Co-Operative Group v Virk (Valuation Officer): UTLC 22 Oct 2020

Abuse of Process in Rating Alterations

Rating – Alteration of Rating List – validity of proposal challenging alteration to list made by VO to give effect to agreement – application to strike out appeals from the Valuation Tribunal for Wales and Valuation Tribunal for England – res judicata – abuse of process

[2020] UKUT 286 (LC)
Bailii
England and Wales
Citing:
CitedArnold v National Westminster Bank Plc HL 1991
Tenants invited the court to construe the terms of a rent review provision in the sub-underlease under which they held premises. The provision had been construed in a sense adverse to them in earlier proceedings before Walton J, but they had been . .
CitedJohnson v Gore Wood and Co HL 14-Dec-2000
Shareholder May Sue for Additional Personal Losses
A company brought a claim of negligence against its solicitors, and, after that claim was settled, the company’s owner brought a separate claim in respect of the same subject-matter.
Held: It need not be an abuse of the court for a shareholder . .
CitedThorntons Plc and Another UTLC 27-Apr-2018
Rating – Alteration of Rating List – Validity of Proposal Challenging alteration to list made by VO to give effect to agreement – whether abuse of process – Regs. 4, 12, 17 Non-Domestic Rating (Alteration of Lists and Appeals) (England) Regulation . .
CitedArnold v Dearing (VO) (Wedding Venue and Premises) UTLC 30-Jul-2019
Wedding venue and premises – proposal to divide single assessment into two hereditaments following letting of part for storage use – mode of use of retained part – whether reversion to single hereditament as wedding venue following termination of . .

Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Rating

Updated: 02 November 2021; Ref: scu.655165

Arsenal Football Club Ltd v Ende, Smith: HL 1978

It was said that the Arsenal football stadium was under-valued in local rating list. The House was asked who might be a ‘person aggrieved’ and entitled to complain about the under-valuation of a hereditament in the same area.
Held: A person liable to pay rates in the same area was entitled to challenge the valuation of another hereditament even if he could not show any financial or other loss to himself.
Lord Wilberforce said that ‘Uniformity and fairness have always been proclaimed and judicially approved as standards by which to judge the validity of rates.’
Viscount Dilhorne said: ‘While it is true that words in the English language take colour from the context in which they are used, I see nothing in the subsection or in the remainder of the 1967 Act to warrant giving to the word ‘aggrieved’ any meaning other than its ordinary natural meaning. To be ‘aggrieved’ a person must be affected by the matter of which he complains.’

Lord Wilberforce, Viscount Dilhorne, Lord Fraser of Tullybelton
[1979] AC 1
General Rate Act 1967 69(1)
England and Wales
Cited by:
CitedWalton v The Scottish Ministers SC 17-Oct-2012
The appellant, former chair of a road activist group, challenged certain roads orders saying that the respondent had not carried out the required environmental assessment. His claim was that the road had been adopted without the consultation . .

Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Rating

Leading Case

Updated: 02 November 2021; Ref: scu.470546

North Somerset District Council v Honda Motor Europe Ltd and Others: QBD 2 Jul 2010

Deleayed Rates Claims Service made them Defective

The council claimed that the defendants were liable for business rates. The defendants said that the notices were defective in not having been served ‘as soon as practicable’, and further that they should not be enforced since the delay had created substantial prejudice. The Council challenged the correctness of the Waltham Forest and Nottingham cases.
Held: The court reviewed the issue of delay in issuing claims for rates. Though Honda had been in rateable occupation, the claims had ot been served as soon as was practicable, and, given the Council’s delays which would lead to an unconscionable burden on Honda, the case for recovering the sums claimed was unsustainable. The claim against all the defendants failed.

Burnett J
[2010] EWHC 1505 (QB), [2010] RA 285
Bailii
Non-Domestic Rating (Collection and Enforcement) (Local Lists) Regulations 1989 (SI 1989/1058), Local Government Finance Act 1988
England and Wales
Citing:
CitedEncon Insulation Ltd v Nottingham City Council Admn 9-Jun-1999
When the rating authority discovered ratable premises, and issued claims going back in time the test was not whether they were unaware of them earlier, but whether they could have taken steps beforehand to discover the existence of the premises. A . .
CitedLondon Borough of Waltham Forest, Regina (On the Application of) v Waltham Forest Magistrates’ Court and Yem Yom Ventures Limited Admn 4-Nov-2008
. .
CitedRegina v Soneji and Bullen HL 21-Jul-2005
The defendants had had confiscation orders made against them. They had appealed on the basis that the orders were made more than six months after sentence. The prosecutor now appealed saying that the fact that the order were not timely did not . .
CitedJJB Sports Plc, Regina (On the Application of) v Telford and Wrekin Borough Council Admn 5-Nov-2008
The authority’s demand notice was served later than was practicable. The company now appealed against a liability order.
Held: The ratepayer’s appeal by way of Case Stated was dismissed. ‘demand notices must be served by the relevant authority . .
CitedRegentford Ltd v Thanet District Council Admn 18-Feb-2004
The council sought to enforce payment of arrears of council tax. The company responded that proceedings had not been begun in time. The company contended that time ran from the day when the council set the precept. The regulations said that time ran . .
CitedRegina v Secretary of State for the Home Department Ex Parte Jeyeanthan; Ravichandran v Secretary of State for the Home Department CA 21-May-1999
The applicant had failed to comply with the Rules in not using the form prescribed for appliying for leave to appeal against a special adjudicator’s decision to the Immigration Appeal Tribunal. The application, by letter, included all the relevant . .
CitedHardy v Sefton Metropolitan Borough Council Admn 27-Jul-2006
Appeal against finding of liability to pay council tax.
Held: A Magistrates’ Court which is invited to make a liability order may be entitled to refuse to make such an order in a case where there has been a serious breach of the mandatory . .
CitedHoward v Bodington Carc 27-Feb-1877
Imperative or Directory Statutory Requirements
The court considered the consequences of a failure to comply with a statutory requirement.
Held: The distinction drawn between statutory requirements which were ‘imperative’ on the one hand and ‘directory’ on the other involved unfortunate use . .
CitedLondon and Clydeside Estates v Aberdeen District Council HL 8-Nov-1979
Identifying ‘maandatory’ and ‘regulatory’
The appellants had sought a Certificate of Alternative Development. The certificate provided was defective in that it did not notify the appellants, as required, of their right to appeal. Their appeal out of time was refused.
Held: The House . .
CitedAttorney General’s Reference No 3 of 1999: Application By the British Broadcasting Corporation To Set Aside or Vary a Reporting Restriction Order HL 17-Jun-2009
An application was made to discharge an anonymity order made in previous criminal proceedings before the House. The defendant was to be retried for rape under the 2003 Act, after an earlier acquittal. The applicant questioned whether such a order . .
CitedRegentford Ltd, Regina (on the Application of) v Shepway District Council Admn 25-Oct-2006
A breach of the statutory duty by the billing authority to serve the notice as soon as practicable does not operate in all cases as a windfall to the person otherwise liable, but the breach precludes a claim to payment and a duty to pay only where . .
CitedWandsworth London Borough Council v Winder HL 1985
Rent demands were made by a local authority landlord on one of its tenants. The local authority, using its powers under the Act, resolved to increase rents generally. The tenant refused to pay the increased element of the rent. He argued that the . .
CitedCharles v The Judicial and Legal Service Commission and The Disciplinary Tribunal PC 19-Jun-2002
PC (Trinidad and Tobago) Disciplinary proceedings had commenced against the appellant, the chief magistrate, but the time limits had not been followed. The appellant argued that the time limits were mandatory. . .
CitedProject Blue Sky Inc v Australian Broadcasting Authority 28-Apr-1998
(High Court of Australia) ‘In our opinion, the Court of Appeal of New South Wales was correct in Tasker v Fullwood in criticising the continued use of the ‘elusive distinction between directory and mandatory requirements’ and the division of . .
CitedWang v Commissioner of Inland Revenue PC 19-Oct-1994
(Hong Kong) At first instance the judge found that the deputy commissioner lacked jurisdiction to make two determinations since he had not done so within a reasonable time required by the imperative language of the statute. The Court of Appeal . .
CitedBoddington v British Transport Police HL 2-Apr-1998
The defendant had been convicted, under regulations made under the Act, of smoking in a railway carriage. He sought to challenge the validity of the regulations themselves. He wanted to argue that the power to ban smoking on carriages did not . .
CitedDedman v British Building and Engineering Appliances CA 1973
The claimant sought to bring his claim under a provision which required a complaint to the industrial tribunal to be made within four weeks of the dismissal unless the employment tribunal was satisfied that this was not ‘practicable’. He did not . .
CitedRegina v Chief Constable of South Wales and Another Ex Parte Merrick QBD 17-Feb-1994
The court considered the failure of the respondent to comply with a statutory requirement to comply with a request from a detained person to consult a solicitor ‘as soon as practicable’.
Held: For the police to deny access to solicitors at . .
CitedAllan v Liverpool Overseers 1874
The court was asked whether a steamship company was liable to be rated in respect of its occupation of sheds which it occupied under a licence from the Mersey Docks and Harbour Board. The court noted that liability for rates fell only on a person . .
CitedHewson, Chapman and Co ltd v Grimsby County Borough Council 1953
That storage facilities might stand empty from time to time does not result in their ceasing to be in rateable occupation during those periods. . .
CitedMilford Haven Conservancy Board v Inland Revenue Commissioners CA 1976
The Minister had power to make provision by order for determining rateable values ‘by such method as may be so specified’. The formula prescribed by the Minister for dock undertakings was based on 4% of their receipts, including receipts from some . .
CitedCamden London Borough Council v Herwald 1978
Occupation of part of a hereditament by someone who retains legal possession of the whole and whose occupation of the part fulfils the description in the rating list, amounts to rateable occupation of the whole. . .
CitedRegina v Central Valuation Officer and another ex parte Edison First Power Limited HL 10-Apr-2003
Powergen sold a property to Edison. Powergen paid rates under a separate statutory rating regime, and paid an additional thirteen million pounds under an apportionment. Edison later complained that in being rated itself, the authorities had . .
CitedP.B. Groenveld BV v Produktschap voor Vee en Vlees ECJ 8-Nov-1979
A prohibited restriction on exports involved a national measure having discriminatory effect: ‘provision [i.e. Article 29 EC; now Article 35 TFEU] concerns the national measures which have as their specific object or effect the restriction of . .
CitedEdison First Power Ltd v The Secretary of State for Department of Environment Transport and the Regions CA 12-Jul-2001
. .

