Bridgeport Hydraulic Co. v. Town of Stratford

94 A.2d 1, 139 Conn. 388, 1953 Conn. LEXIS 142
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedJanuary 13, 1953
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 94 A.2d 1 (Bridgeport Hydraulic Co. v. Town of Stratford) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bridgeport Hydraulic Co. v. Town of Stratford, 94 A.2d 1, 139 Conn. 388, 1953 Conn. LEXIS 142 (Colo. 1953).

Opinion

*390 Jennings, J.

The defendant placed the property of the plaintiff in its 194'5 grand list at $1,242,102. On appeal to the board of tax review, this figure was confirmed. The property was taxable at its “fair market value” in the defendant town under General Statutes, §1759 (formerly Cum. Sup. 1935, §366c). The plaintiff appealed to the Court of Common Pleas, which reduced the assessment to $720,000. The defendant appealed from this judgment. It attacked the finding, the conclusions and several of the rulings made.

The defendant states in its brief that sixty-one paragraphs of the draft finding “were, it is believed, admitted and undisputed facts and should have been found.” This is the only reference in the brief to this assignment of error, and it was not alluded to in oral argument. Under these circumstances, we are under no obligation to search the 764-page record for supporting testimony. Linahan v. Linahan, 131 Conn. 307, 311, 39 A.2d 895. The assignment falls into the class of assignments of error which are not pursued in the brief and will be disregarded. State v. Jones, 124 Conn. 664, 665, 2 A.2d 374; Maltbie, Conn. App. Proc., § 165.

The second assignment claims that three paragraphs were found without evidence and the third that three paragraphs were of doubtful meaning. These assignments are without merit.

The fourth assignment attacked certain paragraphs of the finding as conclusions not supported by subordinate facts. The first group stated, in effect, that there was a market for the personal property of the plaintiff located and taxable in Stratford, that its fair market value on October 1, 1945, was $900,000, and that it ought to be assessed at $720,000, or 80 per cent of the fair market value, *391 the admitted basis of property assessment in Stratford. Whether these statements were conclusions or findings of fact is not free from doubt. The difficulty is one of terminology and is discussed at length in Maltbie, Connecticut Appellate Procedure, §§ 77-82. The dominant thought in this discussion is that the appellant must have a practical means of testing the validity of the statement in the finding, by whatever name called. The trial court was faced with the alternative of repeating the mass of facts on which the experts based their opinions and then coming to the stated conclusion or of finding the ultimate fact. It chose the latter course. The defendant is not harmed, because it has brought up the entire testimony by which the validity of the ultimate fact found can be tested. This method falls within the pattern described in Maltbie, Connecticut Appellate Procedure, page 109, where, under these circumstances, it is said: M[I]t is sufficient ordinarily to state the main fact and any proceedings for correction of the finding with reference to it would be upon the basis of the printing of the evidence in the record.” As stated above, this was the eourse followed by the defendant. On the merits, the evidence of Mr. Fricker, a qualified expert who testified for the plaintiff, furnished abundant support for the findings in question.

The other group is placed among the conclusions in the second part of the finding and, except for one paragraph which restated the fair market value, detailed the factors considered by the trial court in reaching that figure. Such a discussion ordinarily appears in the memorandum of decision, but it afforded both parties a further opportunity of testing the correctness of the judgment. The position of the defendant was not harmed thereby.

*392 Another assignment attacks certain of the bases of the trial court’s conclusions on the ground that they were irrelevant. The defendant also complains because the trial court failed to consider other matters claimed by the defendant to be relevant. Most, if not all, of these claims depend on the rulings on evidence presently to be considered.

Before trial, the defendant filed a motion for disclosure. This sought information as to the quantity of water supplied and the revenue obtained. The denial of this motion fell fairly within the discretionary power of the trial court. Kiessling v. Kiessling, 1 34 Conn. 564, 568, 59 A.2d 532; and see State v. Hayes, 127 Conn. 543, 602, 18 A.2d 895.

The finding may be summarized as follows: The plaintiff is a Connecticut corporation supplying water to the defendant and adjoining towns. On October 1, 1945, it was the owner of personal property, consisting of pipes, meters, etc., located in Stratford and subject to taxation. The property was assessed on that date at $1,242,102. Its use as a water transmission and distribution system was its best and most valuable use, and its market value was dependent to a substantial extent on its availability for such use. It had a market value on October 1, 1945. The plaintiff has no definite records as to installations prior to 1901 but has made a reasonably accurate estimate that the average date of installation of its pipe prior to that date was 1893. The defendant’s water supply is almost entirely drawn from a reservoir located outside of its borders. The historical cost of the system, including overhead, was $1,187,116.04. The reproduction cost new, depreciated at a reasonable rate, was, as of October 1, 1945, $1,103,191.40. Insofar as reproduction cost new was considered by the assessors, it was com *393 puted on the purported cost of labor and materials in 1941. Had the plaintiff used that date, its reproduction cost would have been decreased not less than $120,000. From the plaintiff’s experience, cleaning cast iron pipes to remove tuberculation was not sound practice. This determination was reasonable. The cost of labor and materials in 1945 was regarded by expert appraisers as inflationary and abnormally high. The fair market value of the plaintiff’s property on October 1, 1945, considered as an operating distribution system, was $900,000. The assessors placed property in Stratford in the grand list at 80 per cent of its fair market value.

The court also found that the value of the plaintiff’s property in Stratford on the lists of 1928,1929 and 1930 was fixed by judgments of the Superior Court on tax appeals. Thereafter, through 1944, the assessments were computed on approximately the following formula. From the full value of the property on the last list there was deducted one year’s depreciation at agreed rates; to the resulting figure was added the cost without overhead of property acquired since the immediately preceding assessment date; 85 per cent of this total became the assessment for that particular year. The plaintiff’s list for 1944 on this basis was $699,285. This tax history was considered as evidence of fair market value only to the extent of the reasonably probable effect of such history on the minds of a willing buyer and a willing seller and upon the probable price which would have resulted from fair negotiations between them.

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Bluebook (online)
94 A.2d 1, 139 Conn. 388, 1953 Conn. LEXIS 142, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bridgeport-hydraulic-co-v-town-of-stratford-conn-1953.