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Scottish Court of Session Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Fishers Bistro v Lothian Assessor [2007] ScotCS CSIH_41 (05 June 2007)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/2007/CSIH_41.html
Cite as: [2007] CSIH 41, [2007] ScotCS CSIH_41

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LANDS VALUATION APPEAL COURT, COURT OF SESSION

 

Lord Justice Clerk

Lord Philip

Lord Kingarth

 

[2007] CSIH 41

XA50/06

 

OPINION OF THE LORD JUSTICE CLERK

 

in the Appeal by

 

FISHERS BISTRO

Appellants;

 

against

 

LOTHIAN ASSESSOR

Respondent:

_______

 

For the Appellants: Haddow, QC; Shield and Kyd

For the Respondent: Doherty, QC; Drummond Miller, WS

 

5 June 2007

 

Introduction

 

[1] This is an appeal from a decision of the Lothian Valuation Appeal Committee (the VAC) dated 5 December 2005 and revised by a decision dated 8 January 2007. It relates to an entry in the Valuation Roll made at the 2000 Revaluation in which the subjects at 1 The Shore, Edinburgh were described as a "Public House" and valued at a net annual value and rateable value of £60,000.

 

The subjects

[2] The subjects are a listed building situated at the north end of The Shore, Leith, at its corner with Tower Street. Until 1991 they had been operated as a traditional public house for over a century. In 1991 the then owner shifted the emphasis to the service of food. The appellants acquired the subjects in 1992. Since then, they have maintained a continuing emphasis on meals. They have taken steps "to discourage serious drinkers" (finding 2). The subjects have an impressive bar area. Food is available from noon until 10.30 pm. The premises remain open until midnight or 1 am. They are busy at lunch time and dinner time. Customers can have a drink only, although most are there for meals. Some have a drink with a sandwich or a snack at lunch time. Customers also have drinks before and after meals. The Committee was satisfied that the subjects have a high reputation for food.

[3] In the bar area there are four tables but little standing space. In the dining area there are eight tables. There is capacity for six persons at the bar, 20 in the bar area and up to 30 in the dining area. There are two chefs at each working shift, up to five dishwashers, three waiters and one bartender. There is also an area outside for tables and seating for about 20 people. It is used intermittently between May and October.

 

Planning and licensing status

[4] The Committee found that the subjects had planning permission for use as a public house. They were acquired with and continued to have a public house licence. A public house licence was more valuable and attractive than a restaurant or a refreshment licence. It gave the licensee greater flexibility in the use of the premises and had the benefit to the licensee that persons having a drink at the bar had the opportunity to see the restaurant and to decide to have a meal.

 

Changes in the pattern of public house trade

[5] The Committee found that in the last 10 to 15 years the range of public houses within Edinburgh had broadened considerably. Throughout Edinburgh, and within the locality of the appeal subjects, there was a wide range of public houses catering for different types of customer, from traditional pubs to those featuring meals. There were many similar public houses in the immediate locality where there was considerable emphasis on food, and several where the sale of food was predominant (finding 5).

 

The Revaluation Scheme

[6] In the 2000 Revaluation, licensed premises were valued in accordance with the relevant Scheme of the Scottish Assessors' Association (SAA). Under the Scheme, subjects with a public house licence were valued by reference to a hypothetical achievable turnover derived from evidence of turnover in 1998.

[7] In the Lothian valuation area, the 2000 Scheme was supplemented by an Instruction issued to staff by the assessor (Valuation of Restaurants, VP/C/7) which envisaged that certain factors other than turnover could be taken into account in the valuation of licensed restaurants.

 

The assessor's valuation

[8] The assessor valued the subjects under the Scheme as a public house on an adjusted turnover basis. In 1998, the adjusted turnover was £581,181, split between £243,621 liquor and £337,560 food. The valuation of £60,000 that was entered in the Roll made no allowance for over-performance. It produced a rate per square metre of £894. Before the Committee the assessor presented the following revised valuation.

Hypothetical Achievable Turnover:

Liquor £280,000 @ 100% £280000

Food £500,000 - £15,000 @ 80% £388000

Tobacco

£668024

Less 13% over-performance £ 86843

£581181

@ 9%

£52,306

 

NAV/RV Say £52,000

 

According to the assessor's witness, the allowance for over-performance was the highest given in the 2000 Revaluation. On a floor area of 67.1 sm, the revised rate was £774.96 psm.

