BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just Β£1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales Lands Tribunal |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Lands Tribunal >> La Boulangerie Ltd v Jacobs (VO) [2001] EWLands RA_57_2000 (08 June 2001) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWLands/2001/RA_57_2000.html Cite as: [2001] EWLands RA_57_2000 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
[2001] EWLands RA_57_2000 (08 June 2001)
RA/57/2000
LANDS TRIBUNAL ACT 1949
RATING High Street shop effect of public works temporary reduction in value turnover comparison with nearby premises appeal dismissed
IN THE MATTER of an APPEAL against a DECISION of
SURREY VALUATION TRIBUNAL
BETWEEN LA BOULANGERIE LIMITED Appellant
and
MICHAEL JACOBS Respondent
(Valuation Officer)
Re: 142 High Street, Guildford, Surrey, GU1 3HJ
Tribunal Member: P R Francis FRICS
Sitting at: 48/49 Chancery Lane, london, WC2A 1JR
on
21 May 2001
Cases referred to in this decision:
Berrill v Hill (VO) [2000] RA 194
Kenneth J Joyner, Chairman, La Boulangerie Limited for the appellant Company, with leave of the Tribunal
Michael A G Jacobs MRICS, respondent Valuation Officer, with leave of the Tribunal
DECISION
FACTS
3.1 The appeal premises comprise a ground floor lock-up shop and bakery situated on the southern side of a cobbled section of the High Street, slightly off the peak retail area and approximately midway between Tunsgate Arch (a secondary shopping street linking High Street with Sydenham Road) and Holy Trinity Church.
3.2 The bakery shop has, immediately to the left (when viewing from the front), a narrow covered passageway which leads from the High Street into Milkhouse Gate, a pedestrian walkway that leads to Milkhouse Gate Square and Sydenham Road. The passageway is over-sailed towards the forward section of the appeal premises by part of Tudor Rose Restaurant which occupies two upper floors of this 17th Century building, and is subject to a separate rating assessment. There are approximately 5 steps up into the passage from the High Street, and towards the rear of the covered area it is approximately 1 metre wide. It then broadens out into a slightly wider pedestrian lane immediately to the rear of the appeal premises, into which there is a secondary access adjacent to the only entrance to Tudor Rose Restaurant.
3.3 Milkhouse Gate continues uphill, past a small restaurant and specialist shops and leads into Milkhouse Gate Square which is immediately adjacent to the new Sydenham Road car park (the construction of which and the disruption and disturbance caused by it being the reason for this appeal). Milkhouse Gate Square also has a pedestrian access onto Tunsgate.
3.4 The appeal premises are occupied leasehold by the appellant, and trade as "La Boulangerie". The appellant also occupies the first and second floor premises above, but they are understood to be subject to a different lease, and are the subject of a separate appeal.
3.6 On 31 January 1999 Guildford Borough Council closed the Sydenham Road multi-storey car park for the purposes of demolishing it, and constructing a new, smaller multi-storey car park with a roof-top restaurant and a high-level pedestrian link into the rear of Sainsbury's supermarket ("the works"). The principal pedestrian access and egress point would be onto Sydenham Road at street level, a few metres from the top of Milkhouse Gate Square.
3.7 The demolition works necessitated the temporary, short-term closure of Sydenham Road and Milkhouse Gate, following which, for the duration of re-building, Sydenham Road was restricted to one-way traffic, and Milkhouse Gate Square was partially sectioned off by builders' hoardings, although pedestrian access through to the High Street was still possible.
3.8 The reconstruction works took about 18 months, the new car-park being partially opened on 15 August 2000 and declared fully open on 7 November 2000.
3.9 An assessment of £41,400 was entered into the 1995 rating list for the appeal premises with an effective date of 14 March 1996 (due to an address change). On 14 June 1999 the appellant made a proposal seeking a reduction to £1 as from 1 February 1999 on both the Tudor Rose Restaurant and the appeal premises on the grounds that the joint turnover of the two businesses had been reduced by approximately £1,000 per week due to the southern end of Milkhouse Gate being largely hidden from public view by the builders' hoardings, and regularly obstructed by lorries and building materials. Shoppers who would normally have used Milkhouse Gate as a route to the High Street from the Sydenham Road car-park, and the other parking facilities at Bright Hill and in the adjacent roads were, therefore, forced to use Tunsgate or the footpaths on either side of Holy Trinity Church.
3.10 Failure to reach agreement on the proposal resulted in an appeal to the Surrey Valuation Tribunal on 25 July 2000. By its decision of 25 September 2000 the appeal was dismissed, and no alteration was made to the rating list.
3.11 Notice of Appeal was made to the Lands Tribunal on 9 October 2000.
ISSUE
APPELLANT'S CASE
RESPONDENT'S CASE
DECISION
"I do not find these turnover figures helpful for three reasons. First, in the rating hypothesis the appeal property must be assumed to be vacant and to let to a hypothetical tenant and therefore the trade of the actual occupier is not relevant (Marsh v Weston (VO)). Secondly, the measure of rateable value (and any reduction in that value) is rental value and not turnover. There is no direct correlation between turnover and rent. Thirdly, Mr. Berrill's turnover started to fall before the start of the Tramlink works. There is no evidence to show that the continued fall was wholly or partly caused by the works. I give no weight to this evidence".
Even if I were to accept Mr. Joyner's submissions that a temporary reduction in turnover caused by outside influences would affect the rental, and thus the rateable value, I found his schedule to be of little assistance. It commenced in the week that the old car-park was closed (6 February 1999) and ran up to only 9 February 2000 almost a full year before the appellant suggested business was beginning to get back to normal. I am unable therefore to observe the pattern of trading in the period before the works started, and for some 6 months before they were completed. What is evident, however, is that during the pre-Christmas trading period in November and December 1999 turnover in comparison with the previous year was down between 30 and 70 per cent.
DATED 8 June 2001
(Signed) P R Francis FRICS