Connecticut Savings Bank v. City of New Haven

41 A.2d 765, 131 Conn. 575, 1945 Conn. LEXIS 131
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedFebruary 21, 1945
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 41 A.2d 765 (Connecticut Savings Bank v. City of New Haven) 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
Connecticut Savings Bank v. City of New Haven, 41 A.2d 765, 131 Conn. 575, 1945 Conn. LEXIS 131 (Colo. 1945).

Opinions

Jennings, J.

The preliminary statement above sufficiently describes the general situation. Both cases were tried together before a state referee. Both appeals are based on the overruling of remonstrances to the reports. The plaintiff claims that all of the valuations placed on the properties are too high The defendant claims that no reductions should have been granted. Ninety-seven different assessments are involved but neither side has requested detailed analysis of each individual assessment except in so far as is necessary to test the validity of the conclusions reached by the referee, with which the trial court refused to interfere. Both sides co-operated in the presentation of the evidence, and the analysis of the exhibits in the briefs of the plaintiff is skillful and thorough and has been most helpful in the study of this complicated record.

The reports in both appeals were substantially identical. They are divided into two parts. Part A may be summarized as follows: The subject properties consisted of various types but were of a kind to interest only those who bought real estate as an investment, to derive either income therefrom or a profit on resale, or both. The plaintiff had held mortgages *578 on all of these properties and had acquired title thereto either by foreclosure or quitclaim deeds from the owners of the equity. Nearly all of them had been sold at the time of trial. Most of the sales were in 1941. The plaintiff was not forced to sell them but it was the holder of a very large number of properties acquired by foreclosure of its mortgages and was in a sense an “unwilling holder.” It proceeded to liquidate its holdings for the best prices it could obtain. The prices realized did not conclusively determine the fair market value of these properties for assessment purposes.

The experts of the plaintiff based their appraisals, made before sale, upon sales of similar and comparable properties during the years 1936 through 1941. They also applied to the subject properties methods of appraisal which utilized reproduction cost of the buildings less depreciation and obsolescence and capitalization of net and gross income.

The defendant’s experts testified that during this period there was no “normal” market from which the fair market value of real property could be determined; they did not base their appraisals on sales of similar and comparable properties but, as regards buildings, upon capitalization of gross and net income and reproduction cost less depreciation and obsolescence; and they added to the values so determined the values of the land. Five per cent was a fair, reasonable and accepted percentage to be used as a factor in capitalizing net income.

There was a market for real property in New Haven between 1936 and 1941. Besides the subject properties, between two hundred and fifty and three hundred other properties comparable thereto were sold during that period, a majority of them by banks and insurance companies. Following the general business *579 depression in 1930, there was a very substantial decrease in the number of transfers, and the prices realized were not comparable with those obtained prior to that date. As compared with the years prior to 1930, the market in 1940 was not a “normal” market. The market between 1936 and 1941 was not such a market that sales then made could be relied on exclusively as determining the true and actual value of property over a period of years, wdiich is deemed to be the fair market value of property for assessment purposes.

Since 1930, the assessors have reduced the assessments on nearly all of these properties, in many cases very substantially. After the bringing of the appeal from the assessment of 1940, the assessors examined the subject properties and other properties in the same area and reduced the assessment upon certain of the plaintiff’s properties and certain other properties in the same area, to equalize the assessments upon the list of 1941. After the closing sessions of the board of tax review in each of the years 1940 and 1941, the board visited each of the subject properties and reviewed it in connection with the values placed upon other comparable properties. It reduced the values on twenty-nine of the properties on the list of 1940 in the gross amount of $37,875, and on seven on the list of 1941 in the gross amount of $23,165. The total assessed value of the plaintiff’s property involved in these appeals was $2,210,690 and the total value as fixed by the referee was $1,954,100, a further reduction by him of $256,590. The figures are from the plaintiff’s brief.

Part B of the report consisted of an analysis of each property. The following quotation is a fair sample. The last sentence appeared in each case, only the amounts varying.

*580 “201 Bishop Street.

' “This property was a one family frame house upon which the mortgage was $9975. It was insured for $14,000» Its reproduction cost of the house, less depreciation and obsolescence was $8000. The net income .reasonably to be expected from the property would be $500. Capitalized at 5% the value of the property - upon that method of valuation would be $10,000. The property was sold on May 5, 1942, for $6000. The land, was assessed at $4000 and the building at $12,000, a total of $16,000.

“The true and actual value and fair market value of the land was $4000 and of the building $6000, a total of $10,000.”

The plaintiff remonstrated against the acceptance of the report. The remonstrance requests the elimination of one. fact found without evidence, asks that the report be recommitted or, in the alternative, that certain facts be added, and claims that in any event the report, should not be accepted for reasons apparent on its face. One ruling on evidence was also included in the remonstrance but this was not pursued in the brief. The motion to recommit was denied, the remonstrance was overruled and judgment was entered on the report. The assignments of error, in substance, make these rulings the subject of the appeal. Its consideration is simplified by the preliminary statement of the question presented in the plaintiff’s brief:

“(1) In an appeal from the doings of a Board of Relief claiming excessive assessment where a market fof the property in question is found to exist, is it error for the trier of fact to consider evidence of value computed by those methods approved for use only in cases where eoncededly there is no market?

“(2) Was it error in any case for the trier to find values almost uniformly so far in excess of the evi *581 dence of market value as to show that he gave little or no weight to such evidence?”

The rules for the determination of the amount for which property should be assessed have a very considerable legislative history. The present method of basing taxation upon the valuation of property by assessors originated in Chapter 2 of the Public Acts passed at the May session, 1819. According to the statute in force in 1821, dwelling houses were to be set in the list “valued at the rate which each separate dwelling-house and lot . . . are worth in money, and with due regard to the situation, use and income thereof.” Statutes, 1821, p. 446, § 2. Market value first appears in Chapter 47 of the Public Acts of 1851.

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Bluebook (online)
41 A.2d 765, 131 Conn. 575, 1945 Conn. LEXIS 131, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/connecticut-savings-bank-v-city-of-new-haven-conn-1945.