R v London Rent Assessment Panel, ex parte Chelmsford Building Co Ltd
(Before Mr Justice McNEILL)
Rent Act 1977 — Decision of rent assessment committee of London Rent Assessment Panel challenged by application for judicial review — Landlords seek to have committee’s decision quashed on the ground that the reasons given for it were inadequate — Committee in this case had upheld the determination of the rent officer that the rent of a flat should be £100 per month exclusive of rates — A main complaint made by the landlords was that the committee’s reasons did not deal satisfactorily with the landlords’ case in regard to the effects of inflation — The committee had not in fact commented in any detail on landlords’ submissions as to percentage increases of costs and increases in average earnings, but had indicated that they did not accept their application — The court referred to the limitation on the committee’s power and duty to give reasons in detail in determining an appeal on a fair rent, which was a matter of valuation, as explained by Lord Widgery CJ in Metropolitan Holdings Ltd v Laufer and Guppys (Bridport) Ltd v Sandoe — The committee had taken inflation into account and their reasons were sufficient to show how their decision was reached — The suggestion that the reference in their decision to their own knowledge and experience was merely a ‘common form of wording’ which might cover weaknesses was rejected; the Court of Appeal in Wareing v White had recognised the phrase in which these words occurred as a permissible way for the committee to express themselves unless they were being untruthful — The judge agreed with comments made by Mann J in Ellis & Sons Fourth Amalgamated Properties Ltd v Southern Rent Assessment Panel as to the advantages of using the procedure of judicial review rather than statutory appeal to challenge the decision of a rent assessment committee — Application dismissed
This was an
application by landlords, Chelmsford Building Co Ltd, for judicial review
seeking an order of certiorari to quash the decision of a committee of the
London Rent Assessment Panel. The decision related to a flat at 1 Longwood
Court, Longwood Close, Corbets Tey Road, Upminster, of which the tenant at the
time was a Mr Wakefield. The committee had confirmed the rent officer’s
registration of £100 per calendar month.
Derek Wood QC
and Wayne Clark (instructed by Macdonald Stacey, agents for Elgar &
Griffith, of Salisbury, Wilts) appeared on behalf of the applicants; John Laws
(instructed by the Treasury Solicitor) represented the respondents.
Rent Act 1977 — Decision of rent assessment committee of London Rent Assessment Panel challenged by application for judicial review — Landlords seek to have committee’s decision quashed on the ground that the reasons given for it were inadequate — Committee in this case had upheld the determination of the rent officer that the rent of a flat should be £100 per month exclusive of rates — A main complaint made by the landlords was that the committee’s reasons did not deal satisfactorily with the landlords’ case in regard to the effects of inflation — The committee had not in fact commented in any detail on landlords’ submissions as to percentage increases of costs and increases in average earnings, but had indicated that they did not accept their application — The court referred to the limitation on the committee’s power and duty to give reasons in detail in determining an appeal on a fair rent, which was a matter of valuation, as explained by Lord Widgery CJ in Metropolitan Holdings Ltd v Laufer and Guppys (Bridport) Ltd v Sandoe — The committee had taken inflation into account and their reasons were sufficient to show how their decision was reached — The suggestion that the reference in their decision to their own knowledge and experience was merely a ‘common form of wording’ which might cover weaknesses was rejected; the Court of Appeal in Wareing v White had recognised the phrase in which these words occurred as a permissible way for the committee to express themselves unless they were being untruthful — The judge agreed with comments made by Mann J in Ellis & Sons Fourth Amalgamated Properties Ltd v Southern Rent Assessment Panel as to the advantages of using the procedure of judicial review rather than statutory appeal to challenge the decision of a rent assessment committee — Application dismissed
This was an
application by landlords, Chelmsford Building Co Ltd, for judicial review
seeking an order of certiorari to quash the decision of a committee of the
London Rent Assessment Panel. The decision related to a flat at 1 Longwood
Court, Longwood Close, Corbets Tey Road, Upminster, of which the tenant at the
time was a Mr Wakefield. The committee had confirmed the rent officer’s
registration of £100 per calendar month.
Derek Wood QC
and Wayne Clark (instructed by Macdonald Stacey, agents for Elgar &
Griffith, of Salisbury, Wilts) appeared on behalf of the applicants; John Laws
(instructed by the Treasury Solicitor) represented the respondents.