Cited by:
CitedSecerno Ltd and Others v Oxford Magistrates Court and Another Admn 19-Apr-2011
The applicants each sought judicial review of a decision of the magistrate that he did not have jurisdiction to decline to issue liability notices. They argued that the Council had failed to issue the required notices before placing the properties . .

Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Rating

Leading Case

Updated: 01 November 2021; Ref: scu.420209

Allen (Valuation Officer) v Freemans Plc: UTLC 7 Dec 2009

UTLC RATING – valuation – large distribution warehouse – treatment of passing rent – comparable rents and assessments – mixed age building – adjustments for height and first floor accommodation – quantum – end allowance – appeal allowed in part – rateable value determined at 1,675,000 pounds

[2009] UKUT 240 (LC)
Bailii
England and Wales

Rating

Updated: 01 November 2021; Ref: scu.415046

Pall Mall Investments (London) Ltd v Gloucester City Council: Admn 8 Jul 2014

The land-owner appealed by case stated against an assessment to unoccupied, non-domestic rate demands. The land-owner said that they were unoccupied through dilapidations and therefore exempt. They said that the court had wrongly disregarded their evidence that it would be an offence for the properties to be occupied in their condition.
Held: The appeal failed. It was not enough for the owner to establish that if he occupies the property or allows it to be occupied for a particular purpose he will render himself liable to prosecution under the health and safety legislation. At no time has the law prevented him from entering the premises in order to restore them. He must show that the law prohibits occupation, either because, as in Tower Hamlets, the law says he must not occupy in the circumstances as they currently prevail, or, as in Regent Lion Properties Ltd, that the necessary effect of a prohibition or enforcement notice is to prohibit him from occupation.

Pitchford LJ, Nicola Davies J
[2014] EWHC 2247 (Admin)
Bailii
Non-Domestic Rating (Collection and Enforcement) Local Lists Regulations 1989, Local Government Finance Act 1988 45
England and Wales
Citing:
CitedArbuckle Smith and Co Limited v Greenock Corporation HL 1960
The appellants had purchased a building which they wished to use as a bonded warehouse. In order to obtain the necessary licence they were required to carry out works of upgrading and repair. The rating authority made a demand for ‘occupied’ rates . .
CitedEasiwork Homes Ltd v Redbridge London Borough Council QBD 1970
The Court considered liability for a domestic rate during a period when a block of flats was being upgraded. Under paragraph 1 of schedule 1 to the General Rate Act 1967, where a relevant hereditament was unoccupied for a continuous period exceeding . .
CitedTower Hamlets London Borough Council v St Katherine by the Tower Limited QBD 1982
By section 34(4) of the 1939 Act, no building which required a means of escape from fire under section 34(1) ‘shall be occupied or let for occupation’ until the local authority had issued a certificate that the building had been provided with a . .
CitedRegent Lion Properties Limited v Westminster City Council CA 1990
An existing outline planning permission to develop land to include a parade of 12 shops in central London. In 1968 Pan American Airways Corporation took a sub-lease of the land and got planning permission to develop it as an air terminal for a . .

Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Rating

Updated: 01 November 2021; Ref: scu.533871

London County Council v Wilkins (Valuation Officer): HL 1957

Four builders’ moveable huts, which had been erected as temporary structures on a site for 18 months, only one of which was moved from one part of the site to the other during that period, were claimed chattels and therefore not rateable.
Held: Whether or not the structures had lost their character as chattels was not decisive as the test of rateability, nor was the conscious intention of the contractors to attach or not to attach them to the soil. These were factors to be considered and the test of rateability was whether there was evidence that the structures, occupied for a period which was not transient, were enjoyed with the land and enhanced its value. The test of rateability is whether there is evidence that the structures were enjoyed with the land and enhanced its value. In considering this, the intention of the erector and the other elements of annexation, period, size, quality, amenities and purpose are all material. All these factors are important, but intention, the ‘conscious element’ in intention, is no more than one factor and its importance is not overriding. The question is eminently one of fact.
Viscount Kilmuir set out what he regarded as the appropriate legal test for rateability: ‘I think that the Respondent’s submission was right, namely, that the test of rateability is whether there is evidence that the structures were enjoyed with the land and enhanced its value. In considering this, the intention of the erector and the other elements of annexation, period, size, quality, amenities and purpose are all material. All these factors are important, but intention, and certainly what I may call the ‘conscious element’ in intention, is no more than one factor and its importance is not overriding. The question is eminently one of fact.’
Lord Oaksey said: ‘A consideration of the authorities leads me to the conclusion that an occupier who makes any beneficial use of land is rateable if he does so for a period which is not transient.’
Lord Radcliffe said: ‘In my opinion, the present case really centres round the question whether the sheds, created on a building site by a building contractor for the purpose of his operations, involves such a degree of permanency in his occupation as to make it a rateable one. I have no doubt that, in considering this, it is at any rate relevant to ascertain to what extent and in what way these constructions have been made a fixed part of the site on which they stand, for the more casually they are attached the less likely it is that the occupation of them will be found to be a permanent one. In this sense it may be of some importance to enquire whether they are chattels or not. But to make the whole issue of rateability depends on the bare issue, for instance, whether a particular structure has or has not foundations in the ground which give it a measure of lateral as well as subjacent support would be to use a legal distinction for a purpose for which it was never intended . .
Certainly it is true that the law demands that an occupation to be rateable should be permanent. But then it is equally certain that permanence does not connote what it might appear to in this connexion. It is rather easier to say what it does not mean than what it does. An occupation is not the less permanent because it is that of a lessee who holds under a lease for a fixed term. In other words, there is permanent occupation however clearly the end might be in sight. More than that, an occupation can be permanent even though the structure or other chattel which is the means of occupation is removable on notice . . it may be that ‘permanent’ signifies no more than continuous, as opposed to intermittent, physical possession of the soil, as is suggested by the learned editors of Ryde on Rating (see 10th ed., p. 39). However that may be, it is well settled that a tenant at will has an occupation that is sufficiently permanent to carry rateability. If so, I see no reason why the contractor’s occupation of his huts during the pendency of the building contract should not produce a similar result. . .
But, in my opinion, within very wide limits, which are not overstepped in the present case, the question whether there is sufficient permanency of occupation is essentially a question of degree and as such is a proper question for the final determination of the Lands Tribunal. If the evidence had been, as it was not, that the huts or sheds were constantly being moved from one site to another, so that there was no real appropriation of any particular area of soil to the purposes of occupation, I can see that it might be necessary to say that the law did not admit so transient an occupation to be a rateable one. But all that we know is that one structure was once moved in the course of the operations and I do not think that we ought to assume that the occupation was in fact more transient than the evidence suggests. If so, 18 months on the site does not present itself to me as something inherently too brief for rateability. The rate is an annual impost on the occupier in respect of his profitable occupation of land; it is not a capital charge on the owner in respect of the property interest in the soil. If such an occupation in fact endures for a year or more I do not see why the occupier should not contribute to the current fund of the rating area for that period. The mere brevity of his occupation will be itself the cure of any hardship in his liability.’
Lord Tucker said: ‘A hereditament only becomes a subject of rateability if there is a sufficient element of ‘permanence’ in its occupation. This is essentially a question of fact and degree. It has long been settled that occupation for a defined period of time or even under a tenancy at will or by virtue of licence subject to revocation at any time may not be too transient to be regarded as ‘permanent’. See, for example, Cory v Bristow, where the moorings were subject to removal at a week’s notice from the conservators. If, therefore, the sites on which these huts stood, apart altogether from the huts themselves, were exclusively and beneficially occupied by the contractors for a sufficient length of time, they would become rateable hereditaments. The presence of the huts thereon would merely be an element enhancing the value of their occupation. In this case their presence is also a factor to be taken into consideration in deciding whether there has been a sufficient ‘carving out’ or appropriation of a particular portion of the site to amount to exclusive occupation by the contractors.’
Earl Jowitt thought it would not have been in the least surprising if the Lands Tribunal had come to a conclusion of fact that the structures in that case were ‘of such a transient nature’ as to justify their exclusion from the valuation bill; ‘they might be of such an unsubstantial and ephemeral character as to make it obvious that they should not be included’ on the valuation roll.

