331 Mass. 685 | Mass. | 1954
This appeal by the State tax commission from a determination by the Appellate Tax Board of the valuation of the “machinery, poles, wires and underground conduits, wires and pipes” located in Haverhill belonging to New England Telephone and Telegraph Company on January 1, 1954, presents questions similar to those decided by us this day in State Tax Commission v. Assessors of Springfield, ante, 677.
On March 5, 1954, the tax commission certified to the assessors that the valuation as of January 1, 1954, at which the assessors should assess the property pursuant to G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 59, § 39, as appearing in St. 1953, c. 654, § 32, was: poles, wires and underground conduits, wires and pipes $575,200; machinery $44,400; total $619,600.
• On March 12, 1954, the assessors appealed to the Appellate Tax Board, which conducted a hearing on the same day as the hearing in the Springfield case. Again the only witness to value was one Hill of Chicago, Illinois, who testified on behalf of the assessors that in his opinion the fair cash value should be: overhead plant $190,293; underground plant $1,451,906; machinery $45,872; total $1,688,071. Again the Appellate Tax Board on June 22, 1954, in a majority decision adopted his exact figures as the fair cash value of all the items of property.
1. There was no error in the failure to rule that the burden was upon the assessors to prove that the original determination of value made by the tax commission was in error, unfair, or unreasonable. The tax commission’s motion •to dismiss was rightly denied,- and its requests for rulings in substance to that effect could not have been given. State Tax Commission v. Assessors of Springfield, ante, 677.
2. The tax commission also argues the same question of evidence'. The testimony of value summarized above was received subject to the tax commission’s exception. The •witness testified that in 1951 he was engaged by the city of Haverhill to investigate the taxable property of the telephone company; that he made a physical inventory in the field of the overhead plant; that he made an inventory of
The testimony of the expert is open to the same objection as that in the Springfield case. The proper foundation' for’ his opinion was not laid, and could not be provided by the witness in the manner attempted.
Decision reversed.