24 A.2d 470 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1941
Argued December 10, 1941. In this appeal by the city of Allentown from the valuation of appellee's land for assessment purposes, the question of a reduction to accomplish equalization with other similar property within the taxing district is not involved. For the purposes of this appeal the court found, and it is conceded, that the basis upon which real estate was assessed for the triennium beginning with 1940, generally throughout the city, was its actual value and not a percentage thereof.
The property is well located with a frontage of 61 1/2 feet on Hamilton Street and a uniform depth of 225 feet along Law Street, northwardly to Court Street. The four story brick building is over fifty years old. The entire ground floor is tenanted; of the 43 offices on the upper floors, 22 are vacant. The owner has made extensive improvements but the expense of modernizing the building is prohibitive. In 1930 the entire property including a parking lot for automobiles, yielded a net income in rentals of about $3,250. There is evidence that the probable future life of the building will not exceed fifteen years and that the trend of business is away from that section of the city. The real estate was assessed at $150,000. The lower court, on a finding that $100,000 was the actual value of the property, reduced the assessment to that amount.
The then owner had a wide experience in buying and selling real estate in the City of Allentown and was well acquainted with values. He valued the land and the building at $100,000 and expressed a willingness to sell at that figure. The actual value of the property according to the testimony of four real estate dealers, well *238
qualified to express opinions, ranged from $80,000 to $96,000. The city offered no testimony. From a consideration of the record we are convinced that the owner and his witnesses measured actual value of the real estate in accordance with the Act of May 25, 1939, P.L. 225,
The evidence as to value was entirely sufficient to rebut the prima facie case made out by the assessment and when overcome by evidence, the presumption in favor of the regularity and validity of the assessment ceased to exist. Kemble's Estate,
The order is affirmed. *239