Fruit Growers Express Co. v. City of Alexandria

221 S.E.2d 157, 216 Va. 602, 1976 Va. LEXIS 173
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJanuary 16, 1976
DocketRecord 740856
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 221 S.E.2d 157 (Fruit Growers Express Co. v. City of Alexandria) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fruit Growers Express Co. v. City of Alexandria, 221 S.E.2d 157, 216 Va. 602, 1976 Va. LEXIS 173 (Va. 1976).

Opinion

Poff, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Fruit Growers Express Company (landowner) filed an application pursuant to Code § 58-1145 (Replj Vol. 1974) for relief from erroneous tax assessment made by the City of Alexandria (the City). On the City’s motion, the trial court struck landowner’s evidence and, by final order entered May 3, 1974, dismissed the application.

The subject property is a 30.55 acre tract zoned 1-2 (heavy industrial) . It is situated near the highway interchange between Interstate 495 (Beltway) and Telegraph Road. The northern boundary *603 lies One block south of and parallel to Duke Street. The southern boundary parallels the rights of way of the RF&P and Southern railroads. At a width of 350 feet between these boundaries, the property runs a distance of 4,000 feet between Quaker Lane on the west and Telegraph Road on the east. The land is nearly level, but its elevation is below that of land to the north. Although the subject property is improved by railroad spur tracks, shop buildings, and hardstand storage and work areas, landowner did not challenge the assessment on these improvements but only the assessment on the land itself. The challenged assessment was based on an appraisal of $2,030,700, a valuation of approximately $1.53 per square foot.

Under familiar principles, we review the depositions and ore tenus evidence in the light most favorable to landowner.

Walter C. Robbins, Jr., a general contractor engaged in development of large industrial properties, testified that the highest and best use of the property was industrial. He further testified he would either develop the property as an industrial park and “sell off units”, or construct three large buildings of “high cubage” to be leased for “bulk storage or manufacturing”. Robbins said that he “would probably develop [the subject property] into three buildings of at least 100,000 feet each, in three stages over a period of three to five years”, and that, because of inflation, it would be “less expensive to do all the [development] work at one time and pay the carrying costs”. When asked about market value, Robbins said:

“I don’t think you can take and put a value on that piece of ground until you decide what your development costs are to have it ready to build. You have to back into value of ground .... You don’t know until you decide exactly how many dollars worth of development costs are involved.
“Now, whatever these development costs are should be subtracted from whatever you feel the value is less whatever profit you want to make or expenses; and that is the net value of that land today for that use.”

Kenneth Marks, a corporate official engaged in the buying, selling, and leasing of “warehouse space”, stated that raw land must be valued on “an individual basis”, and that the market value for the subject property would be computed by first estimating the “gross rental income” from leases of warehouse space, the development costs, *604 and the expected return on cash invested. Marks believed that a developer would require a “minimum” return on equity, before taxes, of 12 per cent, and projected the “sell-out” or “lease-out” time at “three to six years”.

Landowner’s next witness, Arthur Crawford Mosely, Jr., was a “developer of industrial and warehouse properties.” He testified that he “basically works backwards in determining market value”, i.e., after estimating the “market rents for a certain location”, he “would determine whether that rent would support whatever is being asked for the land.”

Dolph R. Traver, a real estate investment manager knowledgeable in the valuation of large tracts suitable for automobile dealerships, testified that the subject property was not suitable for that purpose. He said that market price is a function of land development costs and that such costs “are routinely investigated before serious negotiations with the seller.”

After the assessment was made by the City, landowner employed Walter Lee Phillips, Jr., a professional engineer and land surveyor, to prepare a “feasibility study” for the subject property. At trial, Phillips estimated that the development costs for a “layout to maximize the industrial warehouse space” on the property would be $1,310,346. Without objection, landowner introduced an exhibit showing itemized cost estimates prepared by Phillips. This exhibit showed that the development costs would be incurred in four separate phases, but it did not show the time interval for each phase or the total time period over which development costs would be incurred.

Landowner’s principal witness, McCloud B. Hodges, Jr., a professional appraiser, testified that “the maximum monetary profit from this land can be derived on the 1st of January, ’72, by developing a good quality—and it would have to be good quality—permanent warehouse park with rail service serving the back ends of almost all of the buildings backing up to it.” He further stated that the property should be “subdivided and sold in smaller parts to various users.”

Hodges’ opinion of the market value of the subject property on January 1, 1972, was premised upon “development cost analysis”, a valuation method designed to determine the value of the property “as it could be developed”. Hodges conceded that comparable sales would have provided a better valuation approach but said that he “didn’t have enough market data” on sales of unfinished land. He explained that his appraisal method involved a process of “working. *605 backwards” or “backing into” present market value after first determining anticipated income from sales of finished sites. Expanding upon his explanation, Hodges said:

“The development costs are the important thing, because the difference between the retail value of the finished site in the aggregate and the total development costs and other costs, such as the time value of money, the interest on the deferred purchase money note to the seller of the land and the interest on the development or construction loans, the difference between all the income and all the expenses represents land value; and that is the basis for the entire valuation.”

Hodges further testified that the market data on sales of finished industrial sites, (i.egraded sites with all utilities and drainage facilities in place), situated on land comparable to the subject land, showed market values within a range of $1.50 to $2.25 per square foot on January 1, 1972. Hodges believed that if the subject property were developed as an industrial park and individual lots were sold, it would “command the highest price in that range, $2.25 a square foot, for all of our net usable land.” Hodges estimated that, as a finished industrial park, the property would have a value of $2,454,206 but said that because of market absorption limitations, there would be “a minimum development time of 3/z years and a maximum development time of 6/z years.”

Utilizing a portable computer programmed for discounted cash flow analysis, Hodges obtained a print-out showing 12 different “value range estimates”.

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Bluebook (online)
221 S.E.2d 157, 216 Va. 602, 1976 Va. LEXIS 173, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fruit-growers-express-co-v-city-of-alexandria-va-1976.