Giving
judgment, McNEILL J said: Chelmsford Building Co Ltd moves with leave for
judicial review by way of certiorari to quash a decision of the London Rent
Assessment Panel, reasons for which decision were given on October 23 1984.
The decision
of the panel was upon an appeal by the applicant company from a registration by
the rent officer of a fair rent of premises of which the applicant company was
landlord, namely, flat no 1, Longwood Court, Longwood Close, Corbets Tey Road,
Upminster. The tenant at that time was a Mr Wakefield. He has since left. By
its decision the panel upheld the rent officer’s determination that the fair
rent for the premises (upon terms of the lease which are not material to this
application) was £100 per calendar month.
No question
arises as to the jurisdiction or as to the statutory functions of the rent
officer and the panel under the Rent Act 1977. Moreover, although there is a
statutory right of appeal from the panel under the Tribunals and Inquiries Act
1971 (section 13), Mr John Laws for the panel does not contend that these proceedings
are improperly instituted. This is consistent with the opinion expressed by
Mann J, which I accept and follow, in Ellis & Sons Fourth Amalgamated
Properties Ltd v Southern Rent Assessment Panel, unreported, the
judgment being given on February 8, 1984.*
In the course of that judgment the learned judge said:
The appeal is
under section 33 of the Tribunals and Inquiries Act and therefore attracts
Order 55. The appellant is perfectly entitled to take that course, but as Mr
Brown, who very helpfully appeared as amicus in this case, pointed out,
a challenge to a decision of a Rent Assessment Committee by way of judicial
review has three possible advantages. First, it enables the committee to be
represented. The probability is that they would make use of that ability and
thus avoid the delay such as occurred in the present case, which has occurred
through the appointment of an amicus. Secondly, costs can follow the
event in either direction. Thirdly, it permits the possibility of an appeal if
a landlord’s appeal against the committee’s decision is successful. I of course
postulate in looking at those advantages that the tenant does not appear. In
the present case there is no tenant, but I understand that it is rare for
tenants to appear on these occasions. So I would commend for consideration by
those who are thinking of challenging a decision of a rent assessment committee
that they should proceed by way of an application for judicial review.
*Editor’s
note: The decision was in fact reported at (1984) 270 EG 39, [1984] 1 EGLR 91.
It is that
course which has been followed in the present case. Those words of the learned
judge appear to me to apply precisely to this application. Judicial review is
particularly apt where what is under consideration is, as here, the procedure
adopted by the panel and the reasons given by it for its decision. The present
case is a good example of the task of this jurisdiction, to look not at the
decision itself but at the decision-making process (see, for example, per Lord
Brightman in Chief Constable of the North Wales Police v Evans
[1982] 1 WLR 1155 at p 1174).
Here the main
thrust of the attack by Mr Derek Wood for the landlord applicant upon the
decision of the tribunal is directed to the reasons given or the absence of any
or any sufficient reasons given for the decision.
It is beyond
question, as a matter of law, that a rent assessment panel must give reasons
for its decision. This obligation arises under section 12(1) of the Tribunals
and Inquiries Act 1971 and has been well recognised as applicable in this
jurisdiction. The contrary is not argued. The matter is clearly expressed in
the judgment of Lord Widgery CJ in Metropolitan Property Holdings Ltd v Laufer
(1975) 30 P & CR 172 at p 176. Having stated that the obligation is derived
from section 12(1) and having set out the relevant words of the subsection, the
judgment continued:
So there is an
obligation to state reasons, and it is necessary to say that this is a provision
applicable to a wide range of tribunals, not merely the rent assessment
committee, and it is, I think, obvious that the character of the reasons given,
the nature of the reasons, the extent of the reasons, must in some measure be
governed by the nature of the problem which the particular tribunal has been
set to resolve. It is well established, so much so that I shall not refer to
any authority, that rent assessment committees when fixing fair rents are
entitled, indeed bound, to have regard to their own experience and knowledge.
Initially they are not perhaps to be described as an expert tribunal, but they
acquire a really remarkable knowledge of prevailing rents in their area from
the simple experience which they gain from doing their job, and it has been, as
I say, firmly established for many years that in considering what is a fair
rent the committee can and should take into account its own experience and
knowledge. That does not mean, as Lord Denning MR said, that they can throw
away the expert evidence; they cannot throw away the expert evidence in the
sense of declining to look at it. They have got to look at the evidence put
before them, but if, as so often happens in the typical simple case, the
landlords’ experts say that the rent should be X and the tenant’s experts say
that the rent should be X minus Y, if the committee thinks that neither figure
is the right one not only can it choose a figure in between the two extremes
but it should do so.
