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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Neville v Cowdray Trust Ltd & Anor [2006] EWCA Civ 709 (05 May 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2006/709.html Cite as: [2006] 1 WLR 2097, [2006] EWCA Civ 709 |
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IN THE COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM CHICHESTER COUNTY COURT
HIS HONOUR JUDGE ROBIN BARRATT QC
Strand London, WC2 |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE LATHAM
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CAROLINE LINDA ANNETTE NEVILLE | CLAIMANT/RESPONDENT | |
- v - | ||
THE COWDRAY TRUST LTD | ||
RATHBONE TRUST COMPANY LTD | DEFENDANTS/APPELLANTS |
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Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited
190 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7404 1400 Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
MS J MOSS (instructed by Messrs James MR Debenham, East Farm House, Affpuddle,
Dorchester, DT2 7HH) appeared on behalf of the Respondent
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Crown Copyright ©
"… means 23 March 1965 or such later date as by virtue of section 25(3) of the Rent Act 1977 would be the appropriate day for the purposes of that Act in relation to a dwelling house consisting of the house in question if the reference in paragraph (a) of that provision to a rateable value were to a rateable value other than nil."
Section 25(3) of the 1977 Act produces, at most, 9 August 1967 as the appropriate day for this purpose. The comparison would then be between a currently yearly rent of £200 and an historical net rateable value of £158. This rent is not less than two-thirds of this rateable value. None of that is contentious, except that the appellants say that the proper meaning of section 25(3) of the 1977 Act would produce in this case an appropriate day earlier than 9 August 1967, and thus a lesser rateable value.
(a) the tenancy was entered into on or after 1 April 1963 but before 1 April 1990, as this tenancy was;
(b) the property had a rateable value other than nil at the date of the commencement of the tenancy or else at any time before 1 April 1990; and
(c) either no rent was payable under the tenancy in respect of the property during the initial year or the aggregate amount of rent so payable during that year did not exceed two-thirds of the rateable value of the property on the "relevant date".
The initial year in this case means the year from 29 September 1965. For that year, the lease stipulated a rent of £100. As to the "relevant date", section 4A(2) provides that this means:
"… the date of the commencement of the tenancy or, if the property did not have a rateable value, or had a rateable value of nil, on that date, the date on which it first had a rateable value other than nil."
The judge's decision
"The claimant contends that this property which is now a single dwelling house had no rateable value at the commencement of the tenancy in October 1965.
On the defendants' case the landlords contend that the proper approach is to take the property, the subject of the tenancy, as the two separate cottages at the commencement of the tenancy in October 1965. Both cottages had a net rateable value of £21 appearing in the valuation list at the appropriate time. The rent payable at all times was plainly more than two-thirds of the rateable value of either or both of these cottages at all times throughout the tenancy.
The claimant of course accepts that no claim to acquire the freehold could have been made to acquire the freehold of the two cottages under section 1 and 4 of the 1967 Act. Indeed she also accepts that because there were two cottages until their conversion into a single dwelling house, neither could have been enfranchised anyway. (Malekshad v Howard de Walden Estates Limited [2003] 1 AC 1013) Furthermore she also points out that in terms of layout and juxtaposition, there was probably in any event a horizontal overlap physically between the two properties which could have constituted a further disqualifying factor (section 2(2)).
The defendant landlords have conceded in submissions before me that in principle it has to be accepted that there has been a substantial change in these cottages since the beginning of the tenancy. They accept the conversion to a single dwelling house plainly brought about a substantial alteration to the identity of the property, the subject of the long tenancy. It had become a single dwelling by August 1967. This probably occurred within the first year of the tenancy by 29 September 1966, although there is no evidence to establish this. The building is now a significantly different property from the building when it consisted of two separate semi-detached cottages.
The defendants however deny that the extent and nature of the works of conversion or the substantial alteration of each cottage is relevant to the issue which this court has to decide in this case under section 4A(2)(b). …
It is submitted on behalf of the tenant that the 'property' must logically be that which is described in the valuation list for the first time following its creation. There is no good reason it is submitted in logic or semantics to take the rateable value of the premises prior to its change in identity. This is especially the case here where neither property would have been enfranchiseable in any event.
Thus in this case 'the property' the subject of this tenancy was not it is submitted in fact or intention the two cottages with a rateable value of £21 per annum. It has to be conceded that each property was on the valuation list on 23 March 1965 and therefore on the list at the commencement of the tenancy. The property, the subject matter of the tenancy, however described in the lease or licence to assign, must be the modernised dwelling house which the tenant was obliged under the covenants in the lease to construct during the first year of the lease. Before any lawful or indeed beneficial occupation under the terms of the covenants in this lease could commence, the approved works had to have been completed.
It is submitted that it was this dwelling house which qualifies under the Act and which appears for the first time in the valuation list on 9 August 1967. This property did not appear in the valuation list before that date."
"The property the subject of this tenancy was always in fact and intention a modernised single dwelling house which the tenant was obliged to construct in the first year of the tenancy in accordance with plans approved by the landlords. This is what the landlord required of the tenant. It was not a device by him to qualify under the Act whereas otherwise he would not have done so."
And further:
"I am persuaded that the property the subject of this tenancy did not have a rateable value at the commencement of the tenancy because the dwelling house did not exist. The property which was constructed is substantially different from what was on the valuation list. It is the dwelling house which was constructed which is the subject of this tenancy."
Grounds of appeal and submissions
"Section 25(1), (2) and (4) of the Rent Act 1977 shall apply to the ascertainment for the purposes of this Part of this Act of the rateable value of a house and premises or any other property as they apply to the ascertainment of that of a dwelling-house for the purposes of that Act."
"(1) Except where this Act otherwise provides, the rateable value on any day of a dwelling house shall be ascertained for the purposes of this Act as follows:-
(a) If the dwelling house is a hereditament for which a rateable value is then shown in the valuation list, it shall be that rateable value;
(b) If the dwelling house forms part only of such a hereditament or consists of or forms part of more than one such hereditament, its rateable value shall be taken to be such value as is found by a proper apportionment or aggregation of the rateable value or values so shown.
(2) Any question arising under this section as to the proper apportionment or aggregation of any value or values shall be determined by the county court and the decision of the county court shall be final.
(3) …
(4) Where, after the date which is the appropriate day in relation to any dwelling-house, the valuation list is altered so as to vary the rateable value of the hereditament of which the dwelling-house consists or forms part and the alteration has effect from a date not later than the appropriate day, the rateable value of the dwelling-house on the appropriate day shall be ascertained as if the value shown in the valuation list on the appropriate day had been the value shown in the list as altered."
"[Counsel for Mr Dixon] also submitted that 'the house' did not come into existence until 1977 when the two cottages were converted into one house and that 1977 was, therefore, the appropriate day and that the house [presumably and premises] then consisted of three hereditaments comprised of the two cottages and the garages. But section 4(1)(a) of the Act of 1967, read in conjunction with section 25(1) of the Act of 1977, requires the appropriate day to be the day when 'the house', consisting of two cottages and no more, was first rated and that day was 6 February 1967. A tenant of two semi-detached houses, each rated at £50 on 25 March 1965, could not by inserted communicating doors between the two houses and converting them into one house, rated in 1987 at £150, alter the appropriate day or increase the rateable value for the purposes of the Act of 1967. In the present case, 'the house' created by the tenant in 1977 consisted of two hereditaments rated for the first time by 6 February 1967."
Discussion
Order: Appeal allowed.