Collins v Murray and another
(Before Mr Justice STEPHEN BROWN)
Rent Act 1977 — Appeal from decision of rent assessment committee — Committee reduced rent officer’s assessment — Complaint by landlord that committee’s reasons were inadequate — Committee’s decision, on landlord’s submission, did not indicate that they had taken into account, inter alia, the lapse of time since the date of the rent officer’s assessment; two premises alleged by the landlord to be comparable; official statistics of the rise of registered unfurnished rents during 1970-80; a published report of the result of the Department of Environment’s ‘Beacon Exercise’ showing the rates of return on capital in different types of accommodation; and his submission that rents determined by rent officers and committees in the London area were unrealistically low — Held, dismissing appeal, that the appellant had not established that committee’s reasons were insufficient — Decision of same judge in Waddington v Surrey and Sussex Rent Assessment Committee distinguished on the ground that in that case there were very specific comparables which the committee in question had not appeared to consider — In the present case there was no such ‘hard evidence’ — Committee had considered the premises with great care and their reasons met the requirements of the legislation — Appellant’s submissions were really general submissions that rents, particularly in the London area, were too low
These were
statutory appeals by the landlord, Ronald Nelson Collins, against decisions of
a rent assessment committee of the London Rent Assessment Panel. The appellant,
however, did not proceed with one of the appeals, relating to a Mr Barrett. The
other appeal was against the committee’s decision in relation to a
bed-sitting-room occupied by Mrs Gladys Murray in Digby Mansions, Beryl Road,
London W6.
The appellant
appeared in person; the respondents were not present or represented.
Rent Act 1977 — Appeal from decision of rent assessment committee — Committee reduced rent officer’s assessment — Complaint by landlord that committee’s reasons were inadequate — Committee’s decision, on landlord’s submission, did not indicate that they had taken into account, inter alia, the lapse of time since the date of the rent officer’s assessment; two premises alleged by the landlord to be comparable; official statistics of the rise of registered unfurnished rents during 1970-80; a published report of the result of the Department of Environment’s ‘Beacon Exercise’ showing the rates of return on capital in different types of accommodation; and his submission that rents determined by rent officers and committees in the London area were unrealistically low — Held, dismissing appeal, that the appellant had not established that committee’s reasons were insufficient — Decision of same judge in Waddington v Surrey and Sussex Rent Assessment Committee distinguished on the ground that in that case there were very specific comparables which the committee in question had not appeared to consider — In the present case there was no such ‘hard evidence’ — Committee had considered the premises with great care and their reasons met the requirements of the legislation — Appellant’s submissions were really general submissions that rents, particularly in the London area, were too low
These were
statutory appeals by the landlord, Ronald Nelson Collins, against decisions of
a rent assessment committee of the London Rent Assessment Panel. The appellant,
however, did not proceed with one of the appeals, relating to a Mr Barrett. The
other appeal was against the committee’s decision in relation to a
bed-sitting-room occupied by Mrs Gladys Murray in Digby Mansions, Beryl Road,
London W6.
The appellant
appeared in person; the respondents were not present or represented.
Giving
judgment, STEPHEN BROWN J said: This is an appeal by Mr Ronald Nelson Collins
against decisions of the London Rent Assessment Panel of May 10 1982 in
relation to two tenanted rooms in a building known as Digby Mansions which Mr
Collins tells the court he bought on September 1 1981. I say it is an appeal
against two of the determinations of the London Rent Assessment Panel, but Mr
Collins has indicated, and indeed he did so at a very early stage when he filed
an affidavit in this matter, that he only proposed to proceed in respect of one
of these tenancies. That related to the room occupied by a tenant called Mrs G
Murray. He does not proceed in relation to his appeal concerning the other room
tenanted by a Mr Barrett. Accordingly, I must formally dismiss that appeal.
Digby Mansions
is a building containing what Mr Collins describes as 10 flats. The rent
officer’s registration document, RNC/5, describes the property as being a ‘five-storey
corner mansion block of flats arranged in six sections with a common entrance
and stairwell to the centre of each section. Angled bays to the front
elevations. Stone stairways to common parts and suspended timber floors to the
individual flats. Sash-hung windows.’
The accommodation in fact in this particular instance is a
bed-sitting-room, although it is described as a flat. This is a
bed-sitting-room on the ground floor and the room is described in RNC/5 and
there is annexed to it a plan which indicates its location.
