Habern Realty Co. v. Tax Commission

102 A.D.2d 302, 478 N.Y.S.2d 868, 1984 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 18342
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJune 19, 1984
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 102 A.D.2d 302 (Habern Realty Co. v. Tax Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Habern Realty Co. v. Tax Commission, 102 A.D.2d 302, 478 N.Y.S.2d 868, 1984 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 18342 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1984).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Sandler, J. P.

In these consolidated tax certiorari proceedings seeking review of assessments of petitioner’s real property at 855 Sixth Avenue, Manhattan, for the tax years 1973/74 through 1981/82, petitioner appeals from a final judgment of the Supreme Court, New York County (Mangan, J.), entered June 28, 1982, confirming the total assessments.

The subject property is located at the northwest corner of Sixth Avenue at 30th Street, in a mixed commercial area [303]*303which is characterized south of 31st Street by low-rise tenements and loft buildings. The configuration of the site is irregular. With a frontage of only 47 feet on Sixth Avenue, the bulk of the plot runs west 189 feet along the north side of West 30th Street. A narrow portion of vacant land extends north to West 31st Street and is utilized as a public parking lot and as a passageway to the service entrance of the building. The site is improved with a six-story and basement office and store building erected in 1949.

The existing assessments and the respective appraised value for the subject property advanced respectively by the city’s appraiser and the petitioner’s appraiser are as follows:

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Although in disagreement on much else, the city’s expert and the petitioner’s expert agreed with each other, in accordance with long-accepted principles, that the prefera[304]*304ble method for evaluating this adequately developed income-producing property was income capitalization. (See Matter of City of New York [First Elephant Estates La Hermosa Church], 17 AD2d 317, 320; People ex rel. Gale v Tax Comm., 17 AD2d 225, 230; Matter of City of New York [Lincoln Sq. Slum Clearance Project], 15 AD2d 153, 161.) The sharply divergent total appraised values reached by the experts derive primarily from the application of different capitalization rates, although the record discloses other disagreements with regard to expenses and rentals that contributed to different estimates of net income.

Having determined the total value of the property for the years in question, the experts then undertook, as required by law, to apportion that value between the land and the building. For that purpose, both experts used sales of property in the immediate area in the preceding years. The method used was to adjust the appraised land values for the sold properties in accordance with the relationship between the amount for which each property was sold and its over-all appraised value. From those indicated land values, each expert derived a figure which he undertook to apply to the subject property, the city’s expert using a value per square foot and the petitioner’s expert using a unit lot price. Employing markedly different methods to adjust the values each derived from the different sales, the two experts reached strikingly different results with regard to the land value of the subject property.

In confirming the assessments, Special Term concluded that the land values advanced by the city’s expert were correct and that they could not be reconciled with the total appraised values found by petitioner’s expert on the basis of income capitalization. Without identifying any error in the income capitalization analysis of petitioner’s expert, Special Term determined that the incompatability of the appraised values found by petitioner’s expert with the land values found by Special Term to have been established rendered the conclusions of petitioner’s expert unreliable, and required rejection of petitioner’s challenge to the assessed values. We disagree both with the conclusion reached by Special Term and the basic approach which led to that conclusion.

[305]*305Even if the land value assigned by the city’s expert were more persuasively supported by the record than we believe it to be, it is doubtful that such a dispositive effect should have been accorded a value reached in the application of what both experts correctly believed to be the less satisfactory method under the circumstances to determine the total appraised value of the property.

No doubt there are occasions in which a secondary method, although less suitable to determining a reliable value under the circumstances, may be useful to the court in resolving an issue presented by conflicting expert testimony. (Cf. Matter of City of New York [Lincoln Sq. Slum Clearance Project], supra, at p 162; People ex rel. Gale v Tax Comm., supra, at p 231.) And in the situation which Special Term believed was presented, in which a value derived by the secondary method diverges sharply from the total assessed value found by an expert applying the preferable method, this difference might well justify a closer scrutiny of the data and methodology used by the expert in applying the ordinarily preferable method.

The situation presented is sharply to be distinguished from that in which an alternative value is presented by a truly comparable sale, such as a bona fide sale of the same property, at or near the relevant date. Clearly the price paid on such a sale would be entitled to careful consideration. (Matter of Zipel Realty Corp. v Finance Admin., 69 AD2d 837.) But even with regard to such a sale, it was observed by the court in People ex rel. Gale v Tax Comm. (supra, at p 231) that evidence “of the price paid at a bona fide sale [of the subject property] during or reasonably near the tax years is not conclusive in determining the value of the property. It would only be one element for consideration to be weighed with all other relevant factors.” Although such a sale may be highly relevant to determining value, “the time, the place, the circumstances and the conditions of the sale must be explored.” (People ex rel. Four Park Ave. Corp. v Lilly, 265 App Div 68, 71.)

In this case, both experts were in agreement that, in the absence of a truly comparable sale, the income capitalization method was superior. The comparable sales method was used only for the limited purpose of enabling the [306]*306experts to determine what part of the assessed values they had determined for the property as a whole should be allocated to the land. Central to the method adopted by both experts were the values allocated to land in the assessed values of the properties whose sales they considered. But it is obvious that in the usual situation of adequately developed income-producing properties the assessor’s allocation of value to the land follows determination of the over-all assessed value of the property, is not intended to be exact, and is often a rough estimate, if not indeed somewhat arbitrary. It was, accordingly, an error for Special Term to give such conclusive importance to a land value derived through an inherently inexact and unreliable procedure.

In any event, the land value derived by petitioner’s expert, essentially in agreement with that of the city assessor, is far more persuasively supported by the record. Indeed, the conclusion reached by respondent’s expert with regard to the land value is almost totally unsupported by probative evidence.

What emerges most clearly from the report and testimony of respondent’s expert is his total failure to explain the process by which he derived the land value he attributed to the subject property from the comparable sales that he relied upon. (See Shore Haven Apts. No. 6 v Commissioner of Fin., 93 AD2d 233, 236; Matter of Stoneleigh Parkway v Assessor of Town of Eastchester,

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Bluebook (online)
102 A.D.2d 302, 478 N.Y.S.2d 868, 1984 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 18342, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/habern-realty-co-v-tax-commission-nyappdiv-1984.