Betts and others v Vivamat Properties Ltd
(Before Mr Justice HODGSON)
Rent Act 1977, section 71(4) — Variable rents — Appeal by statutory tenants, of whom the case of one was considered as an example, from a decision of a rent assessment committee of the London Rent Assessment Panel — Tenancy agreement, after reserving the rent payable quarterly, provided for a fixed sum in respect of services to be paid by way of addition to the rent at the same times and manner as the rent — It also provided for recovery by the landlords once a year in arrear of any excess of the cost of services over the said fixed sum — The rent officer determined a total rent of £1,460 a year, variable in accordance with section 71(4) of the 1977 Act, which included an amount for services of £660 as at the date of registration — On appeal to the rent assessment committee, the committee reduced the total figure of £1,460 to £1,300 on account of certain disadvantages which they noted — Although the matter was not clear, the judge considered that the committee accepted the rent officer’s figure of £660 in respect of services — On appeal to the High Court it was contended by the tenant that the committee, having arrived at the total fair rent including the amount attributable to services, should have divided the latter amount into two parts — Part should have been assessed as a new fixed annual sum on account of future service charges bearing the same proportion to the new total rent as the fixed sum mentioned in the tenancy agreement bore to the old total rent — The balance in respect of services would then be payable separately each year in arrear — Held, rejecting this contention, that the committee had acted correctly — The suggested apportionment of the amount attributable to services between a fixed sum by way of addition to rent and a variable figure was inconsistent with section 71(1) of the 1977 Act — The committee’s decision meant that the total fair rent of £1,300 comprised rent in the strict sense and the whole of the amount attributable to services, any increases in the latter through the working of the variation terms being recoverable by the landlord at the end of each yearly period in arrear — Appeal dismissed
96
This was an
appeal under the Tribunals and Inquiries Act 1971 by five statutory tenants of
a block of flats, Embassy Court, Portsmouth Road, Surbiton, Surrey, for which
services were provided. The judgment takes one of the five, Mr W C Murray, as
an example. The respondents were the landlords, Vivamat Properties Ltd.
Nicholas Wood
(instructed by Lake Parry & Treadwell) appeared on behalf of the appellant;
David Neuberger (instructed by Green David Conway & Co) represented the
respondents.
Rent Act 1977, section 71(4) — Variable rents — Appeal by statutory tenants, of whom the case of one was considered as an example, from a decision of a rent assessment committee of the London Rent Assessment Panel — Tenancy agreement, after reserving the rent payable quarterly, provided for a fixed sum in respect of services to be paid by way of addition to the rent at the same times and manner as the rent — It also provided for recovery by the landlords once a year in arrear of any excess of the cost of services over the said fixed sum — The rent officer determined a total rent of £1,460 a year, variable in accordance with section 71(4) of the 1977 Act, which included an amount for services of £660 as at the date of registration — On appeal to the rent assessment committee, the committee reduced the total figure of £1,460 to £1,300 on account of certain disadvantages which they noted — Although the matter was not clear, the judge considered that the committee accepted the rent officer’s figure of £660 in respect of services — On appeal to the High Court it was contended by the tenant that the committee, having arrived at the total fair rent including the amount attributable to services, should have divided the latter amount into two parts — Part should have been assessed as a new fixed annual sum on account of future service charges bearing the same proportion to the new total rent as the fixed sum mentioned in the tenancy agreement bore to the old total rent — The balance in respect of services would then be payable separately each year in arrear — Held, rejecting this contention, that the committee had acted correctly — The suggested apportionment of the amount attributable to services between a fixed sum by way of addition to rent and a variable figure was inconsistent with section 71(1) of the 1977 Act — The committee’s decision meant that the total fair rent of £1,300 comprised rent in the strict sense and the whole of the amount attributable to services, any increases in the latter through the working of the variation terms being recoverable by the landlord at the end of each yearly period in arrear — Appeal dismissed
96
This was an
appeal under the Tribunals and Inquiries Act 1971 by five statutory tenants of
a block of flats, Embassy Court, Portsmouth Road, Surbiton, Surrey, for which
services were provided. The judgment takes one of the five, Mr W C Murray, as
an example. The respondents were the landlords, Vivamat Properties Ltd.
Nicholas Wood
(instructed by Lake Parry & Treadwell) appeared on behalf of the appellant;
David Neuberger (instructed by Green David Conway & Co) represented the
respondents.
Giving
judgment, HODGSON J said: I hope I do justice, in an impromptu judgment, to the
arguments very ably advanced by both counsel in this case.
This is an appeal
by five statutory tenants against the decision of a rent assessment committee
which was given after a hearing on December 20 1982. The same principles apply
to all five appellants, so I shall take one as an example; that of Mr Murray. I
am told he is the chairman of the tenants’ association of the block of flats at
Embassy Court, the property in question.
He held over,
as a statutory tenant, at the end of his tenancy. That would be June 8 1973. In
the agreement there were provisions for service charges. Clause 2, subclause
(8) reads:
To pay by way
of addition to the said rent hereby reserved and at the time and in manner
aforesaid the annual sum of £161.00 and such further annual sum as hereinafter
provided in respect of the cost of the following services. . .
The services
are then set out.
Subclause (9)
reads:
To pay or
refund to the Landlords on the Twenty-fifth day of March in every year any
excess or increase over and above the said annual sum of £161.00 which the
Landlord’s Surveyors shall certify is (when added to the said sum of £161.00)
the proper proportion attributable to the said Flat of the cost of supplying
the services hereinbefore mentioned to the whole of the said Building for the
previous yearly period.
Those two
clauses were of advantage to the tenants. As the service charges increased with
inflation, all the tenants had to pay periodically was what came to be the
comparatively small sum of £149. Any increase was delayed until the end of the
year, so that for the year, or those parts of it — three quarters of the year,
half the year and a quarter of a year — the tenants, for those periods, had the
use of the money which was being expended by the landlord. It had the advantage
to the landlord — an advantage which in the present circumstances was highly
unlikely ever to inure to his benefit — that if the service charges decreased
below the value of £149, then there was no way in which the tenant could
recover that difference.
In 1982 the
landlord applied for registration of rent. Mr Murray attended a meeting. The
meeting took place on September 22 1982. By letter dated October 1 1982 the
rent officer sent a notification of the registration of rent to Mr Murray. The
rent determined by the rent officer was £365 per quarter, or £1,460 per annum.
Under ‘Remarks’, he wrote: ‘Including variable amount for services currently
assessed at £660 per annum.’
Mr Murray
appealed to the rent committee from that decision. His submissions are
contained in his notice of appeal. He was represented at the meeting.
The decision
of the committee was given on December 20 1982. The details of the registration
are set out. So far as Mr Murray is concerned, the fair rent was entered as
£1,300 variable. In column 10, which sets out the rent officer’s rent, the
entry for Mr Murray’s flat is £365 per quarter or £1,460 per annum. That is
asterisked. On the London Rent Assessment Panel’s document there is a sentence
against that asterisk which reads: ‘Including variable amount for services
currently assessed at £660 per annum.’
The committee
gave their reasons. The fourth and fifth paragraphs should be read.
The tenants
considered that the loss of the resident caretaker was a drawback. Cleaning
contractors were now provided, and the rubbish, for example, was only cleared
twice a week. The schedule for services however showed a lower figure since the
caretaker left.
The committee
therefore determined a lower overall figure than the rent officer had fixed on
all the flats because of the above factors relating to the services. We
determined that the rents were variable in accordance with the tenancy
agreements in respect of the subject flats.
When the
committee wrote ‘with the tenancy agreements’, I have no doubt that more
precisely they would have stated ‘the relevant provisions of the tenancy
agreement’.
As a result of
that determination, from then on Mr Murray had to pay quarterly the sum of
£365, which included the whole of the services for the year subject to any
increase that might be recoverable at the end of the year. So he lost the
advantage of only having to pay a small part of the services quarterly and not
being obliged to pay the rest until the end of the year.
That decision
is the decision which is attacked. The attack is based on the grounds set out
by Mr Wood, dated April 19 1983. I think I can fairly summarise them by saying
that the allegation is that the committee reached its decision without having
proper regard to the provisions of section 71(4) of the Act. What it was
suggested that the committee should have done had it paid proper attention to
the provisions of section 71(4) is clearly set out in para 12 of the affidavit
of Mr Simes, who appeared for all the tenants at the hearing. It is worth
setting it out in full.
I
respectfully contend that what the rent assessment committee ought to have done
is to proceed as follows: — (a) to satisfy itself that the terms as to
variation are reasonable; and being so satisfied; (b) to arrive at a figure
which is reasonable for the combination of a new rent and a service charge and
which is based upon the last complete maintenance year in which all the
accounts have been settled; (c) of that figure, carefully to apportion the
amount attributable to rent; (d) of the balance attributable to services, to
assess part thereof as a new fixed annual sum payable on account of future
service charges, which should bear the same relation to the new rent as the old
fixed annual sum paid on account of the service charges bore to the old rent.
In my
judgment, had they been empowered to do so, that would have been a perfectly
just and sensible thing for the committee to have done. But, in my judgment,
they had no right to make a decision in those terms.
Under the
terms of the Rent Act 1977, section 3(1) provides:
So long as he
retains possession, a statutory tenant shall observe and be entitled to the
benefit of all the terms and conditions of the original contract of tenancy, so
far as they are consistent with the provisions of this Act.
Section 71
deals with the question of what is the rent which has to be registered. Section
71(1) reads:
The amount to
be registered as the rent of any dwelling-house shall include any sums payable
by the tenant to the landlord for the use of furniture or for services, whether
or not those sums are separate from the sums payable for the occupation of the
dwelling-house or are payable under separate agreements.
It seems clear
to me that that is a mandatory provision, and that when the committee was
deciding what rent to register, they were obliged to register ‘Rent Act’ rents
rather than ‘strict landlord’ rents. They had to register a single sum for both
the rent strictu sensu and that part of the rent attributable to
services. That they did.
Section 71(4)
reads:
Where, under
a regulated tenancy, the sums payable by the tenant to the landlord include any
sums varying according to the cost from time to time of — (a) any services
provided by the landlord
I pause there
to say that this is a regulated tenancy and the sums payable to the landlord do
include sums varying according to the cost from time to time of services. The
subsection goes on:
. . . the
amount to be registered under this Part of this Act as rent may, if the rent
officer is satisfied or, as the case may be, the rent assessment committee are
satisfied, that the terms as to the variation are reasonable, be entered as an
amount variable in accordance with those terms.
Clearly the
committee looked at the terms in the agreement, to which I have referred. They
came to the conclusion — in my view, the correct conclusion — that subclause
(8) of clause 2 was inconsistent with section 71(1). They also came to the
conclusion that on the facts of this particular tenancy, it was reasonable that
the landlord should be entitled to vary upwards the amount to be paid by the
tenant if the services became or were shown at the end of a year to have
exceeded the services included in the rent fixed under section 71(1).
It seems to me
that the scheme of section 71 is a simple one and a fair one. First of all, the
committee has to fix a rent in accordance with section 71(1) which must be
inclusive of rent — if I may call it that — and services. We should then
consider section 71(4). That section looks at the agreement to see whether it
is reasonable. It might be possible to have provisions for, as it were, a
repayment to a97
tenant, but in these days of inflation it would be very unusual to find such a
term in an agreement. But that section looks at the agreement to see whether
the terms as to variations are reasonable, such terms, of course, as are not
inconsistent with the statutory tenancy. If it decides that they are not
reasonable — perhaps they give the landlord an unfair advantage over the
tenant, or for some other reason — they may not make the rent under section
71(1) variable at all. In that case, the tenant, no matter what the increase in
the rent over the period of two years before the landlord can come back to the
rent officer, will be fixed at that figure. That is a permissive power given to
the committee to alleviate, so far as the tenant is concerned, the obligation
to pay any more over the two years. But in this case, it is clear that having
heard both sides, the committee considered that it would be fair to allow the
landlord to charge the tenants with any extra cost at the end of the year. They
stated in their reasons — and to me they seem to be perfectly sensible reasons
— ‘We determined that the rents were variable in accordance with the tenancy
agreements in respect of the subject flats.’
The term ‘rents’ is there used within the section 71(1) meaning.
That, in my
view, clearly means that in accordance with subclause (9) of clause 2, if the
landlord at the end of the year finds that the services have cost more than he
has recovered from his tenants, then he can, subject to the provisions of the
agreement and the certification of the landlord’s surveyor, exact that sum from
the tenant, Mr Murray.
In my
judgment, as satisfactory as it would have been had they been able to, the
committee had no power to fix or register a rent in the way in which, in
paragraph 12 of Mr Simes’ affidavit, they were asked to do. The rent officer
did apportion between rent and services. As I have shown, in terms, certainly
in their reasons, the committee did not. But I read the comment — if that is
what it is — on the registration — if that is the right word — as meaning that
the committee were accepting the £660 for services arrived at by the rent
officer as being the figure that they themselves were adopting. It is true that
the two paragraphs in the reasons which I have read at first sight seem to
militate against that view. But I think they can equally easily be read as
saying that because of what they found about the services, the true value of
the flats is less than the rent officer had found, and that therefore the
global figure — if that is the correct word — which they were assessing under
section 71(1) should be reduced.
It is alleged
that by the decision which they came to, the committee have deprived Mr Murray
of his rights under Schedule 19 to the Housing Act 1980. Para 15 of Schedule 19
provides:
This Schedule
does not apply to service charges payable by the tenant of a flat the rent of
which is registered under Part IV of the 1977 Act, unless the amount registered
is, in pursuance of section 71(4) of that Act, entered as a variable amount.
That is just
what the committee did in this case. In brief, therefore, attractive as the
proposal put forward by Mr Simes might have been, in my judgment it would not
have come within the mandatory requirements of section 71(1).
In those
circumstances, the appeal fails. There is no need, in my judgment, for any
remission to the committee.
The appeal
was dismissed with costs.