[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
United Kingdom Upper Tribunal (Lands Chamber) |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Upper Tribunal (Lands Chamber) >> Voyvoda v Grosvenor West End Properties & Anor [2013] UKUT 334 (LC) (25 July 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKUT/LC/2013/LRA_52_2012.html Cite as: [2013] UKUT 334 (LC) |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
UPPER TRIBUNAL (LANDS CHAMBER)
|
|
UT Neutral citation number: [2013] UKUT 334 (LC)
UTLC Case Number: LRA/52/2012
TRIBUNALS, COURTS AND ENFORCEMENT ACT 2007
LEASEHOLD ENFRANCHISEMENT – flat – deferment rate – whether Zuckerman addition for management applicable to a well-run block in prime central London – held Zuckerman addition not applicable to such a building or at all
IN THE MATTER OF AN APPEAL AGAINST A DECISION
OF THE LONDON LEASEHOLD VALUATION TRIBUNAL
and
(1) GROSVENOR WEST END PROPERTIES Respondents
(2) 32 GROSVENOR SQUARE LIMITED
Re: Flats 1, 2 and 12
33 Grosvenor Square
London W1 2HL
Before: Sir Jeremy Sullivan, Senior President and Mr N.J. Rose FRICS
Sitting at 43-45 Bedford Square, London WC1B 3AS
on 24 and 25 June 2013
Philip Rainey QC, instructed by Dorman Joseph Wachtel, solicitors for the appellant
Anthony Radevsky, instructed by Boodle Hatfield LLP, solicitors for the first respondent
Judith Jackson QC, instructed by Russell-Cooke LLP, solicitors for the second respondent
The following cases are referred to in this decision:
Cadogan v Sportelli [2007] 1 EGLR 153
Cadogan v Sportelli [2008] 1WLR 2142
Zuckerman v Calthorpe Estate [2011] L&TR12(UT)
Discussion
66. With one exception, all of the factors relied upon by Mr. Beckett in his evidence as justifying the Zuckerman addition were in existence and, if they had been thought to have any significance in valuation terms, would have been taken into account by the Tribunal when it decided in Sportelli that there was a need to make 0.25% uplift to the generic deferment rate of 4.75% for houses to reflect the more complex management problems that were associated with flats.
67. The one exception was not the existence of the 2003 Regulations, which had come into force prior to all of the relevant valuation dates (the earliest of which was 22 December 2003, and the latest of which was 7 July 2005) in the conjoined appeals that were heard by the Tribunal in Sportelli. It was the fact that, as the Tribunal concluded in paragraph 56 of its decision in Zuckerman, by September 2007 the market had become -
“more aware of the dangers posed by the regulations than was the case in Sportelli where the properties fell to be valued between two and a quarter and three and three quarter years earlier.”
68. The market’s awareness in 2007 that the 2003 Regulations posed dangers for landlords of flats did not, in the Tribunal’s view in Zuckerman, stem from the fact that the consultation regime under the regulations was more elaborate and prescriptive than the consultation requirements in the original section 20 of the 1985 Act. It stemmed from the fact that, on the law as it was then understood to be, a failure to comply with the strict procedural requirements imposed by the 2003 Regulations “could leave landlords unable to recover a large proportion of the costs of repairs”: see paragraph 55 of Zuckerman. In paragraph 56 of Zuckerman the Tribunal illustrated the “potentially extremely serious” consequences for landlords of failure to comply with the 2003 Regulations by reference to the 2008 decision of the Lands Tribunal in the Camden case, in which the landlord had been unable to recover service charges amounting to some £495,000.
69. That it was the market’s awareness post Sportelli of the potential severity of the consequences for the landlord of a failure to comply with the 2003 Regulations, rather than a perception that compliance with the regulations was unduly difficult, that was the basis for the additional 0.25% management allowance in Zuckerman is confirmed by the Tribunal’s decision in Yeats. Endorsing the approach in Zuckerman, the Tribunal said in paragraph 44 of its decision in Yeats:
“Since the valuation dates in Sportelli the potentially draconian effect of the legislation has become more widely recognised. In paragraph 53 of its decision the LVT drew attention to the decision of the Lands Tribunal in Daejan v Benson, where the Tribunal made reference to:
… the potential effects – draconian on the one side and a windfall on the other – are an intrinsic part of the legislative scheme.”
In paragraph 45, the Tribunal concluded that the level of concern about possible management problems during the course of a tenancy that had been recognised in Sportelli had been raised, not simply by the coming into force of the 2003 Regulations, but by the “subsequent interpretation and application” of the regulations, “especially in a case such as Daejan v Benson.”
70. The Supreme Court’s decision in Daejan v Benson has removed the basis on which the Tribunal reached the conclusion in Zuckerman and Yeats that post Sportelli there was a raised level of concern about possible management problems which would be reflected in the market. The potential effects of the legislation for the landlord of an efficiently managed block of flats are no longer “draconian”.
71. Mr. Beckett acknowledged that his firm’s reluctance to accept instructions to manage owner occupied flats meant that his experience of such management was limited. His perception that it was extremely difficult to comply with the requirements of the 2003 Regulations may well be due in large part to his own lack of experience in management. We preferred the evidence of Mr. Elmer, who has considerable experience of operating the 2003 Regulations in practice, that provided proper procedures were put in place, compliance with the 2003 Regulations was straightforward (paragraph 41 above). We also accepted his evidence that in well-managed blocks of flats the more prescriptive requirements in the regulations had proved to be a force for good, in that they had resulted in better relationships between landlord and tenant to their mutual advantage (paragraph 39 above).
72. Mr. Elmer fairly accepted that if the Chancellor’s judgment in Phillips v Francis is upheld on appeal it will make the landlord’s position more difficult. We do not accept that the market would view the additional difficulty of complying with the consultation requirements in the regulations with anything like the degree of trepidation with which it viewed the potentially draconian effect of the legislation as it had been interpreted by the Tribunal and the Court of Appeal prior to the Supreme Court’s judgment in Daejan.
73. It follows that we do not accept Mr. Beckett’s evidence that the effect of the Supreme Court’s judgment in Daejan was to remove a particular item of risk which had not been of “vital significance” and that most of the “general problems” which resulted from the 2003 Regulations remain (paragraph 31 above). We prefer Mr. Clark’s view (paragraphs 51-53 above) that in the light of the Supreme Court’s judgment in Daejan the risk profile which had formed the basis of the Tribunal’s decisions in Zuckerman and Yeats has been changed to such an extent that although there is still an element of risk, the level of risk is adequately covered by the uplift of 0.25% in the deferment rate which was established in Sportelli.
74. Since we have concluded that there is no longer any basis for making a Zuckerman addition we do not need to reach a conclusion on the Respondents’ further contention that the LVT was entitled to decide that a Zuckerman addition was not justified in the particular case of a well run block in PCL.
Conclusion
75. The appeal is dismissed.
Dated: 25 July 2013
Sir Jeremy Sullivan, Senior President of Tribunals
N J Rose FRICS