In January, 1902, the petitioner, the Huron Building Company, acquired lot No. 251 in Port La.wreneo division in the city of Toledo, Ohio, being a lot of land fronting 60 feet on Jefferson avenue, and having a depth of 120 feet. The purchase price was $45,-000. In 1904 a retail store and commercial loft building was constructed on the lot at a cost of $90,940.71. On December 1, 1921, the petitioner sold these premises for the net sum of $213,340. The principal question for decision before the Commissioner and the Board of Tax Appeals related to the March 1, 1913, value to be used in computing the profit derived from the sale. Thе Commissioner fixed this value at $132,310.64. The Board of Tax Appeals increased it to $176,-000, and, since much of the evidence was directed to the valuation of land and buildings separately, apportioned $96,000 of this sum to the land and $80,000 to the building. The Board also held that the value of the building on March .1, 1913, should be reduced by 2 per cent, depreciation, from March 1, 19.13, to January 1, 1921, in computing the profit on the sale in 1921. The petitioner contends that the March 1,1913, value should not be less than $211,000, and that the Board acted arbitrarily in fixing it at $176,000; that the conclusion of the Board was not supported by any evidencе, was contrary to the evidence, and was not based upon the independent knowledge of the Board. It is also contended that the Board erred in deducting depreciation, in refusing to allow, as a proper charge to depreciation reserve, certain sums said to represent capital expenditures, and in rejecting and excluding certain evidence tendered by petitioner.
The ease of Thomas H. Tracy is related to that of the Huron Building Company, in that it concerns the effect to be given a dividend of $15,000 paid to him by the Huron Building Company in 1921. Determination of the portion of such dividend which constituted a return of capital and nontaxable surplus depends upon the decision in the case of the Huron Building Company. If the decision in the case of that petitioner he affirmed, the decision of the Board of Tax Appeals in the Tracy cаse must likewise be affirmed.
The evidence introduced by the petitioners consisted largely of the testimony of experts, all of whom attempted to place a separate value upon the land and to arrive at the reconstruction cost of the building, less depreciation, as of March 1,1913. This separate valuation of land and building was necessary and proper in determining the amount of annual depreciation, but is not particularly helpful in arriving at the market or sound value of a parcel of improved real estate. In such case building and land constitute a unit, the market value of which has been frequently said to he the price which one, who is under no compulsion to sell, is willing to take for the property, and which another, who is under no compulsion to buy, but is able and desires to buy, is willing to pay for tho property. This price may or may not be largely influеnced by reproduction costs. The type of the building, its suitability to tho neighborhood in which it is located, whether construction expenditures were needlessly lavish and extravagant on the one hand, or wise and economical on the other, the earning capacity of the building as pure investment, and many other factors, also have to do with the question of value as of any specific date.
It is contended by the petitioner that the only evidence of value introduced before the Board of Tax Appeals being this opinion evidence of experts, and that which is аlso in its nature opinion evidence — tho tax valuations of land and building, which were testified to be 60 per cent, of the true value — tho Board was under obligation to accept the petitioner’s valuation and to render judgment accordingly. While the opinions of experts are competent and often very helpful, such evidence is not considered binding upon the tribunal before which it is produced, at least not to the extent that such tribunal is bound to follow it, if contrary to the best judgment of its members. Anchor Co. v. Commissioner,
It must first be observed that the Board of Tax Appeals is an administrative tribunal, not a court. Old Colony Trust Co. v. Commissioner,
The Supreme Court has many times outlined in a comprehensive way the conditions under which administrative orders or decisions are to be considered as void and as “not in accordance with law.” Thus in Interstate Commerce Commission v. Louisville & N. R. Co.,
But, whatever doubt there may have been as to the extent to which courts will accept the findings of fact of the Board of Tax Appeals, such doubts are laid at rest by the decision in the ease of Phillips v. Commissioner,
We assume, therefore, that the court may, and should, in every ease in which a hearing was had and evidence was introduced before the Board, look into such/evidence to determine whether it was “legally sufficient to sustain” the findings made. The court need go no further. It is not required to weigh the evidence, or to determine the credibility of witnesses; nor may it usurp the power of administrative decision. The opinion of the
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court may not be substituted for that of the administrative body in matters involving the exercise of judgment or discretion. Compare Interstate Commerce Commission v. Illinois Central R. Co.,
The Board of Tax Appeals did not act without evidence or without full opportunity to the petitionеrs to bo heard. Such Board accepted the petitioner’s evidence as to the independent or separate valuation of the land. The Board had before it not only the cost of the land in 1902, the cost of constructing the building which was completed in 1904, the tax values of land and building in 1913 аnd 1915, and the opinions of. the experts as to the separate valuations to be placed on both, but the record is devoid of any evidence of sales of closely comparable buildings, or of the value of the property as a unit and for investment purposes. The burden of producing such evidence, if it was to bo determinative of the case in whole or in part, was upon the petitioner. In connection with investment value, also,, earning power is of the greatest importance. Prior to 1913 such earnings ranged between $5,699.08, in 1910, and $2,361.54, in 1912. The maximum earnings prior to 1922 were for the year 1920 $7,845.12. For the ten years commencing with 1908, the average was approximately $5,000 per year. This is a return of but 2.8 per cent, upon the valuation of $176,000. The Board also had before it that which is common statistical knowledge —the tremendous increase in the price of building materials, equipment, and the like, which followed the beginning of the World War in 1914, as well as the lower cost of labor at or about that time, and comparative costs in 1904, 1914, and 1921. The weight to be given to each of these elements of evidence was within the sound discretion of the Board, and we cannot say that such discretion was abused, that the evidence was not legally sufficient to sustain the Board’s decision, or that such evidence clearly showed a value in excess of that fixed by the Board.
In view of the decision of the Supreme Court in United States v. Ludey,
The petitioner complаins that the Board of Tax Appeals erred in a matter of law in rejecting evidence tendered by the petitioner to show the general development in the immediate vicinity of the building in question between the years 1913 and 1921. This, it is claimed, would have tended to show a greater stability in market value during that period and that practically all of the increase occurred prior to 1913. While the evidence might have some slight effect in this direction, the probative force would *580 be inconsequential. Conceding the truth of the proffer, but without admitting the necessity or propriety of the inferenсe to be drawn from such evidence, we cannot see that a different result would be required.
The respondent questions the jurisdiction of the court in the matter of the petition of Thomas H. Tracy upon the ground that such petition was not filed within six months after the decision of the Board of Tax Appeals. This petitioner contends that the decision in his case was entered of record by the Board of Tax Appeals on May 25, 1929, by inadvertence and mistake, and in violation of the stipulation between the parties, and that the board erred in denying petitioner’s motion to vacate and set aside its earlier decision and to enter a nunc pro tunc order as of July 8, 1929. Since, as has already been stated, relief in this ease is dependent upon relief in the matter of the petition of the Huron Building Company, it becomes unnecessary for us to determine this question. We accept jurisdiction and affirm the decision rendered by the Board.
The decision of the Board of Tax Appeals is affirmed in both cases.
