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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Lands Tribunal >> Orange PCS v Bradford (VO) [2003] EWLands RA_53_2001 (8 April 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWLands/2003/RA_53_2001.html Cite as: [2003] EWLands RA_53_2001 |
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[2003] EWLands RA_53_2001 (13 April 2003)
RA/53/2001
LANDS TRIBUNAL ACT 1949
RATING – rateable value – telecommunications mast and associated equipment located in highway – operator's right to locate equipment in highway free of charge – whether effect of right that land of no value on rating hypothesis – land held to be of value – rateable value of land and rateable plant confirmed at £1,100
IN THE MATTER OF AN APPEAL AGAINST A DEICSION OF THE
NOTTINGHAMSHIRE VALUATION TRIBUNAL
BETWEEN ORANGE PCS Appellant
and
ALAN ROY BRADFORD Respondent
(Valuation Officer)
Re: Communication Station and Premises
Orange Pcs Ltd
Rotherham Baulk
Carlton in Lindrick Worksop
Notts SS1 9LD
Before: The President
Sitting at 48/49 Chancery Lane, London WC2A 1JR
on 25 March 2003
The following cases are referred to in this decision:
Hoare (VO) v National Trust [1998] RA 391
Trocette Property Co Ltd v Greater London Council [1974] RVR 306
Williams (VO) v Scottish & Newcastle Retail Ltd [2001] RA 41
Poplar Assessment Committee v Roberts [1922] 2 AC 93
Dawkins (VO) v Leamington Spa Corporation (1961) 8 RRC 241
Monsanto plc v Farris (VO) [1998] RA 107
Distillers Company v Fife Assessor [1983] RA 228
The following further cases were referred to in argument:
Railway Assessment Authority v Southern Railway Co [1936] AC 266
Amalgamated Relays Ltd v Burnley Rating Authority [1950] 2 KB 183
Robinson Bros (Brewers) Ltd v Houghton and Chester-le-Street Assessment Committee [1937] 2 KB 445
Royal Hong Kong Golf Club v Commissioner of Rating and Valuation [1977] HKTLR 236
Richard Glover instructed by Erdman Lewis Rating, chartered surveyors, for the appellant
Timothy Morshead instructed by Solicitor of Inland Revenue for the respondent
DECISION
Introduction
The facts
The Telecommunications Code
"The operator shall, for the statutory purposes, have the right to do any of the following things, that is to say -
(a) install telecommunication apparatus, or keep telecommunication apparatus installed, under, over, in, on, along or across a street …
(b) inspect, maintain, adjust, repair or alter any telecommunication apparatus so installed; and
(c) execute any works requisite for or incidental to the purposes of any works falling within paragraph (a) or (b) above, including for those purposes the following kinds of works, that is to say -
(i) breaking up or opening a street …
(ii) tunnelling or boring under a street …
(iii) breaking up or opening a sewer, drain or tunnel."
The code contains no provision for the payment of consideration or compensation where the power contained in para 9(1) is exercised, either to the highway authority or to the owner of land within the lateral limits of the highway that is not vested in the highway authority.
The Arguments
"It is important that this statutory world of make-believe should be kept as near as possible to reality. No assumption of any kind should be made unless provided for by statute or by decided cases."
Peter Gibson LJ went on to say:
"…subject to the specific statutory provisions the general principles which have been held to apply to statutory and other hypothetical transactions seem to me consistent with the rating authorities, which Schiemann LJ has reviewed, and are pertinent to the rating hypothesis mutatis mutandis. In particular I would emphasise the necessity to adhere to reality subject only to giving full effect to the statutory hypothesis, so that the hypothetical lessor and lessee act as a prudent lessor and lessee. I would call this the principle of reality, which is, to my mind, of fundamental importance in this case."
"In arriving at the valuation for the purposes of the Valuation (Metropolis) Act, 1869, of a hereditament to which the Increase of Rent and Mortgage Interest (Restrictions) Act, 1920, applies the maximum gross value to be assigned to that hereditament is not limited to the standard rent of the hereditament together with the additions thereto permitted by the latter Act."
The Valuation (Metropolis) Act 1869 contained the same basis for rateable value as that in the Parochial Assessments Act 1836 and the one that now applies under para 2(1) of Schedule 6 to the Local Government Finance Act 1988: the rent at which it is estimated that the hereditament might reasonably be expected to be let on a tenancy from year to year. The hereditament in question was a beerhouse the rent of which was restricted under the 1920 Act.
Discussion
"The tenant referred to is, by common consent, an imaginary person; the actual rent paid is no criterion, unless, indeed, it happens to be the rent that the imaginary tenant might reasonably be expected to pay in the circumstances mentioned in the section…
Just as the tenant is hypothetical, so also is the rent; it is only used as a standard which must be examined without regard to the actual limitation of the rent paid by virtue of covenant as between landlord and tenant, and also, as I regard it, to statutory restrictions that may be imposed upon its receipt. From the earliest time it is the inhabitant who has to be taxed. It is in respect of his occupation that the rate is levied, and the standard in the Act is nothing but a means of finding out what the value of that occupation is for the purposes of assessment. In my opinion, the rent that the tenant might reasonably be expected to pay is the rent which, apart from all conditions affecting or limiting its receipt in the hands of the landlord, would be regarded as a reasonable rent for the tenant who occupied under the conditions which the statute of 1869 imposes."
"This imaginary rent is not to be confounded with the rent which an actual tenant in possession in fact pays. It may naturally be assumed that the hypothetical tenant would take this latter into consideration, along with many other things, including the capacity of the hereditament and its adaptabilities, in calculating the amount of the rent he might be expected to pay; but the actual rent paid by the actual tenant is not, and cannot be, treated as a measure of, or a substitute for, the hypothetical rent which conceivably might be expected from a hypothetical tenant."
"…I think that the word 'rent' must now be held to mean something which at any rate is not conditioned by the legal relations which exist between an actual landlord and an actual tenant. An occupier under a beneficial lease cannot require the annual value to be cut down to the rent actually reserved. Equally a hypothetical occupier, although he will occupy, if he occupies at all, under a beneficial statute, must not be supposed to limit what he is prepared to give in order to get the occupation of the hereditament, merely to the amount, the giving of which will enable him to retain it in the face of anything that an actual landlord could legally do against him."
"The occupation value of property may be, and often is, distinct from its value to the owner. This distinction would probably be emphasized where an artificial statutory maximum is fixed, and a statutory restriction prevents an owner from recovering from any tenant a greater amount, as rent, than the statutory maximum. It has long been recognized that actual rents based on the contractual relationship between tenant and landlord are not the test of the value of a property for rating purposes. I do not think that there is any difference in this respect between a contractual or a statutory rental. In either case the same objections apply, and in either case the rateable value must be assessed in accordance with statutory directions."
And at 121 he said:
"The fundamental distinction remains that the assumed rental, based on statutory directions for the purpose of ascertaining occupation value, is in itself a different thing from an actual rental which denotes the liability between owner and tenant, and which may depend on a variety of conditions other than those affecting the beneficial or profitable occupation of the property."
Conclusion
Dated 8 April 2003
George Bartlett QC, President