Cheltenham Federal Savings & Loan Ass'n v. Pocono Sky Enterprises, Inc.

451 A.2d 744, 305 Pa. Super. 471, 1982 Pa. Super. LEXIS 5525
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 8, 1982
Docket766
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 451 A.2d 744 (Cheltenham Federal Savings & Loan Ass'n v. Pocono Sky Enterprises, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cheltenham Federal Savings & Loan Ass'n v. Pocono Sky Enterprises, Inc., 451 A.2d 744, 305 Pa. Super. 471, 1982 Pa. Super. LEXIS 5525 (Pa. Ct. App. 1982).

Opinion

VAN der VOORT, Judge:

This is an appeal from the lower court’s determination of a fair market value on a Motion for Deficiency Judgment, pursuant to 42 Pa.C.S. § 8103 et seq., which is substantially a reenactment of 12 P.S. § 2621.1 et seq.

Cheltenham Federal Savings and Loan Association (hereafter referred to as Cheltenham) loaned Pocono Sky Enterprises, Inc. (hereafter referred to as Pocono) $250,000 and as security for the loan received for a mortgage on 66 non-contiguous lots in a real estate development of over 600 lots located in Pike County. Pocono subsequently transferred 55 of those lots to the appellants. The loan went into default and Cheltenham filed a complaint in Confession of Judgment, and judgment was entered against Pocono. 1 A sheriff’s sale was eventually held, at which Cheltenham bid in the realty. Cheltenham thereafter filed a petition designated “Petition to File Deficiency Judgment”, requesting the court to determine the fair market value. After a hearing, the court entered the following order, from which the appellants have appealed:

ORDER

AND NOW, March 3, 1980, the fair market value of the subject real estate is fixed as of the date of execution sale, July 25, 1979, at $136,000.00.

Appellant’s brief raises five issues, enumerated below. 2

*475 Essentially they raise two fundamental issues specifically; first that the opinion of Cheltenham’s expert on values, whose opinion Judge Thomson followed in determining fair market value, was improperly arrived at; and second, that the lower court’s determination was contrary to the weight of the evidence.

The initial duty and authority to determine “fair market value” under petitions of this kind lies with the fact-finder, the lower court. Our review is limited to deciding whether there is sufficient evidence to sustain the holding of the lower court, or whether there is a reversible error of law. Shrawder v. Quiggle, 256 Pa.Superior Ct. 303, 311, 389 A.2d 1135 (1978). Recognizing our limited authority on appeal, and our deference in most cases to the lower court’s determination, based upon its first-hand observation of the witnesses, we are nevertheless of the opinion that the lower court’s finding and order are not consistent with the weight of the evidence.

The pertinent testimony presented to Judge Thomson can be summarized as follows: On July 19, 1973, Cheltenham loaned $250,000 to Pocono, secured by a mortgage on some 66 lots in a development known as “Sky View Lake”. On May 14, 1973, before making this loan, Cheltenham had the *476 properties appraised by William A. Hammeke, who valued the lots at $420,000. (Defendant’s Exhibit l). 3 By deed dated June 25, 1975, Pocono conveyed the 55 lots here involved to John W. Dean III and Donald B. McCoy.

On September 8, 1976, Hammeke made a second appraisal of the 55 lots for Cheltenham, and evaluated them at $400,-000. (Defendant’s Exhibit 2). By a bond dated February 4, 1977, Dean and McCoy, with their respective wives, undertook to pay Pocono’s then debt of $195,000. On May 4,1978, Cheltenham took judgment by confession against Pocono in the amount of $215,231.44. Hammeke made a new appraisal dated June 27, 1978 of the 55 lots for Cheltenham, and appraised them at $400,000. On July 25, 1979, Cheltenham bought the property on an execution sale. “As of July 25, 1979” 4 (N.T. 13), William R. Henkelman appraised the 55 lots for Cheltenham. Using what he termed “a subdivision analysis” (N.T., p. 20) to determine what “an investor-developer would pay” (N.T., p. 15), and after making various assumptions discussed hereinafter, Henkelman evaluated the 55 lots at $136,000. As of July 27, 1979 (R. 30a) Joseph Von Hake, at the request of Cheltenham, using a method of “comparable sales”, evaluated the 55 lots to be worth $110,-000.

George Fry, President of Cheltenham, testified that Cheltenham’s policy was to make loans up to 75 to 80 percent of the “appraised market value” (N.T., p. 69). On or about December 18, 1979, at the request of appellant’s attorneys, Davis R. Chant, a real estate appraiser, evaluated the 55 lots as of July 25, 1979, at $255,000. 5 The total debt owing to *477 Cheltenham as of July 25, 1979, including interest and costs, was $226,257.

It seems obvious from the record that Judge Thomson accepted as the best evaluation of the property the opinion of the witness Henkelman, since the court’s finding of a value of $136,000 was identical with the net “fair market value” to which Henkelman testified. We find that Henkelman’s evaluation was predicated upon two false assumptions:

(1) that the 55 lots could be resold by Cheltenham only at “wholesale” prices to a buyer in bulk; and

(2) that the “gross”, or “retail” value of the 55 lots must be reduced to a “net” or “wholesale” value by allowing to Cheltenham, after estimated expenses, a “profit” of 20% of the gross sales price, plus an allowance of 14% per annum for the use of Cheltenham’s money—sometimes referred to as a reduction of profit to “present value” with a factor of 14%.

Henkelman, and all witnesses who testified on the point, conceded that the various lots were not all contiguous, and that all had been developed to a point where some of them, at least, could be (and, in fact, some were) sold to individuals for residences at “retail” prices of $6,000 to $7,000 per lot. That Henkelman gave no weight at all to the possibility that Cheltenham could sell some lots at “retail” obviously tends to affect adversely the value of his testimony. Further, it seems to us that there is an additional error in Henkelman’s approach from a “gross” or “retail” evaluation to a “net” or “wholesale” value: After deducting estimated expenses from the “gross” sales price, which is, of course, proper, although the various experts differ as to what those percentages should be, Henkelman deducts, first, a “profit” of 20% of the gross sales price and then, second, an allowance at 14% per annum to reduce what Henkelman terms the “fair market value” (a net 40% of the “gross” sales price) to its “present worth”.

*478 Henkelman estimated the gross sales price for the 55 lots, sold over a period of four years, at $452,420 and estimated expenses (promotion, commissions, administration and overhead) at 40%, or $180,968. The net of $271,452 can be termed a “gross profit”, and could be argued to represent “fair market value”, before whatever further adjustments are necessary, including, from a third party investor’s viewpoint certainly, an allowance for “profit”, or, from the mortgagee’s viewpoint, an allowance to reduce the “gross profit” to “present worth”, since payment of the mortgagor’s debt will be delayed over a period of 4 years.

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Bluebook (online)
451 A.2d 744, 305 Pa. Super. 471, 1982 Pa. Super. LEXIS 5525, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cheltenham-federal-savings-loan-assn-v-pocono-sky-enterprises-inc-pasuperct-1982.