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Cravecrest Ltd v Trustees of the will of the Second Duke of Westminster and another

Collective enfranchisement – Leasehold Reform, Housing and Urban Development Act 1993 – Purchase price – Development value – Tenants’ leases of individual flats having only a few days to run at valuation date – Premium payable on enfranchisement held to include prospect of reconversion to single house on merger of two intermediate leasehold interests – Whether such value excluded on assumption that owner of neither interest individually able to unlock development value – Para 3(1) of Schedule 6 to 1993 Act – Appeal dismissed

In March 2009, the tenants of flats in a converted house in London SW1 claimed the right to acquire the property by collective enfranchisement under the Leasehold Reform, Housing and Urban Development Act 1993, with the appellant as nominated purchaser. The interests to be acquired were the first respondents’ freehold interest plus two intermediate leasehold interests, namely: (i) a headlease of the entire property; and (ii) the second respondent’s overriding leasehold interest in the second and third floors.
The leasehold valuation tribunal (LVT) was asked to determine the premium payable on enfranchisement in accordance with Schedule 6 to the Act. It determined a premium of nearly £6.928m, comprising £2,190 for the freehold, £3.741m for the headlease and £3.184m for the second respondents’ overriding lease. Those figures took into account development value flowing from the prospect of reconverting the property to a single dwelling and developing the roof space into a fourth floor. The LVT reasoned that the participating tenants’ leases had only a few days left to run at the valuation date and that, if the headlease and the overriding lease were treated as a single merged interest acquired by the same person, then, in the absence of the enfranchisement claim, the owner of that interest could shortly have enjoyed vacant possession of the property with the consequent ability to seek reconversion.
The Upper Tribunal upheld that decision on appeal, save that it applied a 5% discount to reflect an element of risk to the hypothetical purchaser under a “two-stage” process who acquired one intermediate interest before being certain of also acquiring the other. It fixed the premium at £6.8565m: see [2012] UKUT 68 (LC); [2012] PLSCS 171.
The appellant appealed. The issues were: (i) whether, on a proper application of Schedule 6, it could be assumed that the headlease and overriding lease would come into the same ownership so as to allow reconversion of the property by the owner of those interests; and, if so (ii) whether the UT had properly applied a discount to reflect the risks to the hypothetical purchaser in a two-stage process. The appellant’s argument largely centred on the bracketed words in para 3(1) of Schedule 6 requiring the relevant interest to be valued as if sold on the open market “(with no person who falls within sub paragraph (1A) buying or seeking to buy)”; the appellant contended that those words required each intermediate interest to be valued separately, ignoring any potential sale of the other.

Thomas Jefferies (instructed by Maxwell Winward LLP) appeared for the appellant; Anthony Radevsky (instructed by Boodle Hatfield) appeared for the first respondents; Timothy Dutton QC (instructed by Walker Morris, of Leeds) appeared for the second respondent.

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