BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
Scottish Court of Session Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Dundee City Council v Dundee Valuation Appeal Committee & Anor [2011] ScotCS CSIH_73 (23 November 2011) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/2011/2011CSIH73.html Cite as: [2011] CSIH 73, 2012 GWD 1-8, 2012 SC 463, [2012] RA 101, [2011] ScotCS CSIH_73 |
[New search] [Help]
SECOND DIVISION, INNER HOUSE, COURT OF SESSION
|
|
Lord Justice ClerkLord HodgeLord Malcolm
|
[2011] CSIH 73XA100/11 OPINION OF THE LORD JUSTICE CLERK
in the cause
DUNDEE CITY COUNCIL Appellant;
against
DUNDEE VALUATION APPEAL COMMITTEE First Respondent:
and
FLEMMING HANSEN Second Respondent: _______
|
For first respondent: Lindhorst; Bonar Mackenzie
For second respondent: Party
23 November 2011
Introduction
[1] This is an appeal by Dundee City Council
(the Council) as the levying authority for council tax against a decision of
the first respondent (the Committee) dated 19 July 2011. The question is whether
the second respondent (the landlord) is liable for the council tax due in
respect of flats in Dundee
that he owns and lets. I understand that the number of flats involved was
latterly 27.
[2] The Council determined that the landlord
was liable for the council tax in each case. The landlord appealed on the
ground that, since a valid lease existed over each of the flats at the relevant
date, the tenant was liable for the tax in each case. He argued (a) that each
tenancy continued beyond the contractual date of ish by virtue of tacit
relocation until it was validly terminated; and (b) that since none of the
leases had been terminated, the liability for the tax remained with the
tenant.
The nature of the tenancies
[3] Although the Committee has failed to refer
to this, it seems to be agreed that all of the properties in this case were let
on short assured tenancies under sections 32-35 of the 1988 Act and that
they were let in accordance with the landlord's standard form of lease, a copy
of which was exhibited to and approved by the Council in each case for housing
benefit purposes.
The statutory provisions
[4] Section 75 of the Local Government Finance
Act 1992 (the 1992 Act) provides inter alia as follows:
"75-(1) The person who is liable to pay council tax in respect of any chargeable dwelling and any day is the person who falls within the first paragraph of subsection (2) below to apply, taking paragraph (a) of that subsection first, paragraph (b) next, and so on.
(2) A person falls within this subsection in relation to any chargeable dwelling and any day if, on that day -
(a) he is the resident owner of the whole or any part of the dwelling;
(b) he is a resident tenant of the whole or any part of the dwelling;
(c) he is a resident statutory tenant, resident statutory assured tenant or resident secure tenant of the whole or any part of the dwelling
(d) he is a resident sub-tenant of the whole or any part of the dwelling;
(e) he is a resident of the dwelling; or
(f) he is any of the following -
(i) the sub-tenant of the whole or any part of the dwelling under a sub-lease granted for a term of six months or more;
(ii) the tenant, under a lease granted for a term of six months or more, of any part of the dwelling which is not subject to a sub-lease granted for a term of six months or more;
(iii) the owner of any part of the dwelling which is not subject to a lease granted for a term of six months or more ... "
[5] Section 32 of the Housing (Scotland) Act 1988 (the 1988 Act)
provides inter alia as follows:
"32-(1) A short assured tenancy is an assured tenancy -
(a) which is for a term of not less than six months; and
(b) in respect of which a notice is served as mentioned in subsection (2) below ...
(3) Subject to subsection (4) below, if, at the ish of a short assured tenancy -
(a) it continues by tacit relocation; or
(b) a new contractual tenancy of the same or substantially the same premises comes into being under which the landlord and the tenant are the same as at the ish,
the continued tenancy or, as the case may be, the new contractual tenancy shall be a short assured tenancy, whether or not it fulfils the conditions in paragraphs (a) and (b) of subsection (1) above ... "
The hearing
[6] The appeal before
the Committee proceeded on the understanding (a) that at the relevant date each
of the flats was unoccupied; and (b) that if any of the flats nonetheless
remained subject to a tenancy, the tenant and not the landlord would be liable
for the tax by reason of section 75 of the 1992 Act (supra).
