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1895: after which year the rentals decreased from $15,406.87 to $8.845.72 in 1898.
Sir Matthew does not deal with the property as a whole, bu takes the land and building separately, giving $32,481 as the depreciation on the land; but as an earning power, they cannot be separated, and the value must be deducted from the earnings of the year before the rentals began to decrease.
was 1895.
That year
Clause 9 deals with the value of the Lot,when it ceased to
be a Marine Lot. Here again Sir Matthew is met by the conflict- ing evidence of Experts, but treats $2.50 per foot as the most correct valuation, and deducting this from $3.50 which he thought
fairly represented the value of the Lot as a Marine Lot, not withstanding Governor Des Voeux's valuation of $5.00 per foot, he arrives at the conclusion that $1 per foot, giving $32,481,
is the total amount for depreciation.
It is now contended that $110,000 was no criterion of the
value of the property in October 1899 because it was afterwards
sold for $140,000. In July 1859 the property was offered for
sale by auction and no purchaser could be found to pay more
than $100.000.
I then offered it to Messrs. Jardine, Matheson & Co. to
the HongKong & Kowloon Godown Company, to S. J. David & Co. and
Mr. Stephens offered it to Mr. Chater, for $110,000, and they
would not buy: but Mr. Hughes ultimately found a buyer in the
Humphreys Estate & Finance Comapny, who after about 7 months working, earning gross rentals of $1,754.87 during that time, sold it, I was informed, with a lease at $600 a month for the Western half to be used as a soda water factory for $120.000.
Had such a Thus the lease accounts for the rise in value.
lease been offered to us we should not have sold the property.
Clause 11 states that we are entitled to 10% on the amount
of depreciation. This should be on the ascertained value of the