Opinion by
Pennsylvania’s Northern Lights Shoppers City, Inc.
The Board of Assessment and Revision of Taxes of Beaver County
The assessment fixed by the Board for the year 1961 represents a 40% inсrease over the tax assessment of the property which was fixed by the Court for the years 1959 and 1960. Between 1959 and 1961 no other buildings were erected, nor were any improvements made on Northern’s propеrty. Moreover, since the 1959 assessment, a valuable tract of Northern’s property was sold by it and (of course) there were two years of further depreciation in the existing buildings.
Northern produced three expert witnesses. One testified that the market value of the property was $3,-360,000, another $3,365,460, and Northern’s third witness $3,525,216.
Thе Board, in order to overcome this testimony and support its assessment, produced three expert wit
All of the six experts, whether testifying for the Board or for Northern, agreed that the capitalization of net income is, overall, the most scientific and the most accurate method for finding the actual (fair) market value of а purely commercial property, such as a shopping center.
The witnesses for Northern based their opinion as to the actual (fair market) value in 1961 principally on the capitalization of net income. Two real estate experts who testified in rebuttal on behalf of the Board used two methods in fixing the market value оf Northern’s property: (1) Beproduction cost less depreciation; and (2) a capitalization calculation which combines (a) capitalizing the land, and (b) the reproduction cost, less deрreciation for the value of the improvements and buildings.
The Board’s principal contention is that rеproduction cost less depreciation may be used in conjunction with the capitalization оf net income in determining the actual (fair market) value for tax assessment purposes. While many factors may be considered in determining actual or fair market value, the lower Court properly rejected the testimony of the Board’s expert witnesses on the ground that reproduction cost less depreciation may not be used as a factor in determining the market value of property: Buhl Foundation v. Bd. of Prop. Assess.,
In Park Drive Manor Tax Assessment Case,
In Buhl Foundation v. Bd. of Prop. Assess., 407 Pa., supra, this Court aptly stated (рages 570, 570-571) : “The landowner called as its witness the chief building appraiser of the Board of Property Assessment of Allegheny County, the individual who made the assessment for the board. He testified that he considered several factors in arriving at his conclusion as to the value of the buildings involved, but an analysis of his testimony makеs it clear that the major and basic factor used was depreciated reproduction costs. This was error.
...
“. . . reproduction cost has no probativе value for any purpose in fixing the fair market value of improved real estate for tax purpоses: Metropolitan Edison Co.’s Appeal,
“Since an improper factor was . . . used in computing the assessment, . . . the finding of value [based thereon] . . . cannot stand.”
The Board further contends that the trial Judge committed prejudicial error when he allowed the introduction into evidence of the record of the 1959 as
The Board also contends that testimony relating to the market value of a shopping center beyond the territоrial limits of Beaver County is inadmissible to determine the actual (or fair) market value of a shopping сenter within the County. The lower Court admitted this evidence, with doubt and reservation, and did not mention it in its exhaustive Opinion. The mere fact that a property is located across the County line would not of itself make the evidence inadmissible if it were admissible notwithstanding its location.
Order affirmed.
Notes
Hereinafter referred to as Northern.
Hereinafter referred to as the Board.
Italics throughout, ours.