Now, what
reasons should the committee give in that situation? The answer is that in the simple typical case
to which I have referred there are no reasons which the committee can give,
save that it was not satisfied with either of the alternatives put forward in
evidence and on its own expert knowledge preferred another figure. If that is
all that the decision was, a simple matter of valuation opinion and nothing
else, that is all that the decision involves, and if the decision is based
simply on the committee’s own views, having regard to the evidence put before
them, then there are no reasons which the committee can give save to say that
they think that their figure is right. Great complication and trouble would
ensue if it were sought to make committees give reasons in such a situation
beyond the simple and single reason to which I have referred.
Here, says Mr
Wood, the landlord advanced a substantial argument based upon what is by
concession a relevant matter, namely, the effect of inflation itself and the
effect of inflation upon the rentals of comparable properties, but he says the
panel either176
failed to give any reasons for rejecting the argument and the material
supporting it or rejected it in such cryptic language as to make it impossible
to ascertain whether it was rejecting it as inadmissible or irrelevant or upon
some factual basis resulting from an assessment of conflicting evidence.
The factual
background to the dispute can be set out shortly. Mr C B J Miller, a chartered
surveyor and a Fellow of the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors, acts
professionally for the landlord applicant, which was established by his late
father. Since 1975 or thereabouts he has managed Longwood Court, which
comprises six flats in one of the best parts of Havering. Four of the flats,
including the subject flat, are conversions of the original building and the
remaining two are in a more modern 1959 extension. A fair rent for the subject
flat, no 1, was first registered in 1968. On April 16 1973 the panel determined
the fair rent for the flat at £396 per annum, that is to say, £33 per month,
effective from January 24 1972. This and all relevant rents hereafter referred
to were exclusive of general and water rates. There had been no subsequent
determination prior to the matters which I have to consider, but the tenant, Mr
Wakefield, was in fact, prior to the dispute with which I am concerned, paying
by agreement a monthly rental of £80 for the subject flat.
No issue of
any significance arises as to the size, accommodation, facilities, state of
repair and the like of flat no 1. The landlord’s challenge to the rent
officer’s determination of a fair rent of £100 per month is, as appears from
the proof of Mr Miller, which was before the panel, supplemented by his oral
evidence or explanation. The landlord company was also represented by counsel.
The tenant submitted written representations from Mr D J Parish, also a Fellow
of the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors. Both Mr Miller’s proof and Mr
Parish’s written representations are before me as exhibits to the landlord’s
solicitor’s first and second affidavits.
According to
Mr Miller, of the four flats in Longwood Court and the two then tenanted, only
no 1 had a registered rent. However, at some stage, five of the six had been
registered. No 3 was then tenanted at an unregistered rental of £108 per month,
agreed in early 1983 on a three-year tenancy. In 1968 a fair rent for no 2 was
registered at £23 per month. This flat was then occupied by Mr Miller’s sister.
Four other flats were subsequently registered and, on later references, he said
that the fair rents registered were the same or, in most cases, more than the
rental terms which had been offered to tenants.
Mr Miller also
commented on four lettings referred to by the rent officer; one in particular,
7 Tadlows Close, Upminster, where the fair rent was registered at £123.50 per
month. That was, said Mr Miller, the only one of the four referred to by the
rent officer in close proximity to the subject flat.
Mr Miller
advanced a number of contentions based on (i) the increased cost of complying
with the landlord’s obligations under the lease, put by him at an increase of
500/600% since the last registration in 1972; (ii) the average increase in
income since that date of 480%, according to government statistics; (iii) The
updating or phasing up of the rentals of the various flats referred to, to
bring them to 1984 levels; (iv) A comparison of the accommodation and situation
at 7 Tadlows Close and the fair rent registered for those premises in
comparison with that registered for the subject flat. He concluded that on those
bases the fair rent for flat no 1 should be registered at £160 per month.
