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United Kingdom Upper Tribunal (Lands Chamber) |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Upper Tribunal (Lands Chamber) >> Sherwood Hall (East End Road) Management Co Ltd v Magnolia Tree Ltd [2009] UKUT 158 (LC) (10 September 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKUT/LC/2009/LRA_1_2008.html Cite as: [2009] UKUT 158 (LC) |
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UPPER TRIBUNAL (LANDS CHAMBER) |
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UT Neutral citation number:
[2009] UKUT 158 (LC) LT Case Number: LRA/1/2008 |
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TRIBUNALS, COURTS AND ENFORCEMENT ACT 2007
LEASEHOLD ENFRANCHISEMENT –
collective enfranchisement – price – deferment rate – whether departure
from Sportelli starting point justified for 88 year reversions –
additional value, if any, attributable to developable land – appeal
allowed on development value – price reduced from £248,825 to
£205,000. |
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IN THE MATTER OF AN APPEAL
AGAINST A DECISION OF THE LEASEHOLD VALUATION TRIBUNAL FOR THE LONDON RENT
ASSESSMENT PANEL |
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BETWEEN |
SHERWOOD HALL (EAST END ROAD)
MANAGEMENT COMPANY LIMITED |
Appellant |
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and |
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MAGNOLIA TREE LIMITED |
Respondent |
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Re: Flats 1-12, 12A, 14-36,
Sherwood Hall, East End Road, London, N2 0TA |
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Before: N J Rose FRICS |
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Sitting at 43-45 Bedford
Square, London, WC1B 3AS on 20 and 21 July 2009 |
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Gary Cowen, instructed by
Alan Edwards & Co, solicitors for Appellant Ellodie Gibbons,
instructed by direct access, for Respondent |
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© CROWN COPYRIGHT 2009 |
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1 |
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The following cases are referred to in this
decision:
Arbib v Earl Cadogan
[2005] 3 EGLR 139
Cadogan v Sportelli [2007] 1 EGLR 153
Cadogan v Sportelli [2008] 1 WLR 2142
Maryland Estates Ltd v 63
Perham Road Ltd [1997] 35 EG 94
Stokes v Cambridge Corpn
(1961) 13 P&CR 77
Arrowdell Ltd v Coniston Court
(North) Hove Ltd [2007] RVR 39 |
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The following cases were also referred to:
Deajan Investments Limited v
The Holt (Freehold) Limited LRA/133/2006, unreported
Wellcome Trust Limited v
Romines [1999] 3 EGLR 229
Hildron Finance Limited v
Greenhill Hampstead Ltd [2008] 1 EGLR 179
Cik v Chavda LRA/111/2007,
23 July 2008
Cadogan v 2 Herbert Crescent
Freehold Limited LRA/91/2007, unreported
IRC v Grey [1994] 2 EGLR
185 |
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2 |
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DECISION |
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Introduction |
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1. This is an appeal by Sherwood
Hall (East End Road) Management Company Limited against a decision of the
Leasehold Valuation Tribunal for the London Rent Assessment Committee,
determining the price payable by the appellant for the freehold interest
in 36 flats, arranged in four blocks and known as Sherwood Hall, East End
Road, London, N2 0TA, under the provisions of section 24 of the Leasehold
Reform, Housing and Urban Development Act 1993, at £248,825. Permission to
appeal by way of rehearing was granted by the President on 3 March 2008.
The appellant’s case was that the price should be £119,012 and the
respondent freeholder, Magnolia Tree Limited, contended for a figure of
£246,907. |
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2. Mr Gary Cowen of counsel
appeared for the appellant. He called one expert witness, Mr B R Maunder
Taylor FRICS, MAE. Counsel for the respondent, Ms Ellodie Gibbons, called
Mr E F Shapiro BSc (Est Man), FRICS, IRRV, FCIArb to give expert evidence.
A factual witness statement by Mr B Mehmet, company secretary of the
respondent, was submitted and not challenged. By arrangement with the
parties I visited the site of the appeal property, unaccompanied, on 17
August 2009 and made an external inspection of the four blocks of flats
and its grounds. |
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Facts |
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3. In the light of the evidence
and my site inspection I find the following facts. The appeal property is
located on the north side of East End Road in the London Borough of
Barnet, approximately midway between East Finchley London Underground
station to the south east and the North Circular Road to the north west.
East End Road forms the northern boundary of Hampstead Garden Suburb in a
mixed inner London residential suburb, with local shops immediately
adjacent to and opposite the appeal property and within easy distance of
shopping facilities in the centre of the Suburb in Lyttelton Road to the
south and Temple Fortune and Brent Cross to the south
west. |
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4. The appeal property comprises
four blocks of flats, two containing twelve units each and two with six
flats each, together with twelve lock-up garages, ancillary gardens and
parking areas and a small undeveloped area at the rear of the
site. |
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5. Access into the estate is via
a front service road, entered at the western end of the East End Road
frontage. This service road is also used for car parking. It leads to the
central service road, which in turn gives access to the two rear blocks,
the lock-up garages and the undeveloped site; it too is used for car
parking. The estate was developed during the late 1920s or early 1930s.