Viscount Kilmuir LC, Tucker, Oaksey, Radcliffe LL, Earl Jowitt
[1957] AC 362
England and Wales
Citing:
ApprovedJohn Laing and Son Ltd v Kingswood Assessment Committee KBD 1949
The appellant building contractors had been engaged by the Air Ministry to execute works at an aerodrome. They erected on the site, for the purpose of carrying out the contract, offices, garages, canteen for workmen and other structures. Although . .

Cited by:
CitedField Place Caravan Park Ltd v Harding CA 1966
The Court considered the rateability of a residential caravan site. The caravans were on wheels and retained their mobility although they were jacked up to keep them stable.
Held: Although a chattel is not a rateable hereditament by itself, it . .
CitedCinderella Rockerfellas Ltd v Rudd (Valuation Officer) CA 11-Apr-2003
The taxpayer appealed against a rating assessment on a barge permanently moored at a riverbank. He claimed that as a chattel, it should not be rated.
Held: The vessel was a chattel, but its occupation could be an occupation of the riverbed. . .
CitedReeves (Listing Officer) v Northrop Admn 6-Mar-2012
The respondent occupied a tugboat with his family as his home. The appellant authority had sought to charge council tax, saying that it was a dwelling. The boat was not a houseboat but a live-aboard seagoing vessel, registered in the Small Ships . .
CitedReeves (Listing Officer) v Northrop CA 17-Apr-2013
The taxpayer had successfully challenged the entry of his houseboat in the rating list at the Valuation Tribunal, but this had been re-instated at first instance. He said that the boat, as a registered seagoing vessel was not a houseboat, and that . .

Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Rating, Land

Leading Case

Updated: 01 November 2021; Ref: scu.181043

VRCC Ltd v French: UTLC 17 Dec 2013

UTLC RATING – Valuation – Veterinary Treatment Centre in converted warehouse – rebus sic stantibus – whether to be valued on gross or net internal area basis – appeal allowed in part – rateable value assessed at andpound;74,000.

[2013] UKUT 627 (LC)
Bailii
England and Wales

Rating

Updated: 01 November 2021; Ref: scu.535671

United Grand Lodge of Free and Accepted Masons of England v Holborn Borough Council: 1957

The Freemasons sought to be entitled to rating relief as having the purpose of advancing religion. To belong to the Freemasons a person did not need to practise any religion providing he believed in a Supreme Being and lived a moral life. This was viewed as laudable but not the same as advancing religion. It was noted that it might be argued that religion can be advanced by ‘example as well as precept’ but there was no evidence before the Court that the main object of Masons was to go out in the world and, by their example, lead persons to one religion or another. There was ‘no religious instruction, no programme for the persuasion of unbelievers, no religious supervision to see that its members remain active and constant in the various religions they profess, no holding of religious services, no pastoral or missionary work of any kind.’
Held: The Court defined ‘advancing’ religion as meaning ‘to promote it, to spread its message ever wider among mankind; to take some positive steps to sustain and increase religious belief.’ This was said to be able to be done ‘in a variety of ways which may be comprehensively described as pastoral and missionary.’

[1957] 1 WLR 1080, [1957] 3 All ER 281
England and Wales

Rating

Leading Case

Updated: 01 November 2021; Ref: scu.570864

Secerno Ltd and Others v Oxford Magistrates Court and Another: Admn 19 Apr 2011

The applicants each sought judicial review of a decision of the magistrate that he did not have jurisdiction to decline to issue liability notices. They argued that the Council had failed to issue the required notices before placing the properties on the List.
Held: The appeal failed. The role of the Magistrates Court was limited to considering whether liability had arisen following the service of a demand notice under Regulation 4 and a non payment of sums due and demanded on such an application. It was not open to the Magistrates Court (or an Appeal Court) to go behind the list and entertain a challenge to the validity or accuracy of the entry in the rating list upon which the liability order is based, and: ‘the Deputy District Judge was bound to conclude that the sums had become payable. The statutory scheme delivers that result. The two conditions specified in section 43(1) (a) and (b) of the 1988 Act were satisfied: the ratepayers were in occupation of the hereditaments on the days in question and the hereditaments were shown for the days in question in the local non-domestic rating list in force for the relevant years. The ratepayers, that is to say the claimants, were liable to pay an amount calculated in accordance with the provisions of section 43 of the 1988 Act. The liability for rates and the duty to pay the rates are separate. The liability arises by operation of the primary legislation. The duty to pay arises under the 1989 Regulations. No payment in respect of the liability need be made until a demand notice is served: see regulation 7(6) of the 1989 Regulations. No enforcement action can be taken unless a demand notice has been served.’

Burnett J
[2011] EWHC 1009 (Admin), [2011] RA 247
Bailii
Non-Domestic Rating (Alteration of Lists and Appeals) (England) Regulations 2005 42, Local Government Finance Act 1988 41 43
England and Wales
Citing:
CitedRegina v Soneji and Bullen HL 21-Jul-2005
The defendants had had confiscation orders made against them. They had appealed on the basis that the orders were made more than six months after sentence. The prosecutor now appealed saying that the fact that the order were not timely did not . .
CitedNorth Somerset District Council v Honda Motor Europe Ltd and Others QBD 2-Jul-2010
Deleayed Rates Claims Service made them Defective
The council claimed that the defendants were liable for business rates. The defendants said that the notices were defective in not having been served ‘as soon as practicable’, and further that they should not be enforced since the delay had created . .
CitedCounty and Nimbus Estates Limited v Ealing London Borough Council 1979
. .
CitedVitesse Networks Ltd, Regina (on The Application of) v North West Wiltshire Magistrates Court Admn 10-Dec-2009
. .
CitedCounty and Nimbus Estates Limited v Ealing London Borough Council 1979
. .
CitedHackney London Borough Council v Mott and Fairman QBD 7-Jul-1994
Justices have no jurisdiction to check the validity of an entry on the non-domestic rating list. . .

Cited by:
CitedSunderland City Council v Stirling Investment Properties Llp Admn 24-May-2013
The Council appealed by cases stated against dismissal of its summons against the defendant alleging non-payment of non-domestic rates. The property owned by the respondent had been occupied by a tenant, but only by a small equipment box, and the . .

Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Rating

Updated: 01 November 2021; Ref: scu.432854

Leda Properties Ltd, Re: Computer Centre: LT 27 Mar 2009

LT RATING – hereditament – computer centre – whether entry to be deleted from list on ground that incapable of beneficial use – held that it should not be – whether open to appellant on basis of proposal for deletion to contend that RV and descriprion should be altered – held it was not – Local Government Finance Act 1988 Sch 6 para 2; Non-Domestic Rating (Material Day for List Alterations) Regulations 1993 reg 3; Rating (Valuation) Act 1999 s 1; Valuation for Rating (Plant and Machinery) (England) Regulations 2000 reg 2; Non-Domestic Rating (Alterations and Appeals) Regulations 1993, regs 4A, 5A.

LT George Bartlett QC President
[2009] EWLands RA – 62 – 2006, [2009] RA 165
Bailii
Local Government Finance Act 1988 Sch 6.2, Non-Domestic Rating (Material Day for List Alterations) Regulations 1993 3, Rating (Valuation) Act 1999 1, Valuation for Rating (Plant and Machinery) (England) Regulations 2000 2, Non-Domestic Rating (Alterations and Appeals) Regulations 1993 4A 5A
England and Wales
Cited by:
CitedIceland Foods Ltd v Berry (Valuation Officer) SC 7-Mar-2018
Air System plant excluded from Rating value
The court was asked whether the services provided by a specialised air handling system, used in connection with refrigerated merchandise in the appellant’s retail store, are ‘manufacturing operations or trade processes’ for rating purposes.
Rating

Updated: 01 November 2021; Ref: scu.341638

JJB Sports Plc, Regina (On the Application of) v Telford and Wrekin Borough Council: Admn 5 Nov 2008

The authority’s demand notice was served later than was practicable. The company now appealed against a liability order.
Held: The ratepayer’s appeal by way of Case Stated was dismissed. ‘demand notices must be served by the relevant authority separately for each year. They can relate to more than one hereditament, but what have been conveniently described in this case as ‘multi-bills’, that is to say one bill demanding payment of the liability relating to more than one financial year, are not within the Regulations. The notices must contain prescribed details and if, by mistake, they do not, but the relevant amounts have nonetheless been demanded under Part II of the Collection Regulations, the validity of the notice is preserved by Regulation 4 of the 2003 Regulations, subject to the billing authority providing any permitted information as soon as practicable.’ and ‘It would, in my judgment, be highly unsatisfactory for the citizen’s liability to pay a tax, or not to pay it, to depend on the administrative details of the organisation of the rating authority in circumstances where the citizen himself cannot find out what the position is.’ However the appellant had suffered no prejudice by the failure. The appeal was dismissed.