Mr Parish,
largely though not wholly, relied upon the condition and amenities of flat no 1
and upon seven rentals which he regarded as representing prevailing rentals in
the district and concluded that the fair rent would be, as the rent officer had
concluded, £100 per month. He regarded 7 Tadlows Close as ‘probably one of the
best flats in the entire area with a number of advantages not shared by flat no
1’.
That was the
material before the tribunal, supplementary to the reports of and the
particulars provided by the rent officer himself, and in addition to the
inspection which the panel carried out prior to reaching their decision.
The method by
which a fair rent is to be determined is laid down by section 70 of the Rent
Act 1977. Subsection (1) reads as follows:
In
determining, for the purposes of this Part of this Act, what rent is or would
be a fair rent under a regulated tenancy of a dwelling-house, regard shall be
had to all circumstances (other than personal circumstances) and in particular
to — (a) the age, character, locality and state of repair of the
dwelling-house, and (b) if any furniture is provided for use under the tenancy,
the quantity, quality and condition of the furniture.
Subsection
(2), in effect, provides that scarcity value is to be disregarded and
subsection (3) sets out a number of other matters which are specifically to be
disregarded. These, then, are the provisions with which the panel had to comply
when reaching its decision.
The panel set
out its reasons for the decision as follows. The paragraphs in the decision are
not in fact numbered, but can be so identified. The first three paragraphs are
descriptive of the subject property. Nothing turns upon them or upon para 5,
which records that the panel carried out its statutory duty under subsection
(3). I set out the remaining paragraphs upon which the argument has turned:
(4) We paid
careful consideration to the written representations of Mr Parish on behalf of
the tenant. We found his reference to recent registrations in the area to be of
interest in showing the general level of rent officer registrations. We also
noted his comments as to the state of repair of the property.
(6) We also
carefully considered the submissions made to us at the hearing by Mr Brock on
behalf of the landlord, and by Mr Miller who presented his evidence in a
convenient written proof.
The concluding
sentence of that paragraph does not raise any controversial question.
(7) We could not agree with Mr Miller’s
calculation of a rent of £160.00 per calendar month based on the updating of
the unregistered rent of no 3 Longwood Court nor were we assisted to any extent
by his argument based on phasing, having regard to the rental history in recent
years of the subject property. We noted, but were not convinced by his
submissions based on Government statistics of the index of average earnings
from 1972-1984.
There again, I
need not read the last sentence because no point is taken on that.
(8) We
inspected the exterior of 7 Tadlows Close, Upminster
and they give
the reference of the decision
which was
drawn to our attention by both parties. We found this flat, which was situated
close to the subject property, to be modern, of superior construction, and
quite different from the subject flat.
(9) In all
those circumstances, we saw no reason to disturb the rent officer’s
determination.
(10) Having
regard to all the evidence put before us, to our inspection, to our own
knowledge and experience, and to the provisions of section 70 of the Rent Act
1977, we confirmed the fair rent, to be registered exclusive of rates, at
‘100.00 per calendar month.’
Mr Wood
contended that although the theme running through the landlord’s case before
the panel was the effect of inflation and its impact upon other rents however
established, whether by registration or agreement, the panel does not appear to
deal with that in a manner which he said was legally satisfactory. Indeed, he
said the way in which, in para (7), the panel dealt with Mr Miller’s evidence,
commencing with the words ‘We could not agree’, appears to amount to dismissal
of the validity of that evidence in respect of both inflation and updating
(phasing), but gives no or no sufficient reason for dismissing it.
It is, in my
view, clear that so far as no 7 Tadlows Close was concerned, the panel were not
prepared to regard it as a proper comparable (see the last sentence of para
(8)). Equally, the panel was (I consider) rejecting in clear terms Mr Miller’s
calculated rental of £160 per month, based on the updating of the unregistered
rent at no 3 and his ‘phasing’ arguments, having regard, as it was put, to the
rental history of no 1. Finally, the panel expressed itself as not convinced by
Mr Miller’s argument based on the average earnings index. It could have been
said, though it was not expressly spelt out, that the rental of £100 per month
was broadly in line with registered rents of comparable properties as disclosed
by the evidence. I am also satisfied, in particular from paras (4) and (6),
that the panel did give consideration to all relevant material. Although para
(4) of the grounds upon which relief is sought disputed this, Mr Wood did not
rely on that ground at the hearing and it was not suggested on the landlord’s
behalf that the decision of the panel could be attacked on what can for
convenience be called Wednesbury grounds.