The rent
officer had assessed the fair rent on January 5 1982 at £10 per week, exclusive
of rates. In addition there was an amount for furniture, apparently of 50p per
week. The tenant, Mrs Murray, appealed against that assessment and that appeal
was heard by the London Rent Assessment Panel on May 7 1982. The rent
assessment committee heard evidence and heard Mr Collins’ submissions. They had
before them the rent officer’s registration document with the description of
the premises; and Mr Collins tells me, and I accept it, that the committee
inspected the premises and that he drew the committee’s attention to a number
of features. In particular one matter was that the Ascot heater in the bathroom
was in fact in working order and he contrasted that fact at the date of the
inspection with the recorded information in the rent officer’s registration
document that only the cold-water tap to the bath functioned, the inference
being that at the stage when he inspected it and assessed the rent there was no
hot water there. His description of it had included a description of the
arrangement of the premises. He had noted that the room was in a particularly
bad state, and that at inspection the tenant had five cats in the room. Mrs
Murray’s notice of appeal, which is to be found at p 11 of the documents that
are before me, was a letter written to the rent officer in these terms:
Dear Sir, I
wish to appeal against the decision of your office to raise my rent to a total
of £10.00 (plus 50 pence service charge) per week, as from January 5. The
accommodation as supplied is one small room, with shared bathroom facilities —
which I am unable to use because of my lack of mobility. The house is in a very
poor condition and there remain structural defects in my room which the
landlord refuses to repair, despite my requests and his legal obligations to
carry out these repairs.
The tenant,
who is respondent to this appeal, is not present, neither is she represented at
this hearing. Mr Collins submits that the committee wrongly reduced the rent
officer’s assessment in pursuance of Mrs Murray’s appeal from £10 to £8 a week;
they left undisturbed the rent officer’s assessed figure of 50 pence per week
for furniture. The reasons for their decision are given in full on the second
page of the document which is Exhibit RNC/7. They describe the premises, noting
that:
Digby
Mansions, while in a potentially favourable position near the river, is in a
fairly run-down area and the section owned by the applicant is badly neglected.
At the time of the committee’s inspection there were pools of what was
apparently waste water outside the window of Room 3, 21 Digby Mansions. The
internal common parts of the block were not clean and this was also the case
with the internal common parts of the flat which was let on a room by room
basis. There was one wc and one bathroom for the use of six tenants. The room
itself was quite small.
It then dealt
with another part of the premises which is not material to this appeal, as I
understand it. They then set out the landlord’s contention, saying:
118
The landlord
had advanced a general contention that all rents determined by rent asessment
committees and rent officers were far too low and he considered that one way to
determine a fair rent would be to take the rent of comparable premises and
increase that by 50%. The committee did not accept these contentions, or the
arithmetical calculations based on the capital values he placed on the flats.
Their reasons
go on to say:
Mr Murray, the
son of the tenant, said that the room was not fit to live in, but the committee
thought that this was in part due to the advanced age of the tenant and to
neglect by the tenant and those looking after her. There was however as had
been mentioned a large amount of neglect by the landlord and there was no way
in which the tenant could have arranged for the common parts either inside the
flat or on the outside staircase and hall to be cleaned. The landlord had put
forward two possible comparables but was not able to give enough details of
these to enable the committee to derive any value from them. One of the
comparables suggested was in Oakley Street, Chelsea, which was clearly a far
more favourable position.
Having regard
to all the evidence put before them, to their inspection, to their knowledge
and experience, and to the provisions of Section 70 of the Rent Act 1977, they
reached the decisions which have already been notified to the parties.
As I have
indicated, in the material appeal the committee reduced the rent assessed by
the rent officer of £10 a week to one of £8 a week.
Mr Collins
appeals against that determination and submits that it should be quashed and
the matter remitted for further consideration, because he submits the reasons
did not indicate that the committee had taken into account material matters. He
submits, first, that basically where you have an experienced rent officer
working in the area under review, it is a remarkable thing to reduce his
assessment, and certainly to reduce it by as much as 20%. Furthermore, he
submits that four months had elapsed since the rent officer had made that
assessment and the committee had not apparently taken that period of time into
account. He makes the point that he specifically drew the attention of the two
members of the panel to the fact that the water heater was working and that
they noted that. He said he brought to the attention of the committee two
premises alleged to be comparable — 59 Avonmore Road, a furnished single room
with shared facilities let at £15 a week (that being a rent registered by the
rent officer on April 7 1982); and also 36 Blythe Road, a third-floor room let
at £13.25 a week, that also being assessed by the rent officer. Mr Collins got
those rents, he said, from the register at Hammersmith in the same district,
but he apparently did not submit any further details of the premises other than
that which was available from the register, although he says that he gave the
details (that is, the addresses) to the rent officer and to the committee.
He makes a
particular complaint of the fact that the document, which is a table supplied
by the Department of the Environment and exhibited as RNC/2 in his affidavit,
was before the committee and he says that they chose to take no account of
that. That is a document which shows the progress, if I may so call it, of the
mean registered unfurnished rents during the period 1970 to the first half of
1980. The mean registered rents throughout the country, as I understand it, had
increased certainly as much as, if not more than, the index of inflation and
that of average earnings. Mr Collins says that the committee had not taken that
into account. He also complains that on the same document there is a general
comment from the Department of the Environment which sets out the basis of what
should be the attitude of rent officers and rent assessment committees. That
document says that it is an important consideration that the decision should be
fair and be seen to be fair, that tribunals need to retain the confidence of
both landlord and tenant, and the proceedings should be carried out fairly and
impartially.
In addition to
that matter, Mr Collins submits that an article from ESTATES GAZETTE* which was
before the committee contains an extract of the Department of the Environment
investigation called the ‘Beacons Exercise’ and again he thinks that should
have moved them to act in a way different from that in which they did act on
this occasion. The ‘Beacons Exercise’ apparently was an exercise based upon the
rate of return on the capital involved in what Mr Collins describes as ‘family-sized
accommodation’. In fact the article shows that three hypothetical properties
were taken as the subject of investigation — a mid-terrace, two-storey house
built around 1870, a mid-terrace, two-storey house built around 1880 and a
two-storey, semi-detached house built in the mid-1930s — and that showed a very
low return in the London area of 2.9% which compared with 5.9 and 6% obtained
in areas which are further north. Mr Collins submits that generally speaking
that shows that rent officers and rent assessment committees, in the London
area in particular, are unrealistically low in their assessments and
determinations. He quite plainly feels that as a landlord he is in a position
where he is prejudiced by an outlook which is not sympathetic to his situation.
In his written submission to this court, he has made it plain that he did not
really feel confidence in this rent assessment committee. He has not advanced
at this hearing in detail matters which are set out in his affidavit in which
he complained that he had not really been given a fair hearing; but I feel
bound to say that the reasons for the decision and the fact that the committee
visited the premises do not suggest that the committee failed to consider and
to record his point of view.
*Editor’s
note: Rates of returns, scarfity, and the decline of privately rented
housing, by John Doling and Mary Davies, May 1, 1982. p 415.
Mr Collins
complains in particular that the committee did not correct in their decision
the fact that the hot water was working, specifically at the time of their
inspection, although he had asked them to do so, and they had acknowledged they
had noted that, but they did not actually put it in writing. He also complains that
they should not have rejected or overlooked his general submissions on the
rates of return on property let in the London area and he complains that the
reduction of 20% on the rent officer’s assessment was strikingly at variance
with the fact that in relation to two other appeals with which he was concerned
on the same occasion the committee approved and endorsed the rent assessed by
the rent officer.
This court, of
course, is not rehearing this matter and cannot substitute its view of the
facts of the case for that of the assessment committee whose specific function
it is to determine the facts. In considering the grounds of appeal the court
has to consider the complaints made by the appellant and see whether this
committee failed to give adequate reasons or proper reasons for their decision.
It has to be borne in mind that this question of determining the fair rent is
specifically within their purview; that it is their duty; and it is their duty
to hear appeals, whether by landlord or by tenant, and to give a determination.
I have
carefully considered the points made by Mr Collins, but I am quite unable to
find that the committee did not give sufficient reasons in this case. Mr
Collins referred to a decision which was apparently a decision of mine sitting
in this court in May 1982, relating to a property let in Herne Bay, Kent. That
was a house. He has kindly and helpfully put before the court a copy of that
decison in ESTATES GAZETTE*, but as the report shows (and it is my
recollection, assisted by the report) the facts in that case were really very
different from this case. There were, in that case, very specific comparables
with full details which that assessment committee had not appeared to consider
in the way one would expect, but in this case there is no such ‘hard evidence’,
as I think I described it.
*Editor’s
note: Waddington v Surrey and Sussex Rent Assessment Committee
(1982) 264 EG 717, [1982] 2 EGLR 107.
Mr Collins’
submissions are really general submissions to the effect that rents are too low
and, in particular, they are far too low in the London area. That is a matter
which goes well beyond the facts of this particular case and it seems to me
that really the fact that he finds he has no complaint of the rent assessment
committee’s decision in two cases (of the three cases he had) rather suggests
that this committee were not in any sense biased against him, but were basing
their decision on their true and fair view of the particular case. It is clear
from the reasons for their decision that they observed with great care the
premises and the favourable position which the house itself occupies, but they
took into account its state, which they described as being badly neglected.
Also, quite plainly, they took into account, in Mr Collins’ favour, that many
of the complaints which the tenant’s son had put forward were not to be laid at
his door; that is to say, the committee expressed the view that the state of
the room was in part due to the advanced age of the tenant and to neglect by
the tenant and those looking after her and not to Mr Collins.
It seems to me
that their decision meets the requirements of the legislation, and in the
circumstances I cannot find any ground for saying that it should be quashed or
the appeal should be allowed. The appeal is therefore dismissed.