Opinion
McLACHLAN, J.
This appeal concerns the trial court’s decision as to the just compensation for real property subject to eminent domain. Specifically, the plaintiff, the housing authority of the city of West Haven,
appeals from the judgment of the trial court finding the total value of the Glen Oaks Condominiums in West Haven, which were owned by the defendants, including CB Alexander Real Estate, LLC,
based on the five year income capitalization approach applied by the defendants’ appraiser. We affirm the judgment of the trial court.
The following facts are relevant to the resolution of the plaintiffs appeal. In 2004, the plaintiff exercised its
power of eminent domain pursuant to General Statutes § 8-50
to acquire the real property subject to the current appeal. Pursuant to its eminent domain powers, the plaintiff took title to all of the units within the Glen Oaks condominium complex, to which it did not have title previously.
In its memorandum of decision, the court made the following factual findings. The plaintiff “filed statements of compensation for seventy-four units in the same period in which the defendants’ property was seized by eminent domain. Previously, the city of West Haven had transferred the sixteen units it owned to the plaintiff. The [plaintiff] thus acquired ownership of all ninety units in the Glen Oaks Condominiums. The [plaintiff] filed statements of compensation as to all seventy-four units it seized by eminent domain, including statements of compensation for each of the sixty-three units [owned by the defendants] . . . .” For these sixty-three units, the plaintiff deposited the sum of $341,002 with the clerk of the Superior Court. Pursuant to General Statutes § 8-132, the defendants filed applications for review of the statements of compensation for their respective units, thereby appealing from the plaintiffs statements of compensation.
At trial, the issue before the court was the amount of just compensation for the property seized by the plaintiff as of the date of the taking. The defendants proposed two methods of valuation: “[1] a straight market value determination
and (2) a business plan valuation based on allegations ‘that the plaintiff participated in the devaluation of the subject property.’ ” To calculate the proper valuation, the defendants retained the services of an appraiser, John Leary, president of Leary Counseling and Valuation, Inc.
Leary prepared an appraisal report, which was admitted as a full exhibit at trial and relied on by the court. Leary’s report detailed the two aforementioned valuation methods; however, the court found that Leary’s income capitalization method was the appropriate method to apply in the present case.
The court summarized Leary’s income capitalization analysis in its memorandum of decision by quoting from his appraisal report as follows: “The value of the [sixty-three] units as a
rental investment holding as of mid-year 2004 is estimated using a five-year discounted cash flow analysis. The capitalization method simulates the rights of an investor to an annual cash flow and to the resale of the property by quantifying the income and expense of the holding over a five-year period (cash flow) and calculating a reversion (resale value) at the end of the fifth year based [on] dividing the sixth year net operating income ... by a terminal capitalization rate. Two income projections are made to bracket market expectations: one with higher vacancy, repairs and maintenance, and management expenses, and one with lower vacancy, repairs and maintenance, and management expenses. Each year of the income projection is then discounted to a present value at a yield rate commensurate with the risk inherent in the income stream. The sum of the present values under each income projection represents the value range of the [sixty-three] units as of mid-year 2004.” In order to calculate the value at the time of taking, also referred to as the present value, Leary performed a discounted cash flow analysis. Essentially, Leary capitalized the income stream of the units projected for a five year period and discounted the rate they could be sold at in the sixth year.
On the basis of Leary’s report, the court concluded that “Leary did a thorough job of minimizing conjecture and speculation.” Therefore, the court accepted and adopted Leary’s conclusion that the value of the units was $1,986,600. In accepting the income capitalization approach, the court rejected the defendants’ business plan approach valuation of $2,240,000. Thus, the court concluded that the value of the subject property was $1,986,600.
This appeal followed.
The plaintiff argues that the court improperly accepted the income capitalization approach of the defendants’ appraiser. Specifically, the plaintiff claims that this estimate was flawed because it was based on “first year net operating income substantially in excess of the demonstrated actual net operating income of the units being appraised for the immediately preceding year . . . .’’In opposition, the defendants contend that the “well reasoned and detailed opinion of the trial court should be affirmed” because the plaintiff did not rebut or impeach the valuation testimony offered at trial by Leary. Moreover, the defendants argue that market value is a question of fact and because the plaintiff has not established that the court’s valuation determination is clearly erroneous, the judgment should be affirmed.
“We begin our analysis of this claim by setting forth the general, well established principles that govern the taking of real property by eminent domain. The fifth amendment to the United States constitution, as applied
to the states through the due process clause of the fourteenth amendment . . . provides that private property [shall not] be taken for public use, without just compensation. U.S. Const., amend. V. Article first, § 11, of the Connecticut constitution similarly provides that [t]he property of no person shall be taken for public use, without just compensation therefor. This constitutional principle is well reflected throughout the General Statutes and our case law. See, e.g.,
Minicucci
v.