[7] The Committee told the parties at the
outset that it would arrive at a view in principle on the law and that
thereafter either party could make further submissions to it in respect of any
individual property.
The decision
[8] By letter to the landlord dated 19 July 2011, the Committee gave its
decision and its reasons. The letter, so far as relevant, is in the following
terms:
"I refer to your attendance at the Valuation Appeals Committee which sat in Dundee on 29th March 2011. The Committee has now reconvened and has asked me to write to you to advise you of their view, in principle, on your Appeal. I am writing in similar terms to Dundee City Council and it will then be up to them whether they want to come back the Committee on any of the specific properties to argue why the decision of the Committee should not apply in any of the particular cases.
It is, of course, open to either of you to appeal to the Court of Session in Edinburgh if either of you is not in agreement with the decision.
The Committee were of the view that, in principle, your Appeal should succeed for the following reasons:-
1 In terms of the Lease which you
produced to the Panel and on
the assumption that the Leases for the other properties which you rented out
were in similar terms, the Tenants had Security of Tenure under the Housing (Scotland) Act 1988.
2 The rule of tacit relocation
applies to these Tenants which
means that their Leases continue until such time as either a valid Notice to
Quit is served by you as Landlord and accepted by the Tenant or the Tenant
gives proper notice to you as Landlord in terms of the Lease or you, as
Landlord, obtain a Court Order evicting the Tenant from the property and
therefore bringing the Lease to an end. No evidence was led by Dundee City
Council that valid Notices to Quit had been served by you on any of the Tenants
and you indicated to the Committee that you had not issued such Notices to
Quit. No evidence was led by Dundee City Council to show that any of the
Tenants had given proper notice to you and the indication by you to the
Committee was that such notices had not been given to you. No evidence was led
by Dundee City Council that you had sought Eviction Orders from the Court for
any of the properties in question and you indicated to the Committee that you
had not taken steps to recover possession of any of the properties through the
Courts.
3 The Committee can find no
requirement in law that requires a
Landlord to serve a Notice to Quit on a Tenant or to seek recovery of a
property through a Court Order even although the Tenant of the property in
question is not paying rent and/or appears to have abandoned the property.
4 The hierarchical structure for liability of Council Tax is clear laid out in s 75 of the Local Government Finance Act 1992 and the liability for Council Tax falls with the first person who meets the test laid out in each of the paragraphs under s 75(2) of that Act. The first five provisions of that subsection relate to people who are resident within a property. It is the understanding of the Committee that all of the properties in question were unoccupied and therefore the first relevant paragraph is s 75(2)(f) which provides firstly for a sub Tenant under a sub Lease for a term of 6 months or more. This makes no reference to the requirement for a property to be occupied. So far as the Committee were aware there were no sub Tenancies. The next person who would be liable is 'the Tenant, under a Lease granted for a term of 6 months or more of any part of the dwelling which is not subject to a sub Lease granted for a term of 6 months or more'. On the basis that there were Tenants with the Leases granted for a term of 6 months or more, these tenancies having continued under the Rule of tacit relocation, the Committee therefore took the view that these Tenants had responsibility for payment of the Council Tax for the properties in question."
The appeal
[9] The appellant contends (1) that the
Committee's decision is wrong in law; (2) that decree of eviction is not a
means of terminating a lease; (3) that the Council erred in making a decision
"in principle" in these cases and thereby fettering its discretion in a
decision on any of the individual appeals; and (4) that it erred in reversing
the onus of proof, the true position being that the onus was on the landlord to
establish that at the material date each lease remained in force.
[10] The Committee has lodged answers to the
effect that (1) the appeal is premature and (2) that its decision is sound in
law. The landlord's answers support the decision and the reasoning of the
Committee.
Conclusions
The procedure adopted by the Committee
[11] In my opinion, the Committee erred at the
outset in the procedure that it adopted. Where there is a multiplicity of
appeals, a committee should, in general, refrain from making a decision on
principle without having made findings in fact in any of the cases. It may
appear to a committee that it can make such a decision on submissions by the
parties, but that is an exceptional procedure. Experience shows that in most
cases the decision depends on the facts. It would have been better if the
Committee had required the parties to lodge a joint minute setting out the
agreed facts in each case and heard evidence on any matters that were in
dispute. It would then have been better able to consider how the statutory
provisions applied.
