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Western Heritable Investment Co Ltd v Husband

Rent Acts — Correct interpretation of ‘scarcity’ provision in determination of a fair rent — Section 42(2) of Rent (Scotland) Act 1971, the wording of which is identical with that of section 70(2) of the Rent Act 1977 applying to England and Wales — Important decision of House of Lords, reversing a decision of the Scottish Court of Session — A Scottish rent assessment committee based their determination of fair rents on those fixed by a previous committee who, in assessing the rents of comparable houses, had deducted 40% from a vacant possession capital value calculation on account of ‘relatively high scarcity’ in the area — On appeal by the landlords to the Court of Session two out of the three judges held that the deduction for scarcity ought not to have been made and that the committee were wrong to have relied on the previous committee’s computations, which were vitiated by error of law in making such a deduction — House of Lords held unanimously that the Court of Session were in error and restored the rent assessment committee’s decision — Court of Session were wrong in interpreting section 42(2) as creating an irrebuttable presumption of fact as to the non-existence of scarcity, whatever the true facts might be — The true construction of the subsection was that it required fair rents to be determined on the hypothetical basis that the house-letting market in the locality is in a state of equilibrium, in respect that the number of comparable houses available for letting does not substantially exceed the number of persons seeking to become tenants — If the actual state of affairs is that the market is unbalanced, rent officers and committees must make the adjustment in the rents needed to eliminate the element attributable to scarcity.

House of
Lords rejected a submission that there was no evidence that a shortage of
houses to let had the effect of inflating the prices paid for houses for sale.

The
requirement to have regard to ‘all the circumstances’ in subsection (1) does
not impose on a committee the duty to take into consideration ‘a fair return on
capital’ as one of ‘the circumstances’, although there may be exceptional cases
where they would be justified in considering what would be a fair return — ‘I
do not accept that a committee’s decision can be challenged as erroneous in law
merely because the committee have failed to take into consideration a ‘fair
return on capital’ but have based their decision exclusively upon comparables’,
per Lord Brightman.

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