Timothy Brennan QC
[2008] EWHC 2870 (Admin), [2009] RA 33, [2009] RA 33
Bailii
Non Domestic Rating (Collection and Enforcement)(Local Lists) Regulations 1989 4 5, Local Government Finance Act 1988
England and Wales
Citing:
CitedLondon and Clydeside Estates v Aberdeen District Council HL 8-Nov-1979
Identifying ‘maandatory’ and ‘regulatory’
The appellants had sought a Certificate of Alternative Development. The certificate provided was defective in that it did not notify the appellants, as required, of their right to appeal. Their appeal out of time was refused.
Held: The House . .
CitedRegentford Ltd, Regina (on the Application of) v Shepway District Council Admn 25-Oct-2006
A breach of the statutory duty by the billing authority to serve the notice as soon as practicable does not operate in all cases as a windfall to the person otherwise liable, but the breach precludes a claim to payment and a duty to pay only where . .
CitedRegina v Soneji and Bullen HL 21-Jul-2005
The defendants had had confiscation orders made against them. They had appealed on the basis that the orders were made more than six months after sentence. The prosecutor now appealed saying that the fact that the order were not timely did not . .
CitedEncon Insulation Ltd v Nottingham City Council Admn 9-Jun-1999
When the rating authority discovered ratable premises, and issued claims going back in time the test was not whether they were unaware of them earlier, but whether they could have taken steps beforehand to discover the existence of the premises. A . .
CitedPetch v Gurney (Inspector of Taxes) CA 8-Jun-1994
The thirty day time limit for the forwarding of a case stated is mandatory. The Court of Appeal has no discretion to extend the time limit. Millett LJ analysed the position by reference to the traditional dichotomy of directory or mandatory . .

Cited by:
CitedNorth Somerset District Council v Honda Motor Europe Ltd and Others QBD 2-Jul-2010
Deleayed Rates Claims Service made them Defective
The council claimed that the defendants were liable for business rates. The defendants said that the notices were defective in not having been served ‘as soon as practicable’, and further that they should not be enforced since the delay had created . .

Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Rating

Updated: 01 November 2021; Ref: scu.343953

Powys County Council v Hurst: Admn 4 Jul 2018

Pension not attachable for Council Tax arrears

Recovery of unpaid council tax – whether pension was ‘earnings’ for attachment of earnings order.
Held: The council’s appeal succeeded. The pension was not available to be attached, and it had exhausted all alternatives to committal.

Hickinbottom, Singh LJJ
[2018] EWHC 1684 (Admin), [2018] WLR(D) 413
Bailii, WLRD
Council Tax (Administration and Enforcement) Regulations 1992
England and Wales

Rating, Magistrates

Updated: 01 November 2021; Ref: scu.619004

Wilson v Josephine Coll (Listing Officer): Admn 13 Oct 2011

The land owners challenged the re-appearance of their empty and disrepaired dweliinghouse in the valuation list. It had been exempt for twelve months. The appellanat said that the appeal property was not a hereditament as it was not in reasonable repair. The officer submitted that the question of whether a property continues to be a hereditament, according to the relevant legal regime, does not depend on whether any repairs which may be needed can be economically carried out. It was submitted that a dwelling that is capable of repair remains a hereditament even if it would not necessarily be economic to carry out those repairs.
The Panel concluded that: ‘a dwelling cannot be deleted from the valuation list simply because of disrepair, regardless of the extent of that disrepair.’ Singh J said: ‘It seems to me that the tribunal fell into precisely the error of law which the respondent has stressed before me ought not to infect this area of law. They confused the two concepts which the respondent has been at pains to stress to me ought not to be confused, namely the concept of the existence, or continued existence, of a hereditament on the one hand, and the distinct question of the proper valuation of a hereditament on the other hand.’
The decision was erroneous and should be remitted to the tribunal.

Singh J
[2011] EWHC 2824 (Admin), [2012] PTSR 1313
Bailii
Valuation Tribunal for England (Council Tax and Rating Appeals) (Procedure) Regulations 2009 43, Local Government Finance Act 1992 22, Council Tax (Situation and Valuation of Dwellings) Regulations 1992
England and Wales
Citing:
CitedPost Office v Nottingham Council CA 1976
The court provided a definition of what is a hereditament. Browne LJ said: ‘the question is whether the building as a building is so far completed as to be capable of occupation or ready for occupation for the purposes for which it is intended – as . .
CitedRegina v East Sussex Valuation Tribunal Ex Parte Silverstone QBD 10-May-1996
There were two flats, which the applicant bought with a view to carrying out extensive repairs and converting into one unit. This went only slowly, the work being done by the applicant himself. The applicant had in fact been living in the property, . .
CitedBurke v Broomhead Admn 2009
The court heard applications relating to the inclusion of the property in the valuation list, including an assertion that the tribunal had wrongly interpreted the valuation evidence presented to it in arriving at its decision. The claimant said that . .

Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Rating

Updated: 01 November 2021; Ref: scu.466305

Reeves (VO) v Tobias and Others: UTLC 22 Nov 2010

RATING – hereditament – whether car parking spaces in a car park licensed to residential occupiers and used by them in connection with nearby residential premises were domestic property and so exempt from rating – held they were not – appeal allowed – Local Government Finance Act 1988, s 66(1)

[2010] UKUT 411 (LC), [2011] 16 EG 80, [2011] RA 149
Bailii
England and Wales

Rating

Updated: 01 November 2021; Ref: scu.569613

BMC Properties and Management Ltd v Jackson (VO): UTLC 11 Mar 2014

bmc_jacksonUTLC0314

UTLC RATING – alteration of rating list by valuation officer – effective date of alteration – list inaccurate on day of compilation by reason of omission of hereditament – date on which hereditament became liable to rating not reasonably ascertainable but before compilation of list – Reg. 14(2), (5) Non-domestic Rating (Alteration of Lists and Appeals) (England) Regulations 2009 – appeal dismissed

Martin Rodger QC, Deputy President
[2014] UKUT 93 (LC)
Bailii
Non-domestic Rating (Alteration of Lists and Appeals) (England) Regulations 2009 14(2) 14(5)
England and Wales

Rating

Updated: 01 November 2021; Ref: scu.522659

Ash (Valuation Officer): LT 29 Sep 2008

LT RATING – valuation – 2005 list – outdoor market authorised by Royal Charter and operated by local authority – whether shortened profits method of valuation appropriate – held that it was -appeal allowed – RV increased from andpound;6,100 to andpound;14,300.

[2008] EWLands RA – 64 – 2007
Bailii
England and Wales

Rating

Updated: 01 November 2021; Ref: scu.278623

Reeves (Listing Officer) v Northrop: CA 17 Apr 2013

The taxpayer had successfully challenged the entry of his houseboat in the rating list at the Valuation Tribunal, but this had been re-instated at first instance. He said that the boat, as a registered seagoing vessel was not a houseboat, and that he occupied only a tidal fore and aft mooring protected by a pit.
Held: The appeal failed. To be enterable in the list, the property had to be both a heraditament and a domestic property. As to the stautes applicable: ‘If prizes are to be offered for legislative gobbledegook then the foregoing would surely qualify. Having undertaken that trawl through these various statutes I confess to my shame I am no wiser nor would any ordinary citizen be without help from the Practice Note.’
‘The Tribunal had failed to recognise that the time Randy and his family were moored up in the estuary was not simply a factor of weight but the crucial, and on the facts of this case, the determinative factor. This family had made their home in their boat moored on the estuary for some two years by the time of the appeal before the Tribunal . . In the circumstances of this case the duration of two years is so overwhelming a factor that without any adequate explanation of how and why that factor was outweighed by others, the Tribunal, in my judgment, erred in law.’

Hughes, Patten LJJ, Sir Alan Ward
[2013] EWCA Civ 362
Bailii
Local Government Finance Act 1992 3(2) 64 66, General Rate Act 1967 115(1), Rating (Caravan and Boats) Act 1996
England and Wales
Citing:
Appeal fromReeves (Listing Officer) v Northrop Admn 6-Mar-2012
The respondent occupied a tugboat with his family as his home. The appellant authority had sought to charge council tax, saying that it was a dwelling. The boat was not a houseboat but a live-aboard seagoing vessel, registered in the Small Ships . .
CitedForrest v Overseers of Greenwich 1858
The court was asked whether a landing stage by a river was part of the land. F. moored a barge in the Thames between high and low water mark : the moorings wera stationary, in the bed of the river; and the barge floated at high water and grounded at . .
CitedCorey v Bristow HL 1877
The House considered the liability to be rated to the relief of the poor of the parish within which lay that part of the river where a derrick hulk was moored.
Held: Lord Hatherley said: ‘As Lord Campbell expressed it in one of the cases last . .
CitedWestminster City Council v Southern Railway Co HL 1936
Subject to special enactments, people are treated as occupiers of land, land being understood as including not only the surface of the earth but all strata above or below. The occupier, not the land, is rateable; but the occupier is rateable in . .
CitedJohn Laing and Son Ltd v Kingswood Assessment Committee KBD 1949
The appellant building contractors had been engaged by the Air Ministry to execute works at an aerodrome. They erected on the site, for the purpose of carrying out the contract, offices, garages, canteen for workmen and other structures. Although . .
CitedLondon County Council v Wilkins (Valuation Officer) HL 1957
Four builders’ moveable huts, which had been erected as temporary structures on a site for 18 months, only one of which was moved from one part of the site to the other during that period, were claimed chattels and therefore not rateable.
CitedHilleshog Sugar Beet Breeding Co Ltd v Wilke LT 1971
hilleshopLT1971
Parcels of land were occupied for 9-10 months in a year.
Held: This was not too transient a period to establish a rateable occupation notwithstanding that in subsequent years the occupation passed on to the other land.
Sir Michael Rowe . .
CitedCinderella Rockerfellas Ltd v Rudd (Valuation Officer) CA 11-Apr-2003
The taxpayer appealed against a rating assessment on a barge permanently moored at a riverbank. He claimed that as a chattel, it should not be rated.
Held: The vessel was a chattel, but its occupation could be an occupation of the riverbed. . .

Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Rating

Updated: 01 November 2021; Ref: scu.472637

Robinson Brothers (Brewers) Ltd v Houghton and Chester-Le-Street Assessment Committee: CA 1937

The enquiry which set the value of land for rating was economic not legal in nature. The passing rent, if determined by the operation of the market, would carry significant weight in that process.
Scott LJ said: Where the particular hereditament is let at what is plainly a rack rent or where similar hereditaments in similar economic sites are so let, so that they are truly comparable, that evidence is the best evidence, and for that reason is alone admissible; indirect evidence is excluded not because it is not logically relevant to the economic inquiry, but because it is not the best evidence. (3.) Where such direct evidence is not available, for example, if the rents of other premises are shown to be not truly comparable, resort must necessarily be had to indirect evidence from which it is possible to estimate the probable rent which the hypothetical tenant would pay. (4.) This kind of estimating is a skilled business, and it is here especially that the role of the skilled valuer comes in. His employment is plainly contemplated by all the rating statutes of the last hundred years and has always been the practice in all disputes upon quantum of assessment, but, above all, wherever resort to indirect sources for assessing value is necessary. (5.) In weighing up the evidence bearing upon value, it is the duty of the valuer to take into consideration every intrinsic quality and every intrinsic circumstance which tends to push the rental value either up or down, just because it is relevant to the valuation and ought therefore to be cast into the scales of the balance before he looks to see the resultant figure on the dial at which the pointer finally rests . . (8.) The rent to be ascertained is the figure at which the hypothetical landlord and tenant would, in the opinion of the valuer or the tribunal, come to terms as a result of bargaining for that hereditament, in the light of competition or its absence in both demand and supply, as a result of ‘the higgling of the market’. I call this the true rent because it corresponds to real value.

Scott LJ
[1937] 2 KB 445, [1938] AC 321
England and Wales
Cited by:
CitedOrange PCS v Alan Roy Bradford (Valuation Officer) CA 17-Feb-2004
The claimant challenged the rating of the land it had used for the erection of a mobile ohone mast.
Held: Even though the company had the statutory right to place a mast in this location and without payment, for rating purposes the officer . .

Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Rating

Leading Case

Updated: 01 November 2021; Ref: scu.193772

Burvill v Jones (Valuation Officer): UTLC 25 Mar 2013

burvill_jonesUTLC2013

UTLC RATING – valuation – MOT test centre – rebus sic stantibus – use of comparable warehouse rents – effect of business relocation from Olympics site – low emission zone – vehicle scrappage scheme – use of adjoining property as a waste transfer and recycling depot – appeal allowed in part – rateable value assessed at andpound;14,500 – Local Government Finance Act 1988 Schedule 6 para 2(7)

[2013] UKUT 101 (LC)
Bailii
Local Government Finance Act 1988
England and Wales

Rating

Updated: 31 October 2021; Ref: scu.472937

Royal College of Nursing v Borough of St Marylebone: CA 27 Oct 1959

The College sought exemption from rates in respect of a nurses’ home saying that its objects made it a charitable organisation. It was not conducted for profit, but appeared to have two main purposes.
Held: Each of the purposes must be charitable for the exemption to apply. The one at issue was the object ‘to promote the advance of nursing as a profession in all or any of its branches’,

Morris, Romer, Willmer LJJ
[1959] EWCA Civ 1, [1959] 3 All ER 663, [1959] 1 WLR 1077
Bailii
Rating and Valuation (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 1955 8
England and Wales
Citing:
CitedOverseers of the Savoy v Art Union of London Limited QBD 1894
AL Smith LJ considered the objects of the company: ‘If the other object be only a means to the one end . . then the Society has a sole and exclusive object and not another object subsidiary thereto’. . .
CitedGeneral Nursing Council for England and Wales v St Marylebone Borough Council HL 1959
The court considered how to decide whether the Council could claim exemption from rates.
Held: The court should restrict its consideration to the purposes as set out and not look to the actual activities. The relevant clause had as its main . .

Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Rating, Charity

Leading Case

Updated: 31 October 2021; Ref: scu.262822

Regentford Ltd v Thanet District Council: Admn 18 Feb 2004

The council sought to enforce payment of arrears of council tax. The company responded that proceedings had not been begun in time. The company contended that time ran from the day when the council set the precept. The regulations said that time ran from the date of service of the notification of liability served on the respondent. The first would have been out of time, but the second was not, and the action could proceed.
Held: A failure to serve the notice as soon as practicable did not operate as a bar to recovery of the tax, unless the breach had occasioned some procedural or substantive prejudice.
Lightman J said: ‘The statutory duty is imposed at least in substantial part for the protection of those from whom the billing authority may seek payment of council tax. The notice is required to enable the recipient to know that a claim may be made for payment and accordingly to take immediate steps to prepare and assemble any necessary evidence to establish that there is not a duty to pay . . and to arrange his finances to make payment.’

Lightman J
[2004] EWHC 246 (Admin), Times 04-Mar-2004, Gazette 18-Mar-2004, [2004] RA 113
Bailii
Local Government Finance Act 1992, Council Tax (Administration and Enforcement) Regulations 1992
England and Wales
Citing:
DistinguishedEncon Insulation Ltd v Nottingham City Council Admn 9-Jun-1999
When the rating authority discovered ratable premises, and issued claims going back in time the test was not whether they were unaware of them earlier, but whether they could have taken steps beforehand to discover the existence of the premises. A . .

Cited by:
CitedNorth Somerset District Council v Honda Motor Europe Ltd and Others QBD 2-Jul-2010
Deleayed Rates Claims Service made them Defective
The council claimed that the defendants were liable for business rates. The defendants said that the notices were defective in not having been served ‘as soon as practicable’, and further that they should not be enforced since the delay had created . .

Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Rating, Local Government

Updated: 31 October 2021; Ref: scu.193708

Sunderland City Council v Stirling Investment Properties Llp: Admn 24 May 2013

The Council appealed by cases stated against dismissal of its summons against the defendant alleging non-payment of non-domestic rates. The property owned by the respondent had been occupied by a tenant, but only by a small equipment box, and the respondent argued that it was entitled to a period of six months without rates liability under the 2008 Regulations upon it becoming empty.

Wilkie J
[2013] EWHC 1413 (Admin)
Bailii
Local Government Finance Act 1988, Non-Domestic Rating (Unoccupied Property) Regulations 2008& 4(b)
England and Wales
Citing:
CitedJohn Laing and Son Ltd v Kingswood Assessment Committee KBD 1949
The appellant building contractors had been engaged by the Air Ministry to execute works at an aerodrome. They erected on the site, for the purpose of carrying out the contract, offices, garages, canteen for workmen and other structures. Although . .
CitedSecerno Ltd and Others v Oxford Magistrates Court and Another Admn 19-Apr-2011
The applicants each sought judicial review of a decision of the magistrate that he did not have jurisdiction to decline to issue liability notices. They argued that the Council had failed to issue the required notices before placing the properties . .

Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Rating

Updated: 31 October 2021; Ref: scu.510080

Regina v East Sussex Valuation Tribunal Ex Parte Silverstone: QBD 10 May 1996

There were two flats, which the applicant bought with a view to carrying out extensive repairs and converting into one unit. This went only slowly, the work being done by the applicant himself. The applicant had in fact been living in the property, although he said it was vacant for about three months after he bought it. The property concerned was included in the initial valuation list as two separate dwellings, both of which were placed in band C, but in July 1993 the applicant made a proposal to alter the list on the basis that the dwellings should have been included in the valuation list as one entry. The applicant submitted that the dwelling did not, at the relevant date, comply with the statutory assumptions which are set out in Regulation 6.
Held: Conversion of two houses to one requires a new valuation, not an amalgamation. Nevertheless, the simple question before the court was one of law, namely whether the assumptions in that legislation are rebuttable. Carnwath J concluded that they were not rebuttable. He said that an assumption is by definition a hypothesis which may be adopted whether or not it is in fact true.
Carnwath J
Times 10-May-1996, [1996] RVR 203
Council Tax (Alteration of Lists and Appeals) Regulations 1993
England and Wales
Cited by:
CitedWilson v Josephine Coll (Listing Officer) Admn 13-Oct-2011
The land owners challenged the re-appearance of their empty and disrepaired dweliinghouse in the valuation list. It had been exempt for twelve months. The appellanat said that the appeal property was not a hereditament as it was not in reasonable . .

Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.
Updated: 26 October 2021; Ref: scu.86620

London Borough of Waltham Forest, Regina (On the Application of) v Waltham Forest Magistrates’ Court and Yem Yom Ventures Limited: Admn 4 Nov 2008

David Holgate QC
[2008] EWHC 3579 (Admin), [2009] RA 181
Bailii
England and Wales
Citing:
CitedDedman v British Building and Engineering Appliances CA 1973
The claimant sought to bring his claim under a provision which required a complaint to the industrial tribunal to be made within four weeks of the dismissal unless the employment tribunal was satisfied that this was not ‘practicable’. He did not . .

Cited by:
CitedNorth Somerset District Council v Honda Motor Europe Ltd and Others QBD 2-Jul-2010
Deleayed Rates Claims Service made them Defective
The council claimed that the defendants were liable for business rates. The defendants said that the notices were defective in not having been served ‘as soon as practicable’, and further that they should not be enforced since the delay had created . .

Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.
Updated: 23 October 2021; Ref: scu.372687

Thomas v Witney Aquatic Co Ltd: LT 1972

A clubhouse floated upon a lake over which the ratepayer had rights of use for sporting and boating activities and to maintain a floating clubhouse which was moored to three steel barges in turn moored to the land, made fast to the land by two wire hawsers and kept at a fixed distance from the land by two gangways, being moved in winter months to an island in the lake. The disputed hereditament was described as ‘lake, clubhouse and premises’.
Held: The floating clubhouse was a chattel enjoyed with the land and therefore rateable as part of the hereditament.
[1972] RA 31
England and Wales
Cited by:
CitedCinderella Rockerfellas Ltd v Rudd (Valuation Officer) CA 11-Apr-2003
The taxpayer appealed against a rating assessment on a barge permanently moored at a riverbank. He claimed that as a chattel, it should not be rated.
Held: The vessel was a chattel, but its occupation could be an occupation of the riverbed. . .

Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.
Updated: 23 October 2021; Ref: scu.181047

Re Truro College Haven: LT 10 Apr 2007

RATING – College premises – open learning centre – mode and category of occupation distinguished from office use – contractor’s basis of valuation rejected – comparative rental basis preferred – appeal allowed
[2007] EWLands RA – 74 – 2005
Bailii
England and Wales

Updated: 23 October 2021; Ref: scu.251196

London Borough of Newham v Rad Phase 1 Type B Property Company NO1 Ltd (Rating – Procedure – Service of Completion Notice): UTLC 28 Jul 2020

RATING – PROCEDURE – service of completion notice on 26 June 2019 – whether VTE has the power to determine a completion date later than three months from the date of the notice – whether the VTE has the power to quash a completion notice – appeal allowed – completion date of 11 May 2020 determined – s46 and schedule 4A, Local Government Finance Act 1988
[2020] UKUT 203 (LC)
Bailii
England and Wales

Updated: 08 October 2021; Ref: scu.652819

The Queen v The Overseers Of The Township Of Bilston: QBD 15 Nov 1865

On a case stated by Quarter Sessions, the gross rental of a house was found to be a certain sum.
Held: That in ascertaining the rateable value to the poor-rate, a deduction from this gross rental ought not to be allowed in respect of a payment made by the landlord for water laid on and supplied to the house by public commissioners, such supply and payment being optional.
[1865] EngR 732, (1865) 6 B and S 908, (1865) 122 ER 1428, (1865-1866) LR 1 QB 18, [1865] UKLawRpKQB 20
Commonlii, Commonlii
England and Wales

Updated: 25 September 2021; Ref: scu.281644

Rex v Shoreditch Assessment Committee, Ex parte Morgan: CA 6 Jul 1910

(At KBD and CA) A ratepayer claimed that the value of his hereditament had been reduced in value. Pursuant to section 47 of the Valuation (Metropolis) Act, 1869, he addressed a written requisition to the overseers. The section provided that: ‘If in the course of any year the value of any hereditament is increased by the addition of . . any building, or is from any cause increased or reduced in value . . (1) The overseers of the parish . . on the written requisition of . . any ratepayer . . shall, send to the assessment committee a provisional list containing the gross and rateable value as so increased or reduced of such hereditament.’ The section further provided that a person sending a requisition had to send a copy of it to the clerk to the assessment committee. The section further provided that if within fourteen days after the service of the requisition on the overseers they made default in sending the provisional list, then the clerk to the assessment committee was required forthwith to summon the assessment committee: ‘and the assessment committee shall appoint a person to make such provisional list, in the same manner as is in this Act provided in the case of the overseers failing to transmit a valuation list.’
After the ratepayer had addressed his written requisition to the overseers they failed, as required, to send a provisional list to the assessment committee. Because of the default of the overseers the assessment committee was summoned. The assessment committee instead of appointing a person to make a provisional list proceeded to consider the matter themselves and after hearing the ratepayer’s representative passed a resolution that they found as a question of fact that the premises had not been reduced in value during the year so as to warrant the committee appointing a person to make a provisional list.
Held: The ratepayer was entitled to a mandamus commanding the assessment committee to appoint a person to make a provisional list. Provided that there was prima facie evidence of a reduction in value, as it was held that there was, then it seemed plain on the wording of the section that the assessment committee were under obligation to ‘appoint a person to make such provisional list.’
Cozens-Hardy MR explained: ‘The ascertainment of the fact of reduction cannot be a condition precedent to the putting in force of the machinery by which it may be ascertained whether in truth there has been any reduction in value.’
Farwell LJ said that the ascertainment of the proper limits of the tribunal’s power of decision is a task for the court: ‘Subjection in this respect to the High Court is a necessary and inseparable incident for all tribunals of limited jurisdiction; for the existence of the limit necessitates an authority to determine and enforce it: it is a contradiction in terms to create a tribunal with limited jurisdiction and unlimited power to determine such limit at its own will and pleasure – such a tribunal would be autocratic, not limited – and it is immaterial whether the decision of the inferior tribunal on the question of the existence or non-existence of its own jurisdictions is founded on law or fact.’
Cozens-Hardy MR, Farwell LJ
[1910] 2 KB 859, [1910] UKLawRpKQB 121
Valuation (Metropolis) Act 1869
England and Wales
Cited by:
CitedAnisminic Ltd v Foreign Compensation Commission HL 17-Dec-1968
All Public Law Challenges are For a Nullity
The plaintiffs had owned mining property in Egypt. Their interests were damaged and or sequestrated and they sought compensation from the Respondent Commission. The plaintiffs brought an action for the declaration rejecting their claims was a . .

Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.
Updated: 20 September 2021; Ref: scu.653281

The Secretary of State for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy v PAG Asset Preservation Ltd: CA 31 Jul 2020

Whether companies operating a scheme to enable property owners to avoid liability for national non-domestic rates (‘NNDR’ or ‘business rates’) in respect of unoccupied commercial properties, in the form of what is referred to in the judgment below as ‘Scheme 3’, should be wound up on public interest grounds because it is said that their business model ‘lacks commercial probity in their operation of Scheme Three which misuses and/or abuses and/or subverts the insolvency legislation and process’.
[2020] EWCA Civ 1017
Bailii
England and Wales

Updated: 20 September 2021; Ref: scu.652902

Ratford v Northavon District Council: CA 1986

The reality of the agency of a receiver is reflected in the continuity, after the appointment of receivers, of the rateable occupation of the mortgagor through the agency of the receivers. The possession of an agent is to be attributed to that of his principal for rating purposes. The facts that the receivers had had representatives on the company’s premises from time to time during the receivership and that the receivers had managed the company’s business and controlled its assets were ‘quite consistent with the company remaining in legal possession and rateable occupation of the premises’. As to the authorities: ‘they all clearly show that the mere fact that a receiver has entered upon the company’s premises for the purpose of managing and carrying on its business does not necessarily mean that the company has been dispossessed or has ceased to occupy the premises for rating purposes. If it is to be shown that a change of rateable occupation has occurred, this conclusion must be derived from the terms of the receiver’s appointment or from what he has actually done, or from both together.’ The receivers having demonstrated that their appointment did not oblige them to take possession, and that in carrying out their duties they were deemed to be the agents of the company: ‘the onus . . shifted to the council to show that the receivers had dispossessed the company, or, to put it another way, to show that the quality of any possession of the premises which the receivers might have enjoyed was not that of mere agents. For possession held by a person in his capacity as agent is in law the possession of his principal.’ ‘It is a general principle of rating law that where an agent is required to occupy a hereditament in order to secure the better performance of his duties as agent, his occupation is for rating purposes ordinarily treated as that of his principal. If, on the other hand, an agent occupies his principal’s property otherwise than in his capacity as agent, the occupation will be treated as his own for rating purposes.’
Slade LJ, Ralph Gibson LJ and Sir John Megaw
[1987] QB 357
England and Wales
Citing:
CitedRe Marriage Neave and Co CA 1896
The court considered the liability for rates of a company’s receiver: ‘The argument that, because a receiver and manager is appointed, then ipso facto the company or persons carrying on business are turned out, is neither reasonable nor plausible. . .
CitedNational Provincial Bank of England v United Electric Theatres 1916
. .
CitedGyton v Palmour 1944
. .

