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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Cinderella Rockerfellas Ltd v Valuation Officer [2003] EWCA Civ 529 (11 April 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2003/529.html Cite as: [2003] 1 WLR 2423, [2003] EWCA Civ 529 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE LANDS TRIBUNAL
(GEORGE BARTLETT QC, PRESIDENT)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL | ||
B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE CHADWICK
and
LORD JUSTICE TUCKEY
____________________
CINDERELLA ROCKERFELLAS LIMITED | Appellant | |
- and - | ||
PETER JAMES RUDD (VALUATION OFFICER) | Respondent |
____________________
Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited, 190 Fleet Street
London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7421 4040, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Mr T Mould (instructed by the Solicitor of Inland Revenue) for the Respondent
____________________
AS APPROVED BY THE COURT
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Potter:
Introduction
"River and riverbed occupied by floating nightclub moorings car park and premises"
and
"Tuxedo Royale, Hillgate Quay, Gateshead, Tyne & Wear"
should be deleted on the ground that the vessel was not rateable.
The facts
"Nothing herein is to be construed as conferring on the Licensee the right to the exclusive use of any part of the said foreshore or bed of the river Tyne and the Commissioners shall be at liberty to grant such interest rights and easements in or over the same as the Commissioners shall think fit provided only that the placing and maintenance of the Vessel in accordance with this Licence is not thereby prevented."
The Decision of the Lands Tribunal
"The correct proposition today is that, although a chattel is not a rateable hereditament by itself, nevertheless it may become rateable together with land, if it is placed on a piece of land and enjoyed with it in such circumstances and with such a degree of permanence so that the chattel with the land can together be regarded as one unit of occupation."
"The fact that the Tuxedo Royale is a vessel is no bar to rateability. In the normal way, a vessel, as a mobile chattel, is not rateable. As the Sol Express, the whole function of the vessel lay in its mobility, its ability to move and to transport passengers and vehicles. Moored under the Tyne Bridge, on the other hand, it was the immobility of the Tuxedo Royale that enabled it to perform its new role as a nightclub. The fact that it had been designed to propel itself across the sea and to transport passengers and goods ceased to have any significance other than to add to its attractiveness in its new and wholly different role. Its moorings were intended to ensure that the vessel stayed in position, eliminating all movement except for the small amount that would inevitably arise from the tidal nature of the river. The occupation by the ratepayers of the vessel, the riverbed and quay had the same characteristics in terms of permanence and exclusiveness as in the case of a nightclub contained in a building on dry land. The vessel, is, in my judgment, undoubtedly rateable."
The Relevant Law
"A hereditament is anything which, by virtue of the definition of hereditament in section 115(1) of the [General Rate Act 1967], would have been a hereditament for the purposes of that Act had this Act not been passed."
" 'Hereditament' means property which is or may become liable to a rate, being a unit of such property which is, or would fall to be, shown as a separate item in the valuation list."
"A hereditament is a relevant hereditament if it consists of property of any of the following descriptions –
(a)Lands …"
"A local non-domestic rating list must show, for each day in each chargeable financial year for which it is in force, each hereditament which fulfils the following conditions on the day concerned –
(a) it is situated in the authority's area,
(b) it is a relevant non-domestic hereditament …"
"A person (the ratepayer) shall as regards a hereditament be subject to a non-domestic rate in respect of a chargeable financial year if the following conditions are fulfilled in respect of any day in the year –
(a) on the day the ratepayer is in occupation of all or part of the hereditament, and
(b) the hereditament is shown for the day in a local non-domestic rating list in force for the year."
" … the test of rateability is whether there is evidence that the structures were enjoyed with the land and enhanced its value. In considering this, the intention of the erector and the other elements of annexation, period, size, quality, amenities and purpose are all material. All these factors are important, but intention, and certainly what I may call the "conscious element" in intention, is no more than one factor and its importance is not overriding. The question is eminently one of fact …"
"No-one supposes, of course, that a man is rateable in respect of the enjoyment of chattels as he is in respect of the occupation of land. But, on the other hand, I think that that is a long way from saying that the presence of chattels on land can never be a relevant factor either in determining the assessment of the rateable value of a hereditament or in determining whether there is a rateable occupation or not …I think it equally well established that a structure placed upon another person's land can with it form a rateable hereditament, even though the structure remains in law a chattel and as such the property of the person who placed it there. It has been habitual practice to treat gas and water pipes, drains and sewers, telegraph posts placed in and telegraph or telephone wires placed over land as being themselves rateable subjects, yet I do not think that there is any foundation for supposing that when the undertaker equipped either with the licence of the owner of the soil or with statutory powers, affixes his apparatus to a building or lays it in or on the soil the law regards him as thereby making it a part of the freehold."