Mr Laws
submitted that the reasons given by the panel enabled an informed reader such
as the landlord’s professional adviser, Mr Miller, to know perfectly well what
was and what was not being taken into account and how the decision was reached.
I accept this. Moreover, he said the panel did take inflation into account.
Although it expressly or by implication rejected or declined to apply Mr
Miller’s suggested percentage increases of rent to allow for inflation, and in
particular for increased landlord’s expenses and a proper return on capital,
put variously at 480, 500 and 600%, the registered rent did in fact represent
an increase of 200% over the last 1972 registered rent. Mr Wood had argued that
a landlord such as the177
present applicant was entitled to guidance as to how this panel, adjudicating
in a district where the landlord had a number of properties, would take into
consideration inflation. I think it is sufficient for present purposes to say
that in this case they did, though, of course, not to the extent claimed by the
landlord. I am also mindful of the view of Lord Reid in Mason v Skilling
[1974] 1 WLR 1437 at p 1439, commenting in relation to the valuation method of
comparing with the subject premises the registered rent of comparable houses in
the area, that ‘. . . as the number of comparable registered rents increases
the more likely it will be that it will lead to a correct result’.
I only
mention, for example, that an unregistered rental for a superficially
comparable house may reflect a scarcity value, which is of course an
inadmissible factor in determining a fair rent. That inflation generally is a
permissible consideration has been well recognised (see, for example, in the
Court of Appeal Wareing v White (1985) 274 EG 488,* per Lawton
LJ, with whom Fox LJ and Kerr LJ agreed, who, while accepting the relevance of
inflation, affirmed the view expressed by Forbes J in Kovats v Corporation
of Trinity House (1981) 262 EG 485 that it was a ‘fallacy to conclude that
rents must rigorously be in line with inflation generally’. See also Lord
Widgery in Metropolitan Holdings Ltd v Laufer, to which I have
already referred, and the decision of Woolf J (as he then was) in Wareing v
White (1984) 270 EG 851, [1984] 1 EGLR 97, the decision which was upheld
by the Court of Appeal in the case to which I have already referred.
*Editor’s
note: See also [1985] 1 EGLR 125.
Mr Laws
reminded me that the nature of the panel’s task in determining on appeal the
fair rent of premises was one of valuation where there was more scope for the
exercise of opinion and judgment than in other fields of adjudication. Panels
are constituted with expert and professional members, who operate within a
particular locality of which they would have or would gain experience. This
panel, according to the papers, included a legal member and a Fellow of the
Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors.
In Guppys
(Bridport) Ltd v Sandoe (1975) 30 P & CR 69, Lord Widgery CJ
said at p 74:
There are
plenty of judicial offices, not the least that of a High Court judge, where
reasons undoubtedly have to be given for every decision, but that does not mean
that if the judge has two conflicting opinions put before him in evidence he
has to explain why he chooses one in preference to the other. Such explanations
are not possible. They are matters of judgment, impression and sometimes even
instinct, and it is quite impossible to give detailed reasons to explain how
the system of decision has worked, and so with a rent assessment committee. If
they have decided, having carefully weighed the evidence, that they must reject
one approach and adopt another, then all they need to do is to say that in the
exercise of their discretion and relying on their skill and judgment they
prefer the method which in fact they do prefer. If they say that, it cannot be
said against them that their decision is invalidated by the fact that no
further or more detailed explanation of why they prefer method A and reject
method B is given.
In the present
case, said Mr Laws, there is no real issue as to the primary facts, the
location, condition, accommodation and so on of the subject premises. On the
contested material, he said, the panel’s reasons are unambiguous. This is, in
my view, a correct analysis of the situation.
Mr Wood
criticised what he called the ‘common form wording’ of para (10) of the reasons
and suggested that it might be there to cover the weaknesses of the earlier
paragraphs of the reasons. However, the Court of Appeal in Wareing v White,
to which I have already referred, recognised that phrase as a permissible way
for the panel to express itself unless it could be said that the panel was
being untruthful. That was not suggested there and is not here.
Having given
careful consideration to all the arguments advanced by Mr Wood, I have come to
the conclusion that upon the material before me the panel cannot be said not to
have given sufficient reasons for the decision. In my view, adequate reasons
were given. This application therefore fails and is dismissed.
The
application was dismissed with costs