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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Lands Tribunal >> Prielipp & Anor v Secretary of State for Environment, Transport & the Regions [2002] EWLands ACQ_127_1999 (08 February 2002) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWLands/2002/ACQ_127_1999.html Cite as: [2002] EWLands ACQ_127_1999 |
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[2002] EWLands ACQ_127_1999 (08 February 2002)
ACQ/127/1999
LANDS TRIBUNAL ACT 1949
COMPENSATION Land Compensation Act 1961 s.5, rr(2), (5) and (6) - compulsory acquisition of riding stables and land equivalent reinstatement, total extinguishment or relocation eviction costs Compensation awarded on basis of relocation £119,438 no jurisdiction to determine eviction costs
IN THE MATTER of a NOTICE OF REFERENCE
BETWEEN W L & A P PRIELIPP
and
C KENNERLY Claimants
and
SECRETARY OF STATE for the
ENVIRONMENT, TRANSPORT and the REGIONS Respondent
Re: Tollgate Riding Stables, Northumberland Bottom,
Gravesend, Kent
Tribunal Member: P R Francis FRICS
Sitting at: 48/49 Chancery Lane, London, WC2A 1JR
on
10-13 September and 25 October 2001
The following cases are referred to in this decision:
Lindon Print Ltd v West Midlands County Council [1987] 2 EGLR 200
Director of Buildings and Lands v Shun Fung Ironworks Ltd [1995] 1 All ER 846
Mallick v Liverpool City Council (1999) 79 P&CR 1
Festiniog Rly Society Ltd v Central Electricity Generating Board (1962) 13 P&CR 248
Sparks and Others (Trustees of East Hunslet Liberal Club) v Leeds City Council (1977) 240 EG 66
Kolbe House Society v Department of Transport (1994) 98 P&CR 569
Harrison & Hetherington Limited v Cumbria County Council (1985) 275 EG 457
Sceneout Limited v Central Manchester Development Corporation [1995] 34 EG 77
Shevlin v Trafford Park Development Corporation [1998] 1 EGLR 115
Matthews v Lewisham London Borough Council (1982) 263 EG 266
Wilkinson v Middlesborough Borough Council (1983) 45 P&CR 142
Commissioner of Highways v Shipp Bros Property Limited (1978) 19 SASR 215
Trustees of the Manchester Homeopathic Clinic v Manchester Corporation (1970) 22 P&CR241
Runcorn Association Football Club v Warrington and Runcorn Development Corporation [1982] 2 EGLR 216
W Clibbett Ltd v Avon County Council [1976] 237 EG 271
Halil v London Borough of Lambeth (2001) (LT) ACQ/105/1999 (Unreported)
Reynolds v Manchester City Council [1981] 257 EG 939
Horn v Sunderland Corporation [1941] 2 KB 26
Robert Lewis of counsel, instructed by Barrett & Thompson, solicitors of Slough for the claimants
Michael Humphries of counsel, instructed by Cripps Harries Hall, solicitors of Tunbridge Wells for the acquiring authority
DECISION
FACTS
4.1 The subject property formerly comprised a Riding School and Stables, of which private Livery formed a part, situated on the A227 Gravesend to Tonbridge road, about 3 miles south of Gravesend on land that had previously been part of a military base. It was located within the Metropolitan Green Belt in the Borough of Gravesham, extended to 3.43 ha (8.47 acres) and contained a number of buildings, some of which had been converted from old military buildings and others constructed by the claimants, together with a yard, exercise areas and grazing. The buildings comprised:
Indoor School 18m x 36m of steel portal frame construction with asbestos roofs and cladding and electric lighting.
Outdoor menage/school with electric floodlighting
Secure tack/feed room
43 Stables
Pole barn/hay storage
Storage shed, further storage building and toilet block.
Further dilapidated buildings
Office
Stockproof and electric fences enclosed the whole area.