 

The appellants' valuation

[9] Mr Peter Henry FRICS valued the subjects as a restaurant with a public house licence at an NAV/RV of £19,650. The assessor accepts that if the subjects are not to be valued solely on hypothetical achievable turnover, that should be the substituted value.

[10] Mr Henry's alternative submission was that if the subjects were to be valued as a public house, an end allowance for over-performance of 25% or even 331/3% would be appropriate.

 

Comparison subjects

[11] The Committee had comparison evidence about nearby public houses and restaurants. In its decision of 5 December 2005 (infra) it held that two of them were similar in character and in location, namely The Waterfront Wine Bar and Bistro (The Waterfront) and Skippers Bistro (Skippers). The valuations of both had been settled with the assessor by professional agents.

[12] The Waterfront was entered in the Roll as a public house and had been valued as such under the Scheme. It had a total turnover of £575,000. According to the undisputed evidence for the assessor, the turnover split was £267,000 liquor and £308,000 food. The ratio of liquor to food was similar to that of the appeal subjects. The NAV/RV was £52,000. On a floor area of 86.8 sm, that represented £588.08 psm.

[13] Skippers was entered in the Roll as a restaurant and had planning permission for use as such. In its decision of 5 December 2005, the Committee found, erroneously, that it had a public house licence. It had been valued as a public house under the Scheme. Its turnover was only £417,881, split between £153,000 liquor and £264,881 food. The NAV/RV was £35,500. On a floor area of 65.103 sm, that represented £545.06 psm. Its floor area was similar to that of the appeal subjects. It had only a small bar servery. It was closed during the middle of the day. In 1998 a slightly higher proportion of turnover was generated from food than at the appeal subjects.

 

The decision of the Committee

The decision of 5 December 2005

[14] The Committee found that the appeal subjects were correctly entered in the Roll as a public house. It held that in the real world landlords and tenants arriving at the rental value of licensed premises would attach more importance to turnover than to floor area. Turnover was a better indicator of annual value. Analysis of the rateable value per square metre could in some cases provide a useful check on turnover valuations; but it was not the best indicator. The check exercises of both parties demonstrated that there was no consistent relationship between turnover and floor area. The appellants' primary valuation produced a value that was below what any landlord in the real world would have agreed as a rent for the subjects at the relevant date.

[15] In giving its reasons the Committee said

"The Committee considered that most members of the public would think of the premises as being restaurant premises but for valuation purposes the categorisation to bring the Scheme ... into play took greater account of public house licence as opposed to restaurant or refreshment licence, planning permission, the extent of liquor sales in proportion to food sales and general matters of character. The Committee was not satisfied that there was an error in classifying these subjects as a public house and that classification was consistent with a number of comparables which might also be regarded by members of the public as being more akin to restaurants than traditional pubs ... "

 

[16] Having found that both The Waterfront and Skippers had public house licences, the Committee held that they were comparable with the appeal subjects in character and type of business and were the best comparisons, no matter whether the appeal subjects were classified as a public house or as a restaurant. Of the two, The Waterfront was the better comparison. The Committee rejected eight other proposed comparisons for reasons that are not challenged (finding 7).

[17] It therefore rejected the appellants' proposed valuation method and their proposed valuation. It accepted the assessor's valuation, except in relation to the end allowance. It considered that the end allowance for over-performance should be 25%. Beyond that, it considered that the high turnover was attributable to factors such as location, layout and atmosphere. It therefore allowed the appeal to the extent of reducing the NAV/RV to £45,000.

 

The revised decision of 8 January 2007

[18] After the present appeal was lodged, it emerged that, contrary to the evidence led before the Committee, and contrary to its finding, Skippers had only a restaurant licence. We returned the case to the Committee for it to consider the relevance, if any, of this new information; to review its findings regarding Skippers, and in the light of its reconsideration of the case in these respects to decide whether it wished to alter its decision of 5 December 2005.

[19] When it reconvened, the Committee rightly rejected Mr Henry's attempt to widen the scope of the hearing. It heard further submissions on the matter remitted to it. It decided to revise its finding 7, but otherwise to adhere to its decision. Its revised finding 7, so far as relevant to this appeal, is in the following terms.

