Non-resident property owners in France note
The French Government is preparing to introduce a special tax on non-resident property owners.
The French Government is preparing to introduce a special tax on non-resident property owners.
The UK Government has backed down on plans to tax the oil and gas industry for every worker it sends offshore on helicopters.
The UK Government were considering applying the top rate of air passenger duty (APD) to all flights to rigs and platforms. It had been estimated that the proposal would have cost the industry some £165million a year.
However, after an angry backlash from industry chiefs and politicians at both Holyrood and Westminster, Scottish Secretary Michael Moore confirmed that North Sea helicopter operations would not be “penalised”.
Press and Journal 19 May 2011
Note. APD was one of four minor taxes that the Calman Commission on Scottish Devolution said should be devolved to the Scottish Parliament. As yet only Stamp Duty Land Tax and Landfill Tax are included in the Scotland Bill. It is not yet clear if APD and Aggregates Levy are to be included.
The relief which was announced in the 2011 Budget applies to transactions involving the acquisition of more than one dwelling.
The draft guidance note is available from HMRC’s website here.
Some draft worked examples demonstrating the operation of the relief are available here.
An Expert Group established by the European Commission and consisting of legal practitioners, academics and former judges from across the European Union has produced a feasibility study on European contract law. The publication is a move towards achieving an optional European contract law instrument to be used by European Community legislators to improve the consistency and quality of contract legislation across the Community.
Comments are invited by 1 July 2011.
The Commission’s press release is available here
The study is available here
A useful commentary by Professor Clive (one of the UK representatives in the expert group) is available here
Case considering a landlord’s right to terminate a lease for breach of the maintenance obligations under the lease. Crieff Highland Gathering are the landlords and Perth Council, the tenants of an area of ground known as Market Park in Crieff. The subjects are used by the Council as a pubic park and sub-let back to Crieff Highland every year for the holding of the Crieff Highland Gathering. The lease is for 60 years and began in 1983. The rent is £100 per year and was not subject to review (although it appears that the rent was never demanded or paid). Importantly, the lease contained no irritancy clause.
Background
The Council wished to retain the park as public open space. However, Crieff Highland wanted to sell the park for development as a site for a Sainsbury’s supermarket. They had entered option agreements with developers which would allow for the sale of the park and development of an improved sports ground at an alternative site. They had also been granted outline planning permission for the two developments.
Crieff Highland had also been dissatisfied and frustrated by what they considered to be slow and inadequate maintenance of the park particularly in relation to the boundary walls. In November 2007 (when it became clear that the Council was unwilling to relinquish the tenancy of the park) Crieff Highland served a notice on the Council intimating “numerous wants of repair within the subjects which fall within the tenant’s responsibility in terms of the lease” and an Interim Schedule of Dilapidations. The notice purported to require that the wants of repair be remedied within 3 calendar months and warned that if the Council failed to comply the lease might be terminated.
The Council did not carry out the repairs which it did not consider to be urgent. On 22 January 2009 Crieff Highland served a further notice on the Council purporting to terminate the lease on the basis of the Council’s breaches of the lease. The Council then arranged an independent inspection of the premises and carried out repairs between July and September 2009. Crieff Highland was not satisfied with this and began court proceedings against the Council.
The issues
The main legal issues for the court were as follows:
The decision
Lord Pentland found that the Council was in breach of its obligations under the lease but concluded that the breaches were not material and therefore Crieff Highland were not entitled to terminate the lease.
Breach of the obligations
There was debate as to whether the tenant’s obligations under the lease extended to extraordinary repairs as well as ordinary repairs. The relevant clause said:
“The Tenants shall, during the currency of this lease, relieve the Landlords of their whole responsibility for the maintenance of the boundary fences, walls and others enclosing the ground leased.”
The Council argued that use of the word “maintenance” meant something other than extraordinary repairs. However, Lord Pentland rejected those arguments taking the view that, when read in the context of the lease as a whole, the clause was referring to the liability which would otherwise be incumbent on the landlord for maintaining the boundaries and that would include liability for carrying out extraordinary repairs. On the evidence, the Council had breached its repairing obligations under the lease.
Materiality of the breach
With regard to the materiality of the breaches, Lord Pentland noted that it was primarily a question of fact and degree. In coming to the conclusion that the various breaches were not material Lord Pentland took account of the following:
The following issues were also considered:
The relevance of the Council’s willingness to perform in the future
Lord Pentland contrasted the right to rescind for material breach with the right to irritate. Whereas the right to irritate applies to a right to terminate for a past breach (and derives from the lease or by law for failure to pay rent), the right to rescind applies to a right to terminate for a refusal by the tenant to perform in the future (and derives from the common law).
The landlord can only rescind for material breach when the following conditions are satisfied:
It had been established that Crieff Highland had failed on a) and c). However Lord Penrose also went on to consider whether Crieff Highland had given fair and reasonable opportunity to fulfil the obligations.
