Willowbrook Associates, Inc. v. Finance Administrator

77 A.D.2d 901, 431 N.Y.S.2d 552, 1980 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 12691
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedAugust 11, 1980
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 77 A.D.2d 901 (Willowbrook Associates, Inc. v. Finance Administrator) 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
Willowbrook Associates, Inc. v. Finance Administrator, 77 A.D.2d 901, 431 N.Y.S.2d 552, 1980 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 12691 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1980).

Opinion

In a consolidated proceeding to review certain real property tax assessments for the tax years 1972/1973 through 1975/1976, petitioners appeal from a judgment of the Supreme Court, Richmond County, dated August 16, 1977, which, inter alia, confirmed the assessments for the years under review. Judgment reversed, on the law and the facts, with costs, and it is directed that petitioners have judgment reducing the subject assessments for each of the years in question to a total of $1,300,000 (land: $220,000; building: $1,080,000). The subject property is improved with eight garden-type apartment structures containing 164 apartments with a total of 495 rooms. The improvements were completed during 1968 and 1969 and certificates of. occupancy were issued in January, 1971, approximately one year before the tax status date for the first year under review. Each building, is provided with paved outdoor parking areas for its residents and visitors; heating is supplied by 34 small boilers servicing separate sections of each of the eight structures; all interior public spaces are carpeted; window screens are supplied to all tenants; air conditioning is provided by individual wall-inserted units. The property was assessed as follows for the years under review:

TAX YEAR LAND BUILDING TOTAL
1972/73 $217,000 $1,187,000 $1,404,000
1973/74 220,000. 1,230,000 1,450,000
1974/75 220,000 1,230,000 1,450,000
1975/76 209,000 1,230,000 1,439,000
The respective experts appraised the property as follows: Joseph P. Walsh — Petitioners’ Expert
YEAR LAND BUILDING TOTAL
1972/73 $217,000 $1,053,808 $1,270,808
1973/74 217.000 1,015,570 1,232,570
1974/75 220.000 976,635 1,196,635
1975/76 220,000 949,098 1,169,098
Stanley Siebert — Respondents’ Expert:
YEAR LAND BUILDING TOTAL
1972/73 $280,000 $1,520,000 $1,800,000
1973/74 280,000 1.520.000 1,800,000
1974/75 280,000 1.520.000 1,800,000
1975/76 280,000 1.520.000 1,800,000

Both experts used the income approach, petitioners’ using the building residual technique, with a capitalization rate of 10!/i% for the land and VLVi% for the improvements, the latter rate consisting of 1010% "for return on improvements” and 2% for "allowance for recapture (50 year life)”. Respondents’ expert used an over-all capitalization rate of 9.75%. Special Term stated that it "afforded significant weight to the actual income and expenses submitted by respondent [sic] in its Exhibit 'A’.” In evaluating that exhibit, however, Special Term eliminated certain items of claimed expense [903]*903and made allowances for others. The court derived its own calculations of net income and then made further calculations, as follows:

TOTAL RETURN RETURN
ASSESSED INCLUDING TAX TO
"tax year NET INCOME VALUATION TAX RATE(%) RATE (%) owner(%)
1972/73 $272,418 $1,404,000 19.4 6.519 12.881
1973/74 282,095 1,450,000 19.4 6.908 12.492
1974/75 245,326 1,450,000 16.9 7.353 9.547
1975/76 262,342 1,439,000 18.2 8.187 10.547”

Special Term concluded: "The court finds a fair overall return to the subject owner for each of the tax years under review, to be EMA%. Accordingly, all the assessments for Land and Improvements for each of the tax years under review are confirmed.” In our opinion, Special Term erred in four respects.

I

Petitioners’ expert estimated that the buildings had a 50-year life. Both experts realized, however, that certain items used in connection with the buildings would have a shorter life than the buildings. Thus, petitioners’ expert estimated that the 164 air conditioners would have a five-year life span, whereas respondents’ expert estimated a 12 A year life. Petitioners’ expert estimated that the 162 gas ranges would have a life span of nine years; respondents’ expert’s estimate was 18 years. Both agreed that specific allowances should be made in the estimated expenses for the cost of replacing stoves, refrigerators, air conditioners, and for both interior and exterior painting. Since none of these replacement expenses had yet been incurred during the calendar years under review by virtue of the newness of the buildings,.both experts recognized that it was necessary and proper to anticipate and amortize those costs on an annual basis. Their allowances were as follows:

Walsh Siebert
(Petitioners) (Respondents)
Refrigerator/Stoves ■ $ 6,859 $2,475
Air Conditioners 5,576 1,771
Painting 2,858 4,691
$15,293 $8,937

Special Term erred in disregarding both experts and making no allowance for any of these costs.

II

Furthermore, there were five additional cost items not appearing in the actual expenses which both experts agreed also required allowance in some form, since they also depreciated faster than the building itself and therefore required intermittent replacement during the life of the building. However, while they agreed on that principle, they did not agree how the allowances for those five particular items should be made. Mr. Walsh, the petitioners’ expert, tabulated the following specific deductions in his report, [904]*904after stating their respective unit costs and full costs together with their separate useful lives:

Annual Deduction
Carpeting $ 2,100
Window Screens 1,100
Parking Area Paving 2,280
Roof Replacements 2,900
Small Heating Boilers 6,800
$15,180

In contrast, the respondents’ expert, Mr. Siebert, who had given specific computations for his range, refrigerator, air conditioner, and painting reserves, offered no specific figures on any of these five additional expense items. Significantly, he agreed that each item called for some allowance in the process whereby net income is determined and translated into capital value. His method was to include those allowances for all five items in some lump-sum manner in his 9.75% over-all capitalization rate. However, he could not explain how he had accomplished this, nor could he state the amount or rate of all or any of his állowances. We agree with petitioners’ contention that "His [Siebert’s] inability to do so of course impaired the credibility of his method, but it still left the significant admission that each of these five expense items required allowance in some, form.” Special Term erred in making no allowance for these five expense items. Petitioners argued that "Since the only evidence in the record specifying just what those allowances should be, was that of the petitioner’s [sic]

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Bluebook (online)
77 A.D.2d 901, 431 N.Y.S.2d 552, 1980 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 12691, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/willowbrook-associates-inc-v-finance-administrator-nyappdiv-1980.