The flats are arranged on ground and two upper floors in facing brickwork
beneath pitched tiled roofs, the second floors projecting forward slightly
and faced with vertical tile hanging. All the flats contain similar
accommodation, with a bay window to |
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3 |
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the principal room and with two
flats on each landing. The entrance hall and stairs are basic and there
are no lifts. Each ground floor entrance provides front access and a
secondary rear access to the gardens. |
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6. Internally the flats each comprise a reception room, kitchen, two
bedrooms and bathroom/wc. The approximate dimensions are as
follows:
Reception room 4.14m x 3.71m
Kitchen
2.9m x
2.31m
Bedroom 1
3.38m x
3.30m
Bedroom 2
3.28m x
2.57m
Bathroom/wc |
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7. The following matters are
agreed. The valuation date is 1 August 2005. The ground rent income should
be capitalised at 6%. The value of the long leasehold interest in each
flat was £230,000 unimproved. These values should be uplifted by £1,000 to
reflect the freehold value. The freehold value of each of the two garages
included in a flat lease was £5,000 and that of each of the untied garages
was £10,000. The existing lease values of flats 9 and 36 were
£202,400. |
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Issues |
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8. At the rehearing there were
two principal issues. Firstly, the deferment rate for those flats with an
unexpired lease term of 87.6 years. The appellant argued for a rate of 7%
and the respondent supported the LVT’s decision to adopt 5%. The LVT also
applied a deferment rate of 5% to those flats with 47.8 and 66.6 years
outstanding and that conclusion was not challenged. The lease of one flat
had 177.6 years unexpired. The LVT attached no reversionary value to that
flat and that decision is also not disputed. The second issue relates to
the development value, if any, to be attributed to part of the site, for
which planning permission was granted on appeal for the erection of two
flats. The appeal decision was dated 27 March 2006, some eight months
after the valuation date. The respondent agreed with the LVT’s decision to
attribute £50,000 to this land and the appellant contended for a nil
value. |
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Deferment rate |
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9. Mr Shapiro considered that the
LVT had been right to conclude that there was no reason to deviate from
the decision of the Lands Tribunal in Cadogan v Sportelli [2007] 1EGLR 153 that a deferment rate of 5% should be adopted when valuing flats
with unexpired lease terms of more than 20 years. Subsequent decisions of
the Tribunal, relating to properties in Greater London but outside the
Prime Central London area (PCL) with which Sportelli was
concerned, |
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had applied the same deferment
rate and there was no justification for applying a different rate in the
case of the appeal property.
10. Mr Maunder
Taylor noted that, in Sportelli, the Tribunal had been concerned
with properties in the PCL area with reversions of up to a maximum of 71
years. He considered that the deferment rate should start to increase with
leases of 75 years unexpired and increase further at 80 years. Reversions
which were 100 or more years distant had no value. In support of this
approach he cited differences between the strategies of landlords in the
PCL area and elsewhere and to the Lands Tribunal’s observation in Arbib
v Earl Cadogan [2005] 3 EGLR 139 (para 169) that
“there may be reason to increase
the deferment rate also where there is more than 80 years
unexpired.”
11. Mr Maunder
Taylor attached significance to the fact that, when the appeal property
was offered for sale by auction in 2004, the sale catalogue referred to
the short leases as having a valuable reversion, but no such description
was applied to the long leases. He also referred to LVT decisions in which
a higher rate than the Sportelli 5% had been applied and to two
settlements, which he said showed a similar pattern. |
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12. I start by considering the
weight to be given, in the context of the current appeal, to the guidance
provided by the Lands Tribunal in Sportelli. As I have said, that
case was concerned with a number of properties in the Prime Central London
area (PCL). The Tribunal concluded that the generic deferment rate should
be 4.75% (para 79) and that this should be increased by 0.25% for flats
(para 95). In para 85 the Tribunal said:
“Our conclusion is that the
deferment rate is constant beyond 20 years. Below 20 years we accept the
view of Mr Dumas, Professor Lizieri and Mr Orr Ewing that the rate would
need to have regard to the property cycle at the time of valuation. Beyond
75 years we see no reason on the evidence before us to conclude that the
rate would be either higher or lower.” |
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13. In para 123 the Tribunal
(George Bartlett QC, President, HH Michael Rich QC and P R Francis FRICS)
said:
“The application of the deferment
rate of 5% for flats and 4.75% for houses that we have found to be
generally applicable will need to be considered in relation to the facts
of each individual case. Before applying a rate that is different from
this, however, a valuer or an LVT should be satisfied that there are
particular features that fall outside the matters that are reflected in
the vacant possession value of the house or flat or in the deferment rate
itself and can be shown to make a departure from the rate
appropriate.” |
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14. The decision in Sportelli
was appealed. In the Court of Appeal [2008] 1 WLR 2142 Carnwath LJ
agreed that this general guidance was appropriate. At para 99 he
said: |
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“I agree with the Tribunal that
an important part of its role is to promote consistent practice in land
valuation matters. It was entirely appropriate for the Tribunal to offer
guidance as they have done in this case, and, unless and until the
legislature intervenes, to expect leasehold valuation tribunals to follow
generally that lead.” |
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15. This approval by the Court of
Appeal, however, was qualified. In para 102 Carnwath LJ said:
“The Tribunal’s later comments on
the significance of their guidance do not distinguish in terms between the
PCL area and other parts of London or the country. However, there must in
my view be an implicit distinction. The issues within the PCL were fully
examined in a fully contested dispute between directly interested parties.