"When the owners of pipes, cables, posts etc are rated as occupiers they are rated in respect of those things themselves, by means of which they occupy land, not merely in respect of the land that is occupied: just as in Cory v Bristow it was the moorings themselves that were treated as the rateable hereditament …
In my opinion, the present case really centres round the question whether the sheds, erected on a building site by a building contractor for the purpose of his operations, involve such a degree of permanency in his occupation as to make it a rateable one. I have no doubt that, in considering this, it is at any rate relevant to ascertain to what extent and in what way these constructions have been made a fixed part of the site on which they stand, for the more casually they are attached the less likely it is that the occupation of them will be found to be a permanent one. In this sense it may be of some importance to enquire whether they are chattels or not. But to make the whole issue of rateability depend on the bare issue, for instance, whether a particular structure has or has not foundations in the ground which give it a measure of lateral as well as subjacent support would be to use a legal distinction for a purpose for which it was never intended."
"To my mind that decision turned entirely upon the statute which governs the law of rating in Scotland and which has no application to any of the matters we have to consider. In my judgment the fact that the structure in question happens to be a caravan on wheels rather than a hut or bungalow is material only to a consideration of the question whether or not the occupation of the caravan dweller is transient. That question does not arise in this case because it is conceded that it would be impossible to say that the occupation of these caravan dwellers was so transient as to be incapable of constituting rateable occupation. As was pointed out in the Southern Railway case, in rating, as distinct perhaps from tax law, the courts look to the substance and not the form."
"I cannot accept that the dolphins and the vessel are land. They and the anchors which rest on the riverbed are chattels. Nevertheless, on the facts of the present appeal it is clear and I hold that the Club by means of the vessel, its dolphins and anchors is in occupation of that part of the riverbed over which it is moored and permanently so. That part of the riverbed together with the vessel would thus be a rateable hereditament or part of a rateable hereditament if s.178 of the Port of London Act 1968 had no application: see Cory v Bristow. In other words, the relevant parts of the riverbed, together with the chattels, that is to say the vessel, the dolphins and the anchors, constitute a unit of occupation: see per Lord Denning MR in Field Place Caravan Park v Harding [1966] RA 393. However on the authority of Whenman v Clark, that unit of occupation is not rateable because of the operation of s.178 of the Port of London Act 1968."
"I think that that observation is correct but whether it is so or not, it appears to me that it is not possible for the vessel to occupy part of the riverbed, as I have held it to do, and part of the river wall as well. Moreover, I agree with counsel for the Club that, if paramountcy comes into question, it is the riverbed which is the more important because the vessel derives its stability therefrom and without that stability could not be used as a floating restaurant …"
"I confess that, like the Lands Tribunal, I find some difficulty in the concept of lateral occupation by a chattel, if indeed occupation by a chattel is the right test, but for reasons which will appear, I do not find it necessary to resolve that difficulty …
Such authority as there is seems to suggest that the Hispaniola does not occupy the Victoria Embankment in any relevant sense, though I accept of course that it was attached to the embankment fore and aft by chains and that it was permanently connected to all the main services …
Similarly, in Thomas v Witney Aquatic Co Ltd, the hereditament was described as "lake, clubhouse and premises" with a rateable value of £250. The clubhouse was floating on the surface of the lake. It was argued, first that "lake" was not an adequate description of the land beneath the water and secondly that the rate payers were not in rateable occupation of the clubhouse, as it was a chattel. Both arguments were rejected. It was held that the clubhouse was enjoyed with the lake and so with the land beneath the lake, and was therefore part of the rateable hereditament so described.
So the educated reader would, prima facie at any rate, take "the premises" as a reference to the land comprising the riverbed and not the embankment. If that is so, then counsel for the rating authority is in difficulty, for by s.178(1) of the Port of London Act 1968 the riverbed is not rateable."
" … if it be supposed that the bed of the river is occupied by means of the Hispaniola being held above it by the embedded dolphins, then that occupation would not be a rateable occupation of the bed because of s.178 of the Act. The correctness of the supposition does not fall for decision. However, on the facts as found I am of the view that it would be a correct identification of the only land which could be said to be enjoyed through the vessel. In common with my Lord and with Mr Wellings, I doubt whether one can occupy a land by means of a chattel which is not on, under or above that land."
"Subject to special enactments, people are treated as occupiers of land, land being understood as including not only the surface of the earth but all strata above or below. The occupier, not the land, is rateable; but the occupier is rateable in respect of the land which he occupies."
"The expression 'land' is in my opinion wide enough to include water lying on the surface of the earth, so that the lake in the present case is capable of being part of the hereditament, if it satisfies the other tests of rateability, and in those circumstances I consider that the word 'lake' would be a proper description of that part of the hereditament."
"25. Applying this principle, therefore, whether the vessel is rateable depends on whether it is placed on a piece of land and enjoyed with it in such circumstances and with such a degree of permanence that the chattel with the land can together be regarded as one unit of occupation. "Enjoyed with" the land means no more than that the chattel, although not forming part of the realty, must have some real connection with the land on which it rests (see Ryan Industrial Fuels Ltd v Morgan (VO)).