Commissioner of Transportation,
211 Conn. 382, 384, 559 A.2d 216 (1989) ([t]he owner of land taken by condemnation is entitled to be paid just compensation . . .). [T]he question of what is just compensation is an equitable one rather than a strictly legal or technical one. The paramount law intends that the condemnee shall be put in as good condition pecuniarily by just compensation as he would have been in had the property not been taken. . . .
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Opinion
McLACHLAN, J.
This appeal concerns the trial court’s decision as to the just compensation for real property subject to eminent domain. Specifically, the plaintiff, the housing authority of the city of West Haven,
appeals from the judgment of the trial court finding the total value of the Glen Oaks Condominiums in West Haven, which were owned by the defendants, including CB Alexander Real Estate, LLC,
based on the five year income capitalization approach applied by the defendants’ appraiser. We affirm the judgment of the trial court.
The following facts are relevant to the resolution of the plaintiffs appeal. In 2004, the plaintiff exercised its
power of eminent domain pursuant to General Statutes § 8-50
to acquire the real property subject to the current appeal. Pursuant to its eminent domain powers, the plaintiff took title to all of the units within the Glen Oaks condominium complex, to which it did not have title previously.
In its memorandum of decision, the court made the following factual findings. The plaintiff “filed statements of compensation for seventy-four units in the same period in which the defendants’ property was seized by eminent domain. Previously, the city of West Haven had transferred the sixteen units it owned to the plaintiff. The [plaintiff] thus acquired ownership of all ninety units in the Glen Oaks Condominiums. The [plaintiff] filed statements of compensation as to all seventy-four units it seized by eminent domain, including statements of compensation for each of the sixty-three units [owned by the defendants] . . . .” For these sixty-three units, the plaintiff deposited the sum of $341,002 with the clerk of the Superior Court. Pursuant to General Statutes § 8-132, the defendants filed applications for review of the statements of compensation for their respective units, thereby appealing from the plaintiffs statements of compensation.
At trial, the issue before the court was the amount of just compensation for the property seized by the plaintiff as of the date of the taking. The defendants proposed two methods of valuation: “[1] a straight market value determination
and (2) a business plan valuation based on allegations ‘that the plaintiff participated in the devaluation of the subject property.’ ” To calculate the proper valuation, the defendants retained the services of an appraiser, John Leary, president of Leary Counseling and Valuation, Inc.
Leary prepared an appraisal report, which was admitted as a full exhibit at trial and relied on by the court. Leary’s report detailed the two aforementioned valuation methods; however, the court found that Leary’s income capitalization method was the appropriate method to apply in the present case.
The court summarized Leary’s income capitalization analysis in its memorandum of decision by quoting from his appraisal report as follows: “The value of the [sixty-three] units as a
rental investment holding as of mid-year 2004 is estimated using a five-year discounted cash flow analysis. The capitalization method simulates the rights of an investor to an annual cash flow and to the resale of the property by quantifying the income and expense of the holding over a five-year period (cash flow) and calculating a reversion (resale value) at the end of the fifth year based [on] dividing the sixth year net operating income ... by a terminal capitalization rate. Two income projections are made to bracket market expectations: one with higher vacancy, repairs and maintenance, and management expenses, and one with lower vacancy, repairs and maintenance, and management expenses. Each year of the income projection is then discounted to a present value at a yield rate commensurate with the risk inherent in the income stream. The sum of the present values under each income projection represents the value range of the [sixty-three] units as of mid-year 2004.” In order to calculate the value at the time of taking, also referred to as the present value, Leary performed a discounted cash flow analysis. Essentially, Leary capitalized the income stream of the units projected for a five year period and discounted the rate they could be sold at in the sixth year.
On the basis of Leary’s report, the court concluded that “Leary did a thorough job of minimizing conjecture and speculation.” Therefore, the court accepted and adopted Leary’s conclusion that the value of the units was $1,986,600. In accepting the income capitalization approach, the court rejected the defendants’ business plan approach valuation of $2,240,000. Thus, the court concluded that the value of the subject property was $1,986,600.
This appeal followed.
The plaintiff argues that the court improperly accepted the income capitalization approach of the defendants’ appraiser. Specifically, the plaintiff claims that this estimate was flawed because it was based on “first year net operating income substantially in excess of the demonstrated actual net operating income of the units being appraised for the immediately preceding year . . . .’’In opposition, the defendants contend that the “well reasoned and detailed opinion of the trial court should be affirmed” because the plaintiff did not rebut or impeach the valuation testimony offered at trial by Leary. Moreover, the defendants argue that market value is a question of fact and because the plaintiff has not established that the court’s valuation determination is clearly erroneous, the judgment should be affirmed.