The same cannot be said in respect of other areas. The judgment that the
same deferment rate should apply outside the PCL area was made, and could
only be made, on the evidence then available. That must leave the way open
to the possibility of further evidence being called by other parties in
other cases directly concerned with different areas. The deferment rate
adopted by the Tribunal will no doubt be the starting point; and their
conclusions on the methodology, including the limitations of market
evidence, are likely to remain valid. However, it is possible to envisage
other evidence being called, for example, on issues relevant to the risk
premium for residential property in different areas. That will be a matter
for those advising future parties, and for the tribunals, to consider as
such issues arise.” |
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16. The property which forms the
subject of the present appeal is outside the PCL area and the deferment
rate in issue relates to leases with unexpired terms of approximately 88
years. The appellant accepts that, so far as leases with 66.6 and 47.8
years unexpired are concerned, the Sportelli rate of 5% is
applicable, despite the fact that the appeal property lies outside the PCL
area. It seeks to depart from the Sportelli deferment rate when
valuing the flats with 87.6 years outstanding, on the grounds that this
period is outside the range of unexpired terms considered by the Tribunal
in Sportelli, namely 21.25 to 71.05 years. In the light of the
comments of Carnwath LJ at para 102, I am satisfied that it is indeed open
to a party to call evidence seeking to demonstrate that a different
deferment rate is appropriate in the case of longer dated reversions, such
as those with which I am here concerned. |
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17. Mr Shapiro’s view was that
there could be no such evidence. He described the suggestion that the
deferment rate could change depending on the length of the unexpired term
as a fundamental error of valuation. He said that the present value of a
reversion, discounted at the appropriate deferment rate, automatically
declined as the length of term increased. To reduce that present value
further by increasing the deferment rate would therefore constitute double
counting. |
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18. I do not think that approach
is correct. It is clear from Sportelli that there are a number of
components to the deferment rate – the risk free rate, real growth and the
risk premium. An assessment of the latter involves a consideration of the
risks of investment in long reversions, namely volatility, illiquidity,
deterioration and obsolescence. Whether one or more of these risks
increase over a period of time is a matter for evidence. If the evidence
demonstrated that |
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there was an increased risk, it
would not constitute double counting to reflect it in the yield as well as
in the period of deferment. Indeed, to ignore any increase in risk would
itself amount to a valuation error. |
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19. I therefore turn to Mr
Maunder Taylor’s evidence in support of an increase in the deferment rate.
Firstly, he said that many residential ground rent investments in the PCL
area were owned by landlords, commonly known as the great estates. In the
no Act world those landlords would sell relatively short lease extensions
or hold their investments to term date. This was not the approach of
landlords outside the PCL. In Mr Maunder Taylor’s opinion, landlords of
non-prime residential ground rent investments had a shorter term view than
those interested in prime property in prime
locations. |
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20. The identity of the
hypothetical purchaser of a long-dated reversion was considered by the
Tribunal in Sportelli in the following terms:
“76. It is, in our judgment, the
combined effect of the other components, volatility and illiquidity, that
must have the major impact on the risk premium. If the market was
composed, or contained a substantial number, of people who intended to
hold the reversion to term the fluctuations in the residential property
prices and the illiquidity of the investment would have very little
influence. The investor would simply lock away the investment, and the
passage of time would iron out the fluctuations. The illiquidity would
have no influence because the investment would not be sold. Mr Cullum’s
assessment was based, it appears to us, on the assumption of a market very
much of this sort, and he identified pension funds and the great estates
as the likely purchasers. We do not, however, accept that in the market
that we have to envisage there would be any significant number of
investors who would be looking to hold these very long term assets
throughout their lives. The attraction of the investment would be its
relative security, the prospect of growth and the opportunity for both
long-term retention and earlier sale. Tradeability would, we think, be
important as one of its components, and it is this that would make the
volatility of the housing market and the relative illiquidity of the
investment significant factors in the mind of a purchaser.”