4.2 The property was let to the claimants by the Trustees of Sir James Collyer-Ferguson under a lease dated 2 June 1989 for a term of 14 years at a commencing rental of £2,500 pa. The lease contained provisions for the tenant to insure and undertake repairs and was not excluded from the provisions of Part II of the Landlord and Tenant Act 1954. The permitted user was "Riding School and School for the Riding and Stabling of Horses and for no other purpose", there were provisions for rent reviews every 4 years (although none of them were implemented) and assignment was permitted, but not sub-letting. The lessees paid a premium of £40,000 for the lease together with £15,000 for goodwill, and carried out improvements during the course of their occupation to an agreed value of £10,000 on an equivalent reinstatement basis, or £4,100 on a total extinguishment (write-down value) basis. A secured loan of £75,000 was originally obtained to set up the business.
4.3 The property had a rateable value of £12,250 and the riding school had the benefit of a licence granted by the local authority relating to compliance with standards of facilities and service. The client base for Tollgate Riding Stables (the trading name for the business) ("Tollgate"), which was the only licensed riding school within the Gravesham District Council area, came mainly from the Gravesend/Medway Towns area, but some were from further afield.
4.4 The Company acquired the freehold of the subject property, subject to the extant lease, in 1997.
4.5 Notice to Treat and Notice of Entry in accordance with the provisions of the Channel Tunnel Rail Link Act 1996 and the Compulsory Purchase Act 1965 were served upon the claimants on 26 June 1998. The Date of Entry (by eviction) was 22 October 1998, this being the Valuation Date for the purpose of this Reference.
4.6 The lessees' interest in the subject property at the Date of Entry comprised the residual value of the lease, together with tenants improvements, goodwill, stock and fixtures. An appropriate rental figure, for valuation purposes at that date, was agreed to be £12,250 and a suitable yield to reflect the profit rent was 6 per cent.
4.7 At the Date of Entry there were 48 horses at the subject property, 22 being owned outright by the claimants, 7 on long-term loan to them, 8 in full livery, 8 in working livery and 3 belonging to staff. The riding school was recognised by the British Horse Society as a teaching establishment (including training of teachers) and in addition to Mr. Prielipp and Mrs Kennerly (Mrs Prielipp being a 'sleeping partner') there were 10 grooms.
4.8 The claimants' first Notice of Claim was served on 13 August 1999, this being subsequently amended on 10 December 1999.
4.9 Notice of Reference to this Tribunal was dated 17 September 1999.
4.10 The claimants were offered the property to which they eventually relocated, Pond Farm, Harvel, as a possible alternative location in September 1998. It was agreed that the facilities there, in quantitative terms, would be similar to those at the subject property. Although there would be 12 fewer loose boxes, the total area of land, including pasture, was more than at Tollgate. Whilst Pond Farm was slightly further away from Gravesend it did offer better surrounding countryside for hacking. None of the other properties that had been available locally, and which were viewed by the claimants, met their requirements.
4.11 The Riding School's accounts for 6 years from May 1992 to May 1998 were agreed.
4.12 The claim for compensation under s.5 rule (5) of the 1961 Act was amended by Mrs Norris during the course of the hearing to £286,475 and the claim for disturbance, as assessed by Mr. Brightwell was amended to £358,942, the total therefore being £645,417.
4.13 The acquiring authority's assessment on the basis of total extinguishment (s.5 rule (2) of the 1961 Act) was also recalculated during the hearing at £51,400 (including disturbance). In the alternative, a figure based upon relocation was assessed by Mr. Squier at £47,500 (including disturbance) or, as a purely hypothetical exercise, under rule (5) at £49,000 (including disturbance).
ISSUES
a) The basis upon which compensation should be assessed total extinguishment of the business, relocation, or equivalent reinstatement under s.5 Rule (2) of the 1961 Act.
b) The quantum of compensation and disturbance on whatever basis is determined as appropriate and,
c) Whether this Tribunal has jurisdiction to determine the costs of eviction.
