lower court’s discretion.
In re P. F.,
NEPCO in its cross-appeal argues that the lower court erred in finding that there were no properties “comparable” to *509 that held by NEPCO within the town and hence the NEPCO property should be listed at fifty per cent of fair market value as required by 32 V.S.A. § 3481. The lower court, in an action challenging property tax assessments, must be mindful not only of 32 V.S.A. § 3481, but also of the constitutional and statutory mandates which require uniformity of appraisals. Chapter I, Article 9 of the Vermont Constitution; Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution; 32 V.S.A. §§ 4801 and 4467. Indeed, this Court has recognized that
it is of more urgency to examine the uniformity of the appraisals and the equitability of them on a comparable value basis, than it is to test them for precision with respect to market value. [International Paper Co. v. Town of Winkall, supra,133 Vt. at 387-88 .]
32 V.S.A. § 4467 requires that listed value of property correspond to the listed value of “comparable” properties within the town. This statute was enacted to insure that a taxpayer be granted treatment commensurate with that given his fellow taxpayers within the taxing community. The limiting effect of the term “comparable” properties when single purpose or unique property is the subject of litigation has not been previously resolved by this Court. The town would have us construe the equalization feature of § 4467 as applicable only to properties of the same general type or use within the town. Thus, a taxpayer owning unique property within a taxing authority would have no legal recourse if his property was listed at fifty per cent of fair market value while all other property in the district was listed at twenty-five per cent of fair market value. We feel that this approach makes neither good law nor good sense. We will not presume that the Legislature intended to enact a statute with unjust or unreasonable results.
International Business Machines Corp.
v.
Department of Taxes,
The courts of other jurisdictions, in determining questions such as the one presently facing this Court, have held that, in order to comply with constitutional requirements with respect to uniformity, all properties within a taxing district are “comparable” for purposes of constructing an appropriate ratio between fair market value and listed value.
Kittery Elec
*510
tric Light Co.
v.
Assessors of Town, supra,
We therefore hold that where unique property is the subject of litigation under § 4467 all property within the taxing municipality is comparable for purposes of determining the proper corresponding listed value. Such interpretation of § 4467 fully comports with the Vermont Constitution, the United States Constitution and 32 V.S.A. § 4601.
Before the lower court, NEPCO attempted to establish proof of the prevailing listed value within the town by presenting evidence of a so-called “sales ratio” study. This study was basically an analysis of certain arms-length property transactions within the town intended to determine the average of ratio between the sales price of land actually sold in Barnet and the listed value of such land. The lower court was of the opinion that the sales ratio study presented into evidence complied with the standards and conditions of the Vermont Department of Taxes. Nevertheless, the court felt that the inclusion of “non-comparable” property within the study, along with the study’s small sample size, limited its probative value. It therefore refused to list the NEPCO property at the same ratio shown to be prevailing by the study.
In view of this Court’s opinion regarding the effect of comparable property upon the equalization aspect of § 4467, the lower court’s treatment of the sales-ratio study is erroneous. The prevailing ratio of other properties within the town is a factor to be considered in determining the proper listed value of unique property. Sales-ratio studies have been accepted by the courts of other jurisdictions as a proper method of proving such prevailing ratio.
Southern Bell Tel. & Tel. Co.
v.
County of Dade,
The lower court’s findings of fact and conclusions of law upon the issue of uniformity are not only erroneous but also prejudicial to the vital constitutional and statutory rights afforded NEPCO under 32 V.S.A. § 4467, compelling our conclusion of reversible error. Because of our holdings, it is unnecessary to pass upon any other claims of error raised by either party.
The judgment of the Caledonia Superior Court is reversed, and the cause is remanded for a new hearing on all issues in accordance with the views herein expressed.