Contrary to Mr Maunder Taylor’s
assumption, therefore, the Sportelli deferment rate did not reflect
the requirements of the great estates. |
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21. Mr Maunder Taylor also
referred to the following evidence as to the purchasing strategy of
investors in residential ground rents, given to the Lands Tribunal in
Maryland Estates Ltd v 63 Perham Road Ltd [1997] 35 EG 94 by Mr
Bebbington, a director of the landlord company:
“Mr Bebbington contrasted the
auction market and the results (prices) achieved with those by private
treaty sales involving serious investors and specialist brokers or agents.
He said that investors did not capitalise and defer future increases in
ground rent and that length of lease was seen as relevant only if it was
less than 80 years unexpired. He put in evidence a schedule of private
treaty sales of reversions during 1996 in various categories, for example
ground rent only receivable, insurance commission also receivable and
where in addition the freeholder manages the |
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premises. This schedule of
transactions negotiated by the Ground Rent Brokers, said to be the largest
agent active in this specialised market, included both single reversions
and ‘parcels’ or portfolios. Mr Bebbington stressed that these were sales
between investors and that at the point of sale full relevant information
was available as to the position between the vendor and the lessees of
flats; this situation contrasted markedly with the circumstances
prevailing at auction.”
Mr Maunder Taylor relied on Mr
Bebbington’s evidence to support his view that investors required a higher
deferment rate where leases had more than 80 years
unexpired. |
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22. In his decision in
Maryland the Member (Dr T Hoyes FRICS) accepted Mr Bebbington’s
evidence. In stating his conclusions on the value of the freehold
interest, he said:
“The evidence therefore supports
and favours the approach of Mr Angel [Mr Bebbington’s expert] in annexure
2 save that, as Mr Bebbington said, the market pays no material regard to
prospective, but somewhat distant, increases in ground rent. In the
instant appeal their capitalisation and deferment produced only de minimis
amounts.” |
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23. Mr Angel’s annexure 2 contained the following valuation of
the freeholder’s interest:
“Ground rent income |
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4 x £75 pa = YP @
14.28%
Reversion
Flat 3 1 x £300 pa = YP in perp.
@ 14.28% PV £1 in 56 years @ 14.28%
Flats 1,2 & 4 Reversion to PV
£1 in 89 years @ 14.28% Insurance Commission Premium £765.44 Commission at
20% 6 years purchase
Freehold value = say |
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24. Insofar as any weight is to
be attributed in this appeal to the evidence given in Maryland, it
does not in my view support Mr Maunder Taylor’s contention that a higher
deferment rate is |
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appropriate for leases with long
unexpired terms. In that case the present capital values of flats 1, 2 and
4, deferred 89 years, and the ground rent from flat 3, deferred 56 years
were de minimis, not because a higher deferment rate was applied to either
but because, with a deferment rate of 14.28% in each case, the values
produced by the calculation were vanishingly small. |
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25. Mr Maunder Taylor also
referred a number of post-Sportelli LVT decisions, relating to
properties subject to long leases, which he considered to be of
assistance. The first concerned 50 Wilton Crescent, London, SW1, where he
said that a deferment rate of 5.5% was determined for a house, and the
second concerned 220 Ladbroke Grove, London, W10, where the LVT deferred
the reversion to five flats at 5.25%. In oral evidence in chief Mr Maunder
Taylor confirmed that the rate determined for 50 Wilton Crescent was in
fact 5.0%. |
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26. 50 Wilton Crescent was
subject to a lease with 180 years outstanding. The LVT said
this:
“Sportelli however, was
not concerned with a freehold reversion 180 years in the future and it
does seem to the Tribunal that a reversion so far distant would persuade
an investor that a slightly higher return was
appropriate.” |
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27. In the case of 220 Ladbroke
Grove the unexpired term was 123 years. It is plain from para 42 of the
LVT’s decision that they decided to add 0.25% to the Sportelli
starting point because of the property’s location, not the length of
the lease. |
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28. In my judgment, neither of
these decisions provides any support for Mr Maunder Taylor’s contention
that the circumstances of the appeal property justify an addition of 2% to
the Sportelli rate for leases with 88 years
unexpired. |
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29. In his supplementary report
Mr Maunder Taylor produced two further LVT decisions. The first related to
a block of 429 flats plus some commercial space known as Nell Gwynn House,
Sloane Avenue, London, SW3 and the second to seven blocks of 150 flats and
a small leisure complex, known as King and Queen Wharf, Rotherhithe
Street, London, SE16. The unexpired lease terms were a mixture of 92 and
120 years at Nell Gwynn House and 106 years in the case of King and Queen
Wharf. In both cases the freeholder contended for a deferment rate of 5%.
