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England and Wales Lands Tribunal


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Lands Tribunal >> Nazar v Pendle Borough Council [2007] EWLands ACQ_2_2007 (30 August 2007)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWLands/2000/ACQ_2_2007.html
Cite as: [2007] EWLands ACQ_2_2007

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Nazar v Pendle Borough Council [2007] EWLands ACQ_2_2007 (30 August 2007)
ACQ/2/2007
LANDS TRIBUNAL ACT 1949
COMPENSATION — Compulsory Purchase — acquisition of shop and premises in connection
with town centre development scheme — valuation — methodology — comparables — rental value —
yield rate — disturbance — compensation awarded £45,450
IN THE MATTER of a NOTICE OF REFERENCE
BETWEEN
                                  MOHAMMED NAZAR                                  Claimant
and
PENDLE BOROUGH COUNCIL                         Acquiring
Authority
Re: 7 Jude Street, Nelson, Lanes BB9 7NP
Before: P R Francis FRICS
Sitting at: Burnley Combined Court Centre,
Hammerton Street, Burnley, Lanes BB11 1XD
on
2 August 2007
Brian Mam of Steele Ford and Newton, solicitors of Nelson, for the claimant
Peter Frost, senior solicitor of Democratic and Legal Services, Borough of Pendle, for the
acquiring authority
The following case is referred to in this decision:
Director of Buildings and Lands v Shun Fung Ironworks Ltd [1995] 2 AC 111
© CROWN COPYRIGHT 2007
1

DECISION
1.      This is a decision to determine the amount of compensation payable by Pendle Borough
Council (the council) under the Borough of Pendle (The Grand, Nelson) Compulsory Purchase
Order 2004 (the CPO) to Mohammed Nazar (the claimant) in respect of the compulsory
acquisition of 7 Jude Street, Nelson, Lancs BB9 7NP (the subject property). The case was
heard under the Simplified Procedure (Rule 28, Lands Tribunal Rules 1996).
2.      Brian Irlam, a solicitor with Steele Ford and Newton of Nelson, appeared for the
claimant and called David Briffett BSc (Hons) MRICS, managing director of Thomas V Shaw
& Co Ltd, Chartered Surveyors of Blackburn, who gave valuation evidence. Peter Frost,
senior solicitor with Pendle Borough Council, Legal and Democratic Services, called Mrs
Glenys Barnes MRICS of Liberata UK Ltd who gave valuation evidence for the acquiring
authority.
3.      I undertook an accompanied inspection of the site of the former property; the
surrounding area of the town centre, and the principal comparables relied upon by both parties
on 1 August 2007.
The Claim
4.      The claimant’s case was that the value of the long-leasehold interest in the subject
property at the agreed valuation date of 9 November 2005 was £75,675 to which should be
added £2,000 in respect of the forced sale of fixtures and fittings and stock and £2,000 for the
claimant’s time expended in respect of the matter. The council said the property was worth
£38,000 at the time, and there was no entitlement to the claimed items of disturbance.
Facts
5.      The parties produced an agreed statement of facts and issues to be determined by the
Tribunal. From this, the valuers’ expert reports and evidence, and my inspection of the area I
find the following facts. The subject property was a two-storey building located on the east
side of the Jude Street, and formed the southern end unit of a long terrace of similar buildings,
the property immediately adjacent being a warehouse that principally dealt with the sale of
beds. To the north it abutted a 3 storey commercial building, used as a printing works, that
extended along the rest of the street, and on the opposite side of the road was the rear entrance
of Lambert’s covered market and former residential properties that had been converted to a
carpet warehouse. The subject property had a dressed-stone frontage incorporating a glazed
shop window, front door and roller shutters under double-pitched slated roofs and it was
believed to have been constructed in the early 20th Century. It was laid out as a shop at ground
floor, having an agreed retail area of 48.8sq m and a staircase leading to a first floor storeroom
of the same size. There was a ladder type staircase leading from there to a room that had been
formed in the attic and which contained a bath, washbasin and wc. It had an area of about 28
sq m.
2

