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Scottish Court of Session Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Smiles (Surveyor of Taxes) v. Crooke [1886] ScotLR 23_489 (6 March 1886) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1886/23SLR0489.html Cite as: [1886] SLR 23_489, [1886] ScotLR 23_489 |
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Page: 489↓
[Exchequer Cause.
The proprietor of a house let to one person the three upper floors, which entered from the street by a separate door and passage. The first floor was used as a photographic studio, and the second and third floors as a dwelling-house. The subjects were let under one lease (in which they were separately described) at a cumulo rent. The only communication between the studio and the dwelling-house was by the stair leading from the street. There Was a door from the dwelling-house to the stair, and internal communication between the two floors of which the dwelling-house consisted. Held that the studio and the dwelling-house were in the sense of the Inhabited-House-Duty Acts different tenements.
At a meeting of the Income-Tax and Inhabited-House-Duty Commissioners for the county of Edinburgh, held at Edinburgh on 9th December 1885, William Crooke, photographer, appealed against an assessment made upon him for the year 1885–86 of £9, 7s. 6d., being inhabited-house-duty at the rate of 9d. per pound on £250, the cumulo annual rent of a dwelling-house and photographic studio occupied by him at No. 103 Princes Street, Edinburgh. The premises were part of a building consisting of a ground or basement floor and three flats above, all the property of the Edinburgh Royal Infirmary. The ground or basement floor, No. 103 Princes Street, which had a separate entrance from the street, was let to Messrs Edwin Pass &Son, perfumers, and was occupied by them solely as a shop, and was not assessed for inhabited-house-duty.
The three upper flats, which entered from the street by a separate door and passage, were let to and occupied by Crooke; the first flat was used as a photographic studio, and the second and third flats as a dwelling-house. These subjects were separately described in, but were let under one lease, dated 7th May 1884, at the cumulo rent specified therein, viz., £250. It was admitted that the annual value of the dwelling-house was £80, being the rent paid by the previous tenant, who occupied the house only. The whole of the premises occupied by Crooke were shut in by a street door at the foot of the stair, which remained open during business hours, but was shut at night and fastened by means of a latch. The only communication between the studio and the dwelling-house was by the stair which led from the street, and to which Crooke had the sole access. The studio (occupying the whole of the first flat) had originally two doors to the stair, the one leading to a room at the back and the other to one at the front. One of these, however, was latterly always closed by a bolt on the inside. The dwelling-house consisted of two flats, which were connected with one another by an internal stair, but there was only one door to the outer stair.
Crooke contended that he was entitled to exemption in respect of the studio, as it and the dwelling-house were separate subjects, and were separately specified in his lease, and further that the access from the street by the stair referred to did not constitute internal communication. He further contended that the dwelling-house and studio formed part of a house of which the shop tenanted by Edwin Pass &Son also formed a part, and that being let in different storeys and inhabited by two or more persons or families, it thus fell to be assessed under the 6th rule of Schedule B, 48 Geo. III. cap. 55, and came under the exemption granted by 41 Vict. cap. 15, section 13, sub-section 1.
The Surveyor of Taxes, James S. Smiles, maintained that the exemption referred to did not apply. The premises occupied by the appellant formed one tenement, with an independent entrance, to which he as occupier had the sole right. The dwelling-house and studio were “attached,” and being all enclosed by the entrance door from the street, and not being occupied solely for the purposes of any trade or business, formed an assessable dwelling-house in the sense of the Inhabited-House-Duty Acts.
The Commissioners were of opinion that the premises were so structurally divided as to form two separate subjects, and that the charge should be restricted to the duty on £80, the annual value of the portion occupied as a dwelling-house.
The Surveyor took a Case, from which the foregoing narrative is taken.
The Surveyor argued that the case was distinguishable from Corke v. Brims, July 7, 1883, 10 R. 1128; and Nisbet v. M'Innes, Mackenzie, & Lochead, July 15, 1884, 11 R. 1095, because the whole subjects were let to one person.
The respondent's counsel was not called upon.
At advising—
The words which create the difficulty which Mr Lorimer suggested are “divided into and let in.” I do not think that means that the house
Page: 490↓
Now, this house is undoubtedly divided into different tenements. From the stair which leads up from the street there is a separate entrance to the photographic studio, and that is an entrance into the studio and nowhere else. Nobody can get from the studio to the upper floors without coming back to the stair again. Then the dwelling-house, which is upon the two upper floors, enters from the stair, and is one undivided tenement, because there is external communication between the two floors, and only one door to the outer stair. Therefore these two subjects are divided from one another.
The only question that remains is, whether they are “let in,” or, as Lord Adam put it during the discussion, “let as” different tenements? It appears to me that if it is not necessary that there should be separate leases or separate tenants, then they are “let in” different tenements, because they are separately described in the lease. That satisfies me that the principle of Croke v. Brims [ sup. cit] applies, and that the determination of the Commissioners is right.
The Court affirmed the determination of the Commissioners.
Counsel for Inland Revenue (Appellants)— Moncreiff— Lorimer. Agent— David Crole, Solicitor of Inland Revenue.
Counsel for Crooke— W. Campbell. Agents— J. & J. Galletly, S.S.C.