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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Lands Tribunal >> Barrett v Commissioners for her Majesty's Revenue and Customs [2005] EWLands DET_42_2005 (24 November 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWLands/2005/DET_42_2005.html Cite as: [2005] EWLands DET_42_2005 |
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Barrett v Commissioners for her Majesty's Revenue and Customs [2005] EWLands DET_42_2005 (24 November 2005)
DET/42/2005
LANDS TRIBUNAL ACT 1949
INHERITANCE TAX – house – comparables – allowance for lack of modern bathroom and kitchen, driveway and dispute with neighbour – market value of half-share in freehold interest determined at £133,875 – Inheritance Tax Act 1984, s160
IN THE MATTER of an APPEAL against a NOTICE OF DETERMINATION
BETWEEN JACQUELINE D P BARRETT Appellant
(personal representative of
Samuel Richard Arthur Barrett deceased)
and
COMMISSIONERS FOR HER Respondents
MAJESTY'S REVENUE AND CUSTOMS
Re: 60 Northumberland Road
New Barnet
Hertfordshire
Before: P H Clarke FRICS
Sitting at Procession House, London EC4
on 23 November 2005
The following case is referred to in this decision:
Inland Revenue Commissioners v Gray (Executor of Lady Fox deceased) [1994] RVR 129
The appellant in person
Mr P R Twiddy for the respondents
DECISION
Facts
(i) the roof of the carport over the driveway and the dividing wall between the garages shall be party structures (with provisions for maintenance and repair);
(ii) the owners of no 60 shall have rights of access and of manoeuvring vehicles over part of the area between the two properties and to drain surface water from the car port roof into pipes, gutters, etc on no 58;
(iii) the owners of no 58 shall have rights of access over part of the area between the two properties.
Appellant's case
Respondents' case
Discussion
"……, the value at any time of any property shall for the purposes of this Act be the price which the property might reasonably be expected to fetch if sold in the open market at that time; ……"
"The only express guidance which [s160] offers on the circumstances in which the hypothetical sale must be supposed to have taken place is that it was 'in the open market'. But this deficiency has been amply remedied by the courts during the century since the provision first made its appearance for the purposes of estate duty in the Finance Act 1894. Certain things are necessarily entailed by the statutory hypothesis. ………
In all other respects, the theme which runs through the authorities is that one assumes that the hypothetical vendor and purchaser did whatever reasonable people buying and selling such property would be likely to have done in real life. The hypothetical vendor is an anonymous but reasonable vendor, who goes about the sale as a prudent man of business, negotiating seriously without giving the impression of being either over-anxious or unduly reluctant. The hypothetical buyer is slightly less anonymous. He too is assumed to have behaved reasonably, making proper inquiries about the property and not appearing too eager to buy. But he also reflects reality in that he embodies whatever was actually the demand for that property at the relevant time. It cannot be too strongly emphasised that although the sale is hypothetical, there is nothing hypothetical about the open market in which it is supposed to have taken place. The concept of the open market involves assuming that the whole world was free to bid, and then forming a view about what in those circumstances would in real life have been the best price reasonably obtainable. The practical nature of this exercise will usually mean that although in principle no one is excluded from consideration, most of the world would usually play no part in the calculation. The inquiry will often focus upon what a relatively small number of people would be likely to have paid. It may have to arrive at a figure within a range of prices which the evidence shows that various people would have been likely to pay, reflecting, for example, the fact that one person had a particular reason for paying a higher price than others, but taking into account, if appropriate, the possibility that through accident or whim he might not actually have bought. The valuation is thus a retrospective exercise in probabilities, wholly derived from the real world but rarely committed to the proposition that a sale to a particular purchaser would definitely have happened."
Dated: 24 November 2005
(Signed) P H Clarke