Mr Maunder Taylor gave evidence for the nominee purchaser at both
hearings. He deferred the reversions at King and Queen Wharf at 7%. For
Nell Gwynn House he contended for 7% for those leases with 91.68 years
unexpired and nil reversionary value where the unexpired term was 119.68
years. |
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30. Although the King and Queen
Wharf hearing took place first, the LVT decision on Nell Gwynn House was
published before that of King and Queen Wharf. The Nell Gwynn House LVT
said of Mr Maunder Taylor’s evidence that “it may not be overwhelming but
it was much better than none.” It determined the deferment rate at 6.5%
for the shorter leases, with no reversionary value attributed to the
longer leases. |
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31. Mr Maunder Taylor sent a copy
of the Nell Gwynn House decision to the King and Queen Wharf LVT before
the latter had finalised its decision. The LVT said this of the Nell Gwynn
House decision:
“In Nell Gwynn House Mr
Maunder Taylor’s arguments based on his analysis of auction sales met with
a measure of success. That decision, by a particularly strongly
constituted tribunal, is clearly one of very considerable importance.
However, the actual finding by the Tribunal in that case is of little
evidential value. Notwithstanding that Mr Maunder Taylor’s evidence found
favour with the Tribunal in that case, having considered his report and
listened with great care to his oral evidence both in examination in chief
and cross examination, we do not reach the same conclusion on the facts.
Whereas the Tribunal in Nell Gwynn House did not find Mr Maunder
Taylor’s evidence overwhelming, following the very thorough and
skilful cross examination by Mr Letman we have found it less than
convincing. We have not had the opportunity to investigate what evidence
the Tribunal had before it and how it had treated it. Moreover, as we have
stated above, it is incumbent upon the expert to provide sufficient
particulars to substantiate the reliability of the material upon which the
opinion is based. In this instance, we were not persuaded as to the
reliability of the material produced by Mr Maunder
Taylor.” |
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32. Although Mr Maunder Taylor
did not draw them to my attention in either of his written reports for the
present appeal, it emerged that he had presented a similar argument at
several further recent LVT hearings, but without success apart from in the
Nell Gwynn House case. |
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33. As the LVT indicated in its
decision on King and Queen Wharf, decisions of other tribunals are of
little or no evidential value. The position was considered by the Lands
Tribunal (George Bartlett QC, President and N J Rose FRICS) in
Arrowdell Limited v Coniston Court (North) Hove Limited [2007] RVR 39. At para 37 the Tribunal said:
“In our judgment LVT decisions on
relativity are not inadmissible, but the mere percentage figure adopted in
a particular case is of no evidential value. The reason for this is that
each tribunal decision is dependent on the evidence before it, and thus,
in order to determine how much weight should be attached to the figure
adopted in a decision, it would be necessary to investigate what evidence
the LVT had before it and how it had treated it. Such a process of
investigation is potentially lengthy, and it is inherently undesirable
that LVT hearings should resolve themselves into rehearings of earlier
determinations.
38. It is certainly
understandable that valuers negotiating the settlement of an
enfranchisement claim should have regard to LVT decisions on relativity,
since these might seem to them to be the best guide of the likely outcome
if they were unable to reach agreement, even though, as Mr Pridell said,
the decisions are disparate and fail to show any established pattern. But
the decisions themselves can constitute no useful evidence in subsequent
proceedings.” |
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34. I consider that those
observations apply to LVT decisions on the deferment rate as much as to
those on relativity. None of the recent LVT decisions which have
considered Mr |
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Maunder Taylor’s theory of an
increased deferment rate for long dated reversions add to the weight of
the other evidence before me. Nor do I obtain assistance from the price
which Mr Maunder Taylor negotiated for the freehold in Alexandra Court,
Chase Road, London N14, where the freeholder’s decision was influenced by
personal circumstances. |
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35. At the end of Mr Maunder
Taylor’s evidence I questioned him about changes which had been made to
the appellant’s pleadings. In its statement of case dated 15 May 2008 the
appellant said:
“7. The subject property is in
East Finchley and certainly not in PCL. The Applicant’s expert witness,
Bruce Maunder Taylor FRICS gave evidence before the LVT and will give
evidence before the Lands Tribunal that the subject property has greater
risks associated with volatility and illiquidity than PCL property. In
addition, the property has greater risk of obsolescence and deterioration
than property in PCL.
8. The applicant submits that the
LVT ought to have adopted a deferment rate of 7% for the subject
property.” |
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36. The statement of case was
amended on 5 August 2008. The words in para 7 after “Lands Tribunal” were
deleted and the following two paragraphs added: |
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“5. It is accepted for the
purposes of this appeal that for the leases in the block with less than 80
years unexpired, the relevant deferment rate ought to be 5%. The Appellant
does not seek to overturn the LVT’s decision on that one relatively narrow
aspect.
6. However, the decision in
Sportelli was expressly limited to leases with less than 75 years
unexpired. The 1993 Act as amended by the Commonhold and Leasehold Reform
Act 2002 expressly recognises that leases with in excess of 80 years
unexpired have no marriage value. Mr Maunder Taylor will provide evidence
that for leases in excess of 80 years unexpired, the appropriate deferment
rate should not be 5% and that such leases ought to be treated differently
to those with less than 80 years left unexpired.”