Cited by:
CitedIn re Beck Foods Ltd: Boston Borough Council v Rees and Bennett CA 20-Dec-2001
The council appealed a decision that the administrative receivers of a company were not liable personally for the non-domestic rates otherwise incurred by a company during the receivership.
Held: The activities of the receiver or manager were . .
CitedSilven Properties Limited, Chart Enterprises Incorporated v Royal Bank of Scotland Plc, Vooght, Harris CA 21-Oct-2003
The claimants sought damages from mortgagees who had sold their charged properties as receivers. They said they had failed to sell at a proper value. They asked whether the express appointment in the mortgage of receivers as agents of the mortgagor . .
MentionedRhodes v Allied Dunbar Pension Services Ltd CA 1989
The intermediate tenant had charged the lease to the bank, which appointed receivers. Both the sub rent and the head rent fell into arrears. The head landlord then served a notice direct on the subtenant requiring him to pay the rent direct to the . .

Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.
Updated: 17 September 2021; Ref: scu.183442

Kingston Union v Metropolitan Water Board: HL 1926

The principle for valuation of properties for rating was to estimate ‘the rent at which the hereditaments might reasonably be expected to let from year to year’. But in applying that principle, so simple in appearance, to certain classes of hereditaments, great difficulties were encountered, and it was found necessary for rating experts and the courts to have recourse to hypotheses of a more or less violent character. The mains and other works might produce no rent at all, for no person would wish to become the tenant of them; but when seen as part of a great undertaking extending over a large and populous area, might be quite indispensable to the undertakers (who must be regarded as possible tenants) and so might command an extortionate rent. For a fair assessment a formula was required which . . would not compel the undertakers to pay rates on an aggregate sum exceeding the whole yearly value of their undertaking; and accordingly rating surveyors, soon after the passing of the Act of 1836, began to assess waterworks and other like concerns, such as railways, canals, gasworks, etc, upon the basis of the profits earned by the whole undertaking. The profits basis of valuation was a means of estimating the rent that the hypothetical tenant would pay.
Viscount Cave LC
[1926] AC 331
Parochial Assessments Act 1836 1
England and Wales
Cited by:
CitedRegina v Central Valuation Officer and another ex parte Edison First Power Limited HL 10-Apr-2003
Powergen sold a property to Edison. Powergen paid rates under a separate statutory rating regime, and paid an additional thirteen million pounds under an apportionment. Edison later complained that in being rated itself, the authorities had . .
CitedMilford Haven Conservancy Board v Inland Revenue Commissioners CA 1976
The Minister had power to make provision by order for determining rateable values ‘by such method as may be so specified’. The formula prescribed by the Minister for dock undertakings was based on 4% of their receipts, including receipts from some . .

Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.
Updated: 22 August 2021; Ref: scu.182919

G Greig (Inspector of Poor, City Parish of Edinburgh) v Heriot’s Hospital: SCS 14 Nov 1865

This was a case in which the Inspector of Poor of the City Parish of Edinburgh claimed poor rates from the Governors of Heriot’s Hospital, in respect of those lands upon which the hospital stood, and the gardens, plantations, and parks attached to the same.
[1865] SLR 1 – 27 – 2
Bailii
Scotland

Updated: 07 August 2021; Ref: scu.575131

Worthington and Another v Hulton: QBD 20 Nov 1865

The Public Health Act (11 and 12 Viet. c. 63), s. 89, enacts that rates may be made ‘retrospectively, in order to raise money for the payment of charges and expenses which may have been incurred at any time within six months before the making of the rate’
Held: that the Court might grant a mandamus ordering a rate to be made in order to satisfy a judgment obtained within six months before the claim for the writ, though the action, in which the judgment was obtained, was commenced more than six months after the right of action accrued, provided the delay is excused and shewn not to have been undue. The plaintiff in 1858 entered into contracts with the defendants, a local board of health, for the execution of works for the board, to be paid for out of money to be collected from those on whom the works were chargeable under the Public Health Act. The contracts were duly performed by the plaintiff. The notices given by the defendants turned out bad, and many of those who would otherwise have been liable refused to pay the sums assessed upon them. This became known to the plaintiff in February, 1860, and he then made a demand on the defendants. They were in hopes of being able to collect the money, notwithstanding the badness of the notices, and 800 pounds was in fact collected and paid over to the plaintiff, the last payment being in November, 1860, leaving a balance of more than 3000 pounds. due to the plaintiff, and he commenced an action against the defendants early in the following December. Judgment, was obtained by the plaintiff, and within six months he commenced an action, claiming a writ of mandamus commanding the defendants to levy a rate to satisfy the judgment.
Held: that the delay in commencing the original action was excused and shewn not to be undue, and that a peremptory writ might be granted.
[1865] EngR 738, (1865) 6 B and S 943, (1865) 122 ER 1441, (1865-1866) LR 1 QB 63, [1865] UKLawRpKQB 25
Commonlii, Commonlii
England and Wales

Updated: 06 August 2021; Ref: scu.281650

Edison First Power Ltd v Secretary of State for Environment, Transport and Regions: CA 12 Jul 2001

[2001] EWCA Civ 1096
Bailii
England and Wales
Citing:
Appeal fromRegina (ex parte Edison First Power Limited v Secretary of State for Environment, Transport, Same v Central Valuation Officer Admn 31-Mar-2000
. .

Cited by:
See AlsoEdison First Power Ltd v The Secretary of State for Department of Environment Transport and the Regions CA 12-Jul-2001
. .
At CARegina v Central Valuation Officer and another ex parte Edison First Power Limited HL 10-Apr-2003
Powergen sold a property to Edison. Powergen paid rates under a separate statutory rating regime, and paid an additional thirteen million pounds under an apportionment. Edison later complained that in being rated itself, the authorities had . .

These lists may be incomplete.
Updated: 19 July 2021; Ref: scu.218302

Avison Young Ltd v Jackson (Valuation Officer): CA 1 Jul 2021

Issues as to the scope of the power of the Valuation Tribunal for England (‘the VTE’) under regulation 38(7) of the Valuation Tribunal for England (Council Tax and Rating Appeals) (Procedure) Regulations 2009 (SI 2009/2269, ‘the VTE Regulations’) to require an alteration to a rating list that it is ordering to be limited to the duration of the circumstances giving rise to the alteration, and as to how that power should be exercised.
Lord Justice Arnold
[2021] EWCA Civ 969
Bailii
England and Wales

Updated: 14 July 2021; Ref: scu.663569

Nicolson, Regina (on The Application of) v Tottenham Magistrates and Another: Admn 6 May 2015

The court considered the proper approach on the award of costs on enforcement proceedings taken by local authorities seeking payment of unpaid council tax.
Andrews DBE J
[2015] EWHC 1252 (Admin), [2015] WLR(D) 204, [2015] PTSR 1045
Bailii, WLRD
Council Tax (Administration and Enforcement) Regulations 1992 (SI 1992 No.613)
England and Wales

Updated: 22 June 2021; Ref: scu.546411

Nuffield Health v London Borough of Merton: CA 28 May 2021

Whether Nuffield Health is entitled to mandatory relief from non-domestic rates in respect of its occupation of premises at Merton Abbey under section 43(6)(a) of the Local Government Finance Act 1988 which applies where:
‘the ratepayer is a charity or trustees of a charity and the hereditament is wholly or mainly used for charitable purposes (whether of that charity or of that and other charities).’
Lord Justice David Richards
[2021] EWCA Civ 826
Bailii
Local Government Finance Act 1988 43(6)
England and Wales

Updated: 20 June 2021; Ref: scu.663191

Society of Medical Officers of Health v Hope: HL 1960

A local valuation court had decided in 1951 that the Society’s land was exempt from rates under section 1 of the 1843 Act. The exemption was conditional on certain facts relating to the Society and its purpose in occupying the building. In 1956 the land was shown as a rateable in the new valuation list. The Lands Tribunal rejected a submission that a res judicata estoppel arose from the 1951 decision even though it was admitted that there had been no change of circumstances.
Held: The limited jurisdiction of the local valuation court, which might have to form opinions on questions of general law, but only incidentally to its direct function of fixing the assessment and the special position of the valuation officer or equivalent official did not create an assessment binding for future years.
Lord Radcliffe said there was: ‘high and frequent authority for the proposition that it is not in the nature of a decision on one rate or tax that it should settle anything more than the bare issue of that one liability, and that, consequently, it cannot constitute an estoppel when a new issue of liability to a succeeding year’ s rate or tax comes up for adjudication. The question of this liability is a ‘new question.’
Lord Keith said: ‘The valuation officer has a public duty to perform by making periodically every five years a valuation list of all hereditaments, with certain exceptions, in his rating area. He must necessarily reconsider and revise the previous valuation list. He has no personal interest in any appeals taken against his valuations, and has a duty to hold the scales as fairly as he can among the ratepayers affected, the occupiers of the various hereditaments. The general body of ratepayers is constantly changing. With each quinquennium the revaluation will affect a new body of ratepayers. I doubt if the valuation officer owing such a duty to an ever-changing body of ratepayers can be regarded as always the same party in the sense in which that expression is used for the application of the rule of res judicata. What if the appellant society changes its habitat, and moves into another rating area with a different valuation officer?
I emphasise these aspects of the functions of a valuation officer under the statute, for they lead to what I regard as the true answer to the submission for the appellants, which is that a public officer in the position of the respondent cannot be estopped from carrying out his duties under the statute.’
Radcliffe, Cohen, Jenkins LL, Viscount Simons, Keith L
[1960] AC 553
Scientific Societies Act 1843 1
England and Wales
Cited by:
CitedMatalan Retail Ltd v Revenue and Customs ChD 5-Aug-2009
The taxpayer imported swimwear for sale. The respondent had incorrectly indicated that such swimwear had one classification. The claimant sought to prevent the respondent reclassifying the goods, saying that they had made given binding tariff . .

These lists may be incomplete.
Updated: 17 June 2021; Ref: scu.372323

Debenhams Plc v Westminster City Council: HL 1987

The extended definition of ‘listed building’ in section 54(9) applied equally for the purposes of paragraph 2(c) of Schedule 1 of the 1967 Act. No rates were to be payable in respect of a hereditament for any period during which it was included in a list complied or approved under section 54 of the 1971 Act. It would be absurd if a structure subject to building control by the 1971 Act were to be treated as not so subjected for the purpose of some other Act dealing with the consequences of listing. ‘A large part of the argument for the appellants was directed to the proposition that the words in section 54(9) ‘for the purposes of the provisions of this Act relating to listed buildings and building preservation notices’ had the effect that the enactment which followed them was not to be taken into account for the purposes of Schedule 1 to the General Rate Act 1967. In my opinion that proposition is ill-founded. The quoted words have the effect, for the purposes of the listed building provisions of the Act, of widening the definition of ‘building’ in section 290(1) of the Act of 1971. No other effect can properly be attributed to them. It would be an absurd result, such as cannot have been intended by Parliament, if a structure subjected to listed building control by the Act of 1971, were to be treated as not so subjected for the purpose of some other Act dealing with the consequences of listing.’
References: [1987] AC 396, [1987] 1 All ER 51, [1986] 3 WLR 1063
Judges: Lord Keith of Kinkel
Statutes: Town and Country Planning Act 1971 54(9), General Rate Act 1967 Sch1 2(c)
Jurisdiction: England and Wales
This case is cited by:

  • Cited – Her Majesty’s Commissioners of Customs and Excise v Zielinski Baker and Partners Limited HL 26-Feb-2004
    The commissioners sought to charge to VAT charges for works which had been carried out to a building within the curtilage of a listed building. The taxpayer sought zero-rating.
    Held: The outbuilding to which alterations were made must have . .
    ([2004] BTC 5249, [2004] 1 WLR 707, [2004] STI 502, [2004] STC 456, [2004] 10 EGCS 185, [2004] 2 All ER 141, [2004] BVC 309, , [2004] UKHL 7, , Times 27-Feb-04, Gazette 25-Mar-04)
  • Cited – Shimizu (UK) Ltd v Westminster City Council HL 11-Feb-1997
    The removal of a listed building’s chimney stacks was an alteration allowing a claim for compensation. The phrases ‘alteration’ and ‘demolition’ are mutually exclusive. Although part of a building may be a listed building, a part of a listed . .
    (Gazette 12-Mar-97, Times 11-Feb-97, , , [1997] 1 All ER 481, [1997] UKHL 3, [1997] 1 WLR 168)

These lists may be incomplete.
Last Update: 27 November 2020; Ref: scu.193894

Provident Mutual Life Assurance Association v Derbyshire City Council: HL 1981

The particular individual on whom the task of forming the relevant opinion had been imposed by statute could not possibly perform all the tasks delegated to the relevant financial officer. He had, and needed, a staff to perform his functions, and it was a member of his staff who had formed the relevant opinion. The question was not whether there had been a delegation so that the decision was not that of the treasurer but of the subordinate; the question was whether the treasurer had authorised the subordinate to act as his agent in forming the opinion.
References: [1981] 1 WLR 173
Judges: Lord Roskill
Jurisdiction: England and Wales
This case is cited by:

  • Explained – Cheshire County Council v Secretary of State for the Environment 1988
    The court was asked as to the authority of an assistant solicitor to issue an enforcement notice when the standing orders which dealt with delegated powers referred in this context, but not in others, to the County Solicitor and Secretary alone. The . .
    ([1988] JPL 30)
  • Cited – Younger Homes (Northern) Ltd v First Secretary of State and Another Admn 26-Nov-2003
    The claimant sought to quash a planning decision on the basis that a screening decision had not been made.
    Held: Though the procedures within the authority could have been bettered, there was no formal requirement for a screening option to . .
    (, [2003] EWHC 3058 (Admin))

These lists may be incomplete.
Last Update: 27 November 2020; Ref: scu.192005

The Vestryman of The Parish of St Marylebone In Middlesex v The Zoological Society Of London; 31 May 1854

References: [1854] EngR 566, (1854) 3 El & Bl 807, (1854) 118 ER 1343
Links: Commonlii
Ratio:The Zoological Society was incorporated by Charter ‘for the advancement of Zoology and Animal Physiology, and the introduction of new and curious subjects of the animal kingdom.’ They occupied land on which were buildings appropriated as receptacles for housing animals and birds, and as a museum for stuffed specimens. Three acres, not so appropriated, were cultivated as a flower garden. Refreshment rooms on the premises were occupied for the purpose of supplying refreshment to visitors, by M, who paid to the Society a rent for this privilege. The public were admitted, to the grounds, either by paying money upon each admittance, or by ticketa given to them by the fellows. Once in the weeks for three months in tbe year, the Society procured the attendance of a musical band.
Held: The Society was not exempt from rates, under stat. 6 & 7 Vict. c. 36, s. 1, the premises not being occupied exclusively for the purposes of science. The Society was supported in part by annual contributions from the fellows and subscribers. Each fellow was entitled to personal admission, with a specified number of companions on, every day, and could also give admission at oertain times by written orders and tickets, to which he was entitled: and fellows were also entitled to purchase tickets giving free admission to the bearer. Subscribers also were entitled to purchase annually an ivory ticket, admitting a named person of their family, with a companion,. Semble: that the annual contributions by the felloes were not voluntary contributions within the meaning of sect 1, inasmuch as the fellows and subscribers obtained a benefit not purely scientific, in consideration of the payments.

Last Update: 17-Jun-16
Ref: 293423

The King v The Undertakers of The Aire And Calder Navigation (Case of The Hunslet Mills); 5 May 1832

References: , [1832] EngR 574, (1832) 3 B & Ad 533, (1832) 110 ER 193
Links: Commonlii
The owners of mills in the township of H, in compensation for the loss of water occasioned to them within the township by an adjoining navigation, were allowed, by Act of Parliament, to take certain tolls at a lock situate on the line of navigation,
but in a different township : Held, that they were not rateable at their mills in H. in respect of the tolls so taken.
Last Update: 07-Sep-15 Ref: 319521

The King v The Undertakers of The Aire and Calder Navigation; 12 Nov 1788

References: [1788] EngR 223, (1788) 2 TR 660, (1788) 100 ER 356
Links: Commonlii
Where a navigation runs from A. to B, through several intervening parishes, and the tolls for the whole navigation are collected in those two parishes, they may be assessed to the poor-rates in those two parishes for the whole amount according to the proportion collected in each. The justices at the sessions are the proper judges of the equality of poor-rates ; and the Court of B. R. will not interfere upon the ground of their being unequal, unless the inequality be manifestly apparent on the rate.
Last Update: 07-Sep-15 Ref: 368523

Novello v Toogood; 29 Apr 1823

References: (1823) 1 B and C 554, [1823] EngR 492, (1823) 1 B & C 554, (1823) 107 ER 204
Links: Commonlii
The defendant a British born subject was a music master and teacher of Italian, but was also employed in part as a chorister in the chapel of a foreign ambassador. He rented a large house, subletting parts. He resisted distraint on the premises for non-payment of poor rates.
Held: The appointment as a servant of the foreign ambassador was not sufficient to to protect him from such distraint, at least so far goods were not associated with hs appointment.
This case is cited by:

  • Cited – Regina -v- Jones (Margaret), Regina -v- Milling and others HL (Bailii, [2006] UKHL 16, Times 30-Mar-06, [2006] 2 WLR 772, [2006] 2 CAR 9, [2007] 1 AC 136)
    Each defendant sought to raise by way of defence of their various criminal actions, the fact that they were attempting to prevent the commission by the government of the crime of waging an aggressive war in Iraq, and that their acts were accordingly . .
  • Cited – Aziz -v- Aziz and others Rev 1 CA (Bailii, [2007] EWCA Civ 712, Times 17-Jul-07)
    The claimant sought return of recordings and of money paid to the defendant through an alleged fraud or threats. She was the former wife of the Sultan of Brunei and head of state, who now sought an order requiring the court to protect his identity . .

The Queen v The Inhabitants of St Marylebone; 29 May 1850

References: [1850] EngR 590, (1850) 15 QB 399, (1850) 117 ER 510
Links: Commonlii
Stat. 35 G. 3, c. 73, renders the incoming and the outgoing tenant of premises in the parish of St. Marylebone liable respectively to the payment of the rates of the parish in proportion to the times of their occupation respectively. A. occupied a house in St. Marylebone for the latter part of a year, in respect of which the outgoing tenant was rated ; and A. paid the portion of the rate in respect of the time during which he occupied, but was not entered on the ratebook as occupier for any part of that time. Held, that he acquired a settlement under stat. 3 W. & M. c. 11, s. 6.