The property, whose assessed valuation is here in issue, is land in the Times Square district of the city of New York, improved with a nineteen-story hotel structure, erected in 1928, and operated as a commercial transient hotel. For the tax year under review, 1946-1947, the assessed valuation of the property was $2,500,000, of which $430,000 represented the land valuation. The court at Special Term found a value of $340,000 for the land and a total value of $1,765,000 for the land and building. These findings were identical in amount with the values fixed for the property by the Appellate Division for the tax year 1945-1946, reviewed in an earlier tax certiorari proceeding.
(People ex rel. Chase Nat. Bank
v.
Chambers,
At the trial, evidence was received of a sale of the subject hotel property and business in August, 1945, to the present relator, for $3,000,000, and of a sale of the relator’s capital stock in March, 1946, for $3,600,000. The earlier sale had been received in evidence in the certiorari proceedings covering the prior tax years. There was also evidence, adduced by both relator and respondents, of large earnings produced by the hotel.
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■worth of such additional elements as management, good jwill, hotel furniture and furnishings, inventory of food and beverages and the usual hotel services. The manner of determining what portion of the sales prices and of the yearly income is attributable to the real estate and of segregating that from the portion derived from the other items, the record does not disclose. In these circumstances, the valuation of a transient hotel property is in essence the valuation of a “ specialty ”, a term including real estate, which, unlike an apartment house or office building, produces income only in combination with a business conducted upon it. (See
People ex rel. Hotel St. George Corp.
v.
Lilly,
Giving to the hotel income or to the sale of the hotel enterprise any additional weight was error for an additional reason, having to do more particularly with the valuation of the building. Structural value fixes the maximum value even of an apartment house or office building whose income if capitalized would indicate a higher valuation. (See
People ex rel. Manhattan Square Beresford, Inc.,
v.
Sexton,
The order of the Appellate Division should be reversed and the order of the Special Term affirmed, with costs in this court and in the Appellate Division.
Order reversed, etc. [See