6.      Jude Street was a cul-de-sac accessed from Russell Street, which itself connected with
Cross Street to the west (which was the main entrance for the covered market) and Scotland
Road to the east. Scotland Road was one of the town centre’s principal pedestrianised
shopping streets, and the rear elevation of the subject property (there was no garden or yard)
backed onto a narrow lane (Back Scotland Road) at the rear of the shops on the west side of
Scotland Road. The former Grand Cinema, and some of the shops on the northern side of
Market Street backed partly onto the southern end of Jude Street. The claimant had acquired
the residue of a 999 year lease on the subject property in the early 1970s, and ran a business
selling children’s clothing until about 2000 when the operation ceased, although some of the
stock remained.
7.      Following a fire which destroyed the Grand Cinema and damaged adjacent buildings on
29 May 2000, the council considered what should be done with the site, and in January 2001
the Nelson Committee resolved that the site should be redeveloped as part of a wider area. A
Planning Brief was issued describing the 0.6ha (1.48 acre) proposed development site as lying
“at the heart of Nelson town centre and bound by Market Street, Cross Street, Russell Street
and Back Scotland Road”. The site was stated to include the area of the old cinema, Cross
Street [Lambert’s] Market, the Salvation Army Hall and a number of small retail and
commercial properties, all of which were in private ownership. Acknowledging that the
redevelopment would result in the loss of existing retail units, the Brief indicated that given the
high vacancy rate in Nelson, it would be inappropriate to redevelop the site solely for retail
use. The council started to acquire properties by agreement in 2003 (including the printing
works and former Baines Carpet Warehouse in Jude Street), and the CPO, to be used to acquire
the remainder of the required properties (including the subject property), was confirmed by the
Secretary of State on 4 August 2005; a General Vesting Declaration was made on 10 October
2005, and the property was formally vested in the council on 9 November 2005, which is the
valuation date for the purposes of this reference. The council entered into a development
agreement with Barnfield Construction Limited, and a large office development was nearing
completion at the time of my inspection. An advance payment of £34,200 has been paid to the
claimant, representing 90% of the council’s estimate of the value of the subject property.
Issues
8.      The issues of fact, valuation and law to be determined are:
Valuation under Rule (2) of section 5 of the Land Compensation Act 1961 (the 1961
Act):
i. The appropriate methodology to use in determining the long-leasehold value of the
subject property as at 9 November 2005.
ii. Whether Rule (4) of section 5 of the 1961 Act operates to exclude any increase in
value attributable to the use of the room created in the roof void.
iii. The location of the subject property in relation to the principal town centre retail
area, and the covered market.
3

Valuation under Rule (6):
i. The forced sale value of fixtures fittings and stock.
ii. Claimant’s time.
Claimant’s case
9.      Mr Briffett, who has over 25 years experience of compulsory purchase matters within
east Lancashire, said that he received instructions to act for the claimant in October 2004,
firstly in connection with negotiations with the council, and then as expert witness in respect of
this reference. He said he was aware that Mr Nazar had, in 2003 and prior to his involvement,
agreed a price of £38,000 with the council, but that sale by negotiation did not proceed. He
was also aware that the claimant had ceased trading from the property in 2000, although
thought that he may have operated his business sporadically since then. He understood that it
had been the claimant’s intention to re-establish trading from the shop but had been deprived of
the opportunity by the scheme. Mr Briffett said he had been advised that only the ground floor
was used when the premises did trade, but the first floor could also have been utilised for retail.
The attic space, which could in his opinion also have been utilised for storage, had not, to his
knowledge, been so used for some years. However, he thought that to use it would not have
been unlawful because, although the staircase would not have complied with modern Building
Regulations, as the premises were owner occupied, he would be under no compulsion to
upgrade the access.
10.    It was his case that there was a substantial body of evidence in respect of sales of
comparable premises at around the valuation date to show that the claimant could not have
replicated his business anywhere within Nelson town centre area for anything like the sum the
council had offered. The assessment of fair compensation, he said, had been dealt with at
length in Director of Buildings and Lands v Shun Fung Ironworks Ltd [1995] 2 AC 111 where
Lord Nicholls said (at125):
“The purpose of these provisions, [the relevant compensation Acts] in Hong Kong and
England, is to provide fair compensation for a claimant whose land has been
compulsorily taken from him. This is sometimes described as the principle of
equivalence. No allowance is to be made because the resumption or acquisition was
compulsory; and land is to be valued at the price it might be expected to realise if sold by
a willing seller, not an unwilling seller. But, subject to these qualifications, a claimant is
entitled to be compensated fairly and fully for his loss. Conversely, and built into the
concept of fair compensation, is the corollary that a claimant is not entitled to receive
more than fair compensation for losses fairly attributable to the taking of his land but not
to any greater amount. It is ultimately by this touchstone, with its two facets, that all
claims for compensation succeed or fail.
Land may, of course, have a special value to a claimant over and above the price it would
fetch if sold in the open market. Fair compensation requires that he should be paid for
the value of the land to him, not its value generally or its value to the Acquiring
Authority.”
4