The adequacy of the termination procedure adopted by Crieff Highland
Lord Pentland said that the notice must give both reasonable notice of the grounds for the termination and also an adequate opportunity to put it right. The notice given by Crieff Highland was deemed to have given reasonable notice of the grounds but Lord Pentland found that the 3 month period was not sufficient. In that time the Council had to carry out an inspection, take legal advice, consult Historic Scotland, identify a contractor (who would have to inspect and prepare a programme of works. Evidence was heard to the effect that the works could not be done in the 3 months following the notice due to difficulties in repairing lime mortar in the winter.
Would a fair and reasonable landlord have terminated the lease in the circumstances?
If Crieff Highland had been in material breach the next question would have been whether a fair and reasonable landlord would have terminated the lease. This requirement arises from s 5(1) (b) of the Law Reform (Miscellaneous Provisions) (Scotland) Act 1985. Although he did not require to decide on it, Lord Pentland found that in this case a fair and reasonable landlord would not have terminated the lease because:
Looking at the circumstances as a whole Lord Pentland found that it was reasonable to infer that Crieff Highland’s reason for terminating the lease was that it wanted to proceed with the arrangements it had entered with Sainsbury’s rather than having a pressing concern over the condition of the property.
The full judgement is available here.
All of our property and conveyancing case summaries are contained in the LKS Property and Conveyancing Casebook here.
Case considering a tenant’s liability for extraordinary repairs under a lease. Co-operative Insurance were the landlords and Fife Council were the tenants under a 25 year lease of the Unicorn house at the Kingdom Centre in Glenrothes. The Co-op claimed that the Council had breached their repairing obligations under the lease and sought damages of more than £1.3m. The matter for the court to decide was the relevancy of the Council’s argument that they were not liable for “extraordinary repairs” under the lease
The repairing clause contained the following:
“At their own cost and expense to repair and keep in good and substantial repair and maintained, renewed and cleansedin every respect all to the satisfaction of the Landlords the leased subjects”
The Co-op accepted that at common law a tenant is only liable for “ordinary repairs” and the responsibility for “extraordinary repairs” (such as the rebuilding or renewal of the subjects and making them wind and watertight) is normally that of the landlord. To make it the responsibility of the tenant would require clear stipulation or necessary inference. However, they argued that in this case the lease did make it clear that the tenant was liable for extraordinary repairs. The Co-op relied on the extent of the subjects included in the lease (which comprised the whole of the external walls and roof) and the fact that the repairing clause included an obligation to “renew” as well as to “repair”.
On the other hand, the Council contended that many of the repairs identified by the Co-op arose as a result of the impending expiry of lifespan of component parts of the property and both parties would have been aware that the lifespan of the parts in question was not much greater than the length of the lease. If it had been intended that the Council were to replace all such parts at the end of the lease it would have been made unambiguously clear.
Lord Glennie was not persuaded that the lease imposed liability on the tenants for extraordinary repairs. Indeed the clause did not go beyond the common law position. To argue that use of the word “renewed” meant that the tenants had assumed responsibility for “extraordinary repairs” put too much emphasis on the word renewed. As part of an obligation to repair the tenant may be obliged to renew certain elements in the structure but that is part of the repairing obligation.
If the Co-op’s arguments had been correct the lease would also have obliged the Council to give the property back at the end of the lease in as good condition as it had been 25 years earlier. They would have been obliged to renew parts even though they were not in need of repair. Whilst Lord Glennie agreed that it was possible to impose such an obligation, the intention would have to be made clear.
Although there were provisions in the lease which appeared to place responsibility on the tenants for structure that did not alter Lord Glennie’s opinion that the lease did not make the tenant liable for “extraordinary repairs”.
The full judgement is available from Scottish Courts here.
All of our property and conveyancing case summaries are contained in the LKS Property and Conveyancing Casebook here.
The Scottish Law Commission has published a Discussion Paper on the criminal liability of partnerships.
The paper follows a fatal fire at the Rosepark nursing home in Uddingston in 2004 after which the Crown’s attempts to prosecute the partnership (for health and safety offences) failed on the basis the partnership had been dissolved and therefore no longer had any legal existence.
The paper considers ways of preventing the frustration of prosecutions of partnerships due to their dissolution and also looks at the circumstances in which individual partners may be held criminally liable for offences committed by a partnership questioning whether legislation should be introduced to make it easier to prosecute partners as individuals.
The SLC’s news release is here.
The Discussion Paper is available here.
The Scottish Government is reviewing the current financial limits regarding Prior Rights of a surviving spouse or civil partner on intestacy and Confirmation to small estates.
Scottish Borders Council has voted to increase what it charges for the purchase of a burial plot for 2011-12. The cost will rise from £284 to £450. The reason given was that Scottish Borders Council was charging significantly less than the average charged by Scottish local authorities.
A reminder that furnished holiday lettings may be affected by three major taxation changes. Two changes apply from April 2011. The first of these is that the profit or loss from a FHL in an EEA country other than the UK (European Economic Area is the EU countries plus Iceland, Liechtenstein and Norway) has to be calculated separately from a profit or loss arising from UK holiday lettings. Profits and losses from outwith the EEA also have to be calculated separately. Also from 2011 it will no longer be possible to set a loss made from FHL properties in the UK or overseas against other income to generate a tax repayment. As from April 2012 the periods that a property may be let to qualify for the FHL tax reliefs are to be extended. These changes are likely to mean that some FHL businesses will no longer be profitable.