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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Carey -Morgan & Anor v Sloane Stanley Estate [2012] EWCA Civ 1181 (03 September 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2012/1181.html Cite as: [2012] HLR 47, [2012] RVR 348, [2012] EWCA Civ 1181, [2012] 48 EG 64, [2012] 3 EGLR 38 |
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ON APPEAL FROM
THE UPPER TRIBUNAL (LANDS CHAMBER)
LRA/86/2009, [2011] UKUT 415 (LC)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE RIMER
and
MR JUSTICE MORGAN
____________________
(1) CHARLES CAREY-MORGAN (2) JOHN MATTHEW STEPHENSON |
Appellants |
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- and - |
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TRUSTEES OF THE SLOANE STANLEY ESTATE |
Respondents |
____________________
Mr K S Munro (instructed by Pemberton Greenish LLP) for the Respondents
Hearing dates : 11 July 2012
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Morgan:
Introduction
The statutory provisions
Part II
Freehold of Specified Premises
Price payable for freehold of specified premises
2.- (1) Subject to the provisions of this paragraph where the freehold of the whole of the specified premises is owned by the same person, the price payable by the nominee purchaser for the freehold of those premises shall be the aggregate of—
(a) the value of the freeholder's interest in the premises as determined in accordance with paragraph 3,(b) the freeholder's share of the marriage value as determined in accordance with paragraph 4, and(c) any amount of compensation payable to the freeholder under paragraph 5.
(2) Where the amount arrived at in accordance with sub-paragraph (1) is a negative amount, the price payable by the nominee purchaser for the freehold shall be nil.
Value of freeholder's interest
3.- (1) Subject to the provisions of this paragraph, the value of the freeholder's interest in the specified premises is the amount which at the relevant date that interest might be expected to realise if sold on the open market by a willing seller (with no person who falls with sub-paragraph (1A) buying or seeking to buy) on the following assumptions—
(a) on the assumption that the vendor is selling for an estate in fee simple—(i) subject to any leases subject to which the freeholder's interest in the premises is to be acquired by the nominee purchaser, but(ii) subject also to any intermediate or other leasehold interests in the premises which are to be acquired by the nominee purchaser;(b) on the assumption that this Chapter and Chapter II confer no right to acquire any interest in the specified premises or to acquire any new lease (except that this shall not preclude the taking into account of a notice given under section 42 with respect to a flat contained in the specified premises where it is given by a person other than a participating tenant);(c) on the assumption that any increase in the value of any flat held by a participating tenant which is attributable to an improvement carried out at his own expense by the tenant or by any predecessor in title is to be disregarded; and(d) on the assumption that (subject to paragraphs (a) and (b)) the vendor is selling with and subject to the rights and burdens with and subject to which the conveyance to the nominee purchaser of the freeholder's interest is to be made, and in particular with and subject to such permanent or extended rights and burdens as are to be created in order to give effect to Schedule 7.
(1A) A person falls within this sub-paragraph if he is—
(a) the nominee purchaser, or(b) a tenant of premises contained in the specified premises, or(ba) an owner of an interest which the nominee purchaser is to acquire in pursuance of section 1(2)(a), or(c) an owner of an interest which the nominee purchaser is to acquire in pursuance of section 2(1)(b).]
(2) It is hereby declared that the fact that sub-paragraph (1) requires assumptions to be made as to the matters specified in paragraphs (a) to (d) of that sub-paragraph does not preclude the making of assumptions as to other matters where those assumptions are appropriate for determining the amount which at the relevant date the freeholder's interest in the specified premises might be expected to realise if sold as mentioned in that sub-paragraph.
(3) In determining that amount there shall be made such deduction (if any) in respect of any defect in title as on a sale of the interest on the open market might be expected to be allowed between a willing seller and a willing buyer.
(4) Where a lease of any flat or other unit contained in the specified premises is to be granted to the freeholder in accordance with section 36 and Schedule 9, the value of his interest in those premises at the relevant date so far as relating to that flat or other unit shall be taken to be the difference as at that date between—
(a) the value of his freehold interest in it, and(b) the value of his interest in it under that lease, assuming it to have been granted to him at that date;
and each of those values shall, so far as is appropriate, be determined in like manner as the value of the freeholder's interest in the whole of the specified premises is determined for the purposes of paragraph 2(1)(a).
(5) The value of the freeholder's interest in the specified premises shall not be increased by reason of—
(a) any transaction which—(i) is entered into on or after the date of the passing of this Act (otherwise than in pursuance of a contract entered into before that date), and(ii) involves the creation or transfer of an interest superior to (whether or not preceding) any interest held by a qualifying tenant of a flat contained in the specified premises; or(b) any alteration on or after that date of the terms on which any such superior interest is held.