[12] Perhaps the Committee thought that its
procedure would expedite the resolution of these appeals. Unfortunately in
consequence of its procedure it has reached a decision that is illogical,
erroneous in law and based on inadequate findings in fact. In my view, the
decision will have to be set aside.
The Committee's decision
Illogicality
[13] In
my opinion the decision of the Committee is invalid because while it bears to
decided in principle, for reasons 2, 3 and 4, that it is the tenant who is
liable in each case for the tax, it in effect reserves leave to the Council to
challenge the applicability of that decision in any individual case. The
decision is therefore self-contradictory.
Error in law
[14] In my opinion, the Committee erred in its
conclusion in law. It concluded that the leases continued in force by tacit
relocation until either party gave notice of termination to the other or the
landlord obtained a court order for eviction of the tenant (para 1). Since
there was no evidence that a notice of termination had been served; or that the
landlord had sought any order for eviction (para 2), and since there was no obligation
on the landlord to serve a notice to quit or to seek a court order for recovery
of the property even though the tenant was not paying rent and/or had abandoned
the property (para 3), the Committee found that in each case the tenant was a
tenant under a lease granted for a term of six months or more of any part of
the dwelling which was not subject to a sublease granted for a term of six
months or more. Therefore, section 75(2)(f) of the 1992 Act applied. In
reaching this conclusion, the Committee did not refer to any of the provisions
of the 1988 Act.
[15] Section 32 of the 1988 Act (supra)
applies in all of these cases. In contrast with, for example, section 3 of the
Agricultural Holdings (Scotland) Act 1991, section 38 does not provide that at the
contractual expiry, the lease shall continue by tacit relocation unless either
party takes certain steps. Instead, it merely provides that at the expiry of
the contractual term the tenancy will continue as a short assured tenancy "if ...
it continues by tacit relocation." Whether it is so continued will therefore
be decided on common law principles.
[16] The Committee's understanding was that when
the term of a lease expired, the lease was automatically renewed by tacit
relocation and continued so to be renewed until either party served notice of
termination or the landlord obtained a court order for eviction. Therefore, in
the view of the Committee, since none of these events had occurred, the
tenancies continued by operation of law.
[17] In my opinion, the Committee's
interpretation of the principle is unsound. In leases of heritable property,
the broad general principle is straightforward. If at the expiry of the
contractual endurance of the lease neither party indicates to the other that he
does not consent to the renewal of the lease, the lease is held to be renewed on
the basis that the mutual consent of the parties is to be presumed from their
silence. At common law, any overt indication by either party that he does not
consent to the prolongation of the lease is sufficient to exclude tacit
relocation.
[18] In considering whether the leases have been
terminated by notice of termination or by a decree of removal, the Committee
has overlooked the rule that the operation of tacit relocation is excluded
where the tenant does not retain possession after the contractual ish (Rankine,
Leases, 3rd ed, p 600; Ersk, Inst, II.vi.35).
[19] In Signet Group plc v J Clark
Retail Properties Ltd (1996 SC 444), it was suggested that unilateral
actings by one party that were unknown to the other could not prevent the
operation of tacit relocation. That was a case where the tenant sought to
prevent tacit relocation. It was held that there was nothing to show that any of
the actings founded on by the tenant were known to the landlords (ibid,
at p447 C-D). [20] Where a flat let under a short assured tenancy appears to
be vacant at or after the date of ish, the question whether the tenant has
abandoned it will be particularly fact-sensitive. It occurs to me that the special
problem in the present cases is that the landlord's typical tenant will not be
minded to give notice, oral or written, to the landlord. He will simply vacate
the flat and cease to pay rent. That, in my view, would be prima facie
evidence of abandonment. It may reasonably be supposed that in such a case
those facts will come to the notice of the landlord. However, in view of the many
diverse circumstances in which tacit relocation may be excluded, it is
essential that the Committee should hear evidence in each case and make a
decision on its special facts.
Findings in fact
[21] My comments on the operation of tacit
relocation indicate how important it is that a committee in cases of this kind
should make clear findings in fact and set them out in its decision before
giving its reasons. It is unfortunate that the Committee has recorded scarcely
any findings in fact.