“We begin our analysis of this claim by setting forth the general, well established principles that govern the taking of real property by eminent domain. The fifth amendment to the United States constitution, as applied
to the states through the due process clause of the fourteenth amendment . . . provides that private property [shall not] be taken for public use, without just compensation. U.S. Const., amend. V. Article first, § 11, of the Connecticut constitution similarly provides that [t]he property of no person shall be taken for public use, without just compensation therefor. This constitutional principle is well reflected throughout the General Statutes and our case law. See, e.g.,
Minicucci
v.
Commissioner of Transportation,
211 Conn. 382, 384, 559 A.2d 216 (1989) ([t]he owner of land taken by condemnation is entitled to be paid just compensation . . .). [T]he question of what is just compensation is an equitable one rather than a strictly legal or technical one. The paramount law intends that the condemnee shall be put in as good condition pecuniarily by just compensation as he would have been in had the property not been taken. . . .
“We have stated repeatedly that [t]he amount that constitutes just compensation is the market value of the condemned property when put to its highest and best use at the time of the taking. ... In determining market value, it is proper to consider all those elements which an owner or a prospective purchaser could reasonably urge as affecting the fair price of the land . . . . The fair market value is the price that a willing buyer would pay a willing seller based on the highest and best possible use of the land assuming, of course, that a market exists for such optimum use.
Mazzola
v.
Commissioner [of Transportation],
175 Conn. 576, 581-82, 402 A.2d 786 (1978).
Minicucci
v.
Commissioner of Transportation,
supra, [211 Conn.] 384. The highest and best use concept, chiefly employed as a starting point in estimating the value of real estate by appraisers, has to do with the use which will most likely produce the highest market value, greatest financial return, or the most profit from the use of a particular
piece of real estate.
State National Bank
v.
Planning & Zoning Commission,
156 Conn. 99, 101, 239 A.2d 528 (1968). . . .
Robinson
v.
Westport,
222 Conn. 402, 405-406, 610 A.2d 611 (1992). . . .
“[B]ecause each parcel of real property is in some ways unique, trial courts must be afforded substantial discretion in choosing the most appropriate method of determining the value of a taken property.” (Citations omitted; internal quotation marks omitted.)
Northeast Ct. Economic Alliance, Inc.
v.
ATC Partnership,
256 Conn. 813, 827-29, 776 A.2d 1068 (2001).
Moreover, “[i]n actions requiring . . . a valuation of property, the trial court is charged with the duty of making an independent valuation of the property involved. . . . [N]o one method of valuation is controlling .... In determining the value of the property taken, the trier arrives at its own conclusions by weighing the opinions of the appraisers, the claims of the parties, and its own general knowledge of the elements going to establish value, and then employs the most appropriate method to determine the damages that result from the taking. . . . [T]he trial court has the right to accept so much of the testimony of the experts and the recognized appraisal methods which they employed as he finds applicable; his determination is reviewable only if he misapplies, overlooks, or gives a wrong or improper effect to any test or consideration which it was his duty to regard. ... On appeal, it is the function of this court to determine whether . . . [the conclusions of the trial court] are legally and logically correct and whether they find support in the facts set out in the memorandum of decision; where the factual basis of the court’s decision is challenged we must determine whether the facts set out in the memorandum of decision are supported by the evidence or whether, in light of the evidence and the pleadings in the whole record, those facts are clearly erroneous.” (Citation
omitted; internal quotation marks omitted.)
Bristol
v.
Tilcon Minerals, Inc.,
284 Conn. 55, 70, 931 A.2d 237 (2007).
To prevail, the plaintiff is required to demonstrate that the court’s findings were clearly erroneous when it accepted and relied on Leary’s valuations for the income capitalization approach. See id. In an attempt to meet its burden, the plaintiff argues that the court improperly “accepted . . . Leary’s methodology in determining projected management, repair and expense figures, which must be deducted from the market rentals (less vacancy) to arrive at net operating income” for the subject property, which is a critical variable in income capitalization valuation.
Net operating income is not only a critical variable, it is also a prerequisite in the income capitalization approach. In order to arrive at the net operating income, Leary first obtained the gross income, which was the retail income in this case. In its memorandum of decision, the court carefully and meticulously described the steps that Leary took in arriving at his valuation. As the court explained, gross income “is arrived at with a deduction in rental properties for vacancies and credit loss .... Then expenses are calculated, which are deducted from effective gross income to produce the net operating income.
