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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> B and Q Plc v. Dunbartonshire & Argyll & Bute Valuation Joint Board [2006] ScotCS CSIH_50 (24 October 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/2006/CSIH_50.html Cite as: [2006] CSIH 50, [2006] ScotCS CSIH_50 |
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LANDS |
|
Lord Justice ClerkLord PhilipLord Kingarth |
[2006] CSIH 50XA71/06 OPINION OF THE LORD
JUSTICE CLERK in the Appeal by B & Q plc Appellant; against THE ASSESSOR FOR
DUNBARTONSHIRE AND ARGYLL & BUTE VALUATION JOINT BOARD Respondent: _______ |
For the Respondent: Clarke; Simpson & Marwick
Introduction
[1] This
is an appeal against a decision of a Valuation Appeal Committee dated
[2] The
assessor entered the subjects in the Valuation Roll with effect from
[3] The
subjects are of the "large box" type.
They are close to the
[4] It
is common for the landlord in such cases to give the tenant a reverse premium
and A rent-free period at the outset of the lease. Rental evidence relating to such subjects is
therefore not straightforward. There are few operators of retail warehouses of
this size. They operate in their own
marketplace. Rental evidence from other
types of retail outlets is of little, if any, value as a guide (cf B & Q plc v Ass for Renfrewshire
Valuation Joint Board, [2004] RA 220).
The comparison evidence
[5] There
are ten other such warehouses in
[6] The three
[7] The
Renfrewshire comparisons were situated at
[8] The
Lanarkshire comparisons were warehouses at
The assessor's valuation
[9] The
assessor considered that the location of the subjects of appeal was similar to
those of the Glasgow and Renfrewshire comparisons, and should be valued by
reference to them. Since the £95 and £96
psm rates reflected the prominent locations of the Glasgow and Renfrewshire
comparisons in relation to main roads and the motorway network, he considered
that a rate of £85 psm for the appeal subjects adequately reflected their less
advantageous location. He then made a
quantum allowance of 2% for two reasons, namely (1) that the appeal subjects,
at a reduced area of 11,636.76 sm, were marginally larger than any of the other
comparisons and (2) that although the appeal subjects were larger than had been
originally proposed, the pre-agreed level of rent had not been increased. The assessor rejected the evidence of the
Lanarkshire comparisons because they were in a different market and because,
since all of the comparisons were "large boxes" of similar size, the quantum
allowance given to them was not appropriate.
The appellant's valuation
[10] The appellant's advisers valued the subjects by reference to the net rate psm of the Lanarkshire comparisons at an NAV/RV of £845,000.
Decision of the Committee
[11] The Committee's decision was intimated in the following terms:
"The appellant's evidence is not sufficient to
satisfy the Committee that the Assessor's valuation was incorrect. It was not appropriate to confine the
comparisons only to
Submissions for the parties
[12] Counsel for the appellant submitted that the VAC erred in law
in upholding the assessor's valuation in the absence of any rental evidence to
support the rate of £85 psm or the quantum allowance of 2%. Since the assessor had discarded the rates on
which the Glasgow and Renfrewshire comparisons were based, it was incumbent on
him to justify the adoption of the rate of £85 psm. He had failed to produce any rental evidence
from the Bishopbriggs area. Therefore
the only rate that the VAC could properly accept was that of the Lanarkshire
comparisons. The VAC had further erred in
its approach to onus. The onus was on
the assessor to explain and justify his valuation. He had failed to do so. The VAC had erred in accepting the assessor's
unsubstantiated valuation. The court
should set aside the decision and substitute the valuation contended for by the
appellant.
[13] Counsel for the assessor submitted that it was for the VAC to
decide which were the appropriate comparisons.
It decided that the Glasgow and Renfrewshire comparisons were the most
cogent, but recognised that the appeal subjects were at a locational
disadvantage which the assessor's rate of £85 psm, with a quantum allowance of
2%, adequately reflected. It also
accepted that the Lanarkshire comparisons were not valid for the reasons given
by the assessor.
Conclusions
[14] In my opinion, the Committee was entitled to uphold the
assessor's valuation. The case for the
appellant was based on the rate applied in the Lanarkshire comparisons. Since all of the comparisons relied on by the
parties were similar "large box" retail warehouses having reduced floor areas within
such a narrow range, I cannot see why in the Lanarkshire cases the assessor
allowed a 15% quantum discount. The
appellant tendered no evidence to the VAC to explain or justify that
allowance.
[15] The essential submission for the appellant was that the
assessor discarded the Glasgow and Renfrewshire rates and provided no rental
evidence from the Bishopbriggs area to substantiate the rate of £85 psm. In my opinion, the assessor did not discard
the Glasgow and Renfrewshire rates at all.
He started with those rates and adjusted them to reflect the relative
disadvantage of the appeal subjects. In
the circumstances of this case, the assessment of the amount of the adjustment
was not dependent on evidence. Given the
special nature of the appeal subjects, there could be no relevant rental
evidence from other retail subjects in the Bishopbriggs area. The amount of the adjustment therefore fell
to be made in the exercise of the valuer's professional skill (cf Western Heritable Inv Co v Husband, 1983
SC (HL) 60, Lord Keith of Kinkel at p 75).
Why the assessor adjusted the rate to £85 psm, rather than to any other
figure, was in the circumstances incapable of mathematical proof. It was a professional judgment which the VAC was
entitled to accept if it considered it to be reasonable. The essential point was that the assessor had
to explain, as he did, what the amount of the adjustment was and why he had
made it.
[16] I should add that in my opinion the submission for the
appellant on the question of onus is misconceived. When a proposed valuation is challenged by
the ratepayer, the assessor must justify it and explain his approach (cf Drybrough & Co Ltd v Assessor for Strathclyde, 1982 SLT
426). But when the parties have
presented their cases, the question of onus falls away. This case involved a straightforward
assessment of comparison evidence. The
essential facts about the relevant comparisons were not in dispute. The assessor clearly and adequately explained
his reasoning. I do not interpret the
VAC's decision to mean that it regarded the appellant as having failed to
discharge an onus. The appellant's
advisers knew how the assessor's valuation was arrived at. When the parties had explained their respective
valuations, it was for the VAC to weigh them up and make its decision (Dunfermline Corporation v Assessor for
Decision
[17] I propose to your Lordships that we should refuse the appeal.
LANDS |
|
Lord Justice ClerkLord PhilipLord Kingarth |
[2006] CSIH 50XA71/06 OPINION OF LORD PHILIP in the Appeal by B & Q plc Appellant; against THE ASSESSOR FOR DUNBARTONSHIRE
AND ARGYLL & BUTE VALUATION JOINT BOARD Respondent: _______ |
For the Respondent: Clarke; Simpson & Marwick
[18] I agree that the appeal should be refused for the reasons set
out by your Lordship in the Chair.
LANDS |
|
Lord Justice ClerkLord PhilipLord Kingarth |
[2006] CSIH 50XA71/06 OPINION OF LORD KINGARTH in the Appeal by B & Q plc Appellant; against THE ASSESSOR FOR
DUNBARTONSHIRE AND ARGYLL & BUTE VALUATION JOINT BOARD Respondent: _______ |
For the Respondent: Clarke; Simpson & Marwick
24
October 2006
[19] I agree, for the reasons given by your Lordship in the Chair,
that the appeal should be refused.