GRAMPIAN, APPEAL BY ASSESSOR FOR AGAINST CDS (SUPERSTORES INTERNATIONAL) LIMITED TRADING AS THE RANGE [2018] ScotCS CSIH_13 (27 February 2018)


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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> GRAMPIAN, APPEAL BY ASSESSOR FOR AGAINST CDS (SUPERSTORES INTERNATIONAL) LIMITED TRADING AS THE RANGE [2018] ScotCS CSIH_13 (27 February 2018)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/2018/[2018]_CSIH_13.html
Cite as: [2018] ScotCS CSIH_13, [2018] CSIH 13

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Page 1 ⇓
LANDS VALUATION APPEAL COURT, COURT OF SESSION
[2018] CSIH 13
XA89/17
Lord Justice Clerk
Lord Malcolm
Lord Doherty
OPINION OF LADY DORRIAN, the LORD JUSTICE CLERK
in the Appeal
by
ASSESSOR FOR GRAMPIAN
Appellant
against
CDS (SUPERSTORES INTERNATIONAL) LIMITED TRADING AS THE RANGE
Respondent
Appellant: Gill; Solicitor to Glasgow City Council
Respondent: O’Rourke QC, Garrity; Anderson Strathern LLP
27 February 2018
[1]       For the reasons given by Lord Doherty, I agree that this appeal should be allowed in
relation only to the end allowance and the adjustment for fit-out, sprinklers and air
conditioning. The sum which should as a result be reflected in the 2010 valuation roll, with
effect from 28 November 2014, is £602,000. Quoad ultra the appeal should be refused. I have
nothing further to add.
Page 2 ⇓
2
LANDS VALUATION APPEAL COURT, COURT OF SESSION
Lord Justice Clerk
Lord Malcolm
Lord Doherty
OPINION OF LORD MALCOLM
[2018] CSIH 13
XA89/17
in the Appeal
by
ASSESSOR FOR GRAMPIAN
Appellant
against
CDS (SUPERSTORES INTERNATIONAL) LIMITED TRADING AS THE RANGE
Respondent
Appellant: Gill; Solicitor to Glasgow City Council
Respondent: O’Rourke QC, Garrity; Anderson Strathern LLP
27 February 2018
[2]       For the reasons given by Lord Doherty, I agree that this appeal should be allowed in
relation only to the end allowance and the adjustment for fit-out, sprinklers and air
conditioning.
Page 3 ⇓
3
LANDS VALUATION APPEAL COURT, COURT OF SESSION
Lord Justice Clerk
Lord Malcolm
Lord Doherty
OPINION OF LORD DOHERTY
[2018] CSIH 13
XA89/17
in the Appeal
by
ASSESSOR FOR GRAMPIAN
Appellant
against
CDS (SUPERSTORES INTERNATIONAL) LIMITED TRADING AS THE RANGE
Respondent
Appellant: Gill; Solicitor to Glasgow City Council
Respondent: O’Rourke QC, Garrity; Anderson Strathern LLP
27 February 2018
Introduction
[3]       This is an appeal by the appellant (“the assessor”) from a decision of the City of
Aberdeen valuation appeal committee. The committee allowed an appeal by the respondent
(“the ratepayer”) against the NAV/RV of £725,000 which the assessor had entered in the
valuation roll for retail subjects at Unit 8-9, Queen’s Link Leisure Park. The committee
decided that the NAV/RV should be £533,970.
Page 4 ⇓
4
[4]       The first issue in the appeal to this court is whether the committee were entitled to
decide that the appeal subjects are a retail warehouse rather than a depot (“big box”)
warehouse. If in fact the subjects are a big box, it is common ground that the NAV/RV of
£725,000 is correct. In the event that the committee were right to conclude that the subjects
were not a big box, the second and third issues are whether they erred in applying a
quantum allowance of 47.5% and an end allowance of 10%.
The Facts
[5]       The appeal subjects are Unit 8-9, Queen’s Link Leisure Park, Aberdeen. At the 2010
revaluation Units 8 and 9 comprised two separate entries in the valuation roll (a nightclub
and a bingo hall). In October 2013 the landlord obtained planning permission to combine
the units and change their use from “Assembly and Leisure “to “Non-Food Retail”. The
subjects came into existence as a retail warehouse on 28 November 2014 following
reconstruction work. They have a gross internal area (“GIA”) of 5688.8m2. The assessor
entered them in the valuation roll with effect from that date. Since the entry was a new
entry made while the valuation roll was in force, the value to be ascribed to the subjects was
not to exceed the tone of the roll (Local Government (Scotland) Act 1966, s 15).
[6]       The Scottish Assessors Association (“SAA”) published several practice notes for the
2010 revaluation.
[7]       SAA Practice Note 6 “Valuation of Retail Warehouses” (“PN6”) provides that it
applies to retail warehouses up to 8,000m2 (para 1.1). The basis of valuation is the
comparative principle using rates per m2 derived from local rental evidence (para 2.1).
Paragraph 4.0 provides that the basic specification is a shell unit. Paragraph 4.0 concludes:
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5
“The basic unit is usually in the order of 950m2, but most modern retail parks have a
range of unit sizes. Commonly there is a double sized unit around 1,800-1,900m2
plus one or two in the 2,500 3,500m2 range.”
Paragraph 5.2 sets out additions to be made to the basic rate for fit out, air conditioning and
sprinklers. Paragraph 7.0 provides:
“7.0 Quantum
7.1 An allowance under this heading may be granted when supported by local
evidence.”
[8]       SAA Practice Note 6A “Valuation of Depot Warehouses” (“PN6A”) provides:
1.0 Introduction
1.1 This Practice Note applies to Depot Warehouses, which are large retail
warehouses ranging in size from 8,000m2 to 15,000m2. These subjects may be
situated either adjacent to a retail park or in a standalone situation catering for a
relatively large catchment area. Due to their size and characteristics, Depot
Warehouses have a distinctly different market to that of retail warehouses and
should be valued by reference to the level of rents prevailing for this type of subject
and not by comparison with standard retail warehouses.
2.0 Basis of Valuation
2.1 Depot Warehouses are valued on the Comparative Principle using rates per
m2 derived from rentals of units of a similar size, character and location. Where local
evidence is not available, comparison should be made with depot warehouses in
other areas….”
In terms of para 4.1 the basic unit is taken to be a shell unit, and para 5.2 makes provision for
additions to the basic rate for fit out, air conditioning and sprinklers.
[9]       Queen’s Link Leisure Park (“Queen’s Link”) is located near the beach in Aberdeen,
between Links Road and the Esplanade. There are eight other units in Queen’s Link, mainly
devoted to leisure uses, and there is a large common car park with 876 spaces.
[10]       Beach Boulevard Retail Park (“Beach Boulevard”) is adjacent to Queen’s Link on the
other side of Links Road. It contains retail units ranging in size from 559.4m2 to 2049.8m2
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6
GIA. There is a large common car park. The assessor valued the units in accordance with
Practice Note 6. The established tone of the roll basic rate for the subjects in Beach
Boulevard is £175 per m2. Most of the units there are single units. The three larger (double
sized) units (two of 1908.4m2 and one of 2049.8m2) were given quantum allowances of 20%.
[11]       The largest retail warehouse in Aberdeen is B&Q at Garthdee Road (“B&Q”). Those
subjects have a GIA of 8680.91m2. They have an exclusive car park with 480 spaces. At the
2010 revaluation they were valued in accordance with Practice Note 6A as a big box
warehouse by comparison with other big box warehouses. The basic rate applied before
allowance was made for fitting out etc. was £137 per m2.
[12]       There is also a small retail warehouse park in Garthdee Road on a separate site from
B&Q. It contains only two units, each having a GIA of just under 1000m2. One is occupied
by Currys and the other by Boots. The tone of the roll basic rate for those units is £315
per m2.
The ratepayer’s valuation approach
[13]       Before the committee the ratepayer was represented by a surveyor, Mr Hart FRICS,
who acted both as advocate and expert witness. Mr Hart maintained that the appeal
subjects ought to be valued as a retail warehouse rather than as a depot or “big box”
warehouse. In his opinion they were more comparable with the Beach Boulevard units than
with B&Q, but he argued that the tone basic rate of £175 should be reduced by 56.5% to
reflect quantum. He arrived at that conclusion by comparing the size and basic rate of
Currys at Garthdee with the size and basic rate of B&Q. The rate after quantum of £76 per
m2 was lower than the rate of £86 per m2 derived from the rent of one of the larger Beach
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7
Boulevard subjects occupied by Dunelm, but that was to be expected because the appeal
subjects were a much bigger unit than the Dunelm unit.
The assessors valuation approach
[14]       The assessor also acted as an advocate and gave evidence as an expert witness, but
his main valuation witness was one of his principal valuers, Mr Fordyce MRICS.
Mr Fordyce maintained that the appeal subjects were a big box warehouse and that they had
been correctly valued by him using PN6A. The appropriate comparison was with B&Q. It
was recognised that B&Q was in a better locality for a big box and that it had a dedicated car
park. Each of those factors justified a reduction of 5% from the £137 basic rate which had
been applied at B&Q. The application of that 10% end allowance reduced the basic rate to
£123, which Mr Fordyce rounded down to £120. Additions to the rate to reflect fitting out,
sprinklers and air conditioning resulted in an NAV/RV of £725,000. Mr Fordyce also carried
out a check valuation, valuing the subjects as a standard retail warehouse by comparison
with the Beach Boulevard subjects. On that approach the appropriate quantum allowance
was 30%. That was the highest quantum allowance he was aware of having been applied to
any retail warehouse in Scotland. Once appropriate allowance was made for fitting out,
sprinklers and air conditioning the check valuation resulted in an NAV/RV of £750,000,
which was higher than the value the assessor had entered in the roll.
The committee’s interim and final decisions
[15]       The committee followed the unusual course of issuing an interim decision. They
decided that the subjects were a large standard retail warehouse, but were not a big box. In
their view the appropriate comparison was with the Beach Boulevard subjects, and the
correct basic rate was £175. They regarded the Dunelm rent as of no assistance because it
Page 8 ⇓
8
was below the tone of the roll. They prepared a graph. One axis of the graph denoted
quantum and the other axis denoted GIA. They plotted a curve between the position on the
graph of the single units at Beach Boulevard and Garthdee (zero % quantum), the double
sized units at Beach Boulevard (20% quantum), and B&Q (56.5% “quantum”). They used
that curve to ascribe quantum of 47.5% to the appeal subjects. They also applied the 10%
end allowance Mr Fordyce had used in his primary valuation. They invited further written
submissions from the parties as to the correct NAV/RV in light of the interim decision.
[16]       Both parties made further written submissions. The assessor repeated his earlier
submission that the subjects were a big box and ought to be valued as such by comparison
with B&Q. In the event that they were valued as a standard retail warehouse, he submitted
that the committee’s approach to quantum was wrong in principle. Comparing a single unit
retail warehouse at Garthdee with the big box B&Q was not comparing like with like. There
was no proper correlation between them. They were different subjects in different markets
and were valued on different bases. He submitted that that error was compounded by
applying the 10% end allowance which was only appropriate if the subjects were valued as a
big box by comparison with B&Q.
[17]       In their final decision the committee adhered substantially to the approach taken in
the interim decision. After making allowance for fit-out, sprinklers and air conditioning,
they arrived at an NAV/RV of £533,970.
The appeal
[18]       The parties agree that the committee made a mistake when adjusting the valuation
for fit-out, sprinklers and air conditioning. The committee accepted their mistake (in
supplementary reasons which were added to their statement of reasons when they prepared
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9
the stated case). They had intended to follow the assessor’s approach on those aspects of the
valuation, but they had not properly applied it. They indicated that had they done so the
NAV/RV would have been £549,741 rather than £533,970.
[19]       Counsel for the assessor submitted that the committee had erred in three further
respects. First, they had erred in categorising the subjects as an ordinary retail warehouse
rather than a big box. On the evidence no reasonable committee could have come to that
conclusion. An assessor was not obliged to follow a Practice Note: see e.g. Rolls-Royce plc and
others v Assessor for Renfrewshire Valuation Joint Board 2013 SC 131, per Lord President Gill at
para 2, and per Lord Hodge at para 32. Second, in the event that the committee had been
entitled to categorise the subjects in the way they did, the approach they had taken to
quantum was misconceived. They had wrongly assumed that a quantum correlation could
be derived from comparison of the basic rates of the small Garthdee units and B&Q; and that
that correlation would provide reliable guidance as to the appropriate quantum correlation
between the appeal subjects and the single units at Beach Boulevard. The exercise was
misguided because B&Q and the single unit subjects at Garthdee were in different
categories, and their values had been arrived at using different comparative material.
Reference was made to Armour, Valuation for Rating (5th ed.) para 19-26; B&Q plc v
Renfrewshire Valuation Joint Board Assessor [2004] RA 220 at p 232 and pp 238-9; and B&Q plc
v Assessor for Dunbartonshire Valuation Joint Board 2007 SC 135, at para 15. The huge quantum
allowance of 56.5% produced by the B&Q/Currys exercise in itself suggested the lack of any
real correlation between their values. On the evidence adduced no reasonable committee
could have assessed quantum at 47.5%. Third, the committee had erred in applying the end
allowance of 10%. On the evidence that allowance was only appropriate if the subjects were
valued as a big box by comparison with B&Q. The end allowance reflected two particular
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10
advantages which B&Q enjoyed which neither the appeal subjects nor Beach Boulevard
enjoyed. There was no basis for it if the subjects were valued as an ordinary retail
warehouse by comparison with Beach Boulevard.
[20]       In response senior counsel for the ratepayer submitted that on the evidence it had
been open to the committee to decide that the subjects were not a big box warehouse. Their
size was within the range described in PN6 and was below the range discussed in PN6A.
The appropriate classification of the subjects had been a matter of fact for the committee. So
far as the quantum allowance was concerned, given the lack of direct evidence as to
quantum for large subjects the committee had been entitled to draw such assistance as they
could from the evidence which was available. That was what they had done. They had not
erred in law or acted contrary to any fundamental valuation principle. Finally, the
committee had had evidence before them entitling them to apply the end allowance which
they had. While it was true that comparison had been with Beach Boulevard rather than
B&Q, the two 5% allowances applied by the assessor could still be justified because B&Q
had been part of the evidence relied upon to establish the quantum allowance.
Decision and reasons
Classification
[21]       Recommendations in SAA Practice Notes are not binding on individual assessors,
but they are often followed and they have the merit of providing a degree of consistency to
valuations across Scotland: Armour, supra, para 1-8; cf Rolls-Royce plc and others v Assessor for
Renfrewshire Valuation Joint Board, supra, per Lord President Gill at para 2, and per
Lord Hodge at para 32. At the revaluation the assessor followed the guidance in PN6 when
valuing retail warehouses, and he followed the guidance in PN6A when valuing B&Q.
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11
There is no doubt that, prima facie, the guidance in PN6 and PN6A suggests that the appeal
subjects fall within the ambit of PN6 rather than PN6A. Mr Fordyce took a different view.
He thought that their size (albeit less than 8,000m2) and other characteristics made them a
big box, and that they were more comparable with B&Q than with standard retail
warehouses. Mr Hart disagreed. In his view, having regard to their size and other factors,
they were not a big box and they were more comparable with standard retail warehouses.
Accordingly, the committee had before them competing expert testimony on a question
which was essentially a matter of valuation judgement. Unless the basis of either witness’s
evidence was flawed because of an error of law or a fundamental error of valuation
principle, it was open to the committee to decide which evidence they accepted. It was not
suggested that either witness’s evidence on this point was vulnerable to such attack. The
appropriate classification of the subjects and the identification of suitable comparisons were
pre-eminently matters of fact for the committee. In my opinion, on the evidence before them
they were entitled to decide that the subjects were not a big box.
Quantum
[22]       The committee’s assessment of the appropriate quantum allowance is less
straightforward. On any view, a quantum allowance of 47.5% is extraordinarily large.
However, ultimately I am not persuaded that no reasonable committee could have arrived at
that allowance on the evidence before them.
[23]       The very real difficulty which the committee faced was that they had no relevant
evidence of rents or values for standard retail warehouses which were larger than about
2,000m2. It was in those circumstances that Mr Hart and Mr Fordyce made valuation
judgements as to the appropriate quantum allowance for the appeal subjects. Mr Fordyce’s
judgement was that it should be 30%, and that he knew of no higher quantum allowance
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12
having been granted to any retail warehouse in Scotland. Mr Hart’s judgement was that it
ought to be much higher, along the lines of the 56.5% differential between the basic rate of
Currys and B&Q.
[24]       I think it is clear that the committee did not accept Mr Fordyce’s evidence that 30%
was a sufficient allowance. They were persuaded that Mr Hart’s Currys/B&Q exercise did
provide some guidance as to the quantum differential between those subjects; and that
quantum for the appeal subjects ought to be much nearer that differential than the 20%
quantum which the double sized units received. They prepared the graph which they
plotted to assist them in identifying 47.5% as the appropriate allowance.
