Opinion
The plaintiffs, John P. Nolan and Laurel Dixon-Nolan, appeal from the judgment of the trial court determining that the defendant, the city of Milford (city) overvalued their improved residence and land on Point Lookout and reducing their assessment from $2,546,700 to $2,066,880. On appeal, the plaintiffs claim: (1) the court improperly considered the city assessor’s testimony, which was biased; (2) the defendant’s appraisal report should not have been considered by the court because it did not comply with the uniform standards of professional appraiser practice; (3) the assessor’s comparable land sales were unreliable according to the evidence and, therefore, should not have been considered; (4) the city’s valuation relied on
The court has wide discretion in the admission of evidence and in determining what weight to give any such evidence. See State v. Berger,
The plaintiffs repeatedly conceded during oral argument that the court did not improperly admit into evidence the appraiser’s report and testimony, but maintain that the court should not have considered it. All of the plaintiffs’ claims as to this evidence go to its weight, not to its admissibility.
A tax appeal brought pursuant to General Statutes § 12-117a is a de novo proceeding in which the court as trier of fact makes an independent judgment on the valuation of the real property and improvements without regard to the board of assessment review’s prior determination on the same subject. See Konover v. West
In an appeal from the decision of a board of assessment review concerning assessment lists, the trier of fact must arrive at its own conclusions as to the value of the taxpayer’s property by weighing the opinion of the appraisers, the claims of the parties in light of all of the circumstances bearing on value and its own general knowledge of the elements, which establish value. Newbury Commons Ltd. Partnership v. Stamford,
We reject the plaintiffs’ contentions that the court should not have considered the content of properly admitted appraisal reports and testimony of the city’s appraiser. The court was required by binding precedent to consider the evidence it admitted. Xerox v. Board
First, the court viewed the plaintiffs’ premises. It found that the premises had been improved by a relatively new dwelling of 8000 square feet, high on a promontory at the end of a peninsula overlooking Long Island Sound with views of both sunrise and sunset. The plaintiffs paid $1,200,000 for the lot and the forty year old dwelling on it in 1993. Subsequently, they tore down the house when renovation was found impracticable, and they rebuilt. The court, in weighing the city’s assessment, discounted some of the city’s reasoning and justification of its assessment, resulting in a substantial reduction to the plaintiffs.
Significantly, the court noted that the assessor and the defendant’s appraisers valued the improvements almost identically. There was a mere $27,480 difference in the two figures, which the court Solomonicly cut down the middle. As to the land value, the court noted that this left the plaintiffs suggested land value at $450,060. The court found this to be “significantly too low.” It held that $769,940 was the appropriate value. We find nothing in the record to warrant a conclusion that the court’s factual findings were clearly erroneous. They are supported by the underlying factual findings set forth in its memorandum of decision, and the subordinate facts are amply supported by the evidence and the court’s own view of the premises and properties as comparable as any could be to this unique home and home site in Milford.
The judgment is affirmed.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