(6) Sub-paragraph (5) shall not have the effect of preventing an increase in value of the freeholder's interest in the specified premises in a case where the increase is attributable to any such leasehold interest with a negative value as is mentioned in paragraph 14(2).
Comment on the statutory provisions
Deferment rate
Future payment/(1+i)n
(where i is the compound rate of interest and n is the number of years until deferment).
Marriage value
Hope value
Local Government and Housing Act 1989
Deferment rate: the decision under appeal
Deferment rate: the appeal
"We would certainly agree with the statement made herein that there is a short term certainty both as to realisation and cost of holding until the term ends … "
He added that he agreed with a further paragraph in the Upper Tribunal's note where the Upper Tribunal had described how the "short term reversions" were akin to freehold interests in possession, subject only to a period of deferment. He then commented on the choice of deferment rate in those circumstances.
"However, this does not seem to have any relevance to the specific property but should be borne in mind for any formula or methodology."
"The stance which an appellate court should take towards a point not raised at the trial is in general well settled: see Macdougall v Knight (1889) 14 App. Cas. 184 and The Tasmania (1890) 15 App. Cas. 223. It is perhaps best stated in Ex parte Firth, In re Cowburn (1882) 19 Ch D 419, 429, per Sir George Jessel M.R.:
"the rule is that, if a point was not taken before the tribunal which hears the evidence, and evidence could have been adduced which by any possibility would prevent the point from succeeding, it cannot be taken afterwards. You are bound to take the point in the first instance, so as to enable the other party to give evidence."
Even if the point is a pure point of law, the appellate court retains a discretion to exclude it. But where we can be confident, first, that the other party has had opportunity enough to meet it, secondly, that he has not acted to his detriment on the faith of the earlier omission to raise it and, thirdly, that he can be adequately protected in costs, our usual practice is to allow a pure point of law not raised below to be taken in this court. Otherwise, in the name of doing justice to the other party, we might, through visiting the sins of the adviser on the client, do an injustice to the party who seeks to raise it."
Hope value: the decision under appeal
"The conclusion of the House of Lords (Lord Hoffmann dissenting) was that hope value can be taken into account under paragraph 3 of Schedule 6, in so far as it is attributable to non-participating tenants wishing to obtain new leases of their flats in the open market (and not pursuant to Schedule 13)."
Hope value: the appeal
"115. Turning now to the level of hope value that should be applied to each non-participating flat, we accept, as we have said, Mr Roberts's evidence as to the likelihood of lessees coming forward in respect of the four flats with 4.74 years remaining. We agree that the potential imperatives for coming forward prior to lease expiry are many and that each lessee will have his own reasons for doing so. The fact that, with only a short time to go before expiry, the lessee has not served a notice does not mean he will not do so. Despite Mr McDonald's initial arguments that the market was declining at the valuation date, and was anticipated to continue in that vein, it seems to us on the facts that that was not the case. Mr McDonald also accepted in cross-examination that the market was closer to static than the impression he had initially given. Therefore, whilst he mounted a cogent argument as to why in a falling market the chances of a lessee serving a section 42 notice would be significantly diminished, that was not the situation that existed here.
116. The statistical analysis by Mr Roberts as to the percentages of lessees who had come forward, and the lease lengths that would remain when they did so, adds weight to our conclusion that a purchaser would be justified in anticipating the receipt of such a notice and would build in hope value to reflect that view. For instance, in Erkman there was evidence (paragraph 72) that a third of the applications for lease extensions came when there were less than 5.75 years unexpired."
The alleged inconsistency
The result
Future guidance
" Accordingly for future guidance we conclude that the deferment rate for reversions of less than 5 years should be the net rental yield that the evidence shows to be appropriate for the property in question; and that in addition there should be an end allowance, which, in the absence of evidence establishing some other percentage, should be 5%."
Lord Justice Rimer
Lord Justice Pill :
(a) That the Tribunal erred in assuming that the reversioner was guaranteed the early enjoyment of possession;
(b) That even if the Tribunal was entitled to make that assumption, the nominee purchaser should now be permitted to challenge it, and
(c) Upon a successful challenge, the court must adopt the generic deferment rate identified by the Tribunal in Sportelli, where the Tribunal gave guidance as to the deferment rate for unexpired terms of 20 years or more.
The argument was based on the possibility, considered by Morgan J at paragraphs 22 and 23, that tenants may have claims to security of tenure under section 186 and Schedule 10 of the Local Government and Housing Act 1989.