Burritt Mutual Savings Bank v. New Britain

140 A.2d 324, 20 Conn. Super. Ct. 476, 20 Conn. Supp. 476, 1958 Conn. Super. LEXIS 18
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedJanuary 13, 1958
DocketFile No. 67217
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 140 A.2d 324 (Burritt Mutual Savings Bank v. New Britain) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Burritt Mutual Savings Bank v. New Britain, 140 A.2d 324, 20 Conn. Super. Ct. 476, 20 Conn. Supp. 476, 1958 Conn. Super. LEXIS 18 (Colo. Ct. App. 1958).

Opinion

This is an appeal from the refusal of the board of tax review of the defendant city to reduce the tax assessment on the list of September 1, 1956, on the plaintiff's land and building located at 267-271 Main Street in the city of New Britain.

The building in which the plaintiff conducts its savings bank business is a modern one, having been erected in 1949. The land in question has a frontage of approximately 43.5 feet on Main Street and is approximately 90 feet in depth. In addition, there are easement or passway rights on land of others over which entrance may be gained to the rear of the plaintiff's building. *Page 478

The assessors of the city found the fair market value of the land on September 1, 1956, to be $182,866, of which $4137 was the value of the easement and $178,729 the value of the parcel itself. The front foot value of the subject property, based on a depth table standard of a lot 100 feet in depth, was established by the assessors at a market value unit price of $4137.24 per base front foot. This sum of $4137.24 was a slight adjustment of approximately $2.70 per foot from the fair market value of $4200 per front foot for a parcel having a standard depth of 100 feet which the assessors had established as the fair market value of land immediately adjacent and to the south. This market value of $4200 per front foot was established and accepted by the assessors on September 1, 1956, upon the recommendation of J. M. Cleminshaw Company, which had been engaged by the city in 1955 to make a revaluation of the entire real and personal property of the city for the grand list of September 1, 1956. This revaluation was conducted for the city by Richard Nesser, an employee of the J. M. Cleminshaw Company, whose findings and opinions were accepted in this case in toto by the board of assessors. Nesser's experience had been derived entirely from his employment of fourteen years with the Cleminshaw Company, and by research and a study of appraisal methods. He had never been in the real estate business or participated in real estate investments and mortgage financing.

In this case we are concerned with the question whether the $4200 per front foot valuation, adjusted to the subject premises by the slight variance downward, previously described, to $4137.24 by reason of its location a short distance northerly from the corner of Church and Main Streets and the northerly wall of the New Britain Trust Company building, is in fact representative of the fair market value of the subject premises. *Page 479

The basic valuation of $4200 per front foot is the highest land valuation in the city of New Britain. It was the front foot rate established on September 1, 1956, in the so-called 100 per cent business district, which runs southerly from the corner of Main and Church Streets on the east side of Main Street to the Fair Department Store, and runs northerly from said corner to and including Grant's Department Store. Southerly from the corner of Main and Church Streets, the valuation, including the New Britain Trust Company building, which is located on that corner, was uniformly $4200 per front foot and was adjusted to a greater amount as the depth increased beyond 100 feet, in accordance with a depth table submitted in evidence. Northerly there was an adjustment downward for a distance of 141 feet along the east side of Main Street from the northerly wall of the New Britain Trust Company, which also constitutes the southerly wall of the subject property, to the end of Grant's Department Store. At the latter point the front foot price had decreased to $3800. The adjustment downward was due to a feeling that there was a slight decrease in the 100 per cent valuation. Plaintiff's property is located between the New Britain Trust Company building on the south and the so-called Lerner building on the north, with common party walls.

The front foot valuation of the plaintiff's land, having been first adjusted downward from $4200 to $4137.24, was further adjusted to $3971.75 in accordance with a depth table. The 90-foot depth was computed as having a 96 per cent comparative value to that of a standard lot 100 feet in depth. The amount of $3971.75, therefore, represents 96 per cent of $4137.24. The total land value was thereafter computed on a 45-foot frontage as having a fair market value of $178,729 plus $4137 for easement rights. *Page 480 The fair market value of the building on September 1, 1956, was found by the assessors to be $235,497.

In the course of the trial, the plaintiff withdrew its objections to the failure of the board of tax review to reduce the valuation placed upon the building and confined its appeal solely to the issue of fair market value of the land and the tax assessment based thereon.

It was stipulated between the parties that the uniform percentage for tax assessment purposes prevailing and used by the assessors on the list of September 1, 1956, was 60 per cent of the fair market value. Such practice of assessing at a uniform rate less than 100 per cent of the fair market value of real property has been validated by the General Assembly in its 1957 general session; Public Acts 1957, No. 673, § 1; though declared illegal prior to such enactment by the Supreme Court of Errors. E. Ingraham v. Bristol, 144 Conn. 374.

Though the land in the instant case is occupied by the bank building, the parties are in agreement that the highest and best use which could be made of the parcel is for retail business purposes. Hence, the issue in this case is the fair market value of the land if it were devoted and utilized for its highest use and to its best purpose. Based upon such use, the plaintiff's expert claimed that the land had a fair market value on September 1, 1956, of $108,000. The contention of the city, based on the findings of Nesser, as has already been stated, was that its fair market value on that date was $178,729, plus $4137 for the passway rights, or a total of $182,866. Both of these opinions were based almost entirely on the method of determining market value known as capitalization of stabilized net income. Sibley v. Middlefield,143 Conn. 100, 107; Lomas Nettleton Co. v.Waterbury, 122 Conn. 228, 232, 233. This is a method *Page 481 of determining value by capitalizing the future net incomes to be expected from a building devoted to the highest and best use of the land at a capitalization rate which provides for both a return on the investment and a recapture or amortization of the investment, also termed depreciation, over the period of the economic life of the building.

There are three residual methods of capitalizing income into value. The first, known as the land residual process, capitalizes the amount remaining from the gross income, in order to determine the land value, after proper allowance has been made for vacancies, the earnings to be derived from the ownership of the building, the amortization of the investment therein, and the payment of all expenses in connection with its operation including taxes on the building itself. In the land residual method of capitalizing income the return on the capitalization rate as well as the amount of amortization are charged against gross income as expenses of the building. The rate plus an anticipated tax rate is then used to capitalize the remaining income, which is regarded as attributable to the land.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
140 A.2d 324, 20 Conn. Super. Ct. 476, 20 Conn. Supp. 476, 1958 Conn. Super. LEXIS 18, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burritt-mutual-savings-bank-v-new-britain-connsuperct-1958.