37. Para 8 in the original statement of case was also amended
to read:
“7. The Applicant submits that the
LVT ought to have adopted the following deferment rates:-(a) 5% for flats
9, 29 and 36 (as determined by the LVT and in respect of which, therefore,
there is no appeal);
(b) Nil for flats 25 and 26
(c) Nil for
flat 27 (as determined by the LVT and in respect of which, therefore there
is no appeal); and
(d) 7% for the remaining flats in the
subject property.” |
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38. I asked Mr Maunder Taylor
whether he accepted that the deferment rate for those flats with 66.6 and
47.8 years unexpired should be 5%. He replied that he did not. In the
light of legal advice received, his client had decided to accept the 5%
rate, but he still considered that it should be 7%. The following exchange
then took place:
“Q. If you are right that the
deferment rate should be 7% instead of 5% for the shorter leases, does it
follow that you would be asking for 9% for the longer leases?
A. No sir.
Q. I thought you said that there
was a difference between the markets for shorter and longer
reversions.
A. There is a different type of
market. There is a point at which the thoughts and bids of those two
different types of purchasers would come together.” |
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39. That final answer is
irreconcilable with Mr Maunder Taylor’s previous evidence. In para 6.1 of
his first expert report Mr Maunder Taylor said that:
“As far as concerns non-prime
property, it is my opinion that the deferment rate should start to
increase at 75 years unexpired, increase further at 80 years unexpired,
and from 90 years unexpired upwards, reversionary value should be treated
as nil.”
In cross examination he said that
he had carried out further research, and now considered that the nil value
applied to leases of 100 years and more. Nowhere in his written or oral
evidence was there any suggestion that the deferment rates for long and
short leases would converge beyond 75 years. |
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40. Mr Maunder
Taylor’s evidence on the significance of the price paid for the appeal
property at auction was also troubling. In para 11.6 of his report he said
this:
“It is my opinion that the
auction price reflects the existence of the Leasehold Reform, Housing and
Urban Development Act 1993 however, it is my opinion that the existence of
the Act cannot possibly justify the difference between £95,000 in the with
Act world and £248,500 in the no Act world.”
41. As Mr Maunder
Taylor accepted in the course of cross-examination, that view was directly
contrary to one which he had previously expressed in reply to a written
question from the respondent’s solicitors. It was given in the context of
proceedings in the Central London County Court arising from the
respondent’s decision to challenge the validity of the lessees’ initial
notices served under the 1993 Act on the grounds that the prices proposed
were wholly unrealistic. Those prices were based on a valuation report by
Mr Maunder Taylor dated 31 December 2004, two weeks after the appeal
property had been sold at auction. Mr Maunder’s individual valuations of
the four blocks totalled £47,100, half the auction
price. |
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42. The respondent’s solicitors asked Mr Maunder
Taylor |
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12 |
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“10. Was the auction relevant and
contemporaneous evidence of a comparable transaction affecting the above
property?”
On 28 July 2006 Mr Maunder Taylor replied:
“All evidence has some value in
my opinion; the quality of the evidence must first be looked at and the
circumstances behind it, and then the weight that should be given to such
evidence can be properly assessed. In my opinion little weight, if any,
should be placed on the auction result for the purposes of the statutory
valuation.” |
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43. The statement in para 11.6 of
Mr Maunder Taylor’s report was also not supported by the enfranchisement
price paid to the owner of 33 Addison Gardens, London, W14 ODP. The
freehold interest in that property was purchased at auction for £30,000 in
September 2007. The nominee purchaser served an initial notice to purchase
the freehold on 11 January 2008. The freeholder served a counter notice at
£100,000, based on a valuation prepared by Mr Maunder Taylor. Following
negotiations between Mr Maunder Taylor and the nominee purchaser’s
surveyor the price was agreed at £79,600. |
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44. The price determined by the
LVT in respect of the appeal property and the price paid by the nominee
purchaser of 33 Addison Gardens bore the same relationship to the auction
price – a multiple of approximately 2.5. When I pointed this out to Mr
Maunder Taylor, he expressed the view that the value he had agreed for 33
Addison Gardens was exorbitant. That was a surprising suggestion, bearing
in mind his acceptance that the nominee purchaser had been represented by
a very experienced surveyor. |
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45. I am satisfied that Mr
Maunder Taylor’s original opinion on the relevance of the auction price,
quoted in para 42 above, was right. The respondent completed the purchase
of the freehold interest in the appeal property in January 2005. The
decision of the Lands Tribunal in Sportelli was not published until
15 September 2006. It is clear that, prior to Sportelli,
enfranchisement claims in this part of London were being settled based on
a deferment rate, for reversions both long and short, of at least 7%. The
then current valuation practice would have been of considerable
significance to anyone bidding for the appeal property at auction, since
the auction particulars disclosed that the lessees were interested in
acquiring the freehold interest. The effect of Sportelli was that,
for such properties, the starting point for assessing the deferment rate
was reduced from at least 7% to 5%. This change has resulted in a
substantial increase in the prices payable on enfranchisement. The
increases are particularly marked where the unexpired terms of the
existing leases are very long, because of the effects of compound interest
on the calculation. |
