New Haven Water Co. v. Board of Tax Review

422 A.2d 946, 178 Conn. 100, 1979 Conn. LEXIS 819
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedJune 26, 1979
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 422 A.2d 946 (New Haven Water Co. v. Board of Tax Review) 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
New Haven Water Co. v. Board of Tax Review, 422 A.2d 946, 178 Conn. 100, 1979 Conn. LEXIS 819 (Colo. 1979).

Opinion

Longo, J.

The plaintiff, a privately owned water company supplying water for domestic and commercial uses in, inter alia, the town of Prospect, appealed to the Court of Common Pleas from the action of the defendant board of tax review of the town of Prospect in refusing to reduce the valuation and assessment on certain real property owned by the plaintiff situated in the town of Prospect. The plaintiff’s claim of unlawful assessment was and is limited to a portion of its land, comprising approximately 791 acres, used as a watershed for its Prospect reservoir, and certified as forest land by the state forester in 1970 pursuant to § 12-107d *102 of the General Statutes. 1 The trial court did not agree with the plaintiff’s claim that the defendant’s method of valuation for its forest land during the taxable years 1970 through 1974 was improper and illegal and that the resulting assessment values were therefore disproportionate and excessive. In so doing, the court accepted the method of assessment valuation advanced by the defendant at trial. The court, moreover, rejected a separate claim made by the plaintiff relating to the town’s failure to classify the plaintiff’s approximately 791 acres as forest land for the taxable year 1974.

The facts, as stipulated by the parties and as found by the court disclose the following: On September 17, 1970, the state forester issued forest land certificate No. 1331 to the plaintiff, designating 791 acres of the plaintiff’s property as certified forest land, pursuant to § 12-107d of the General Statutes. On October 5, 1970, and thereafter in 1971, 1972 and 1973, the plaintiff duly applied, in proper form, to the Prospect assessor for classification of the above land as forest land. The plaintiff’s application for forest land classification was denied in each year by the town’s assessor, and each denial was affirmed by the defendant board of review. Based on these denials, the assessor and the defendant valued the plaintiff’s certified forest land acres for taxation purposes at their fair market value, rather than their “current use value” as is provided for classified forest land under § 12-63 of the General Statutes. The parties agreed, however, in the trial court that during the above years *103 (1970-1973) this portion of the plaintiff’s real property in Prospect, which had been certified as forest land and used as a watershed for the protection and preservation of water purity in the plaintiff’s Prospect reservoir, should have been valued and assessed for taxation purposes as if it had properly been classified by the assessor as forest land. 2 Thus, at this stage of the proceeding, the only issue before the trial court, with the exception of the taxable year 1974, was the assessment in each year (1970-1973) which should have been made had the forester’s certificate been recognized and the land classified as forest land.

With respect to the year 1974, the same basic issue of valuation, with a slight variation, was presented. The plaintiff did not file an application for forest land classification of its certified 791 acres in 1974, in purported reliance upon the provisions of § 6 of 1974 Public Act No. 343 (General Statutes § 12-504h) which provided, in part, “Any land which has been classified by the record owner as . . . forest land pursuant to section 12-107d . . . shall remain so classified without the filing of any new application subsequent to such classification, notwithstanding the provisions of said sections . . . 12-707d . . . .” The defendant responded that pursuant to § 12-107c (c) of the General Statutes 3 *104 it was not legally required to assess the disputed land as certified forest land because no application for such a classification had been made by the plaintiff in 1974. The defendant refused to classify the plaintiff’s land as forest land for 1974, and assessed it at fair market value. The court was thus additionally required to decide whether the Prospect assessor was legally required to assess the plaintiff’s land as forest land pursuant to § 12-107d, at the valuation rate provided in § 12-63, rather than at fair market value, notwithstanding its failure to file an application for forest land classification in 1974.

The trial court found, in accord with the valuation theory advanced by the defendant’s experts, that under § 12-63 of the General Statutes, set out more fully herein, the “current use” value of the plaintiff’s land should be determined by capitalizing that portion of the plaintiff’s net income attributable to the sale of water drawn from its Prospect reservoir, and determined the full current use value of the 791 acres for each of the taxable years in question. The court found further that, for taxable year 1974, § 12-504h of the General Statutes did not excuse the owners of land not classified as forest land from filing an application for such classification, notwithstanding that the assessor had wrongfully refused to classify the land as forest land during the years 1970-1973, and concluded that the assessor was entitled to assess the plaintiff’s land at fair market value in 1974. From the judgment rendered, the plaintiff has appealed to this court.

*105 The plaintiff’s numerous assignments of error may be discussed in the context of the following two issues: (1) whether the court erred in finding that the defendant’s method of valuing the plaintiff’s certified forest land, for the years 1970-1973, was proper under § 12-63 of the General Statutes, and in concluding that the assessment values derived by that method were not illegal, disproportionate and excessive; and (2) whether the court erred in concluding that the plaintiff was not entitled to have its certified forest land classified and valued as forest land in 1974.

I

A

Section 12-63 of the General Statutes governs the valuation of classified forest land, providing in pertinent part: “The present true and actual value of land classified ... as forest land pursuant to section 12-107d . . . shall be based upon its current use without regard to neighborhood land use of a more intensive nature .... The present true and actual value of all other property shall be deemed by all assessors and boards of tax review to be the fair market value thereof and not its value at a forced or auction sale.” Pursuant to this valuation rate, the “present true and actual value” of classified forest land must reflect the actual use to which the land is being put by its owner; Rustici v. Stonington, 174 Conn. 10, 14, 381 A.2d 532 (1977); and although no single, particular formula is required for appropriate valuation; id.; Xerox Corporation v. Board of Tax Review, 175 Conn. 301, 306, 397 A.2d 1367 (1978); Lomas & Nettleton Co. v. Waterbury, 122 Conn. 228, 231, 188 A. 433 (1936); capitalization of net income is an acceptable and com *106

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Bluebook (online)
422 A.2d 946, 178 Conn. 100, 1979 Conn. LEXIS 819, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/new-haven-water-co-v-board-of-tax-review-conn-1979.