The compensation to which Mr Nazar is entitled should be sufficient, Mr Briffett said, to allow
him to acquire another retail shop in an equivalent tertiary location close to the town centre.
11.    It was also important to note, he said, that the evidence showed the market to have risen
significantly between 2003 when the £38,000 was offered and the valuation date some 2 years
later, so there was no justification whatsoever for the council not increasing its offer. The
RICS Commercial Property Survey showed capital values to have risen throughout the UK by
11.6% in 2004 and 12% in 2005, but the increase in values in poorer areas of northeast
Lancashire had been even more dramatic. Whilst the council had relied to a large extent upon
the settlements achieved for other properties required for the scheme, he said that by 2003 it
was common knowledge that a large area of central Nelson was to be redeveloped, and this had
had a deflationary effect on the sale or letting of properties in the area.
12.    Mr Briffett said that he had looked at actual sale prices achieved around the relevant date
for nearby shops and related them to their rating assessments in the 2005 list. The District
Valuer’s zone A rent assessments, he said, gave an accurate picture of which properties had
better locations than others. He produced a schedule of all the sales of long-leasehold and
freehold premises in the centre of Nelson that had taken place between January 2005 and
March 2006 and one unit that was being marketed (43 Scotland Road). It showed the prices
achieved, the 2005 rateable value, and the zone A rate. He then applied a multiplier by
dividing the sale price by the rateable value and, excluding the lowest (41 Every Street), and
the highest (15 Manchester Road - a prime town centre shop sold in March 2006) to give an
average of 30.27. He then applied this to the rateable value of the subject property as shown in
the 2000 Rating List (£2,500) to give a value of £75,675. He said he used the earlier
valuation list because there had been a reduction by the 2005 revaluation (to £1,550), which he
thought must have been due to the effects of the scheme.
13.    Four of the comparable properties were in Scotland Road which he accepted, with zone
A rates of between £70 and £100, was a better trading location than Jude Street, although they
were very close to the subject property, the whole area could be described as “town centre”,
and the claimant, to replicate his business elsewhere, would need to buy into that same market.
87 Scotland Road had sold for £5,000 more than the asking price in September 2005, which
indicated that the market at that time was strong, and was rising. 14/16 Market Square was a
double shop unit very close by and was comparable in many respects, although in cross-
examination Mr Briffett accepted its zone A rate was double that which was applicable to the
subject property. He also included 41 Every Street, a large end of terrace shop with
accommodation over, that had sold for £125,000 in February 2005. It had a zone A rate of
£47, which was similar to the subject property (£40) and had a rateable value that was less.
14.    In response to the investment valuation methodology that formed part of Mrs Barnes’
evidence, Mr Briffett referred to the ground floor unit at 5 Russell Street let at £75 per week
that she had mentioned. Transposing its floor areas to 7 Jude Street and including a very small
sum for the attic room, indicated a rental value for that of £115.50 pw (£6,006 pa). Applying
the yield of 8% that had been achieved on the two sales of 41 Every Street gave an open
market value, on an investment basis of £75,075 – very close the conclusion he had come to by
comparing sale prices. He disagreed with Mrs Barnes’ suggested yield rate, and said that his
own firm was selling similar investments at 6.5%. Asked to comment on the FOCUS report
5

that Mrs Barnes had referred to, Mr Briffett accepted that it indicated Nelson to be rated poorly
as a town centre, and that its ranking in comparison with other towns was falling, but he said
that did not apply to secondary retail locations.
15.    Finally, on the disturbance claim for loss of stock and fixtures and fittings, Mr Briffett
admitted that there was no evidence that the claimant was trading at the valuation date and that
the property was, and had been for some time, empty for rating purposes. There was also no
evidence produced in respect of the claim for Mr Nazar’s time in seeking out alternative
properties.
Acquiring Authority’s case
16.    Mrs Barnes has 14 years post-qualification experience of negotiating compensation
claims including both residential and commercial properties for Pendle Borough Council. In
forming her opinion that the subject property was worth £38,000 at the valuation date, she
considered evidence from the settlements that the council had achieved on nearby properties in
connection with the scheme and sales of town centre and nearby shop properties outside the
scheme area. She also undertook an investment valuation on the basis of rents and yields.
Extracts from the FOCUS town report on Nelson and the Nathaniel Lichfield & Partners report
that compared prime retail yields in the North West of England were produced, and these
indicated, she said, that prime Zone A rents in the best trading area of the town had fallen from
£377 per sq m in 1999 (£35 per sq ft) to £323 per sq m (£30 per sq ft) in 2000 and had
remained constant since then. Scotland Road (which was a source of a number of the
comparables) was one of the top 3 ranking retail streets according to FOCUS, and Nelson’s
ranking as a town centre had fallen from 500th in 2002 to 866th in England by 2005. Prime
retail yields in Nelson were shown to be consistently above 10%, higher than in all the other
major town centres in the surrounding area.
17.    As to settlements connected to the scheme, Mrs Barnes said that Baines Carpet
Warehouse, which was on the opposite side Jude Street and was four times the size of the
subject property, was acquired in March 2003, in advance of the CPO, for £55,000. 7 Russell
Street, on the corner of Jude Street, was a double fronted shop with storage above where the
retail accommodation was almost twice the size of the subject property’s ground floor. That
was also acquired in March 2003 for £38,000. Lambert’s Market, having a ground floor area
of 1,412 sq m was acquired in the same month at £90,000. These settlements, she said,
supported her assessment of the value of the subject property and showed how overstated Mr
Briffett’s figure was.
18.    Turning to her analysis of open market non-CPO related sales, Mrs Barnes cited 4 units
in Scotland Road but pointed out that that was one of the prime retail streets, as evidenced by
the VOA’s assessments of Zone A rates of between £70 and £100 per sq m against £40 per sq
m for the subject property in the 2005 Rating List. No 57 Scotland Road, a three storey
property of 182.4 sq m overall with retail on ground and first floors and storage above, was
sold in February 2007 (15 months after the valuation date) for £127,000. If that sale were to be
applied to the subject property without adjustment, it would result in a value for 7 Jude Street
of £68,000 (£127,000/182.4 x 97.6 = £67,957). Doing the same exercise on 87 Scotland
6

Road produced a value for the subject property of £50,000, 37 Scotland Road produced
£35,000 and No 21 produced £81,527. Thus there was a range of values produced but, Mrs
Barnes said, all of those properties were in prime locations, and it followed that Jude Street
should be close to the bottom. She also undertook a similar analysis of 41 Every Street, where
the VOA’s Zone A value was 15% above that for the subject property. It was very much
larger at 180.7 sq m overall, and sold for £125,000 in December 2003, giving an equivalent,
non-adjusted figure for 7 Jude Street of £67,515. However, it had been refurbished, was
located facing a main traffic route through Nelson and was opposite a free public car park.
Any comparative value would therefore need to be heavily discounted to reflect these
differences.
19.    On the investment method, she referred again to 41 Every Street which was available to
let at an asking rent of £9,000 pa, although it head been empty for some 18 months with no
takers. On a straight comparison, the gross rental value of 7 Jude Street would be £4,861 pa.
Doing the same exercise on two other properties suggested an appropriate gross rental value
for the subject property of £5,000 pa. However, she said that, following RICS guidance, there
should be a deduction of 10% for voids, management, repairs and maintenance to give a net
figure of £4,500 pa. As to yield, the Nathaniel Lichfield & Partners report having indicated
prime yields of 10% or more, Mrs Barnes said that a 12% return was appropriate to reflect the
subject property’s secondary location. This resulted in a value of £37,500. In response to a
question from the Tribunal, Mrs Barnes accepted that the rental value evidence she had
considered in respect of other properties would have been gross, and to discount her
assessment of rental value of the subject premises before applying a comparative yield may
result in double counting.
20.    In cross-examination Mrs Barnes said that she had not adopted Mr Briffett’s
methodology as it was not an accepted normal valuation process, although she did say that it
provided a useful cross-check. She did not accept that the attic room at the subject property
could be considered useable accommodation, and had not included any of its area in the
assessment of the overall area at 97.6 sq m that she had used for her comparative analyses.
21.    Regarding the claimed items of disturbance, Mrs Barnes said that as there was no
business operating from the premises at the valuation date, or for some time previously, the
council could not have any liability for the value of stock or fixtures and fittings. Also, no
evidence had been provided to support Mr Nazar’s claim for his time. Mrs Barnes did accept
that at the price the council had offered, there appeared to be nothing available to which the
claimant could have relocated, however she reiterated that at the time there was no business in
operation to relocate. All of the comparables outside the CPO area that had been referred to
were in a number of respects better than the subject property, and that was the reason for the
higher values. She said that they all had higher Zone A values in their rating assessments, so
the Valuation Officer must also have thought they had attributes over and above those at 7 Jude
Street.
7

Conclusions
22.    Firstly, on the question of what was the right methodology to use in determining the
value of the subject property, it is in my view equally acceptable to analyse sales prices of
comparable properties, or to perform an investment valuation upon the basis of passing rents
and appropriate yields, or to use both. However, Mr Briffett’s use of the District Valuer’s
Zone A assessments on a number of properties as applied in the 2005 Rating List, and
comparing these with the assessment on the subject property in the 2000 Rating List seems to
me inappropriate. If he had used the 2005 Rateable Value of £1,550, and applied the 30.27
multiplier, the resulting figure would have been £46,918. Although Mr Briffett said that he
thought the reason the Rateable Value had been reduced was to reflect the adverse effects of
the CPO, no evidence was produced to substantiate this. However, in my judgment, whichever
of the two assessments he had used, there are two factors that bring his reasoning into question.
The first relates to the location of the property in comparison with the comparables he used
(issue iii), and the second is the fact that I note the assessment on 7 Jude Street was based
solely on the ground floor, whereas Mr Briffett argued that the first floor could have been used
for retail purposes and the second was suitable for storage, and indeed included those areas in
assessing the rental value on Mrs Barnes’ basis (issue ii).
23.    Mr Briffett described the location of the premises as “town centre”, although he accepted
that the street from which most of the comparable sales had been taken, Scotland Road, was a
“better trading location”. That, it seems to me, was somewhat of an understatement. Scotland
Road was undoubtedly one of the principal town centre shopping streets, pedestrianised in part
and leading directly into the prime central area at the confluence of Market Street, Leeds Road,
and Manchester Road and to the main entrance of the Pendle Rise (former Arndale) shopping
centre. At the time of my inspection, Scotland Road had a significant pedestrian foot flow and
I note from the FOCUS report that had been referred to in evidence, that it was named as one
of the three principal town centre streets. One of the Scotland Road comparables used in the
analysis (No 87) was quite a considerable distance from the town centre end of the street, in a
non-pedestrianised section, but it was a corner unit in a highly visible location.
24.    Also included within the schedule from which Mr Briffett derived his multiplier was a
double unit fronting Market Square. He accepted that this had a Zone A rate that was double
that applied to the subject property, and it is understandable why. It is an attractive location a
short distance along Market Street from the main centre, facing onto the main public library
and again, at about 4 pm on 1 August 2007, was busy with pedestrians. At the valuation date,
those units were also a matter of yards from the main entrance to the covered market, and close
to the Grand Cinema. Finally, Mr Briffett included 41 Every Street, which, apart from 87
Scotland Road, was the only one of the comparables that was not in the principal town centre
area. However, it was in a highly visible position with frontages on three sides at the junction
of Every Street, Cross Street and North Street and overlooks a public car park.
25.    Jude Street, on the other hand, whilst geographically within the town centre, was a short
cul-de-sac in a backwater behind the cinema, behind the rear of the shops on the west side of
Scotland Road and behind the covered market. Vehicular access was from Russell Street, to
the north. It was accepted that this was not one of the main pedestrian through routes into or
out of the town centre, and that the main public access for the market was off Cross Street
8

rather than from Jude Street. Apart from a bed shop and a carpet warehouse, there were no
other shops in this part of the street, the other adjacent premises being used as a printing works.
In my view, to derive a multiplier from a raft of comparables that were all unquestionably in
better trading locations (even excluding, as Mr Briffett did, the highest and lowest), cannot
possibly produce a figure that can be applied, without further adjustment, to the infinitely
inferior subject premises. Indeed, as Mrs Barnes pointed out, the Zone A rate applied to the
subject property was £40 in the 2005 Rating List, whereas apart from 41 Every Street and 15
Manchester Road which Mr Briffett had in any event excluded from the averaging process, all
the others were between £70 and £100. That in itself speaks volumes about the comparability
of the locations.
26.    Mr Briffett referred to Shun Fung, and the fact that Mr Nazar would be unable to re-
establish his business in an equivalent location for anything like the money that the council
was offering. In my judgment, none of the comparables to which he referred could in any way
be deemed equivalent, and the fact that no details were produced of transactions on properties
or premises that were comparable is nothing to the point.
27.    Finally, in respect of Mr Briffett’s evidence, I do not find his alternative valuation on the
basis of rental evidence persuasive. He assessed a rental value on the rental achieved for a
shop at 5 Russell Street, which was, in my view, an infinitely preferable and more highly
visible location. He also used a yield that had been achieved on much better premises at Every
Street.
28.    In my view, Mrs Barnes’ evidence is in general to be preferred. She supplied details of a
number of settlements that had been reached in connection with the scheme, and on that
evidence alone, it is clear that a price of about £75,000 as claimed for the subject property
would be wholly out of line with values in the area. I accept her view that, from an analysis of
the open market sales, significant adjustments need to be made to reflect the poorer trading
position. As to her investment valuation, I am satisfied that the property would have
commanded a rental value of about £5,000 pa, but do not consider it to have been appropriate
to make a deduction of 10 per cent as she had, as the comparables to which she referred, and
the prevailing yields in the area, would not have included such a deduction. I do think that, on
the basis of the reports that she produced, she adopted an appropriate yield (at 11%).
Applying a multiplier, therefore, of 9.09 to the rental value of £5,000 pa gives a value of
£45,450. This is, as it transpires, extremely close to the figure that Mr Briffett’s methodology
would have produced if he had used the 2005 Rateable Value on the subject property and, in
my view, is a figure that, on the whole of the evidence, is the appropriate one to adopt.
29.    On the question of whether or not the “second floor” should be included for the purposes
of assessing value, I note that it had a poor means of access, and was fitted out as a bathroom
that included wc facilities. I do not, therefore, consider that, whatever the state of the staircase
leading to it, it could have been taken into account in calculating rental value as it could not
effectively have been used for any other purposes. Indeed, Mr Briffett in his oral evidence
appeared to attribute only £2.50 per week to it - £130 pa – which in capital value terms would
only make a marginal difference of about £1,100.
9

30.    Turning to the claim for disturbance, I am satisfied that there was no business in
existence at the valuation date, and no claim for extinguishment has been made. No evidence
was produced to support either the alleged loss on forced sale of stock, or in connection with
the alleged costs incurred by the claimant in seeking alternative premises. The claim under
Rule (6) therefore fails,
31.    This decision disposes of the substantive issues in this case, and I determine
compensation for the compulsory acquisition of the subject property in the sum of £45,450.
The matter having been determined in accordance with the Simplified Procedure, and there
being no exceptional circumstances to justify doing otherwise, I make no award as to costs.
DATED 30 August 2007
Signed                                            P R Francis FRICS
10


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