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United Kingdom Upper Tribunal (Tax and Chancery Chamber) |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Upper Tribunal (Tax and Chancery Chamber) >> Mudan & Anor v Commissioners for His Majesty's Revenue and Customs (STAMP DUTY LAND TAX - building previously used as dwelling in need of renovation and repair at time of completion of purchase - whether building 'suitable for use as a single dwelling') [2024] UKUT 307 (TCC) (01 October 2024) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKUT/TCC/2024/307.html Cite as: [2024] WLR(D) 440, [2024] UKUT 307 (TCC) |
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(Tax and Chancery Chamber)
Rolls Building, London |
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Judgment Date: 01 October 2024 |
B e f o r e :
JUDGE ASHLEY GREENBANK
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AMARJEET MUDAN AND TAJINDER MUDAN |
Appellants |
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- and - |
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THE COMMISSIONERS FOR HIS MAJESTY'S REVENUE AND CUSTOMS |
Respondents |
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For the Appellants: Michael Firth KC, instructed by Cornerstone Tax 2020 Limited
For the Respondents: Michael Ripley, instructed by the General Counsel and Solicitor to His Majesty's Revenue and Customs
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Crown Copyright ©
STAMP DUTY LAND TAX – building previously used as dwelling in need of renovation and repair at time of completion of purchase – whether building "suitable for use as a single dwelling"
Introduction
relevant legislation
The amount of tax chargeable in respect of a chargeable transaction to which this section applies is determined in accordance with subsections (1B) and (1C).
a building that is used or suitable for use as a dwelling, or is in the process of being constructed or adapted for such use…
(2) A building or part of a building counts as a dwelling if—
(a) it is used or suitable for use as a single dwelling, or
(b) it is in the process of being constructed or adapted for such use.
the ftt's decision
27. Mr Mudan agreed that the Property was still residential in nature. It had been someone's house for many years and it was not falling down. Nevertheless, he did not consider that it was safe to live in with a young family. This was so even though there was no structural damage to the Property and no structural work was required except to replace the missing roof over the boiler room. Mr Mudan was sure that there was a danger to life because of the state of the electrics...
…
29. Mr Mudan agreed that he had purchased the Property with the benefit of a mortgage and the mortgagee had clearly been happy to lend on the security of the Property.
30. In answer to a question from the Tribunal, Mr Mudan explained that the works that had been done to make the Property safe (as opposed to a pleasant place to live) was as follows:
(1) the electrical works of rewiring, with new switches, sockets and fuse panels;
(2) a new boiler, water pumps and pipes (works to gas as well as water - where the boiler had been pulled away from the wall there were damaged pipes that could be leaking and they had to be made safe) in the boiler house;
(3) a new roof over the boiler house designed to stop rainwater entering;
(4) broken windows were repaired and the Property made secure;
(5) The unbearable smell in the kitchen was cured by cleaning it out completely, removing all the units (and with them the rotting food etc). This had got rid of the smell and the vermin with it;
(6) The basement flooded to about six inches deep. There were some leaking pipes behind the walls and the plumbers had had to redirect the water supply and tank the cellar to some extent as water still came through when it rained. As a result of rainwater entering, Mr Hanspal had suggested tanking the basement.
(7) Lots of rubbish had had to be cleared from the house and the garden. Several skips had been needed to accomplish.
32. … I find as facts that, as at the effective date, the Property:
(a) had been used relatively recently as a dwelling; and
(b) was structurally sound; but
(c) was not in a state such that a reasonable buyer might be expected to move in straight away. I find that, before a reasonable buyer would consider the Property was "ready to move into", the following works would be needed:
(i) the Property would need complete rewiring;
(ii) a new boiler, pumps and gas and water pipes would be required in the boiler house, so that the water system operated safely and the boiler house roof would need fixing;
(iii) the leaking pipes in the cellar would need to be repaired or replaced;
(iv) the kitchen units and appliances would need to be stripped back to the bare walls and replaced;
(v) broken windows and doors (including locks) would need repairing and the Property made secure;
(vi) a lot of rubbish (inside and outside the house) would need clearing away.
33. …I do not consider that works to bathrooms would be required before an occupier would move in, nor do I consider that a reasonable occupier would require the cellar to be tanked before moving in…
(1) Fiander and Brower v HMRC [2020] UKFTT 190 (TC) ("Fiander FTT").
(2) Fiander and Brower v HMRC [2021] UKUT 156 (TCC) ("Fiander UT").
(3) PN Bewley Ltd v HMRC [2019] UKFTT 65 (TC) ("Bewley").
