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England and Wales Lands Tribunal |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Lands Tribunal >> Zhou v Osborne (Valuation Officer) [2008] EWLands RA_56_2007 (19 August 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWLands/2008/RA_56_2007.html Cite as: [2008] EWLands RA_56_2007, [2008] RA 451 |
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RA/56/2007 |
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LANDS TRIBUNAL ACT 1949
RATING -
composite
hereditament
-
home
working
from
ground
floor
front
room
- practice of
Chinese
medicine
(acupuncture
and
herbalism)
-
window
signage
-
advertisements
- fitting out
of
room
-
whether
medical
practice
commenced
-
appeal
allowed
–
Local
Government
Finance Act 1988,
s66(1)(a) |
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IN THE MATTER OF A NOTICE OF
APPEAL |
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BETWEEN |
DR YAN ZHOU
and |
Appellant |
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DENNIS PATRICK OSBORNE
(Valuation Officer) |
Respondent |
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Re: 70 Lowlands Road Harrow
Middlesex HA1 3AN
Before: A J Trott FRICS |
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Sitting at Procession House, 110 New Bridge Street, London
EC4V 6JL
on 14 July 2008 |
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The appellant in person
The respondent in person, with the permission of the
Tribunal |
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© CROWN COPYRIGHT 2008 |
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1 |
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The following cases are referred to in this
decision:
Fotheringham v Wood (VO)
[1995] RA 315 Bell v Rycroft (VO) [2000] RA 103 Tully v
Jorgensen (VO) [2003] RA 233 R v Melladew [1907] 1 KB 192 |
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2 |
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DECISION |
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1. Dr Yan
Zhou is a practitioner of Chinese medicine. She lives in an Edwardian
semi-detached house at 70 Lowlands Road, Harrow, Middlesex, HA1 3AN which
is located in the Roxborough Park Conservation Area a short distance from
Harrow town centre. She purchased the house in 1996 with the intention of
establishing a medical practice in the ground floor front room. In March
1997 she applied for planning permission for “change of use: part of
ground floor from dwelling house to a herb and acupuncture clinic with
parking”. The planning officer recommended refusal of the application and
wrote to Dr Zhou explaining the reasons on 14 May 1997. The parties do not
agree whether planning permission was refused (Dr Zhou) or whether the
application was withdrawn (the VO) but they do agree that planning
permission was not granted.
2. Dr Zhou
said that she was then advised by a council officer that she should
commence her medical practice at a low profile and reapply for planning
permission in 10 years time at which point she should be successful
provided she “could show the evidence that something has happened since
[the original application]”. So in 1997 she put up signs in her front
window advertising “Chinese Herbal Medicine, Acupuncture, Master of Herbs”
and giving a telephone number. She also prepared the room for use by
putting in a desk and some small filing boxes. Despite the signage, she
says that she did not conduct any business from the premises and that the
front room was used for domestic purposes. Meanwhile she continued to be
employed full time as a medical scientist at St Thomas’ Hospital (until
1999) and thereafter as a Chinese doctor for a company called Herbal Magic
based at Leytonstone and Harlesden.
3. The signs
and the basic preparation of the ground floor front room for medical use
remained in place from 1997 until 2005. In March 2005 Doctor Zhou received
a telephone call from Mr Don Kathriaratchi who wanted to arrange an
inspection of the property. Dr Zhou mistakenly thought that Mr
Kathriaratchi was a council employee who would be able to approve (in some
unspecified way) her use of the front room for medical purposes. So over
the next two days she reorganised the room for that use, erecting shelves
upon which she placed herb storage jars, installing chairs and putting the
desk into the centre of the room and removing a sofa, all the while hoping
that Mr Kathriaratchi “would give me the green light”. In fact he was a
referencer with the Valuation Office Agency who wanted to inspect and
measure the property following a Valuation Office report. He visited the
house on 18 March 2005.
4. Following
Mr Kathriaratchi’s visit the VO altered the 2000 rating list to show a new
composite entry with effect from 1 April 2004 (a date apparently suggested
by Mr Kathriaratchi) at a rateable value of £1,575. The appeal property
was described as “office and premises”. It was entered into the 2005 list
under the same description and at the same rateable value. Dr Zhou was
duly notified of these changes. On 13 December 2005 Dr Zhou made a
proposal to alter the 2005 rating list, requesting that the effective date
for the composite entry be changed to 1 January 2006. The VO considered
the proposal to be invalid and served an invalidity notice on 3 January
2006. Dr Zhou submitted a fresh proposal on 23 January 2006 (again
requesting that the effective date be changed to 1 January 2006) which the
VO accepted as valid but not well founded. He subsequently referred it to
the Valuation Tribunal as an appeal. |
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3 |
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5. The VT
heard the appeal on 7 December 2006 and issued its decision on 9 February
2007. It determined that the appeal property had been correctly entered as
a composite hereditament in the 2005 rating list at a rateable value of
£1,575 and confirmed the assessment. It also noted that the appeal before
it referred only to the 2005 rating list and it was therefore unable to
consider whether it was correct to enter the appeal property as a
composite hereditament into the 2000 rating list with effect from 1 April
2004. Dr Zhou appealed to this Tribunal against the VT’s decision on 6
March 2007. She made a further proposal on 10 April 2007 seeking the
deletion of the entry in the 2005 rating list with effect from 1 April
2007 on the grounds that the property was no longer used for business
purposes. The VO accepted the proposal as well founded and removed the
entry from the 2005 rating list with effect from that date.
6. Sections
43(1) and 45(1) of the Local Government Finance Act 1988 make liability to
the non-domestic rate dependent upon the hereditament being shown in the
non-domestic rating list. Section 42(1) provides that only a hereditament
that is a non-domestic hereditament falls to be included in that list.
Section 64(8) defines a non-domestic hereditament as one consisting
entirely of property which is not domestic or one that is a composite
hereditament. Section 64(9) defines a hereditament as being a composite
hereditament if part only of it consists of domestic property. “Domestic
property” is defined under section 66 of the 1988 Act. Section 66(1)(a)
provides that it includes property which “is used wholly for the purposes
of living accommodation.” The issue to be determined is whether the ground
floor front room of the appeal property was used wholly for the purposes
of living accommodation between 1 April 2005 and 1 January 2006, which is
the date the appellant accepts as being the commencement of her business
use. The burden of proof is on the appellant. The appellant has not
challenged the rateable value of £1,575 in respect of the composite entry.
The appeal before this Tribunal relates solely to the 2005 rating list and
I have no jurisdiction to consider the inclusion of the appeal property as
a composite hereditament within the 2000 list.
7. Dr Zhou
said that she had not used the front room for non-domestic purposes before
1 January 2006. Once she realised her mistake about the identity of Mr
Kathriaratchi and the purpose of his visit (following the alteration to
the rating list) she removed the stencils on the window and covered up the
other signs and used the room for domestic purposes. She entertained
friends there, played cards, used the room for sleepover parties and
installed a sofa bed.
8. In
subsequent written submissions after the hearing (which both parties were
invited by the Tribunal to make) Dr Zhou said that the practice of Chinese
herbal medicine involved acupuncture, acupressure and herbal remedies.
This required the provision of at least one treatment couch and screen and
other related equipment such as a TDP (infrared) lamp, footbath basin, a
wireless digital tens (transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulator) and an
auto electric herbal stream. Hundreds of herbal preparations were
required. Dr Zhou described these as essential equipment and products
without which a practitioner of Chinese medicine cannot operate. None of
this essential medical equipment was present at the appeal site when Mr
Kathriaratchi inspected the property in March 2005. The other items such
as the desk, shelves and herb jars which were present at that time “could
be treated as decorations” compared to the other essentials referred to
above. |
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4 |
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9. The
appellant stressed that throughout the period in question she had been a
full time employee working 8 hours a day, six days a week away from her
home. She had spent no time at all working as a medical practitioner at
the appeal property. She also said that she had two telephone lines in her
house, both of which were used for domestic purposes and neither of which
was a dedicated business line.
10. Mr Dennis
Patrick Osborne MRICS, the Valuation Officer, said that the front room had
been used for non-domestic purposes. He relied upon three main arguments.
Firstly, Dr Zhou admitted that she had placed signs in the window and had
fitted out the room ready for its use as a medical consulting room as long
ago as 1997, at the time of her original planning application. By the time
of Mr Kathriaratchi’s inspection in March 2005 the room had been fitted
with shelves containing jars of herbs and contained a desk and chair, a
waiting area with chairs and had a telephone/fax. The telephone number
shown in the window was not the same as that given on the appellant’s
proposal form and Mr Osborne suspected that it was a separate business
line. Secondly, the VO produced copies of two advertisements that he
submitted had been placed by the appellant. The first was a hard copy of
an entry in The Times Online Complementary Therapists Guide which listed
Dr Zhou as a practising acupuncturist based at 70 Lowlands Road. This
entry first appeared in January 2004. The second was a similar entry in
Thompson Local in the section headed “Alternative and Complementary
Medicine.” Investigation showed that this entry first appeared on 26
February 2004. Thirdly, Mr Osborne said that although Dr Zhou said that
she commenced the business use at the appeal property on 1 January 2006,
nothing had happened on that date to make it rateable when it was not
rateable before. Dr Zhou had not identified anything that had taken place
to distinguish the domestic use of the room before that date with its
admitted non-domestic use afterwards. The room contained no domestic
furniture.
11. Dr Zhou denied
that she had actively advertised in either Times Online or in Thompson
Local. The so called advertisement in Times Online was in fact a list of
all the members of the British Acupuncture Council. This had formed part
of a Complementary Therapists Guide compiled by the Body and Soul section
of The Times and published in January 2004. The information had been
prepared by an organisation called Dr Foster. She submitted a copy of an
article published in the Times on 12 June 2004 which reported the outcome
of an independent review of Dr Foster’s input to the guide following
complaints about it from several practitioners. One of the conclusions of
this review was that Dr Foster had not adequately identified the scope and
aims of its survey to practitioners. Mr Osborne accepted in his written
submissions after the hearing that a third party had prepared the Times
Online guide.
12. The
advertisement in Thompson Local resulted from an offer from that company
to Dr Zhou of a free annual entry. She did not approach them, they
approached her and she was prepared to accept free publicity. Mr Osborne
later said that Thompson Local had confirmed to him that they do contact
people offering a listing but they did not know whether such an offer had
been made to Dr Zhou.
13. The VO relied
upon case law to assist in the interpretation of the facts. In
Fotheringham v Wood (VO) [1995] RA 315 the Tribunal, Mr P H Clarke
FRICS, said at 322 that: |
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“In deciding whether or not
property is domestic the test is whether it is used for the purpose of
living accommodation.
The test is therefore to look at
the appeal hereditament as a whole and ask the question: was it used
wholly for the purpose of a living accommodation on the material day? ....
The key word in these tests is ‘wholly’ because property must be used
wholly for the purposes of living accommodation to be exempt from
rates.”
In applying this test the Member
said that it was necessary that the facts should be “considered as a
cumulative whole”. The Tribunal found that the appeal hereditament was not
wholly used for the purposes of living accommodation, one of the factors
being the ratepayer’s advertisement of his accountancy practice in Yellow
Pages and the use of a separate business telephone line.
14. The decision in
Fotheringham was followed in Bell v Rycroft (VO) [2000] RA
103 in which the alteration and extension of a domestic garage to provide
nursery space for childcare purposes was considered to be a significant
non-domestic use sufficient to make the appeal hereditament a composite
hereditament.