CLAIMANTS' CASE
" As at 12 June 2001 Mrs Carole Kennerly and Mr. Wayne Prielipp agree to pay Beechcroft Farm Retirement Benefit Fund all back rent prior to September 1999, for 15 stables that they used from 1 March 1999 to 1 September 1999, a further 10 stables from 1 July 1999 to 1 September 1999 at £10 per stable and planning fees to Graham Simpkin and Gravesham Borough Council totalling £19,704.82. With the proviso that the back rent for the stables or fees to Graham Simpkin and Gravesham Borough Council are only payable if the compensation claim to Union Rail for the relocation to The Whitehorse Riding Centre, Whitehorse Lane, Harvel, Nr Meopham, Kent exceeds the sum of £70,000 (seventy thousand pounds).
In addition they further agree to pay £10 per stable rent from 1 September 1999 onwards for 38 stables, 4 of which were not available until 1 December 1999 and 9 of which were not available until 16 October 2000. They further agree that when the indoor school is completed and ready for use, the cost of the stables will increase to £15 per stable.
All rent arrears to be paid 30 days after the compensation for relocation is received from Union Rail.
They also agree to pay any rates that are charged on the property during their occupation".
That was signed by the parties, and an additional statement, signed just by the claimants, and dated 14 June 2001, read:
"The agreement attached and signed by us [the parties] was signed by us under duress. Mr. Nuttall had previously blocked the front gate, turned the electric and water off, locked the toilets, feed room and office and chained and locked the field gates. We were advised not to sign any agreement and did so as we had no choice .sign or thrown off were the options. We had nowhere to go as the compensation case with Union Rail was not yet heard in the Lands Tribunal".
"Where land is, and but for the compulsory acquisition would continue to be, devoted to a purpose of such a nature that there is no general demand or market for that purpose, the compensation may, if the Lands Tribunal is satisfied that reinstatement in some other place is bona fide intended, be allowed on the basis of the reasonable cost of equivalent reinstatement"
"On completion of the Pond Farm site I will be offering Wayne [Prielipp] and Carol [Kennerly] a long term lease agreement. We have been unable to deal with this sooner due to the fact that they have not had their compensation from Union Rail, and because of this were unable to put any investment into the site and indeed pay any rent thus far.
I look forward to a long and prosperous future with Wayne and Carol".
Pond Farm | Tollgate | Tollgate | Tollgate | Tollgate | Tollgate |
Period | No. stables | Rent pw | Rent pw | Excess rent pw | Excess pa |
17.12.99 to 30.4.00 (19.3 weeks) |
29 |
290 |
48 |
242 |
4,671 |
1.5.00 to 15.10.00 (24 weeks) |
29 |
290 |
142 |
148 |
3,552 |
16.10.00 to 31.10.01 (54.4 weeks) |
38 |
380 |
142 |
238 |
12,947 |
1.11.01 to 31.10.2019 |
38 |
570 |
240 |
330 |
265,305 |
Net Present Value of excess rent over 20 years: | £286,475 | £286,475 | £286,475 | £286,475 | £286,475 |
i) Transport costs £1,650
ii) Claimants' travel expenses £1,018
iii) Vets visits prior to move £ 295
iv) Claimants' time £ 360
v) Legal fees & stamp duty new lease (provisional) £2,000
There was also nothing controversial about:
viii) Redundancy payments Nil
ix) Surveyors fees finding suitable property (provisional) £2,500
x) Costs of notifying customers etc. £2,500
"When determining that value [the land] the tribunal is in effect assessing how much a prudent person in the position of the claimant would himself have been prepared to give for the land sooner than lose it: see Pastoral Finance Association Ltd v The Minister [1914] AC 1083. He would be willing to pay more than others because retention of the site would save him the expense of moving, and the inconvenience of temporary disturbance and also the possible loss of customers. In some circumstances, such as those already mentioned, the extra value of the land to a prudent businessman might even exceed the present value of the business. In such a case that extra is part of the value of the land to the claimant".
a. Livery income would be maintained at the actual reported rate for the third quarter of 1998 (the last full quarter prior to eviction).
b. Teaching income would continue at the rate applicable for the year ended 31 May 1997 plus 5 per cent.
c. Costs would continue at the 1998 level plus 5 per cent.
d. Bank and loan interest excluded, as they do not relate to running of the business but the purchase of it.
e. No depreciation for goodwill, as this was being maintained.
f. Notional proprietors' salary of £22,000 pa
g. Allowance for value of free stabling for proprietors' 4 horses at full livery rates.
Mr. Brightwell adopted a price/earnings ("P/E") ratio of 'between 4 and 5', reflecting a return on investment of 20 to 25 per cent which, he said, was appropriate for this type of business and was within a range readily accepted by the Inland Revenue for fiscal valuations.
Projected Livery - Q3 1998 £133,000
Projected lessons 1997 actual + 5% £ 38,000
Total projected income £171,000
Direct costs 1998 + 5% £ 50,000
Overheads 1998 adjusted + 5% £ 29,000
Projected annual net profit £ 92,000
Less notional salaries £ 22,000
Add benefit of free stabling £ 20,000
Adjusted annual profit £ 90,000
Valuation based on pre-tax earnings
At P/E ratio of 4 = £360,000
At P/E ratio of 5 = £450,000 Say £400,000
Add value of intangible benefits (£50,000 £100,000) Say £ 75,000
Value of business as at October 1998 Say £475,000
Livery: 4 full livery @ £400 per month £19,200
4 part working livery @ £250 per month £12,000
25 working livery @ £200 per month £60,000
1 schooling @ £100 per month £ 1,200
4 own horses £ Nil
11 grazing @ £84 per month £11,088
Say £104,000
Lessons: Projected actual lessons at 12 months after
commencement full trading 25% capacity £ 71,000
£175,000
Less
Direct costs (£10k pa saved in feed and hay from grazing) £ 40,000
Overheads (£10k pa additional property (rental) costs) £ 40,000
Projected pre-tax net profit £ 95,000
The figures were obtained from the claimants and, Mr. Brightwell said, were supported by the actual income received whilst Tollgate had been operational and from his own researches. They were also, for instance in respect of livery income, in line with what the claimants had had to pay whilst the horses were temporarily stabled elsewhere. In his view, the £71,000 pa from lessons was a very conservative figure, as Mr. Prielipp had said that £100,000 pa would be achievable once the new operation was properly established. There could be no question, Mr. Brightwell said, that the prospects for the business were viable.
Disturbance
Temporary accommodation for horses £19,335
Muck disposal £ 2,005
Extra cost of bedding £ 3,430
Telephone connection £ 157
Horse walker £ 740
Legal and professional fees £16,038
Incidental expenses £ 3,337
£ 58,542
Loss of profits £313,900
Total claim for disturbance £358,942
ACQUIRING AUTHORITY'S CASE
Cost £ | VAT £ | TOTAL £ | ||
Sheriff | Office of High Sheriff of Kent Charges |
9,859.50 | 1,725.41 | 11,584.91 |
Security | PSL charges | 10,855.24 | 1,899.67 | 12,754.91 |
Standby transport | Horse Help call out fee and mileage | 204.00 | - | 204.00 |
Removals | Pickfords provision of 2x20' containers on site 2/10/98 to 30/10/98 | 1,680.00 | 294.00 | 1,974.00 |
Agents | Bidwells charges for 7 people in connection with organisation and preparation for abortive possession and subsequent eviction, including inventories, schedules of condition, photo and video records, attendance and supervision | 17,765.15 | 3,093.15 | 20,768.30 |
Veterinary Surgeon | Dr David Platt Professional Services inc. examination 48 horses, travel costs and accommodation | 2,949.50 | 516.16 | 3,465.66 |
Legal Services | Cripps Harries Hall Professional services relating to the eviction | 10,727.00 | ||
Care of Horses | Abbott Anstey Reader Stable Management Services Supply of labour and equipment for temporary management of stables and supply of hay and feed | 8,765.00 | 1,533.88 | 10,298.88 |
Security Fencing | Provision of fencing materials | 600.00 | 600.00 |
TOTAL | Net of VAT | £59,317.14 |
RELOCATION
Residual Interest in lease £23,416
Goodwill £ 7,670
Tenants' improvements & fixtures £ 4,100
Transport costs (as claimed) £ 1,650
Travel expenses (as claimed) £ 1,018
Claimants' time (as claimed) £ 360
Vets visits prior to move (as claimed) £ 295
Legal fees/stamp duty new lease (provisional) £ 2,000
Temporary loss of profits 25 per cent of
£7,670 (adjusted ave. 3 yrs profits exc profit rent) £ 1,917
Redundancy payments £ NIL
Surveyors fees for finding new premises (prov) £ 2,500
Notification to customers, advertising & signage £ 2,500
£47,430
Say £47,500
EQUIVALENT REINSTATEMENT
Equivalent reinstatement of leasehold interest -
expressed as value of remainder Tollgate lease £23,416
Premium £ NIL
Improvements to physically reinstate the
improvements that the claimants had carried
out at Tollgate £10,000
Goodwill N/A since business relocated £ NIL
Disturbance items as in relocation valuation £11,948
Add Cost of temporary accom. for horses £ 3,840
£49,204
Say £49,000
CLOSING SUBMISSIONS
Acquiring Authority
"Reinstatement is usually resorted to in cases where the displaced undertaking was some non-productive enterprise such as the church or a hospital which was not intended to make a profit but to perform some public service to the community which could not equally well be performed in another situation"
"There are four essentials in rule (5) to be satisfied by the claimants, on whom is the burden of proof:
1. that the subject land is devoted to the purpose, and but for the compulsory acquisition would continue to be so devoted;
2. that the purpose is one for which there is no general demand or market for the land;
3. the bona fide intention to reinstate on another site; and
4. these conditions being satisfied, that the Tribunal's reasonable discretion should be exercised in its favour.
" the word 'general' applies only to demand. It does not qualify 'market'. The underlying concept is that there cannot be a market unless both supply and demand exist, but there may be a general demand although there is no supply. In that case the demand will be unsatisfied"
In arguing that there was a general demand for land for the purpose of riding stables and school, the acquiring authority submitted that such demand was not confined only to the subject land, but any other land available for that purpose. It was also right for leasehold land to be taken into account.
" it follows, I think, beyond any doubt that if the undertaking in question is a business undertaking, then the question of the relation between the cost of reinstatement and the value of the undertaking is relevant and may be paramount in considering the question of reasonableness".
Harman LJ expressed the principle (at 261) as :
"The point was emphasised, as I have already said, that this was not a hobby but a commercial venture, and I do not see why the Tribunal should not accept that view and it seems to me that, looking at the matter from that point of view, it is quite clear that it would be commercially ridiculous to spend £180,000 in diverting a railway when there was no hope whatever that profits sufficient to pay it would ever be earned."
"What the authorities (to which I need not refer to in detail) very clearly establish, however, is that when an occupier, whether residential or business, does, in consequence of disturbance, rehouse himself in alternative accommodation, prima facie, he is not entitled to recover, by way of compensation for disturbance or otherwise, any part of the purchase price that he pays for the alternative accommodation to which he removes, whether the accommodation is better or worse than, or equivalent to, the property from which he is being evicted. The reason for that is that there is a presumption in law - albeit a rebuttable presumption that the purchase price paid for the new premises is something for which the claimant has received value for money. If he has made a good bargain, and acquired premises that have a value in excess of what he has paid for them, that is not something for which the acquiring authority is entitled to any credit. If the claimant has made a bad bargain and has paid a great deal more for the new premises to which he is moving than they are really worth, that is not something for which the acquiring authority can properly be charged"
The claimants in the instant case had argued that the rent for the new premises was a market, or fair rent and indeed had sought to demonstrate how reasonable it was on a 'per stable' basis in comparison with what they had paid for the temporary accommodation. If that were the case, why should the Tribunal rebut the very strong presumption that the claimants have achieved value for money?
Claimants
"I think it has to be established that practically nobody in the area wants to obtain land for the necessary purpose and that practically no sales for that purpose take place in the area".
"The situation of the land for the specified use must be governed by the nature of the use and that where this involves the resort of people to it, regard will realistically be had to where those people reside; in essence where are the customers and those associated with them who will be seeking the facilities to be provided? A community hospital and various types of school will need to be located convenient to the population they are to serve "
It was submitted, therefore, that only the evidence relating to general demand or market within the immediate vicinity of Tollgate fell to be considered. This was not a call-centre or tele-sales operation that could be located anywhere, but a local business, with exclusively local custom. To suggest, as the acquiring authority had, that the same type of customers as those using Tollgate could be found anywhere was erroneous and, Mr. Lewis said, based upon a misunderstanding of Kolbe House. If it had been right, the Tribunal would have looked to the whole country for evidence of a general market or demand for old peoples' homes, and it did not. As it was, Kolbe House was considering, not as the acquiring authority had suggested a residential care home for the elderly of Ealing, but just a residential care home for elderly people. The purpose was therefore the provision of residential care for those in need of it, and the potential customers would have been of the same 'type' as from anywhere else in the country. The fact was that in looking only at evidence from Ealing and its surrounding area, the Tribunal was simply reflecting the reality that the business could only have been reinstated in the local area because of its local links.
"The expense and any losses (the claimant) incurs in moving his business to a new site will ordinarily be the measure of the special loss he sustains by being deprived of the land and disturbed in his enjoyment of it"
and he went on to state that the value of the land and the disturbance loss were:
"strictly in law no more than two inseparable elements of a single whole in that together they make up the value of the land to the owner"
"For the purposes of cases such as the one before me, the court is not assessing the standing of the subject business in the market as a possible investment; it is determining whether the claimant is acting reasonably in seeking to transplant his business. A potential investor is likely to decline to invest in a small family business (carried on as a proprietary company) where its net maintainable profit does not exceed that of a well-established and diversified public company. But those who control and manage the former may view what is their own quite differently. Their business may represent more than just a means of getting a living it may represent, too, their chosen way of life. Even though conventional accounting practice would present such a company as making only small profits, the salary and wages received, and the other direct and indirect benefits derived from the company may provide the shareholders (who may care little for the glory of announced profits) with satisfactory emoluments, and reasonably inspire them in a determination to carry on elsewhere which the Court could endorse In this connection, a court will pay close attention to any evidence leading to the inference that there is "a reasonable prospect of improvement" The members of the controlling family may, not unreasonably, be willing to expend an amount on re-establishment notwithstanding that it exceeds not immoderately the value of the business computed according to standard accounting procedures based upon net maintainable profits. The dividing line, in practice, between deriving financial rewards from a family company by drawing salary and wages, and deriving them from distributed net profits is often imperfectly drawn. Accordingly, a court may allow itself some latitude in approving the re-establishment of a family company's business, even though, as a matter of cold commercial judgement, an accountant would not recommend a client to invest in the same business".
"Office
The amount claimed is £194.75. The items under this innocent heading appear to relate to the cost of second-hand timber and doors used to prevent entry by the sheriff's bailiff. I do not allow this item. Nor do I allow the amount of £84.32 claimed by the acquiring authority in respect of the sheriff's fees and removal contractors' fees which they suggest should be offset against the claim".
This language was consistent with the Tribunal considering the eviction costs (and the other costs referred to) and disallowed them. Had it been believed that there was no jurisdiction, the Tribunal would surely have said so.
DECISION
Equivalent reinstatement?
" but in case I be found wrong in law in respect of the determination of 'purpose' it is appropriate, because the evidence was before me, that I consider whether there is a general demand or market for land for a residential care home for elderly people. On the authority of Harrison that investigation falls to be undertaken as a contemporary exercise at the relevant date, which in this reference by consent I take to be at or about the date of the hearing. The search is for a general current demand, not a future or latent demand, or one which is intermittent and rarely emerges, Lord Fraser in Harrison. On the authority of Harrison the word 'general' qualifies demand but not market and land means not only the reference land but land in general. By way of summarising the position under rule (5) Lord Fraser in Harrison adopted with approval the following paragraph from the judgment of Waller LJ in Wilkinson:
Rule (5) provides, however, that there must be no general demand or market for land for that purpose. This indicates to me that it is not sufficient that there should be a demand for the land in question but there should be a general demand i.e. a demand not only for that land but for other land elsewhere for the same purpose. Furthermore, the use of the word 'market' connotes, in my opinion, something more than the fact that there are potential users of the land for the named purpose; it connotes that there is buying and selling for that purpose.
In Wilkinson, Sir David Cairns said, when dealing with the absence of a market, "It has to be established that practically no sales for that purpose take place in the area I should not consider the fact that an isolated transaction has taken place would constitute a 'market'". In references where the rule (5) basis is sought it has become an established practice in this Tribunal to test general demand and the existence of a market by reference to sale transactions and hitherto little assistance has been considered to be afforded by the grant of leases: see Nonentities and Manchester.
To provide a framework and context for the consideration of the evidence relating to transactions it is necessary to consider the geographic extent of the market under scrutiny. Sir David Cairns above spoke of sales taking place in the 'area'. Some of Mr. Casey's [District Valuer for the prospective acquiring authority] evidence was directed to the southern half of the United Kingdom including London but later circumscribed in terms of transactions to north, west and south London, including Ealing and Mr. Strathon [for the claimant] expressed opinions mainly in relation to the Ealing area. The situation of the land for the specified use must be governed by the nature of the use and that where this involves the resort of people to it regard will realistically be had to where those people reside; in essence where are the customers and those associated with them who will be seeking the facilities to be provided? A community hospital and various types of school will need to be located convenient to the population they are to serve; that is a common sense interpretation of the word 'area' used by Sir David Cairns in Wilkinson. A successful residential care home requires residents as direct customers and for the home to be attractive to them, inter alia, it needs to be accessible to friends and relatives for the purpose of periodic visiting. For these reasons I would not envisage the market for land for a residential care home for the elderly people living in the Ealing district extending much beyond the boundaries of the borough save for the particular influence of convenient transport routes by bus, train etc. South London is sufficiently far away from Ealing, geographically and by journey time, to constitute a different 'area' with its own supply, demand and market. For this reason alone transactions in that locality can be of little assistance in determining the existence or otherwise of a general demand or market for the land for a home for elderly people living in or close to Ealing".
After reciting the evidence relating to the transactions, the Member went on to conclude (at 589):
"On the evidence of the transactions I therefore find that there is no proven general demand or market for land for a residential care home for elderly people in and around the borough of Ealing in mid-1994".
"A business has several attributes. These include the goods or services it supplies, its management and staff, its suppliers, its customers, its location, its reputation, its name. When a business closes down at one site and reopens elsewhere, there is usually no difficulty in knowing whether, in practical terms, it is the same business or not. Take a simple example. A restaurant in Soho is forced to close when its premises are taken over. On the following day the same management opens a new restaurant of the same style nearby, under the same name and employing the same staff. That would be the case of the same business operating from a new location. That would be so even if there were an interval of a few days or weeks before the restaurant opened at the new site. The matter would stand differently if, four or five years after the Soho restaurant was shut, the same management opened a new restaurant outside London. That could not be regarded as the same business. It would rather be a case of one business having closed down and, some years later, the same management having set itself up in the same line of business again. In between these two extremes would be examples that would not be so clear cut. In each case it is a question of fact and degree whether the new business has retained sufficient attributes of the old business for the new business sensibly to be regarded as the old business at a new site or, which comes to the same, as a continuation of the old business at a new site".
In that case their Lordships upheld the Lands Tribunal's conclusion that the business had been effectively extinguished as there would have been a gap of many years before it could have re-established itself at another location, even though, upon re-establishment it would effectively have been the same business as the one that had been extinguished.
Relocation or Total Extinguishment?
"I was asked to look at certain previous decisions of the Tribunal, but, as I have said and emphasised before, decisions are only relevant to arguments on law or procedure. The assessment of compensation must be decided on, and only on, the evidence. Useful though the respective valuers' calculations are in assisting me to reach a decision in this matter, I do not propose to determine each item in dispute. How can I, for example, say what is the appropriate years' purchase when on the evidence I can choose any number between 1.5 and 10 without any evidence which I should use ipse dixit of each of the valuers? I propose, therefore, to adopt a robust approach similar to that used by the courts in assessing general damages and to award a sum which, in my judgment, in all the circumstances is reasonable. It seems to me that my function is comparable to that of the courts in assessing damages for loss of future earnings".
Value of interest
Residual Interest in lease £23,416
Tenants improvements and fixtures £ 4,100
Total £27,516
Disturbance
"No substantial help is to be derived from figures used in previous decisions of the Tribunal or from evidence as to settlements effected in other cases, because every case falls to be dealt with on its own merits".
In this case, whilst Mr. Squier might be right in looking at a multiplier of 2 to reflect the type of business that this is, that figure does not, in my view, reflect the special value to the claimants, that subject being rehearsed at length in evidence.
Residual interest in lease £ 23,416
Tenants' fixtures £ 4,100
Disturbance
Goodwill £115,000
Forced sale of livestock £ 3,000
Forced sale of tack and equipment £ 2,050
Claimants time and expenses £ 2,000
Legal fees £ 1,500
Total £151,066
1999: £22,000 (£20,000 + 10 per cent) less £7,727 = £14,273
2000 £24,200 (£22,000 + 10 per cent) less £3,815 = £20,385 £34,658
Year ended 31 May 1999 £14,273
Year ended 31 May 2000 £20,385
Year ended 31 May 2001 £17,746
Year ended 31 May 2002 £ 9,760
Total loss of profits £62,164
Muck Disposal £ 2,005
Extra cost of bedding at Popely's £ 3,430
Telephone connection costs £ 157
Horse walker £ 740
Transport costs (agreed) £ 1,650
Travel expenses (agreed) £ 1,018
Claimants' time (agreed) £ 360
Vets visits prior to move (agreed) £ 295
Legal fees in connection with new lease
(Estimated costs agreed) £ 2,000
Professional fees (planning) £13,103
Surveyor's fees finding new premises £ 2,500
Notification to customers £ 2,500
Sub-total £29,758
ADD Loss of profits £62,164
Total disturbance £91,922
Residual interest in lease £ 23,416
Tenants' fixtures £ 4,100
Goodwill £ NIL
Disturbance £ 91,922
Total £ 119,438
I am satisfied that at this figure, rather than the £645,000 postulated by Mrs Norris, is a sum which in all the circumstances is reasonable and which would adequately compensate the claimants for the actual and anticipated losses incurred in respect of the compulsory acquisition of Tollgate Riding Stables and the move to Pond Farm. In my judgment, it is also a sum which a reasonable businessman would consider expending (in exercising a degree of latitude based on the lifestyle factor referred to (per Shun Fung)), on the grounds that this is the relocation of a small, to all intents and purposes family run business, that has some additional value to the owners over and above a pure commercial investment opportunity.
(3) The costs accruing by reason of the issue and execution of the warrant, to be settled by the sheriff, shall be paid by the person refusing to give possession, and the amount of those costs shall be deducted and retained by the acquiring authority from the compensation, if any, payable by them to that person.
This Tribunal's function is to determine compensation where this is in dispute (s.1 1961 Act and s.6 1965 Act). Any compensation so awarded is recoverable as a civil debt in the courts.
DATED 8 February 2002
(Signed) P R Francis FRICS
ADDENDUM ON COSTS
DATED: 12 March 2002
(Signed) P R Francis FRICS