[25]       Had it been for me rather than the committee to assess the evidence, I may have
given less weight to Mr Hart’s exercise and I may have been less inclined to conclude that an
allowance as high as 47.5% was justified in the circumstances. However, in the final analysis
the assessment of quantum was a question of fact for the committee. I do not think that they
acted irrationally in doing what they did. Notwithstanding the criticisms made of Mr Hart’s
Currys/B&Q exercise, I am not convinced that they were bound to give that evidence no
weight. While it was less compelling than it would have been had those subjects been
within the same genus and valued by reference to the same comparative body of evidence, it
was not devoid of probative value. I think it significant that at the revaluation the actual
rent for B&Q was very close to its NAV/RV. In those circumstances the B&Q basic rate could
reasonably be taken as being in accord not just with comparable big box subjects but also
with the B&Q rent. Comparison between the B&Q rate and the Currys rate could provide
some indication of rental rates applying to subjects in the same location which had broadly
similar uses, but very different sizes (cf Textile World v Assessor for Strathclyde Region 1995 SC
588; Spudulike Group Ltd v Assessor for Tayside Valuation Joint Board [2002] RA 91 at para 89).
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In my opinion, once it is accepted, as I think it has to be, that the committee were entitled to
give some weight to Mr Hart’s Currys/B&Q exercise, it becomes impossible to maintain that
it was not open to them to assess quantum at 47.5%.
End allowance
[26]       I am satisfied that the committee erred in applying a 10% end allowance. In my
opinion there was no proper evidential basis for them following that course. Their stated
basis was Mr Fordyce’s evidence. The problem with that is that Mr Fordyce supported an
end allowance only if the subjects were valued as a big box by comparison with B&Q. It was
in those circumstances, and those circumstances alone, that a 10% end allowance was
justified to reflect the fact that, as compared with B&Q, the appeal subjects were less well
located and did not have the advantage of their own car park. Neither Mr Fordyce nor
Mr Hart maintained that an end allowance was appropriate if the subjects were valued as a
standard retail warehouse. That was because the tone basic rate of £175 per m2 for Beach
Boulevard reflected the advantages and disadvantages of the location (including the fact
that there was a shared car park).
The stated case
[27]       In this appeal the form and content of the stated case were unsatisfactory. The
submissions of the parties were set out at inordinate length. They extended to 21 pages.
The intelligibility of the stated case suffered because the gist of each party’s submissions was
not clearly and succinctly summarised.
[28]       By contrast, the findings in fact were brief, extending to just over a page. Contrary to
the clear guidance given by the court in Scammell v Assessor for Highland and Western Isles
Valuation Joint Board 1997 GWD 29-1495 (which guidance is reproduced in Armour, para 5-
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48), several of the findings required reference to extraneous material in order to understand
them. In a further unwelcome departure from normal practice, at the end of the case a series
of questions for the court were posed.
[29]       It may be helpful to remind committees of the customary form and content of a
stated case in an appeal to the Lands Valuation Appeal Court from a decision of a
committee. The case normally begins by narrating the date and place of the meeting of the
committee and by setting out the entry (or entries) in the valuation roll which the ratepayer
appealed against. That is usually followed by a sentence setting out what it was in the entry
that the ratepayer sought should be changed (e.g. “The appellant craved that the assessor
should have valued the subjects at £x NAV/RV.”). The next paragraph should set out the
representation for each party, and the witnesses which each led. The productions lodged by
each party are then listed. Next come the findings in fact. After the findings in fact, the
contentions for each party should be summarised. Each summary ought to be brief. It
should outline the essence of the party’s submissions and it should note any authorities
which were referred to. It ought to be rare for the summary of a party’s contentions to take
up more than a page or two, and often less than a page is likely to suffice. After the
contentions, the committee’s decision, and then their reasons, are stated. Finally, the
grounds of appeal to the court and the answers thereto are set out.
Disposal
[30]       I propose to your Ladyship and your Lordship that the appeal be allowed, but only
in so far as relating to the end allowance and the adjustment for fit-out, sprinklers and air
conditioning. Quoad ultra the appeal should be refused. The parties are agreed that in those
circumstances the arithmetical result would be an NAV/RV of £602,006. That should be
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15
rounded down to £602,000. That figure should be substituted in the 2010 valuation roll with
effect from 28 November 2014.



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