15. In Tully v
Jorgensen (VO) [2003] RA 233 the President of the Tribunal considered
both Fotheringham and Bell and confirmed that the question
of whether the use of a hereditament is wholly for the purposes of living
accommodation will always be one of fact and degree. Mr Osborne argued
that the facts in the subject appeal showed that the front room was not
used for living accommodation but was used instead for the practice of
Chinese medicine.
16. Mr Osborne also
relied upon R v Melladew [1907] 1 KB 192 to support his argument
that if the front room of the appeal property was fully fitted out as an
office and capable of its intended business use then it was not material
whether clients visited the premises or not; it was still occupied for the
purposes of that business. Collins MR said at 201:
“It is, I think, clear from a
comparison of many authorities that the intention of the alleged occupier
in respect of the hereditament is a governing factor in determining the
question whether rateable occupancy has been established…
…the intention of the defendant
here was as far as possible to avoid the semblance of occupation while
carefully guarding the substance. He carefully retained the control, while
his continuous intention was to utilise the premises for the purpose of
his business whenever the opportunity offered.”
Conclusions
17. The appellant’s
argument is not that the use of the front room of the appeal property for
the practice of Chinese medicine is a use wholly for the purposes of
living accommodation. She accepts that such a use is non-domestic. Her
argument is that such a use did not commence until 1 January 2006 which
she says in her proposal should be the effective
date |
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under the 2005 list. She says
that the limited works undertaken to the front room in anticipation of its
future medical use did not take it outside the statutory definition of a
domestic property. My decision therefore depends upon the establishment of
the facts with regard to those works and the use made of the ground floor
front room between 1 April 2005 and 1 January 2006 (any previous period of
such use not being relevant to this appeal). The burden of proof is upon
the appellant to show that the room was used wholly for the purposes of
living accommodation. |
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18. The parties were unable to
agree all of the relevant facts and I have therefore had to reach my
conclusions on the limited evidence before me. I conclude the
following:
(1) The
appellant intended to use the ground floor front room of the appeal
property for the practice of Chinese medicine since she purchased it in
1996. She admits to having started such a business on 1 January 2006 but
not before. There are no business accounts to corroborate the date upon
which the business commenced.
(2) She
applied for planning permission in March 1997 for a change of use of part
of the ground floor from a dwellinghouse to a herb and acupuncture clinic
with parking. Planning permission was not granted at that time or
subsequently, although it is not known whether the 1997 application was
refused or withdrawn.
(3) She put up
signs in the ground floor front room in 1997 advertising the property for
the purposes of acupuncture and Chinese herbal medicine. A telephone
number was given. She intended that passing pedestrians should see these
signs.
(4) In March
2005 the appellant fitted shelves and loaded them with herb storage jars.
The VO says that these were full, the appellant says that they were empty.
It is not possible to determine the point from the single photograph
(taken by Mr Kathriaratchi on 18 March 2005) provided in evidence.
However, it can be seen that the jars are labelled.
(5) The other
business furniture contained in the front room as at March 2005 was a desk
and chair, three other chairs (arranged in the bay of the window), a
telephone and two small filing boxes.
(6) No
structural alterations were undertaken to the house to accommodate the
proposed use.
(7) Nobody was
employed at the appeal property as a receptionist or a secretary to assist
with the business. At all relevant times the appellant was in full time
employment elsewhere as a medical scientist or Chinese
doctor.
(8) Dr Zhou
received enquiries from time to time about her business “but not very
often”.
(9) The
appellant did not advertise her practice in Times Online. She responded to
an approach from Thompson Local for free publicity and was shown within
that publication as a practitioner under her own name and at her home
address for |
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two years from 2004 in the
section marked Alternative and Complementary Medicine.
19. The appellant
intended to commence the practice of Chinese medicine at the appeal
property. But an intention is not sufficient to constitute occupancy for
such a purpose without some overt act amounting to evidence of user. The
placement of signs in the front window was such an overt act. It signalled
to the world at large that the appeal property was in use for the purposes
of Chinese herbal medicine. It appears that some people, albeit not many,
acted upon this advertisement. However, Dr Zhou explained that the signs
had only been placed in the window in order to create the impression of a
business use following advice given to her (by an unidentified council
officer) after the unsuccessful planning application in 1997. She said
that she had been advised to “keep it [the medical use of the front room]
at a low profile and reapply in ten years”. It seems likely that the
reference to a ten year period was a reference to section 171B(3) of the
Town and Country Planning Act 1990 which provides that no enforcement
action may be taken after the end of the period of ten years beginning
with the date of the breach of planning control, but the appellant did not
express it in those terms. Unlike Melladew there was no attempt to
avoid the semblance of occupation while carefully guarding the substance.
In fact, upon Dr Zhou’s evidence, the opposite was true; there was an
overt semblance of occupation but no actual substance.
20. By fitting out
the front room as a medical consulting room before Mr Kathriaratchi’s
visit in March 2005 the appellant reinforced the semblance of business use
inside the building. She intended that Mr Kathriaratchi should think that
the front room was in use for the practice of Chinese medicine, believing
him to be from the planning department. She succeeded. The installation of
shelves, storage jars, a desk and chair, three other chairs and a
telephone created the colourable impression of such a use, even though the
more specialised equipment referred to by Dr Zhou had not been installed
at the date of the visit. But the appellant vigorously denies actually
having commenced her medical practice at that time. She says that nobody
(apart from family members) was treated at the appeal property. The few
enquirers about her services were referred to her other employment
addresses. They were not seen at Lowlands Road. The front room continued
to be used as living accommodation for a variety of purposes. There were
no physical alterations to the building and no separate entrance to the
front room was created. It remained an integral part of the semi-detached
house. Nobody was employed there. There was no receptionist and no
secretary. The window signs were taken down or covered up after Mr
Kathriaratchi’s visit in March 2005.
21. The VO relies
upon the existence of two external advertisements to support his case that
the appeal property was in non-domestic use at 1 April 2005. I am
satisfied that Dr Zhou did not knowingly advertise in Times Online.
However, she knew about the advertisement in Thompson Local and accepted a
free entry advertising her as a practitioner of complementary medicine at
her home address. The same telephone number was used both in the window
sign and the Thompson Local entry. This was not the same as the number
shown on the appellant’s proposal form. The VO said that this gave the
impression of a separate business line. The appellant denied this and I
note that the telephone number used in the Times Online entry was the same
as that given on the proposal form. This suggests that there was no clear
demarcation between the use of the two lines for business and domestic
purposes. |
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22. Mr Osborne
correctly says that the appellant did not identify anything that changed
between 31 December 2005 and 1 January 2006 so as to distinguish the
activity in the front room between those dates. If the room was in
non-domestic use on 1 January (as the appellant concedes in her proposal)
then it was in non-domestic use the day before. Mr Osborne argued that the
choice of 1 January 2006 as the commencement date was essentially
arbitrary. He notes an apparent contradiction in the appellant’s evidence
when she says that the essential equipment required in order to practice
Chinese medicine had still not been installed at the appeal property by 1
January 2006, the date on which Dr Zhou says she started such a practice.
By this admission she appears to accept, contrary to her submissions, that
such equipment is not a prerequisite to the operation of her
business.
23. This highlights
a general point. Dr Zhou admits to a lack of understanding of English
culture and statutory procedure. She is not a native English speaker and,
in my opinion, occasionally found it difficult to follow the proceedings
and to express herself as adequately as she might have wished. I think
from the evidence that, throughout the history of her ownership of the
appeal property, she has acted in good faith upon the advice given to her
by public officials. But her lack of complete understanding of the subject
matter and language has led to some of her actions appearing confused,
contradictory and, at times, against her self-interest. For instance, I am
not convinced from the evidence that the appellant’s choice of 1 January
2006 as the commencement date for her business was an informed one. It
seems to have followed upon advice received from the Business Rates
section of Harrow Council in September 2005 that (as reported by Dr Zhou
in her oral evidence) she could start her business without planning
permission. In my opinion such advice was more likely to have been to the
effect that a business may still be liable to non-domestic rates even
though the use does not have planning permission (a point made at the
hearing by Mr Osborne). I agree with Mr Osborne that the start date
appears to be arbitrary, but it does not necessarily follow that the
business must have begun before that date. The evidence does not support
that conclusion.
24. In weighing the evidence I have had regard to
the President’s comments in Tully that:
“17…Where a person working at
home uses accommodation, furniture and equipment of the kinds that are
commonly to be found in domestic property, such use will in general, in my
judgment, constitute use for the purposes of living accommodation.
Rateability may, however, arise if the accommodation is adapted so as to
lose its domestic character or where equipment of a non-domestic sort is
used to a significant extent. Similarly, if employees or clients come to
the premises, this may constitute a use going outside the ambit of use for
the purposes of living accommodation. The question will always be one of
fact and degree…
22…Where a business at the
premises is advertised or if planning permission is sought for building
operations or a business use the valuation office may well be alerted and
take steps accordingly. Where there are no such indications, the
probability is, it seems to me, that, if work is being done there, it will
be the sort of work that falls within the scope of use of the property for
the purposes of living accommodation.”
I have considered the facts as a
cumulative whole in the light of this guidance. I am satisfied that the
purpose of the signage in the window and the limited fitting out of the
front room was to create a colourable impression of business use. But,
from the evidence before me, I conclude |
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that no patients were treated
there and that the room continued to be used for domestic purposes as
living accommodation. The furniture and fittings to be found in the room
during the relevant period were not specialised and were commensurate with
the use of the room as a normal domestic study. There is no doubt that the
appellant wanted to use the property for non-domestic purposes, but on the
balance of evidence, as a matter of fact and degree, I find that it was
not so used. The entry in Thompson Local was not material and, in my
opinion, any business use that may have been made of the room was de
minimis. The appeal property therefore remained wholly in use as living
accommodation and was thus domestic property for the purposes of the 1988
Act between 1 April 2005 and 1 January 2006.
25. In reaching this
decision I have referred to the new evidence about the prerequisites of
her practice that was introduced by Dr Zhou after the hearing. The VO has
questioned the admissibility of such evidence given that Dr Zhou made no
reference to it during the hearing, in the course of which the line of
questioning from the VO gave the opportunity for it to be introduced. I
have admitted it for three reasons. Firstly, I gave the appellant the
opportunity to comment upon the case law relied upon by the VO, copies of
which had not been made available to Dr Zhou before the hearing. Her
reference to essential equipment (prerequisites) was placed in the context
of her comments on Melladew and Tully and was therefore
relevant to the further evidence that she was invited to give. Secondly, I
have taken account of the factors referred to in paragraph 23 above and I
think it likely that Dr Zhou may not have appreciated the implications of
the line of questioning pursued by Mr Osborne. Thirdly, the appeal was
conducted under the simplified procedure in which the hearing is informal
and the strict rules of evidence do not apply (see Lands Tribunal Practice
Direction 3.4). The VO was given the opportunity of commenting upon this
new evidence but did so only to challenge its validity and not its
substance.
26. I therefore
allow the appeal. The entry shall be deleted from the 2005 list until the
agreed effective date of 1 January 2006.
27. An award of
costs is made only in exceptional circumstances where an appeal is heard
under the simplified procedure. In my opinion there are no such
circumstances in this appeal and neither party suggested at the hearing,
or subsequently, that there were. I therefore make no order as to
costs.
Dated 19 August 2008 |
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A J Trott FRICS |
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