26. The fact that the vessel is floating does not in my judgment prevent it from forming part of a hereditament. Solicitor for the respondent company accepts that this is so and does not suggest that the Tribunal was wrong in the Yard Arm Club case in treating the Hispaniola as part of a hereditament extending upwards from the bed of the river. The crucial point, on his argument, is that the vessel here is not attached fore and aft to dolphins and to anchors in the bed of the river but is secured to moorings on the dock side. This distinction does not seem to me to be significant.
27. The relevant circumstances are in my judgment these. Although it is a vessel, the essential function of the Lotus is to remain stationary and attached to the dock side to provide a static, landbased facility as a restaurant. Apart from the fact that it floats, it is not designed for movement and has no means of propulsion. It has in fact remained stationary for over six years with the exception of the occasions, twice a year for a few hours, when it is towed across the dock for maintenance purposes. It enjoys all main services. Its presence excludes the potential use for a similar purpose by anyone else of the dock bed beneath it or the dock side alongside it. It is enjoyed with the dock bed and the dock side in that it is supported by the dock bed in conjunction with the water above it and it is secured to moorings on the dockside.
28. In these circumstances, I am satisfied that the valuation officer is correct in identifying as a rateable hereditament the dock bed, floating restaurant and its moorings. Physically the hereditament consists in my view of the dock bed immediately beneath the vessel, the space above it that is filled with water, the vessel itself and its moorings on the dockside. The fact that there is water immediately beneath the vessel is only of relevance, it seems to me, to the extent that the vessel could become more mobile if it were not secured … The occupation of the respondent company fulfils all the ingredients of rateable occupation. Actual use is made of the dock bed for the support of the vessel through the medium of the water above it; the occupation is plainly of benefit to respondent company; in view of the fact that the vessel is continuously secured in position (apart from a few hours when it is moved for maintenance) and has remained in the same position for a number of years, the occupation is undoubtedly permanent; and in my judgment, it is also exclusive. The harbour authority can no doubt be said to use all the dock bed and the space above it, including the area beneath the vessel, in that it controls the volume of water within the dock, but this does not interfere with the use that the respondent company makes of the dock bed, which is exclusive for their purposes, and, in my view is plainly paramount."
The Submissions of the Parties
Discussion
"In my opinion the general character of this structure is plainly, and obviously, that of a ship. It began its life as a ship and unquestionably continued as such until 1947 and it still retains much of its original appearance and character. Above all it shares with other ships the essential characteristic that it habitually floats on water. Nobody has suggested that a ship is prima facie heritable and I do not think such a suggestion could reasonably be made. If one starts from that position, the question is whether there are special facts about this ship which distinguish it from other ships and make it heritable and not movable. It undoubtedly has many unusual features. Perhaps the most prominent of these is that it has been moored at its present position for 16 or 17 years and that its owners have no intention of moving it in the foreseeable future. But that does not take the matter far, because it is settled that, if a thing is by its nature movable, the mere passage of time will not make it heritable even though it is never in fact moved – Anderson Grice & Co Ltd v Assessor for Angus [1962] RA 90. The connections of the various services, and especially of gas, are consistent with and indeed indicative of the intention to keep the ship where it is. Further its use as a club house in the middle of Glasgow is an unusual use for a ship. But, in my opinion, these factors are not enough to outweigh its general character of moveability."
"I do not think that a floating ship, even if permanently moored in one place, could enter the roll as being lands or heritages, except perhaps if there was a high degree of mutual adaptation between the ship and the berth at which it was moored."
"The subjects of appeal were designed and constructed as a ship and they rest not upon land but upon water. This is the outstanding characteristic of the subjects.
In my opinion this characteristic necessarily involves that the subjects are prima facie moveable. The other circumstances of the case are not, in my view, sufficient to warrant the inference that the subjects have become heritable by attachment to, or mutual adaptation with, heritable property."
"I appreciate that even in the absence of sufficient physical or legal connection between the vessels' chattels and the land to satisfy Hong Kong requirements, the position in England might be different. For the English criterion of occupation and liability for rates flowing from the mere existence of a unit of occupation would be sufficient for floating docks together with the land – either sea bed or shore – to form one unit of occupation and so to constitute a rateable hereditament.
However, I am satisfied that the unit of occupation has no place in Hong Kong rating law."
"We find ourselves unable to accept the proposition that a vessel which floats in the sea many feet above a piece of land is properly said to be enjoyed with it or to enhance its value. If that is so, then the same must be said in respect, for example, of an advertising balloon attached by wire to dry land, or even perhaps to a block in the sea bed off a popular holiday resort. Both the balloon and the vessel are of course connected to the land, but the connection is not for the purpose of enjoying or enhancing the land. It is simply to prevent either getting lost or into difficulties. Objects left free in air or on water are inclined to stray unless properly tethered. Builders huts and caravans set upon jacks do not."
Conclusion
Lord Justice Chadwick:
Lord Justice Tuckey: