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Spath Holme Ltd v Chairman of the Greater Manchester and Lancashire Rent Assessment Committee and others

Rent Acts — Assessment of fair rents — Whether rent assessment committee entitled to prefer evidence of other registered fair rents in preference to evidence of rents of assured tenancies

The respondent
is the owner of a block of 20 flats which were originally all let on regulated
tenancies under the Rent Act 1977; section 70 of that Act provides for a fair
rent for such tenancies. Since 1988 vacant flats have been let as assured
tenancies under the Housing Act 1988; section 14 of that Act provides for an
open-market rent. In connection with two references to the rent assessment
committee for the determination of fair rents for several of the flats let on
regulated tenancies, the landlord submitted that the rents paid on comparable
flats let on assured tenancies within the same property must be taken into
account by the committee; they declined to submit comparables outside the
property. In determining the fair rents for the flats, the committee relied on
evidence of other registered rents in preference to evidence of the rents of
the assured tenancies in the property. The landlord’s appeal under section 13
of the Tribunals and Inquiries Act 1971 was allowed by Harrison J who decided
that a committee should have considered the market rents and made adjustments
to these for scarcity before considering evidence of fair rents. The chairman
of the rent assessment committee appealed contending that the committee was
entitled to reject the assured rent comparables without giving any reasons.

Held: The appeal was dismissed. A fair rent is the market rent less the
statutory disregards and discounted to remove any element for scarcity. The
committee made an error of law in using the word ‘fair’ in the sense of
reasonable. If the committee were entitled to conclude, and correct in their
view, that tenancies enjoying security of tenure command higher rents than
those which do not, they were wrong in law in holding that the rents for
assured tenancies would have to be discounted on that ground since the like
security was enjoyed by regulated tenancies as well and was a circumstance to
be taken into account. Contrary to the committee’s view, market rents of
assured tenancies adjusted for scarcity are precisely what the fair rent is
required to be; they were wrong to reject the evidence of the assured
tenancies.

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