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Anoka County City of Lino Lakes <br />Appraisal Terminology <br />CLASSIFICATION The class that a type of property is assigned. A property's classification is <br />based upon the existing use of the property. If the land is vacant and there is no identifiable use, <br />the proper classification would be the most probable use of the land, which would most likely be <br />determined by the zoning classification. <br />CLASSIFICATION RATES The class rate assigned to a particular classification of property. <br />Classification rates are established by the state legislature. Class rates are the same upon the <br />same class of property throughout Minnesota. <br />COEFFICIENT OF DISPERSION Average deviation of a group of numbers from the median, <br />expressed as a percentage of the median. <br />COEFFICIENT OF VARIATION Standard deviation expressed as a percentage of the mean. <br />COMPARABLES (COMPARABLE SALES) Recently sold properties that are similar in <br />important respects to a property being appraised to assist in estimating the value of a specific <br />property. <br />COST APPROACH That approach in appraisal analysis which is based on the proposition that <br />the informed purchaser would pay no more than the cost of producing a substitute property with <br />the same utility as the subject property. It is particularly applicable when the property being <br />appraised involves relatively new improvements which represent the highest and best use of the <br />land or when relatively unique or specialized improvements are located on the site and for which <br />there exist no comparable properties on the market. <br />DEPRECIATION A loss of utility and, hence, value from any cause. An effect caused by <br />deterioration and /or obsolescence. Deterioration or physical depreciation is evidenced by wear <br />and tear, decay, dry rot, cracks, encrustational or structural defects. Obsolescence is divisible <br />into two parts, functional and economic. Functional obsolescence may be due to poor floor plan, <br />mechanical inadequacy or over adequacy, functional inadequacy or over adequacy due to size, <br />style, age, etc. It is evidenced by conditions within the property. Economic obsolescence is <br />caused by changes external to the property, such as neighborhood infiltrations of inharmonious <br />groups or property uses, legislation, etc. It is also the actual decline in market value of the <br />improvement to land from time of purchase to the time of resale. <br />• CURABLE DEPRECIATION Those items of physical deterioration and functional <br />obsolescence which are economically feasible to cure and hence are customarily <br />repaired or replaced by a prudent property owner. The estimate of this depreciation is <br />usually computed as a dollar amount of the cost -to -cure. <br />■ INCURABLE DEPRECIATION Elements of physical deterioration or functional <br />obsolescence which either cannot be corrected; or, if possible to correct, cannot be <br />corrected except at a cost in excess of their contribution to the value of the property. <br />PHYSICAL DEPRECIATION A reduction in utility resulting from an impairment of physical <br />condition. For purposes of appraisal analysis, it is most common and convenient to divide <br />physical deterioration into curable and incurable components. <br />• PHYSICAL CURABLE DEPRECIATION Physical deterioration which the prudent <br />buyer would anticipate correction upon purchase of the property. The cost of effecting <br />52 <br />