[22] On the information before us it is agreed by
counsel that at the relevant date each of these properties was unoccupied; but
the Committee failed to consider whether that was because the tenant had
abandoned the property or was merely absent from it temporarily. No decision
can be made in any of these cases until that question is resolved. For this
reason alone, I would have been of the view that the decision appealed against
was invalid.
The position of the appellant
[23] Although
the matter is not referred to in the Committee's decision, it is significant
that the case involves two separate functions of the appellant, namely its
function as levying authority for Council tax and its function as a housing
authority administering the system of housing benefits. It is unfortunate that
counsel for the appellant was not familiar with the 1988 Act or with the
closely related system of housing benefit.
[24] It seems that virtually all the flats in
this case were let to tenants who received housing benefit. Housing benefit is
funded and administered by the Council (Social Security Administration Act
1992, s 134). It is payable in respect of a specified property and is
calculated by reference to the rent due for that property (Housing Benefit
Regulations 2006 (SI No. 213), Part 3). Although in certain limited
circumstances the Council has a duty or a discretion to pay housing benefit
direct to a private landlord, in the normal case it pays it to the tenant (ibid,
regs 95-96). A recipient of housing benefit is obliged to inform the
Council of any material change of circumstances (ibid, reg 86). One
such change would be where the tenant vacates the property and becomes tenant
of another. If the new property is within the Council's jurisdiction, the
Council may pay benefit in respect of the new property.
[25] The landlord has complained to us that when
a flat appears to have been vacated by the tenant, he cannot be certain that
the tenant has abandoned it until he knows that the tenant's housing benefit
for that flat has been withdrawn. The landlord says that in such cases he
cannot obtain the relevant information from the Council because it is bound by
data protection requirements.
[26] It is essential that both parties should
place before the Committee all relevant evidence that they have on the question
whether a flat has been truly abandoned or is merely temporarily unoccupied.
That may cause difficulties for the parties and for the Committee; but there is
no way of deciding the landlord's appeals other than by a scrutiny of the
evidence in each case.
Disposal
[27] I propose to your Lordships that we should
allow the appeal and recall the decision appealed against; and that we should
return these cases to the Committee with a direction to it to hear evidence in
each of them and to make findings in fact and in law by way of deciding whether
the tenancy continues in force. It would lighten the burden of the Committee
if the landlord and the Council were to submit a statement of agreed facts in
each case.
Convening the Committee as a respondent
[28] Counsel for the Committee has been helpful
to us on numerous points; but he appeared in this appeal only because the
appellant convened the Committee as first respondent. In my opinion, that was
incompetent. Where an appeal is taken to this court against a decision of an
inferior court or of a tribunal or committee, the decision-maker ought not, in
my opinion, to be convened as a party to the appeal. The decision-maker is by
then functus. It is for the successful party, and not the
decision-maker, to defend the decision appealed against.
SECOND DIVISION, INNER HOUSE, COURT OF SESSION
|
|
Lord Justice ClerkLord HodgeLord Malcolm
|
[2011] CSIH 73XA100/11 OPINION OF LORD HODGE
in the cause
DUNDEE CITY COUNCIL Appellant;
against
DUNDEE VALUATION APPEAL COMMITTEE First Respondent:
and
FLEMMING HANSEN Second Respondent: _______
|
For first respondent: Lindhorst; Bonar Mackenzie
For second respondent: Party
23 November 2011
[29] I concur with the Opinion of your Lordship
in the chair and with the disposal which you propose.
SECOND DIVISION, INNER HOUSE, COURT OF SESSION
|
|
Lord Justice ClerkLord HodgeLord Malcolm
|
[2011] CSIH 73XA100/11 OPINION OF LORD MALCOLM
in the cause
DUNDEE CITY COUNCIL Appellant;
against
DUNDEE VALUATION APPEAL COMMITTEE First Respondent:
and
FLEMMING HANSEN Second Respondent: _______
|
For first respondent: Lindhorst; Bonar Mackenzie
For second respondent: Party
23 November 2011
[30] I have had the advantage of reading in draft
the Opinion prepared by your Lordship in the chair. I fully agree with all of
it, including your Lordship's proposals as to the disposal of this appeal.