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46. Mr Maunder Taylor also
pointed to the auction catalogue which would have been seen by the
respondent before it agreed to purchase the appeal property on 14 December
2004. This referred to “valuable reversion in 2072” in the case of flats 9
and 36, having approximately 67 years unexpired, and “valuable reversion
in 2053” for flat 29 with approximately 48 years unexpired. No such note
appeared in respect of the remaining flats with 88 years or more
outstanding on the lease. I do not attach any significance to this
distinction. The auctioneers would have known that, in the real world,
purchasers were interested in the possibility of |
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realising marriage value which,
it is agreed, did not exist where leases were significantly longer than 80
years. In the no Act world, on the other hand, it is clear from
Sportelli that marriage value is to be ignored when assessing the
deferment rate, irrespective of the length of the unexpired
term. |
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47. Mr Maunder Taylor sought to
rely on the Tribunal’s observation in Arbib that there may be
reason to increase the deferment rate with leases of more than 80 years
unexpired. He did not refer to para 123 of Arbib, which drew
attention to the limitations of the evidence before the Tribunal (HH Judge
Michael Rich QC and P H Clarke FRICS) as follows:
“We must emphasise, however,
that, as appears from such analysis, we are disappointed as to the quality
and analysis of the evidence that has been put before us in the course of
these appeals.”
Because Arbib left room
for further evidence and argument as to what deferment rate was right, the
Tribunal decided to collect up further cases raising the same issue for
hearing together. The result was the hearing of Sportelli and other
appeals. In the course of his judgment in the Court of Appeal in
Sportelli Carnwath LJ said, at para 98
“The Tribunal could hardly have
done more to ensure that the issues were fully ventilated and exhaustively
examined. They had already been discussed in detail in Arbib. I have
already referred to the steps taken by the Tribunal to bring together the
present group of cases. Furthermore it is difficult to envisage a better
qualified panel of experts for the purpose than those called in this case,
or of specialist counsel on both sides of the argument.”
Having heard such evidence, the Tribunal decided
that
“Beyond 75 years we see no reason
on the evidence before us to conclude that the rate would be either higher
or lower” (para.85).
Mr Maunder Taylor’s selective
quotation from Arbib, and his failure to state in terms that the
Tribunal had subsequently arrived at a different conclusion having heard
more detailed evidence, was misleading. I regret that in my judgment the
inconsistencies and selective choice of material in Mr Maunder Taylor’s
evidence mean that I can place no reliance on his assertion that a higher
deferment rate should be applied to 88 year reversions than to those with
shorter unexpired terms. The appeal on this issue must therefore
fail. |
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Development value |
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48. Prior to the auction, Mr
Mehmet investigated the planning history of the appeal property. On 27
November 2004 he discovered that the only previous applications had
related to trees. Immediately after the auction Mr Mehmet instructed his
architects, Foster Lomas, to prepare a scheme for the erection of new
flats on the land at the rear of the site. Foster Lomas wrote to the local
planning authority, London Borough of Barnet, on 12 January 2005
requesting a pre-planning application meeting. On 12 September 2005 the
architects submitted a planning application for the erection of 2 two
bedroom flats totalling 157m2. That application
was |
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refused in November 2005,
contrary to the recommendation of the planning officer. A revised
application for two smaller flats was then submitted and approved. At the
same time as it submitted the second application, the respondent appealed
against the refusal of the first application, and the appeal was allowed
on 27 March 2006. |
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49. Mr Maunder Taylor considered
that, at the valuation date, the market value of the undeveloped area was
nil for the following reasons. Enquiries of the local planning authority
were likely to have resulted in an indication being given that planning
permission would be refused. The leases of two of the existing flats would
each have required a deed of variation permitting development of the land,
and there was no guarantee that such deeds would be entered into. Access
to the completed development would be down an access way leading from East
End Road to the garages and the development area. The management and
maintenance of the access way, together with the right to collect service
charges was part of the function of the management company, which was
controlled by the lessees. If the lessees wished to frustrate the
development they could refuse to enter into an agreement regarding
improvements to drainage, service charge contributions and membership of
the management company. Finally, Mr Maunder Taylor’s professional judgment
was that the sale value of the two flats proposed was £400,000, which was
insufficient to produce a profit after all costs had been taken into
account. |
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50. Mr Shapiro produced a
residual valuation of the site, assuming a gross development value for the
two flats of £550,000 which, after deducting the agreed figure for costs
and profit, produced a land value ripe for immediate development of
£95,000. He said that, if the site had been purchased for £50,000, it
would have produced a profit of £116,361 before allowing for the cost of
buying out legal impediments. With the benefit of hindsight it was known
that planning permission was capable of being obtained on appeal. Although
two leaseholders had an absolute indefeasible right to use the area
proposed for the development, in view of the comparatively low value of
the flats Mr Shapiro believed that the freeholder would have been able to
secure the release of their rights over the land for a realistic payment.