“To determine rental income . . . Leary took several steps. He inspected fifty-five of the sixty-three units in question, which [he] rated . . . from poor to fair to average to good and very good with intermediate steps between each category where necessary. He examined the rental histoiy of the sixty-three units appraised against the investigatory background to determine market rent for the units, which is necessary in a highest and best use analysis. If anything, his estimates of market rent for each apartment were conservative; in the
great majority of cases, the market rent was the same as the actual rent being charged for each unit (which he listed) in May, 2004.” Leary also examined actual rents from other similar units as well as performing a comparative analysis of other rents in the area of the subject property, which ranged between $100 and $150 a month higher than those at the Glen Oaks property.
Leary then projected the gross income and expense figures out over a period of five years to arrive at net operating income. Gross rental income was projected out at a 6 percent increase per year based on performance for a few years before 2004. He calculated both the projected expenses and the percentage increase for the vacancy-credit loss deduction. In order to calculate expenses, Leary examined the expenses for part of the subject property for the calendar years of 2001, 2002 and 2003. He ran both a lower and higher end income projection for each of the following categories: income growth rates, vacancy and credit loss, repairs and replacements, management, expense growth rate, real estate tax growth rate and year one expenses per unit.
In his appraisal report, Leary calculated the percentage projections on the basis of his “selection of a terminal capitalization rate for the two income projections . . . based in part on the Real Estate Research Corporation . . . real estates reports for spring, 2004, and summer, 2004. [Real Estate Research Corporation] defines third tier investment properties as: older properties with functional inadequacies and/or marginal locations.”
(Internal quotation marks omitted.) On the basis
of his calculations, and his inspection of fifty-five units,
Leary assigned a final market value to each of the representative units.
“The values for the representative units, as found by Leary, [were] as follows:
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“In accordance with the procedure set forth in the stipulation [in Leary’s appraisal report], market value for the sixty-three units would be calculated as follows:
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As the court stated, the plaintiff “did not rely on an expert of its own. In the posture adopted at trial, the
[plaintiff] did not appear to object to the use of the income capitalization method adopted by [Leary] or other elements of his methodology such as the use of a lower end income projection and an upper end income projection.”
In the present action, the plaintiff challenges the calculations that Leary used to determine the net operating income, a critical variable in the income capitalization valuation calculation. In challenging Leary’s net operating income valuation, the plaintiff alleges that the court’s use of Leary’s “percentage [of effective gross income] projections suggested for third tier properties [older properties with functional inadequacies or marginal locations] in reference works mentioned to calculate other expenses and the vacancy-credit loss figure” was improper. The plaintiff contends that the units are more than just older properties with inadequacies or in marginal locations; rather, the properties are distressed and in a blighted area. Thus, the expense projections should be higher than those calculated by Leary. The plaintiff further argues that the court, in relying on Leary’s calculations, in which he projected the cash flow in the first year using actual expense figures only with respect to common charges and real estate taxes and calculating all other expenses as percentages of
gross income that were “double the actual, historical net operating income,” was improper and amounts to “little more than conjecture and speculation.”
In opposition, the defendants maintain that the plaintiff never offered any other valuation evidence at trial and on appeal is essentially attempting to receive a review of Leary’s appraisal. Moreover, the defendants assert that the plaintiff offers no support for its arguments that the court’s findings were clearly erroneous. We agree.
The court has substantial discretion to determine the appropriate valuation for the Glen Oaks property and to accept or reject an expert’s opinion as to the valuation.
See Northeast Ct. Economic Alliance, Inc.
v.
ATC Partnership,
supra, 256 Conn. 829; see also
Griffin
v.
Nationwide Moving & Storage Co.,
187 Conn. 405, 422-23, 446 A.2d 799 (1982). “In arriving at the value of property, no one method is controlling, and there is no rule of law that any particular method of valuation must be followed. It is a matter of opinion based on all the evidence and, at best, is one of approximation.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.)
Crowther
v.
Guidone,
183 Conn. 464, 470, 441 A.2d 11 (1981). Moreover,
the court is charged with the duty of making an independent determination of value and fair compensation in light of all of the circumstances. See
Northeast Ct. Economic Alliance, Inc.
v.
ATC Partnership,
supra, 829. Here, the court did just that. The court examined both of the valuation methods suggested by the defendants and used its substantial discretion to accept the income capitalization method applied by Leary. It thoroughly examined Leary’s valuations and did not rely on conjecture or speculation when it accepted Leary’s valuation of the subject property. Leary’s appraisal addressed and accounted for the “marginal” conditions of some of the condominium units. Moreover, at trial and on appeal, the plaintiff neither challenged the income capitalization approach, nor did it offer any independent evidence as to the value of the subject property.
The plaintiff had the burden to demonstrate that the court’s finding of the value of the property on the basis of Leary’s income capitalization calculation was clearly erroneous. It has failed to meet this burden.
The judgment is affirmed.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.