(4) Fish Homes Ltd v HMRC [2020] UKFTT 180 (TC) ("Fish Homes").
50. It is clear that there is a degree of disrepair that will result in a property, which may otherwise resemble and meet the requirements for (and indeed have been previously used as) a dwelling, not being suitable for use as a dwelling. However, a significant degree of disrepair is required. Although suitability is tested on the effective date, "suitable for use" on the effective date does not mean suitable for immediate use and occupation ("ready to move in") on that date. There is, as it were, a margin of appreciation, a degree to which a property can fall short of being ready for an occupier to move in without the property ceasing to be suitable for occupation as a dwelling. Disrepair which can be cured (things which are not fundamental but which need fixing, as the FTT put it in Fiander) is not enough, nor is it necessarily enough that there is a feature of the property which makes it potentially more dangerous to inhabit than one would normally expect (unsuitable and potentially dangerous cladding is the example from Fish Homes).
51. It must be unrealistic to expect someone to live in the property in its current state (perhaps because it is too dangerous or unpleasant to inhabit) and it must require more than repair/renovation (the words of the Upper Tribunal in Fiander) or "fixing" non-fundamental issues to make it suitable. If, as was the case in Bewley, the property could not realistically be occupied in its current state and (albeit for different reasons) the relevant defects could not be cured, so that demolition was the only way forward, the property will clearly not be suitable for use as a dwelling. Other examples of sufficiently fundamental problems might include a high risk of structural collapse or some other lack of physical integrity, such as the building being radioactive. Examples of failings which are not sufficient include the need for a new boiler, the heating system not working, damp problems or the flooring needing replacing.
52. I consider that there is considerable force in Mr Vallis' [counsel for HMRC] point that the statute treats as a dwelling a building in the course of being constructed or adapted for use as a dwelling. It does the same, where the effective date of a transaction is the date of substantial performance, for a purchase of a building (or part) which is to be constructed or adapted for use as a dwelling under the terms of the contract under which it is acquired and where the construction or adaptation has not begun by that time (so-called "off plan" purchases); paragraph 18(5) of Schedule 4ZA. The statute counts as a dwelling any building which (as at the effective date) is used or suitable for use as a dwelling, is in the process of being constructed or adapted for such use or is to be constructed/adapted for such use by the seller. Put the other way round, the only buildings which do not count as dwellings are those which do not exist or exist but are not used and not "suitable" for use as dwellings, where the construction/adaptation works required to construct or adapt them to be suitable as dwellings have not begun and where those works (if they have not started) are not the seller's responsibility. If part-constructed/adapted buildings and a developer's plans for a building can count as a dwelling, it would seem surprising for a property which had recently been used as a dwelling and was fundamentally capable of being so used again (there being no lack of structural or other physical integrity preventing this) not to count as a dwelling because there are obstacles to immediate occupation, even though those obstacles do not go to the physical integrity of the building and are capable of being fixed without too much difficulty.
53. Pulling all of this together, I consider that a building which was recently used as a dwelling, has not in the interim been adapted for another use and is capable of being so used again (a building, such as the one in Bewley, the defects in which cannot be put right at all, will not be capable of being so used) will count as a dwelling, even though it is not ready for immediate occupation, unless the reason/s why it is not ready for immediate occupation are so fundamental (being radioactive or at high risk of collapsing, for example) that the work required to put these problems right goes beyond anything that might ordinarily be described as repair, renovation or "fixing things" (examples of this sort of work being installing a new boiler or heating system, damp problems or floors needing replacing).
54. I do not consider that the works I have found a reasonable buyer would require to be carried out before they would consider that the Property was suitable for occupation ("ready to move into") given its state on 5 August 2019 …come anywhere near that threshold. I accept that the state of the gas and electrics and aspects of the water supply (including the need for a new boiler house roof) made the Property too dangerous for a reasonable person to occupy immediately, but the works required to put those problems right were not fundamental and were much closer to the new boiler/heating system/curing damp/new flooring end of the spectrum than the radioactive house/dangerous structure/potentially collapsing walls end. All the other problems and curative work (stripping and refitting the kitchen, sorting out some damp, clearing rubbish and mending doors and windows) were less significant than those items.
grounds of appeal
(1) The FTT applied an incorrect test in law for suitability for use as a dwelling, the correct test being whether the building is suitable for occupation as a place to live as at the effective date, subject to a de minimis principle that minor works which would only take a few days to complete would not prevent suitability for use as a dwelling.
