_ property under proper conditions. The value of the lease was set
_ down at £2,908 - that is, a lease with twenty-five years to run - with
the added value which the existence of the improvements gave to
the unimproved value. The bank rate of interest in 1921 was 7 per
cent. The present annual value of £2,908 at 7 per cent, due twenty-
five years hence, represents in round figures £249. This sum, added
to the rent of £544 per annum, represents what, to the purchaser,
was the annual value (£793) for twenty-five years he was giving for
_ the property in its then condition. That sum, capitalized at 10 per
cent - the rate adopted by the Department when it capitalizes
another fixed annual charge, land tax - produces £7,930. Add
£10,696 to this sum, and the improved capital value of the land in
its actual condition with the existing improvements is arrived at,
namely, £18,626. The next step is to subtract the cost of improving
the property, and I take Mr. Mitchell's estimate, £18,250. The result
is the unimproved value of the land, and it then appears that there
'is no lessee's estate in this land. This had already been shown when
he figure of £7,930 was arrived at, because 44 per cent of that does
not exceed the annual rent (£544) reserved by the lease (sec. 28
(3)(a)). The difference between the value and the rent is in favour
of the lessee, and consequently there is no taxable value of the land.
The same result would follow if, instead of 10 per cent, one were to
e 7 per cent, the bank rate of interest, to capitalize the annual
ue arrived at; but I think that 10 per cent is the rate that
should be adopted. A sale of the subject land, or of comparable
land, affords the best means of arriving at the fee simple value of
ny land, and in any other cases similar to this the Commissioner
hould adopt the method I have already indicated, and so solve the
problem set by the Act.