"7 Appellant's production 2A provides information about public house and restaurant premises with which comparison may be made and information about these premises is also provided in tabular form on Assessor's production 3. Skippers is described in the Valuation Roll as a restaurant. Its planning use is as a restaurant. It has a Restaurant Licence. At the time of the 2000 Revaluation the Assessor believed it to have a Public House Licence. It was valued in the same way as the public houses serving food in the vicinity such as the Waterfront. Had she been aware that it had only a Restaurant Licence, the Assessor would have valued it by comparison with restaurants in Commercial Quay. The original valuation of Fishers Bistro (before the 13% was allowed for over-performance) of £60,000 produced a rate per square metre of £894, very seriously in excess of any of the other comparable subjects. It had, however, been modified by the 13% allowance to £774 ... The Waterfront Wine Bar and Bistro achieved a total turnover of £575,000 compared to Fishers £581,181 but because its area is 86.8 square metres, whereas Fishers has an area of 67.1, the analysis of the rate per square metre showed £599.08 for The Waterfront compared to £774.96 for Fishers. Skippers Bistro has a similar area of 65.13 square metres but achieved a much lower turnover of £417,881 in total. Its rate per square metre was £545.06 and since later concession by the Assessor of error the equivalent of £279. Skippers has a small bar servery with dining tables right up against it. It opens for lunch and dinner but closes in the middle of the day. It is a restaurant with Class 3 planning consent. The Waterfront is comparable to Fishers Bistro in character and type of business. The Waterfront's ratio of food to liquor sold in 1998 was similar to the appeal subjects. At Skippers a slightly higher proportion of turnover was generated from food than at the appeal subjects. The Waterfront is the best comparison for the appeal subjects. That was the position no matter whether the subjects were classified as a public house or a restaurant. The Waterfront was the best comparison."

 

 

Submissions for the appellant

[20] Counsel for the appellant submitted that the Committee misdirected itself in classifying the subjects as a public house in accordance with their planning and licensing status rather than their actual use (Armour, Valuation for Rating, 5th ed, paras 18-09, 18-10; Ass for Stirlingshire v Myles and Binnie, 1962 SC 530; Woodrow v Ass for Lothian Region, 2002 SC 530). In its revised finding 7 (supra), it repeated the error. In view of its findings as to the use made of the subjects, and in particular the finding that only a minority of the customers had a drink without food, and in view of the documentary evidence, such as the appellant's menus, newspaper restaurant reviews and photographs of the subjects, the Committee erred in holding that the premises were run as a public house. That was confirmed by its statement of reasons (supra). Its findings showed that the actual use of Skippers was not significantly different from that of the subjects. Its finding that the appellants' proposed valuation was below what any landlord in the real world would have agreed as a rent for the subjects at the valuation date followed from its initial error The subjects should be classified as a restaurant and valued on the same basis as Skippers. Alternatively, if the Committee was right in upholding the assessor's methodology, the end allowance was inadequate. The resulting NAV of £45,000 produced a rate per square metre (£671) that was out of line with the rates produced by the valuations of The Waterfront (£599) and Skippers when valued as public house (£545). The end allowance should have been 33⅓%. That would reduce the NAV to £40,000, representing £596 psm.

 

Submissions for the assessor

[21] Counsel for the assessor submitted that the Committee had valued the subjects in their actual use, which involved the appellants' taking full advantage of the benefits of the public house licence. The Committee recognised that there was now a broad range of premises that held public house licences. It was entitled on its findings to hold that the subjects were a public house in character. The licence facilitated all-day opening, with service of drinks unrelated to the service of food. The premises remained open until as late as 1am after the service of food ceased. Sales of liquor were substantial. They were £243,621 in the tone year. From all of this, the Committee was entitled to hold that for premises of this kind, turnover was the best indicator of value, as the SAA Scheme envisaged. The Committee found that the best comparison was The Waterfront, whether it was classified as a public house or as a restaurant. It found that Skippers had a different character. That judgment was for the Committee. In the light of the new evidence about the licensing status of Skippers, the Committee was entitled to conclude that it was no longer a valid comparison. The submission that the end allowance should have been greater was not foreshadowed in the grounds of appeal. In any event, the amount of an end allowance was a matter for the Committee.

 

Conclusions

Classification

[22] The Committee was not satisfied that the classification of the subjects as a public house was erroneous. By clear implication, it decided that the predominant character of the premises was that of a public house. That decision was essentially one of fact.

[23] Counsel for the appellants submitted that the similarities between the subjects and Skippers were such that the subjects should have been valued as a restaurant at a similar value; but the Committee was of the view that the differences between the two were decisive in valuation terms. The essential difference was that the appellants made full use of their advantage in holding a public house licence. They sold drink throughout the day unrelated to the service of food and sold drink late at night after the service of food had ceased. The subjects had an impressive bar area, in contrast with that of Skippers. They were operated with a different trading pattern from that of Skippers and achieved significantly greater turnover from liquor sales. On these findings, the Committee was entitled to conclude that the subjects should be classified as a public house, and therefore that the assessor's valuation method was appropriate.

[24] In my view, the Committee would have been entitled to hold that the trading pattern and the performance of the appeal subjects were such that they should be valued solely on turnover, whatever description was given to them in the Roll

 

Comparisons

[25] The Committee's original judgment that The Waterfront and Skippers were the only valid comparisons was based on the evidence that it then had about each. It decided that The Waterfront was the better comparison of the two. It was entered as a public house and, like the appeal subjects, was valued as such on turnover in accordance with the Scheme. The Committee was entitled to make that judgment on the facts.

[26] In its revised finding 7, the Committee has put right its original finding as to the licensing status of Skippers. It has found that if the assessor had known that Skippers had only a restaurant licence, she would have valued it by comparison with the restaurants in Commercial Quay. It has also recorded what seems to have been agreed evidence that in the 2005 Revaluation the assessor has valued Skippers as a restaurant at a significantly lower value and that Skippers has received a refund of part of the rates paid under the 2000 Revaluation. In the result the Committee no longer regards Skippers as being a valid comparison. This too is a judgment that it was entitled to make on the facts.

[27] But the point that matters, in my opinion, is that the Committee has throughout been of the view that The Waterfront is the best comparison of all, no matter whether the subjects are classified as a public house or a restaurant. That view is warranted by its findings. In my opinion, the decision appealed against cannot be faulted so far as it is founded on that comparison alone.

 

End allowance

[28] In my view, we should not entertain the submission for the appellants on the amount of the end allowance since the appellants have not given fair notice of it in their grounds of appeal. But there is nothing in the point anyhow. Since it was conceded that over-performance should be reflected in the valuation by way of an end allowance (cf Sinclair v Lothian Assessor, [2003] RA 202), the decision as to the amount of the allowance was a matter for the discretion of the Committee (JD Wetherspoon plc v Lothian Regional Assessor, 2003 SC 400). A decision of that nature does not raise a proper issue for this court.

 

Disposal

[29] I propose to your Lordships that we should refuse the appeal.


LANDS VALUATION APPEAL COURT, COURT OF SESSION

 

Lord Justice Clerk

Lord Philip

Lord Kingarth

 

[2007] CSIH 41

XA50/06

 

OPINION OF LORD PHILIP

 

in the Appeal by

 

FISHERS BISTRO

Appellants;

 

against

 

LOTHIAN ASSESSOR

Respondent:

_______

 

 

 

For the Appellants: Haddow, QC; Shield and Kyd

For the Respondent: Doherty, QC; Drummond Miller, WS

 

5 June 2007

 

[30] I agree that Lothian Valuation Appeal Committee were entitled to conclude on the facts stated, as highlighted by your Lordship in the chair, that the subjects at 1 Shore, Leith, Edinburgh fell to be classified as a public house, and that as such they should be valued on the basis of a hypothetical achievable turnover derived from evidence of actual turnover in 1998. I also agree that on the facts stated the Committee were wholly justified in regarding The Waterfront as the most appropriate comparison.

[31] In relation to the end allowance for over performance, the amount of the allowance was essentially a matter for the Committee as the fact finding tribunal. In the event, they applied an allowance of 25 per cent, substantially higher than any other allowance applied in the valuation of any subjects in the 2000 Revaluation. No grounds were advanced on behalf of the appellants which would justify our interfering with the Committee's exercise of their discretion in this regard.


LANDS VALUATION APPEAL COURT, COURT OF SESSION

 

Lord Justice Clerk

Lord Philip

Lord Kingarth

 

[2007] CSIH 41

XA50/06

 

OPINION OF LORD KINGARTH

 

in the Appeal by

 

FISHERS BISTRO

Appellants;

 

against

 

LOTHIAN ASSESSOR

Respondent:

_______

 

 

For the Appellants: Haddow, QC; Shield and Kyd

For the Respondent: Doherty, QC; Drummond Miller, WS

 

5 June 2007

 

[31] For the reasons given by your Lordship in the chair I agree that this appeal should be refused.

 


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