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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Cadogan Holdings Ltd v Alberti [2022] EWCA Civ 499 (13 April 2022) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2022/499.html Cite as: [2022] 4 WLR 59, [2022] WLR(D) 186, [2022] EWCA Civ 499, [2022] RVR 193 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE UPPER TRIBUNAL (LANDS CHAMBER)
MARTIN RODGER Q.C., DEPUTY PRESIDENT
[2021] UKUT 0085 (LC)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
SIR KEITH LINDBLOM
(SENIOR PRESIDENT OF TRIBUNALS)
and
LORD JUSTICE NEWEY
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CADOGAN HOLDINGS LIMITED |
Appellant |
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– and – |
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FLEUR MARIE ALBERTI |
Respondent |
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Stephen Jourdan Q.C. and James Fieldsend (instructed by Teacher Stern LLP) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 8 February 2022
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Crown Copyright ©
This judgment was handed down remotely by circulation to the parties' representatives by email and release to BAILII. The date and time for hand-down was deemed not before 4pm on 13 April 2022
The Senior President of Tribunals:
Introduction
The issue in the appeal
"Does section 9(1A)(d) of [the 1967 Act] require the Tribunal to assume that it was unlawful as a matter of planning control to use 10 Cheyne Walk as a single house on the valuation date?"
The facts
The legislative provisions
"(d) … that the price be diminished by the extent to which the value of the house and premises has been increased by any improvement carried out by the tenant or his predecessors in title at their own expense".
Relevant authority on section 9(1A)(d)
"19. The issue in this appeal turns upon what I have called the second condition. What does it mean to say that the value of the house and premises has been increased by the improvement? In my opinion, it signifies a simple causal relationship: but for the improvement, the house and premises would have been worth less. The comparison is between the value of the house as it stands and what its value would have been if the improvement had not been made.
20. The hypothetical house envisaged by this comparison is in my opinion one which has all the features of the real house, including its history, save for one: that the improvement in question had not been made. … [If] the reconversion had not taken place, the 1947 improvements would still have existed and the house would have been worth less. To the extent that it was worth more, the tenant was entitled to a reduction in the open market value.
21. I can see no room in the statutory language for a comparative hypothesis which assumes, as the Court of Appeal did, that the improvement in question had not been done and also that there had been no earlier changes which the improvement reversed. In considering whether an improvement has added to the value of the house, the comparison is simply with the house as it would otherwise have been. This seems to me fair to both parties. If the tenant had not carried out the reconversion, the landlord's interest would have been the reversion on a house converted into five flats. The tenant was under no obligation to reinstate. If the tenant increases the value of the landlord's interest by expenditure on reconversion, it would not seem fair that he should have to pay a second time when the landlord's interest is valued for the purposes of a sale of the freehold."
"13. What assumption (d) requires is a calculation of the amount of the increase in value caused by the improvements. That necessarily involves a valuation of the property as it would have been on the valuation date if it had not been improved. Before the Lands Tribunal both valuers agreed that any potential for improvement would be included in the achieved sale prices of unimproved properties; in other words, that a valuation of an unimproved house and premises would include the value of any such potential. It follows that an increase in value caused by an actual improvement must be calculated as an excess over the unimproved valuation (including the value of the potential for improvement), notwithstanding that the potential is merged in or absorbed by the actual improvement. …".
And he added (in paragraph 15), that section 9(1A)(d) "does not credit the tenant with the value of the relevant improvements, but only with the increase in value they have caused".
"18. … Assumption (d) simply requires that the price be diminished by the extent stated. It does not impose any requirement that the house and premises shall be valued either from the top down or from the bottom up. The method adopted is a matter of valuation, not of law. Moreover, it appears that the method adopted here has been the standard method adopted by the Lands Tribunal ever since its decision in Norfolk v Master, Fellows and Scholars of Trinity College, Cambridge (1976) 32 P & CR 147 …".
As was stated in "Hague on Leasehold Enfranchisement", fourth edition (2003, at p. 225), "[the] manner in which the assumption is given effect is for the property to be valued (at all stages of the valuation – including the calculation of the marriage value) as if the improvements had not been made".
The tribunal's decision
"48. In my judgment the inevitable consequence of treating the works as if they had never been done is that any occupation of the house between the date on which the works were carried out and the valuation date must be assumed to have been of the building in its unimproved condition. It follows that the prospective purchaser of the unimproved house on the valuation date would not be advised that, although the building was divided into five flats, it nevertheless had the benefit of an established planning use which would render it lawful, without planning consent, to occupy it as a single house.
49. I accept Mr Jourdan's submission that, in principle, the best proxy for the value of the unimproved house would be a house next door which had been divided into flats on the date the lease was granted and remained in that condition on the valuation date. The planning status of the two properties would be the same and Cadogan should therefore expect to receive the same price on a notional sale of both properties. To credit Cadogan in the assessment of the price of 10 Cheyne Walk with the benefit of a planning status which was a consequence of the occupation of the property as a single house, when that style of occupation was enabled only by the improvements carried out by Gerald Scarfe, would not be to diminish the price by the extent to which the value of the house had been increased by those improvements.
50. Mr Sefton submitted that Fattal was binding authority that the planning status of the building should be taken to be as it actually was on the valuation date. I disagree. In Fattal the tenant's improvements did not cause the planning permission to be granted; the planning permission was not itself an improvement nor was it an inevitable consequence of the improvements (on the contrary, it pre-dated the improvements). In this case the planning status of the building is not an improvement, but it is a direct consequence of the improvements and would not have been enjoyed without them. That requires that the building must be assumed to have had the same planning status on the valuation date as it would inevitably have had if the improvements had not been carried out."
How should the preliminary issue be determined?
Conclusion
Lord Justice Newey:
Lady Justice King: