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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Lands Tribunal >> Corton Caravans And Chalets Ltd v Anglian Water Services Ltd [2003] EWLands ACQ_19_2001 (25 June 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWLands/2003/ACQ_19_2001.html Cite as: [2003] EWLands ACQ_19_2001 |
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[2003] EWLands ACQ_19_2001 (25 June 2003)
ACQ/19/2001
LANDS TRIBUNAL ACT 1949
COMPENSATION compulsory acquisition of former holiday park whether suitable for use for timeshare development residual valuations hypothetical vendor whether claimant to be considered hypothetical vendor developer's profit whether deduction for developer's profit loss of profits whether compensation to include loss of future profits alternative valuations as caravan site compensation awarded £182,500
IN THE MATTER of A NOTICE OF REFERENCE
BETWEEN CORTON CARAVANS AND CHALETS LIMITED Claimant
and
ANGLIAN WATER SERVICES LIMITED Respondent
Re: Former Holiday Park, Stirrups Lane, Corton, Suffolk
Before: The President and P R Francis FRICS
Sitting at 48/49 Chancery Lane, London, WC2A 1JR
on
3-7 and 10-12 February and 24 March 2003
Barry Denyer-Green and Gordon Nardell instructed by Mills and Reeve, solicitors of Norwich, for the claimant
Guy Roots QC, Gerald Rabie and Guy Williams instructed by Anglian Water Legal Section, for the acquiring authority.
The following cases are referred to in this decision:
Horn v Sunderland Corporation [1941] 2 KB 26
Director of Buildings and Lands v Shun Fung Ironworks [1995] 2 AC 111
Richmond Gateways Ltd v Richmond upon Thames Borough Council [1989] 2 EGLR 182
Harvey v Crawley Development Corporation [1958] 1 QB 485
Hobbs (Quarries) Ltd v Somerset County Council (1975) 30 P & CR 286
Pastoral Finance v The Minister [1914] AC 1083
Collins v Feltham UDC [1937] 4 All ER 189
Wimpey v Middlesex CC [1938] 3 All ER 781
D McEwing and Sons v Renfrew County Council (1959) 11 P & CR 306
Vyricherla Narayana Gajapatiraju v Revenue Divisional Officer, Vizagapatam [1939] AC 302
Railtrack plc v Guinness Ltd (unreported [2003] EWCA Civ 188)
Trocette Property Co v Greater London Council [1974] 28 P&CR 408
Ryde International Plc v London Regional Transport (28 March 2003, unreported; LT ref ACQ/174/2000)
Liesbosch Dredger v SS Edison, The Liesbosch [1933] AC 449
Allied Maples Group Ltd v Simmons and Simmons [1995] 3 WLR 1602
The following further cases were referred to in argument
Bailey v Derby Corporation [1965] 1 All ER 443
Co-operative Retail Services Ltd v Taff Ely BC (1979) 39 P & CR 223
Gagenus v Turkey 5 June 2001, 39335/98 E Ct HR
Lady Fox's Executors v Commissioners of Inland Revenue [1994] 2 EGLR 185
LCC v Tobin [1959] 1 WLR 354
Lithgow v United Kingdom [1986] 8 EHRR 329
Main v Swansea City Council (1984) 49 P & CR 26
Marcic v Thames Water Utilities Ltd [2002] QB 929
Matthews v Environment Agency (2002) LT LCA/192/2000 (Unreported)
McDougall v Wrexham Maelor BC [1993] RVR 141
Minister of Transport v Lee (1965) 17 P & CR 181
Richards v Somerset County Council [2002] RVR 328
Ryde International Plc v London Underground Ltd [2002] RVR 59
Slough Estates Ltd v Slough Borough Council (No2) [1971] AC 958
DECISION
Introduction
The claimant
The subject land
The compulsory purchase
The claim
Planning
Claimant's case
Acquiring authority's case
The issues
(a) Whether the assumption underlying Mr Gale-Hasleham's valuation A, that the hypothetical sale would be by a vendor with the precise characteristics of the claimant, is in accordance with the law.
(b) Whether there should be a deduction for developer's profit in the residual valuations.
(c) Whether the element in Mr Gale-Hasleham's valuation B consisting of prospective loss of profit from the development is in accordance with the law.
(d) Whether there would have been a demand for the subject land for timeshare development.
(e) If there had been a demand, what value this would have given to the land.
(f) If there would have been no demand for a timeshare development, what alternative would have given the highest value to the land, and what such value would have been.
After summarising the relevant evidence we will consider these issues in turn.
Evidence
Conclusions: general
Conclusions: the hypothetical seller and purchaser
"The value of land shall, subject as hereinafter provided, be taken to be the amount which the land if sold on the open market by a willing seller might be expected to realise"
He said that the words "if sold" required the assumption of a sale, which in turn required the assumption that the seller and the purchaser reached agreement on the price. Rule 2 concerned the valuation of the land taken and not any commercial benefits that might be on offer simultaneously. He referred to Vyricherla Narayana Gajapatiraju v Revenue Divisional Officer, Vizagpatam [1939] AC 302 (often referred to as the Indian case) where at 312-313, Lord Romer said that compensation for the value of the land taken must be determined
" by reference to the price which a willing vendor might reasonably expect to obtain from a willing purchaser It may also be observed in passing that it is often said that it is the value of the land to the vendor that has to be estimated. This, however, is not in strictness accurate The vendor is to be treated as willing to sell at 'market price' [The] arbitrator will have to ascertain as best he may from the material before him, what a willing vendor might reasonably expect to obtain from a willing purchaser, for the land in that particular position and with those particular potentialities."
Conclusions: developer's profit
Conclusions: rule (6) and loss of future profits
"Then you will consider what capital amount fairly represents those savings and those profits and you will add that to the amount that you consider fairly represents the market value of the land independently of these special questions."
Giving the opinion of the Board, Lord Moulton said (at 1088) that this direction was seriously at fault. He went on:
"That which the appellants were entitled to receive was compensation not for the business profits or savings which they expected to make from the use of the land, but for the value of the land to them. No doubt the suitability of the land to them, and the prospective savings and additional profits which it could be shewn would probably attend the use of the land in their business furnished material for estimating what was the real value of the land to them. But that is a very different thing from saying that they were entitled to have the capitalised value of these savings and additional profits added to the market value of the land in estimating their compensation. They were only entitled to have them taken into consideration so far as they might fairly be said to increase the value of the land."
"It would, in my opinion, be wrong in principle if this third head of claim regarding future profits were to be allowed as a legitimate addition to the market value of the land. This is not even a case of a firm's business premises being compulsorily acquired in whole or in part. So far as the claimants are concerned the site in question is part of the stock or raw material of the business. By their processing of this raw material and selling the result they anticipate making a profit. They are entitled to the market value of their raw material, so that they may use the surrogatum for making profits in other ways, but if they get the price of their raw material they cannot also get something in respect of the profit they hoped to make upon it. For, if so, they would have the means of securing that profit twice over. Prospective future profits on future prospective developments cannot therefore be claimed in addition to the market value of the land."
" . The particular adventure that the claimants were engaged upon has been terminated but their business remains as before and they are free to turn in other directions and engage upon other profitable work. It would be going beyond anything contained in the idea of compensation to give them the profits they would have made if they had actually completed the project over the next two or three years and, at the same time, leave them free to switch the resources of the business which would have been locked up for that period to other profit-making activity
It may be that no precisely corresponding activity is open to the claimants in Greenock, but the claimants are builders and their business as builders had not been brought to a stop. When the Balclutha project was terminated they became free to engage in other work."
"We find this case very difficult because we see some force in the argument that the loss to the claimants cannot be more than the depreciation in the market value. That argument, however, pre-supposes that there was another quarry available to be bought at market value which could serve the claimants' purposes and provide them with an equal profit; but there was no evidence to that effect. Thus, it is clear that the claimants have been deprived of the profits they would have earned and that much is not disputed."
Conclusions: other matters of law
Conclusions: the timeshare market and the site
Conclusions: timeshare residual valuations
Conclusions: holiday village
Caravan site
(a) Reception and administration (if no other leisure facilities provided) £ 48,000
(b) Reception, admin, clubhouse and indoor swimming pool £475,000
(c) Two houses for staff £ 72,000
(d) Provision of services, caravan pitches, fencing, security etc £480,000
(e) Pumping station £ 75,000
(f) Landscaping £ 50,000
(g) Pitch fees £1,300 pa, gross, excluding VAT
It was the claimant's case that neither of (b) nor (c) was necessary.
Holiday Caravan Site for 150 Pitches
150 @ £1,300pa site fee £ 195,000
add sales: 30 @ £3,500 profit per sale £ 105,000
£ 300,000
less outgoings @ 35% of site fee income £ 68,250
£ 231,750
Y P @ 14% 7
£1,622,350
Allow costs of development
Cost of bases, services and roads £450,000
Reception facility £ 48,000
Site clearance £ 50,000
Fencing & signage £ 40,000
Pumping station £ 75,000
Landscaping £ 50,000
£ 713,000
£ 909,250
Say £ 900,000
Conclusions on caravan site valuation
Dated 25 June 2003
George Bartlett QC, President
Paul Francis FRICS
ADDENDUM
"The second defect is that the offer is expressly stated to be exclusive of costs. In my view, it was reasonable for the Claimants to defer their response until the question of costs had been clarified. The Council could have included an offer as to costs in their letter, thus dealing with both outstanding issues. An offer during proceedings in this Tribunal should have the dual purpose of settling the outstanding claim and compromising the reference. The general rule is that an acquiring authority should normally bear the costs of proceedings in the Lands Tribunal and therefore an offer that makes no reference to costs is defective in that respect."
"After proceedings have commenced in the Lands Tribunal, a sealed offer should be both an offer of compensation in respect of the compulsory acquisition and an offer to compromise the proceedings. The general rule is that an acquiring authority should bear the costs of proceedings in the Lands Tribunal (see Emslie & Simpson Ltd v Aberdeen City District Council (No 2) [1995] RVR 159) and therefore a sealed offer which omits any reference to the claimant's costs is weakened in effect and reduced in amount."
Dated 12 September 2003
George Bartlett QC, President
Paul Francis FRICS
APPENDIX 1
D R Gale-Hasleham FRICS IRRV | |||
Valuation A | |||
SALES income based on 75 units for 50 weeks @ £4,500pw |
75 x 4,500 x 50 |
£16,875,000 |
|
Less: Cost of development including fees of £291,500 (agreed) |
£ 5,666,000 |
||
Setting up costs | £ 30,000 | ||
Marketing costs | £ 4,000,000 | ||
£7,179,000 | |||
Less: Interest on development costs | |||
Setting up costs | £ 30,000 (agreed) | ||
Building regulations | £ 32,000 (agreed) | ||
Design/build contract fees | £291,500 (agreed) | ||
£353,500 | |||
Interest 4 yrs @ 8.5% compound | 0.386 | ||
£ 136,451 | |||
Less: Interest on construction and fitting out costs (£5,666,000 - fees £291,500 and bldg regs £32,000) |
|||
£ 5,342,500 | |||
Period 3 yrs after 9 months later average 2 yrs to allow sales income |
0.166 |
||
£ 890,061 | |||
Less: Interest on marketing in years 1 & 2 thereafter self-funding from sales. Take £1.5m @ 8.5% compound 2 yrs. |
£1,5000,000 |
||
Amount of £1 | 0.1772 | ||
£ 265,800 | |||
£1,292,312 | £5,886,689 | ||
Less: Interest on land value | |||
£2,450,000 for 5 yrs @ 4% compound | £2,450,000 | ||
0.2167 | |||
£5,309,915 | £5,355,774 | ||
Value deferred 5 yrs @ 8.5% | 0.665 | ||
£3,561,589 | |||
Say | £3,560,000 | ||
APPENDIX 2
D R Gale-Hasleham FRICS IRRV | |||
Valuation B | |||
SALES income based on 75 units for 50 weeks @ £4,500pw |
75 x 4,500 x 50 |
£16,875,000 |
|
Allow cost of development (Agreed) figure inc. fees |
£ 5,666,000 |
||
£11.209,000 | |||
Allow costs of acquisition and setting up (Agreed) | |||
Stamp duty | £80,000 | ||
Legal fees | £ 5,000 | ||
Land Registry | £ 1,000 | ||
Legal fees in setting up timeshare | £30,000 | ||
