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R v London Rent Assessment Panel, ex parte Mota

Rent Act 1977, section 70(1)(b) — Application by tenant for judicial review, challenging decision of rent assessment committee — Whether tenancy was a furnished tenancy, the furniture being ‘provided for use under the tenancy’ within the meaning of section 70(1)(b), despite the fact that the furniture physically in situ belonged to the tenant — Tenant of a furnished flat agreed with the landlords that during renovations she would be given temporary accommodation and would then be put back into a renovated flat, although not the one which she had originally occupied — The arrangement, set out in a written agreement, confirmed that she would have a protected tenancy of the new flat, the fair rent of which would be fixed by the rent officer — The agreement stated that the landlords would have no objection to the tenant using on a daily basis her own furniture, in lieu of that supplied by the landlords, which would be removed and retained by them and reinstalled at the end of the tenancy — After she had moved into the new flat a fair rent of £4,500 pa was registered by the rent officer on the basis of a furnished tenancy, adopting an inventory of furniture sent in by the landlords, which the latter confirmed in their application form — The tenant objected to the rent registered and appealed to the rent assessment committee, who reduced the rent to £4,250, but still on the basis of a furnished tenancy — In their reasons the committee accepted that the bulk of the furniture in the flat belonged to the tenant, but said that they were ‘satisfied that the landlords had provided a full complement of furniture and equipment for the flat and concluded that it was let as furnished accommodation and should be assessed on that basis’ — They noted that the tenant had previously had a furnished tenancy from the same landlords — In an affidavit the chairman of the committee observed that, although at the hearing the tenant’s representative had pointed out that the tenant was using her own furniture, he had not argued that the tenancy was unfurnished and the only comparable rents put forward were those of furnished tenancies — Held, rejecting the application, that furniture can be ‘provided for use’ within the meaning of section 70(1)(b) although at the tenant’s request the furniture is not physically on the premises — In the present case the committee were justified on the evidence in taking the view that the tenant was entitled (a) initially to have a flat furnished, (b) to use her own furniture and have some or all of the landlords’ furniture removed and retained by the landlords, and (c) to have the landlords’ furniture replaced not merely at the end of the tenancy but also during its currency — The committee were not in error in having regard to the fact that the tenant’s original tenancy was furnished — It was not the case, as alleged in the grounds for the application, that the tenant should provide her own furniture; the landlords had merely agreed that she could do so — Application dismissed

No cases are
referred to in this report.

This was an
application for judicial review by Mrs Teresa Mota, seeking to quash a decision
of a committee of the London Rent Assessment Panel assessing a fair rent for a
first-floor front flat at 63 Greencroft Gardens, London NW6. The landlords were
Tropicacre Ltd.

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