(2) Even if, contrary to the preceding argument, the test is whether issues requiring repair are "fundamental", the FTT reached a conclusion as to the application of that test on the facts that was outside the reasonable range.
repair and renovation: ftt decisions to date
We note that the property was in some degree of disrepair at the time of purchase (the heating was not working as the boiler needed replacing; there were damp problems such that some of the flooring needed replacing). We have considered if this meant it was not suitable for use as a dwelling as at completion. We are clear that 'suitable for use' does not mean 'ready for immediate occupation'. It would have been obvious to a reasonable person observing the property on the completion date both that the property had been used for dwelling purposes in the relatively recent past and that the things that needed fixing – the boiler, replacement flooring – were not so fundamental as to render the property unsuitable as a place to live. Hence, in our view, the state of disrepair did not render the property unsuitable for use as a dwelling.
62. …..I accept that some defects in what could otherwise be a dwelling or suitable for use as such would mean that it is not so. Defects which make it dangerous to live in fall within that category but such danger must in my view be such that a reasonable person would say "it's too dangerous to live there". Some risks to health and safety may fall into this category: high radioactive pollution, the high probability of walls collapsing, and the kind of hazards which would spur a local authority to issue a prohibition notice restricting the use of the premises.
63. The risk which the cladding on the block created was a risk that if a fire started and if it spread to the cladding it would maim or kill the occupants of the flat. The contingency that the risk would fructify only if there was a fire and only if it spread to the cladding in my view reduced the level of danger, and it seems to me that: the fact that the local authority was not shown to have served a prohibition or enforcement notice, that Miss Fish's friend agreed to live in the flat and that Mr and Mrs Fish countenanced Miss Fish living there, meant that a reasonable person would not say that it was too dangerous to live there.
64. As a result I find that the risk imposed by the cladding was not such as to prevent the flat from being a dwelling or being suitable for use as a dwelling.
24. We agree with the above analysis [in Mudan]. The question of determining suitability for use of a building as a dwelling (or as relevant a single dwelling) is a question of fact in which all the circumstances will need to be considered. As noted in Bewley a dwelling can be expected to have facilities for washing, cooking and sleeping. A property which entirely lacks such facilities is unlikely to suitable for use as a dwelling; such a property would not be ratable as a dwelling and, for instance, for the purposes of the VAT rules concerning a dwelling would not represent a dwelling. However, where a property has such facilities which are unserviceable but can be repaired or replaced, the property will continue to be suitable for use as a dwelling.
25. A building which has the facilities to be a dwelling, but which is so structurally unsound or has some other feature (such as asbestos) which precludes repair/renovation then the building will cease to be suitable for use as a dwelling. In essence, in such cases, the land acquisition is of a plot suitable for development and not the building on it. These situations will, in our view, be relatively unusual (Bewley was however, one such example). In our view the majority of renovations will involve making a house which is suitable for use as a dwelling a habitable residence meeting modern building regulations and becoming a comfortable home ready for immediate occupation. The statutory intention was to tax such properties at the residential or higher rate of SDLT (the higher rate applying where the purchase is by a company or as a second home).
26. In the present case…the Property as a whole was structurally sound. A number of joists were unsound but had not fallen. Ceilings had come down and it was not considered that part of the house was safe, but it was a property which had all the required facilities for living. It had fallen into a state of disrepair in one part – which formed less than half of the floor area of the house. The Appellant renovated it into a beautiful house ready for immediate occupation. They did not take a non-residential building and make it into a dwelling.
the appellants' submissions
(1) The test adopted by the FTT to determine whether a need for repair would prevent a building from being suitable for use as a dwelling was whether the repair was "fundamental", and whether the defect in question was "curable". That was the wrong test in law, and there was no statutory basis for it.
(2) Suitability for use as a dwelling means ready for occupation and capable of being lived in as a dwelling by a reasonable person at the effective date. That is the ordinary and correct meaning of those words.
(3) This definition is modified by the well-established de minimis principle to allow for minor work at the effective date.
(4) The most significant factor in determining whether a repair is minor is the length of time it will take to carry out. A delay of "a few days" would not prevent a building from being suitable for use as a dwelling.
(5) The FTT's approach amounted to an impermissible test of whether a building was capable of being made suitable for use.
(6) The focus must be on the condition of the building at the effective date, not some future date. The previous use of the building is of limited relevance.
(7) The FTT test risks inconsistent decisions, and the issue calls for guidance from the Upper Tribunal.
hmrc's submissions
(1) The Upper Tribunal's jurisdiction in relation to this issue was limited. The ordinary meaning of common words is a question of fact not law. In any event, the FTT was required to carry out a multi-factorial evaluation, so the Upper Tribunal should be very slow to interfere in its decision.