£116,000 | £11,093,000 | ||
Allow marketing costs | |||
Based on stand-alone operation at 27% of sales income £16,875,000 |
£4,556,250 say |
£4,500,000 |
£6,593,000 |
Allow interest on cost of development | |||
Setting up costs | £150,000 | ||
Building regulations | £ 32,000 (agreed) £291,500 (agreed) |
||
Design/build fees | Design/build fees | ||
£473,500 | |||
Interest 4 yrs @ 8.5% compound | 0.386 | ||
£182,771 | |||
Construction & fitting out costs (£5,666,000 less fees £291,500 and bldg regs £32,000) |
£5,342,500 |
||
Period 3 yrs commencing month 9, average 2 yrs 8.5% compound, deferred 9 months offset by sales income in period from 18 months |
0.1666 |
£890,141 |
|
Interest on marketing expenditure in years 1 & 2 thereafter self-funding from sales - £1.5m @ 8.5% compound 2 years | £1,500,000 |
||
0.1772 | |||
£ 265,800 | |||
£1,338,712 | £5,254,288 | ||
Allow developer's profit on £11,093 @ 17.5% |
£1,941,275 |
||
£3,313,013 | |||
Value deferred 5 years @ 8.5% | £2,203,154 | ||
Add overbid of 10%, say £250,000 | £2,453,154 | ||
Say | £2,450,000 |
APPENDIX 3
R W Asher FRICS
Valuation on basis of Caravan Park as at 7 March 2000
Holiday Caravan Site of 150 pitches
Gross Development Value
Caravan pitches 150 @ £8,500 £1,275,000
Sales commission on caravans 150 @ (say) £3,500 at 30 per annum
£105,000
Y P for 5 years @ 12% 3.60478
£ 378,502
TOTAL CAPITAL RECEIPTS £1,653,502
Development Costs
Indoor swimming pool, reception, admin and clubhouse £ 475,000
Two houses @ £36,000 each £ 72,000
Caravan pitch bases @ £800 each £ 120,000
Caravan pitch services @ £800 each £ 120,000
Fencing 700metres @ £28 £ 19,600
Gates, security, signage £ 20,000
Construction roads and sewers 600 metres @ £320 £ 192,000
Site clearance/demolition say £ 50,000
Remediation say £ 50,000
Pumping Station £ 75,000
Landscaping £ 50,000
Sub Total £1,243,600
Construction fees @ 5% £ 62,180
Planning and Building Control fees - say £ 2,000
Marketing say £ 5,000
Legal fees £ 1,000
TOTAL COSTS £1,313,780
Developer's return @ 10% £131,378
Finance on costs 6 months @ 7% £ 20,586
£ 151,964
£1,465,744
£ 187,758
Surveyors fees @ 1% £ 1,700
Legal fees @ 1% £ 1,700
Stamp duty @ 1% £ 1,700
Finance on land cost @ 7% for 1 year £ 11,900
£ 17,000
£ 170,758
Say £ 170,000
APPENDIX 4
Lands Tribunal's valuation
Valuation on basis of Caravan Park as at 7 March 2000
Holiday Caravan Site of 150 pitches
Gross Development Value
Caravan pitches 150 @ £8,500 £1,275,000
Sales commission on caravans 150 @ (say) £3,500 at 30 per annum
£105,000
Y P for 5 years @ 12% 3.60478
£ 378,502
TOTAL CAPITAL RECEIPTS £1,653,502
Development Costs
Indoor swimming pool, reception, admin and clubhouse £ 475,000
Two staff caravans £ 40,000
Caravan pitch bases @ £800 each £ 120,000
Caravan pitch services @ £800 each £ 120,000
Fencing 700metres @ £28 £ 19,600
Gates, security, signage £ 20,000
Construction roads and sewers 600 metres @ £320 £ 192,000
Site clearance/demolition say £ 50,000
Remediation say £ 50,000
Pumping Station £ 75,000
Landscaping £ 50,000
Sub Total £1,211,600
Construction fees @ 5% £ 60,580
Planning and Building Control fees - say £ 2,000
Marketing say £ 5,000
Legal fees £ 1,000
TOTAL COSTS £1,280,180
Developer's return @ 10% £128,018
Finance on costs 6 months @ 7% £ 44,806
£ 172,824
£1,453,004
£ 200,498
Surveyors fees @ 1% £ 1,800
Legal fees @ 1% £ 1,800
Stamp duty @ 1% £ 1,800
Finance on land cost @ 7% for 1 year £ 12,600
£ 18,000
£ 182,498
Say £ 182,500