Alstores Realty Corp. v. Board of Assessors

460 N.E.2d 1276, 391 Mass. 60, 1984 Mass. LEXIS 1326
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedFebruary 6, 1984
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 460 N.E.2d 1276 (Alstores Realty Corp. v. Board of Assessors) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alstores Realty Corp. v. Board of Assessors, 460 N.E.2d 1276, 391 Mass. 60, 1984 Mass. LEXIS 1326 (Mass. 1984).

Opinion

Abrams, J.

The board of assessors of the city of Peabody (assessors) appeals, pursuant to G. L. c. 58A, § 13, from a decision of the Appellate Tax Board (board), granting Alstores Realty Corporation (Alstores) abatements of real estate taxes of $765,301.84 for fiscal 1979, and $646,060.30 for fiscal 1980. On appeal, the assessors claim error in the board’s determination to allow certain operating expenses, in the board’s choice of a capitalization rate, in the board’s determination of fair economic rent for Jordan Marsh Company, a corporate affiliate of Alstores, and in its failure to take into account the real estate taxes paid to Alstores by other tenants. The assessors also complain that the board left out of its gross income figure rental income from kiosks. We conclude that there is no error in the board’s allowance of Alstores’ operating expenses, and in its choice of a capitalization rate. However, the board’s use of Jordan Marsh’s actual rent was error. Further, the board did not add tax payments by tenants to gross income or alternatively reduce the tax factor to reflect the taxes paid to Alstores by tenants. The board also did not add income from kiosks in its gross income figure. We, therefore, reverse and remand for further proceedings.

We summarize the facts found by the board.1 North Shore Shopping Center is located at the junction of Route 114 (Andover Street) and Route 128 in Peabody. The subject parcel includes an enclosed mall with access to fifteen buildings and over seventy rental outlets. It also includes a gas station, an automotive center, and a pump house. Fourteen buildings were constructed in 1957-1958. Additional buildings and the mall enclosure were built in 1977-1978. The “anchor” stores, that is, those which are thought to draw the greatest number of customers to the mall, are [62]*62Jordan Marsh and Sears, Roebuck.2 The mall is regarded as one of the best in New England.

Both Alstores and the assessors offered testimony by expert appraisers. The board adopted the assessors’ expert’s property residual technique of capitalization of income3 as the “best determinative” of the value of the property. The board, however, rejected the assessors’ income figures as “too speculative” and accepted in their entirety Alstores’ expert’s figures for gross income, operating expenses, and net income. To compute net income, Alstores’ expert added actual rental income paid by tenants to Alstores to an imputed rent for the Sears building,4 and then subtracted actual expenses incurred in operating the property, a sum for the use of furniture, equipment and rolling stock, “which serves to develop the income,” and “charges on the land.” He compensated for his failure to include tax payments by tenants as part of gross income by reducing the tax factor.

The board rejected both the assessors’ and Alstores’ capitalization rate computations. Instead, the board used net income figures “capitalized at rates which included a return of the investment, a depreciation factor and an appropriate tax factor.”5 The board derived its tax factor from the tax rate, adjusted for disproportionate assessment. The board then divided the capitalization rate into the net income [63]*63figure to ascertain fair cash value.6 The tax rate was adjusted to compensate for disproportionate assessment,7 and the board calculated the tax and issued its abatement decisions.8

1. Computation of operating expenses. The assessors claim that the board, in adopting Alstores’ expert’s figures for net operating income, erred by permitting expense deductions outside the range testified to by the experts and by including expenses not related to the operation of land or [64]*64improvements. The short answer to these claims is that the board, based on expert testimony, found that “the actual expenses were reasonable and were in line with other shopping centers.” The board then adopted Alstores’ expert’s figures for net operating income. There is no error.

The assessors claim that the board deducted from gross income promotional expenses and certain administrative expenses (dues, membership, and travel) not related to the operation of land or improvements. The board considered insurance, administration, promotion, special jobs, water and sewer, landlord maintenance, common area maintenance, heating, and air conditioning to be operating expenses.9 There was expert testimony that these expenses were related to the operation of a shopping mall.

Alstores’ expert admitted that Alstores’ expenses were higher than average10 but claimed that the expenses were reasonably related to operating the shopping mall, which the board found to be one of New England’s best shopping malls.11 It was within the board’s expertise to accept this [65]*65testimony. “The weight to give to the testimony of a witness, after the disclosure by cross-examination of possible but not fatal weaknesses in that testimony, is clearly for the trier of fact, in this case the board.” Assessors of Lynnfield v. New England Oyster House, Inc., 362 Mass. 696, 702 (1972).

The assessors, in effect, are asking us to create a list of specific expenses which can be considered operating expenses. This we decline to do. Operating expenses of property owners will vary with the use of the land and the nature of the improvements. The issue of what expenses may be considered in any particular piece of property is for the board. “The board could select the various elements of value as shown by the record and from them form, as it properly did, its own independent judgment.” Assessors of Quincy v. Boston Consol. Gas Co., 309 Mass. 60, 72 (1941).

2. Computation of the capitalization rate. The assessors claim that the board erroneously excluded documentary evidence of comparable sales that would show, if accepted, a lower ratio of net income to sale price, and thus justify a lower capitalization rate than the one the board chose to adopt.

The assessors’ expert submitted evidence of five sales that he claimed were comparable. The assessors’ expert, however, admitted that two of the sales were not arm’s-length transactions, two were subject to mortgages, and the remaining sale should be given little evidentiary weight because it had taken place eight years earlier. A trier of fact could reject the sales as reported by the assessors’ expert as evidence of the appropriate capitalization rate because these sales were not comparable and therefore could not be used to determine a capitalization rate. Thus, the expert’s evidence was “too unreliable to be accepted as a correct test of value.” Peoples Sav. Bank v. Assessors of Chicopee, 384 Mass. 808, 809 (1981), quoting State v. Lincoln Memory Gardens, Inc., 242 Ind. 206, 213 (1961).12

[66]*66The assessors also claim that the board’s capitalization rate was not based on substantial evidence. The board considered testimony by both experts and reached its own capitalization rate. “[T]he board [is] not required to indicate the capitalization of earnings rate which it in fact used. The board did not accept the actual computations of any witness and was not obliged to do so.” Assessors of Lynnfield v.

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Bluebook (online)
460 N.E.2d 1276, 391 Mass. 60, 1984 Mass. LEXIS 1326, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alstores-realty-corp-v-board-of-assessors-mass-1984.