In accordance with the principle in Stokes v Cambridge Corporation
(1961) 13 P & CR 77, the most the lessees could have extracted
from the freeholder would be 30% to 40% of the development value. Mr
Shapiro did not think there would have been any difficulty with the
management company, since the two flats could if necessary be sold as
separate freeholds with only rights of access over the estate roads. On
planning, he considered that a purchaser would have had regard to the fact
that the land was an overgrown brownfield site, not in a conservation area
and unencumbered by tree preservation orders. The only reason planning
permission might have been refused was because of objections from the
adjoining leaseholder. Such objections were indeed made to the inspector
on appeal and rejected. The LVT had reflected all the risks by deducting
50% from its estimated unencumbered development value of £100,000. Mr
Shapiro considered this was a fair allowance and he, too, valued the land
at £50,000. |
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51. As is widely known, the Lands
Tribunal is reluctant to accept residual valuations if there is any
comparable evidence of land sales. No such comparable evidence has been
produced in this case, and so the residual method must form the basis of
my decision. The LVT arrived at its valuation of £100,000 as follows. It
valued the two flats at £550,000 and deducted £450,000, being the agreed
costs, and thus arrived at a residual development value of
£100,000 |
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with the benefit of planning
permission and assuming no hindrance to development. From that figure the
LVT deducted 50% to reflect the various risk factors and thus arrived at a
value of £50,000. Mr Shapiro agreed with the LVT’s gross development value
of £550,000. The value of each of the existing unimproved flats in
Sherwood Court had been agreed at £230,000. The proposed flats would be
30% larger and brand new. Mr Maunder Taylor pointed to certain
deficiencies in the proposed flats, but he had no comparable evidence to
justify his suggested value of £200,000 per flat. I find that the proposed
flats would have been worth £275,000 each, giving a gross development
value of £550,000 and a potential development value of £100,000 after
deducting the agreed figure for costs and profit. |
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52. Mr Shapiro pointed out that,
in Arrowdell, the Tribunal had made a deduction of 50% to reflect
the absence of planning permission. In that case, however, planning
permission had recently been granted on appeal for a virtually identical
development on the immediately adjoining site and the planning officer had
advised that refusal of permission for the development proposed “could not
be upheld on appeal”. In the case of the site at Sherwood Hall, by
contrast, there was no comparable planning history. Mr Mehmet did not say
whether he had discussed the possibility of development with the local
authority before the auction and, if he had, what view they had expressed.
He produced a letter from his architects to the Local Planning Authority
dated 12 January 2005, enclosing information for a Pre-application
meeting, but he provided no information as to the objections to the
proposed development which, it appears from a letter dated 12 September
2005, were made by the Council at that meeting. |
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53. I do not agree with Mr
Shapiro’s suggestion that Stokes v Cambridge provides an
appropriate yardstick for estimating the price likely to be required by
the two lessees enjoying a right to prevent the development. In that case
the Tribunal assessed the ransom value of a strip of land in a single
ownership at one-third of the increase in value of the claimant’s land
which would result from its release. One of the considerations which led
to this conclusion was the Tribunal’s finding that there was “an
inducement to the owner of the brown [ransom] strip to sell it as access”,
because development of the claimant’s land would expedite the rezoning of
other land, held together with the access strip, from allotment to
industrial use. In the present case there was no evidence to suggest that
the two leaseholders would benefit in any way from the proposed
development, nor that both could have been bought out at a price which
would have made the development financially viable. It is significant, in
my judgment, that the auctioneers did not even refer to the development
potential of the site in their sale particulars prepared in December 2004.
The LVT’s decision recorded at para 41 that garage 13 was located on the
development land. Garage 13 is not tied to the lease of a particular flat
and it is agreed that such garages are worth £10,000 each. Taking all the
evidence into account, I find that the speculative value of the
development site did not exceed the existing use value of garage 13. I
therefore assess the value of the development site at
£10,000. |
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Conclusion |
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54. The LVT valued the existing
buildings at £198,827 and the development site at £50,000. This produced a
total of £248,827, say £248,825. Before me, Mr Shapiro arrived at a
slightly |
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16 |
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lower value, £196,907, for the
existing buildings, based on a deferment rate of 5% throughout and
utilising an exact unexpired term in each case and no rounding. I accept
that figure. I determine that the price payable by the appellant to the
respondent for the freehold interest in the appeal property is £205,000,
calculated as follows:
Existing buildings
£196,907
Development site
£ 10,000
Total
£206,907
Say
£205,000 |
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55. I am not aware of any
circumstances which would justify the unusual step of awarding costs in an
appeal of this nature. I make no order as to costs. |
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Dated 10 September 2009 |
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N J Rose FRICS |
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