(2) The FTT took the correct approach, which accorded with a purposive construction of section 116, and clearly reached a decision which was within the reasonable range.
(3) Guidance as to the approach to be adopted in relation to suitability for use is found in Fiander UT. Fiander UT did not propose a test of "minor repair".
(4) None of the authorities support the de minimis approach proposed by Mr Firth. In particular, the temporal approach produces fundamental difficulties.
(5) Previous use of the building is a highly relevant factor.
(6) Various extra-statutory materials support the FTT's interpretation.
discussion
Jurisdiction
Purposive construction
In our view the purpose of the SDLT provisions is to tax transactions relating to residential property at a higher rate than non-residential property, and for transactions in relation to residential property by developers and second homeowners to be taxed more highly than a dwelling in which people live as their primary home. It is therefore right to construe the phrase "suitable for use as a … dwelling" by reference to that statutory purpose.
It may help the Committee's understanding still further if I explain why we thought it necessary to include a ''building . . . suitable for use as a dwelling'' as well as a building used as a dwelling within the definition of residential property. Quite simply, the intention is to ensure that existing dwellings that are unoccupied when sold or that are dilapidated or even semi-derelict are within the definition of residential property. For example, in London in recent years, a number of former squats have been sold by local councils and have been in a poor state of repair. It is not my intention to exempt such properties from stamp duty if they exceed the £150,000 limit. They are fundamentally the shell of a desirable home, and that is reflected in the purchase price…A less extreme example is the need to ensure that a vendor could not remove a bathroom suite from an otherwise perfectly kitted-out home to help the purchaser secure a stamp duty saving…
Fiander UT
(1) It is not enough to make a building suitable for use "if it is capable of being made appropriate or fit for such use by adaptations or alterations": [48(1)].
(2) Suitability for use falls to be determined by the physical attributes of the property, with the caveat that "a property may be in a state of disrepair and nevertheless be suitable for use as either a dwelling or a single dwelling if it requires some repair or renovation": [48(1)].
(3) There is an important distinction between adaptations or alterations and repairs or renovation: that is apparent when one reconciles points (1) and (2) above, and is made explicit in the discussion of the distinction at [68].
(4) Whether a building which does require some repair or renovation is suitable for use is a question of degree for assessment by the FTT: [48(1)].
(5) There are a number of factors relevant to suitability for use, and the question involves a multi-factorial assessment, taking into account all the facts and circumstances: [48(7)].
(6) In considering that distinction, recent use and the history of the property are relevant factors: [67] and [68].
(7) The test is not whether the building was ready for immediate occupation as at completion: Fiander FTT at [64], implicitly approved in Fiander UT at [65] and [68].
Context
(1) A building which is used as a dwelling.
(2) A building which is suitable for use as a dwelling.
(3) A building which is in the process of being constructed for use as a dwelling.
(4) A building which is in the process of being adapted for use as a dwelling.
…Put the other way round, the only buildings which do not count as dwellings are those which do not exist or exist but are not used and not "suitable" for use as dwellings, [and] where the construction/adaptation works required to construct or adapt them to be suitable as dwellings have not begun…If part-constructed/adapted buildings…can count as a dwelling, it would seem surprising for a property which had recently been used as a dwelling and was fundamentally capable of being so used again (there being no lack of structural or other physical integrity preventing this) not to count as a dwelling because there are obstacles to immediate occupation, even though those obstacles do not go to the physical integrity of the building and are capable of being fixed without too much difficulty.
48. In our view, the relevant points to be taken from [61] and [62] of Ladson Preston are as follows:
(1) Debates about whether the definition of effective date in section 119 specifies the entirety of a day or a particular point in time have no bearing on the availability or otherwise of a particular SDLT relief or treatment, which turns on the nature of the subject matter of the chargeable transaction.
(2) In such a case, the availability or otherwise of a relief or treatment depends on the nature of the chargeable interest acquired (see section 43(6)).
(3) Where, as in this case, the chargeable interest is acquired at completion of the relevant land transaction, the chargeable interest acquired is the chargeable interest that exists at the time of completion.
(4) Whether a particular SDLT relief or treatment applies requires an analysis of the nature of the chargeable interest acquired at completion.
49. We consider that the approach described by the UT in Ladson Preston and encapsulated in the points above is not restricted to cases where the issue is whether the subject matter of a transaction consists of multiple dwellings. It is relevant whenever the particular SDLT treatment or relief turns on the nature of the subject matter of a chargeable transaction.
Assessing suitability for use as a dwelling when building requires repair or renovation
(1) This issue raises a question of law.
(2) The relevant wording must be construed by reference to the words used, in context, and taking into account the purpose of the legislation. That purpose is as described in Ridgway.
(3) The context, particularly the various classes of building treated as suitable for use as a dwelling, suggests a focus on the fundamental characteristics and nature of a building over a period of time, rather than a snapshot of habitability, at the effective date.
(4) Some guidance on the meaning of the phrase can be drawn from Fiander UT.
(1) In assessing the impact of the works needed to a building in the context of determining suitability for use as a dwelling, a helpful starting point is to establish whether the building has previously been used as a dwelling. That is relevant for two reasons. First, as we said in in Fiander UT, previous use as a single dwelling is relevant in determining whether an alteration needed to a building would be a repair or renovation (because of prior use as a dwelling) or, alternatively, an adaptation or alteration, changing the building's characteristics by making it usable as a single dwelling for the first time. Second, actual use as a dwelling is a very strong indication that the building has possessed the fundamental characteristics of a dwelling, and has previously been suitable for use as a dwelling. An assessment of the repairs and renovations needed can then be made against that backdrop and by reference to the state of the building during its actual use as a dwelling. Previous use is, of course, fact sensitive, and factors such as the length of time between the previous use as a dwelling and the effective date will be relevant.
The fact of previous use as a dwelling does not mean that a building remains suitable for use as a dwelling regardless of what happens to the building and regardless of the effluxion of time. Equally, to state the obvious, the fact that there has been no previous use as a dwelling does not mean that a building is not suitable for use at the effective date. However, previous use is a highly relevant factor in the evaluation of suitability.
(2) Looking at the building as at the effective date, an assessment must be made of the extent to which it has the fundamental characteristics of a dwelling, including the extent to which it is structurally sound. Is it, for instance, a desirable house which has become dilapidated and requires updating, or is it an empty shell with no main roof? Subject to the points which follow, in principle the former is likely to be suitable for use as a dwelling and the latter is not.
(3) The necessary works should be identified, and their impact on suitability for use should be considered collectively. A distinction must be drawn between works needed to render a building habitable and works to be carried out to make the property "a pleasant place to live", in the words used by the FTT at FTT[30] (such as painting and decorating). The latter do not affect suitability for use as a dwelling.
(4) An assessment should be made of whether the defects in the building which require works are capable of remedy (in colloquial terms, are fixable). That assessment should take into account whether the works would be so dangerous or hazardous as to prejudice their viability (as in Bewley). If they would, then the building is unlikely to be (or remain) suitable for use as a dwelling. It should also take into account whether the works could be carried out without prejudicing the structural integrity of the building (because, for instance, the walls might collapse). If they could not, the building is unlikely to be suitable for use as a dwelling.
(5) If occupation at the effective date would be unsafe or dangerous to some degree (for instance, because the building requires rewiring), then that would be a relevant factor, but would not of itself render the building unsuitable for use as a dwelling.
(6) The question of whether a repair would be a "minor repair" is not irrelevant, but nor is it particularly informative in assessing suitability. While certain repairs were described as "minor" in Fiander FTT, that classification was not a reason for the decision in Fiander UT. It is too vague and abstract to form a principled basis for the overall determination of the impact of the need for repair on suitability. For the same reason, an approach which seeks to establish whether the necessary works are "fundamental" is acceptable if it is effectively shorthand for the approach we describe above, but as a free-standing test it is not particularly informative.
(7) Applying the principles we have set out, the question for determination is then whether the works of repair and renovation needed to the building have the result that the building does not have the characteristics of a dwelling at the effective date, so it is no longer residential property.
the ftt's approach
secondary argument: conclusion not reasonably available on facts
disposition
Note 1 The FTT expressed its conclusion by reference to paragraph 18 of Schedule 4ZA, but, as we have explained, nothing turns on that in this appeal. [Back] Note 2 Statements made in Parliament are not a legitimate aid to statutory interpretation unless the three conditions set out by Lord Browne-Wilkinson in Pepper v Hart [1993] AC 593, 640 are met. The three conditions are (i) that the legislative provision must be ambiguous, obscure or, on a conventional interpretation, lead to absurdity; (ii) that the material must be or include one or more statements by a minister or other promoter of the Bill; and (iii) the statement must be clear and unequivocal on the point of interpretation which the court is considering. [Back] Note 3 As stated above, we agree with the description of the purpose of the legislation given inRidgway, which refers to the “characteristics” of the building to be classified as residential or non-residential. [Back]