Houses
Qualification and valuation for enfranchisement IntroductionThis leaflet is not meant to describe or give a full interpretation of the law; only the courts can do that. Nor does it cover every case. If you are in any doubt about your rights and duties then seek specific advice.
Anyone considering enfranchising (buying) the freehold of their leasehold house will probably begin by asking "How much will it cost?" The valuation process required by the law is complicated so it is often difficult to form a clear view at the beginning of the amount.
This advice note sets out to describe:
The Law
The Leasehold Reform Act 1967 gives leasehold tenants of houses the right to buy the freehold. In some cases they have an alternative right to extend the lease. The right to compulsorily purchase the freehold (and any intermediate leasehold interest) is termed enfranchisement. Some freeholders will sell the freehold without the need for a formal claim, but, whether a claim is made or not, the leaseholder should obtain good professional advice to find out roughly what the whole process will cost.
Because the basic right has been extended over the years by various amendments made to the 1967 Act, rules for calculating the price are somewhat complicated. The 1967 Act allowed the purchase of houses at a price which is similar to that at which the freeholder could have sold his interest to anyone else. The Housing Act 1974 extended the right to larger houses and provided that the freeholder and claimant should share the full increase in the value of the house when held on a freehold basis. The Leasehold Reform, Housing and Urban Development Act 1993 extended the right to another group of much larger houses and provided for the additional value to be shared in a different way. The Housing Act 1996 extended the rights further, the Commonhold and Leasehold Reform Act 2002 simplified qualification and provided additional rights.
Qualification
The right to enfranchise is dependent upon a number of qualifications for the house, the lease and the leaseholder; these are set out on page 10 of this booklet.
must be a building reasonably considered a house, divided vertically from any adjoining house. It does not matter if it has been divided into flats so long as you have the lease of the whole house.
must be a long lease, originally for a term of more than 21 years or with a right to renewal. There are also certain restrictions in respect of leases for original terms of less than 35 years (see Summary).
to be a qualifying tenant must be the leaseholder of the house at the time of application and have held the lease for the past two years. In addition, where a leaseholder who is eligible for the right to the freehold dies, his personal representatives will be so eligible and may serve a notice for purchase within a period of two years from the grant of probate or letters of administration.
These qualifications not only determine the leaseholder's eligibility for the right to the freehold but also which method of valuation will be applied.
The two Valuation Methods
The Act provides two distinct procedures for valuation of houses under the Act, dependent upon the section of the Act under which the house qualifies. These sections are:
Section 1 - where the house passes the original low rent test and meets certain value limits
Section 1A - where the house exceeds the value limits
Section 1AA - where the lease of the house had previously been extended under 1967 Act provisions
Section 1B - where the lease was granted after 18 April 1980 and is not for a set term but terminable on death or marriage.
The appropriate method of valuation is then decided from the basis of the above qualifications and in accordance with the following:
Section 9 (1) - where the house qualifies under Section 1 it will be valued according to the original valuation basis
Section 9 (1A), 9(1AA), 9(1C) - where the house qualifies under Section 1A, 1AA or 1B it will be valued according to the special valuation basis
The valuation method under which the house is to be valued is not a matter of the landlord's or the leaseholder's choice but is determined by the qualification criteria.
Put simply:
The special valuation basis of assessment generally means that the price is much higher than that which would be payable under the original valuation basis. It is therefore most important to establish under which basis the house is to be valued.
Under both sets of rules the law requires the freeholder's interest to be valued as if it were being sold in the open market by a willing seller to a willing purchaser. The principles of the Act are not to provide a forced bargain for the leaseholder but adequately to compensate the freeholder for the loss of his property - a fair price based as closely as practicable on open market values. The essential difficulty is the assessment of an open market value in the artificial situation created by the imposition of the leaseholder's rights.
Where the freeholder and the claimant cannot settle the price by negotiation, a Leasehold Valuation Tribunal can be asked to settle the matter. The Tribunal's role is not to decide in favour of either party's valuation but to determine the issues independently; the Tribunal's determination may not, therefore, necessarily reflect prices proposed by either the claimant or the freeholder.
Once you have begun the process of enfranchisement by serving a notice of claim you will be liable to pay the freeholder's reasonable costs in dealing with your notice so you would be wise to find out the likely cost before you begin the process. A valuation surveyor competent in the legislation and with a good knowledge of the local property market will be able to help you.
First Steps
Firstly you need to confirm that you are a qualifying tenant and find out whether the house passes the necessary tests and is not a property excluded from the right of enfranchisement.
Secondly you will need to investigate whether your house meets certain value limits and these vary according to when the lease was originally granted. These two checks will determine your right to purchase and also under which section of the legislation.
Dependent upon the qualifying section there is then another check on value limits to determine the method of valuation.
Gathering Information
For this you will need to gather a certain amount of information. A professional adviser will be better equipped to help if he has the relevant information to hand. It is suggested that before consulting a valuer or solicitor you spend some time amassing the relevant facts. Some will be readily to hand, some will need research; the following checklist should be useful.
i) details of the lease
All this information should be on the first page of the lease document itself. If you do not hold the lease you will need to obtain a copy from your mortgagee (the bank, building society etc) or your solicitor or whoever holds it.
ii) rateable values
You should be able to obtain this information from your local authority.
The Original Valuation Basis (site value)
The original reasoning behind the 1967 Act was that the freeholder owned the land but the leaseholder owned the house. So, at the end of the lease, the freeholder would be left with a vacant piece of land which he could let at a "modern ground rent".
The reality is, of course, rather different but the principle remains the same; to assess today's value of the land the house stands on in terms of the ground rent the landlord could receive, at today's rates, forever.
The Act provided an alternative approach to this based on the leaseholder's statutory right to a new lease. The right is to an extension of 50 years, from the date of expiry of his present lease. The ground rent for the new lease would be assessed on the first day of the lease as a proportion of the value of the land, the site value, and would be a modern ground rent. (A modern ground rent is usually a figure far in excess of the existing ground rent)
The valuation procedure will assume that the leaseholder takes up his right to the 50 year extension at the modern ground rent, although that will not actually happen. Therefore the freeholder's interest becomes the right to receive the rent and any increased rent on review during the term of the lease, followed by the right to receive a modern ground rent for 50 years followed by the right to vacant possession of the house at the end of the lease. This is called the reversion because it is at the time when the house reverts to the freeholder.
The original valuation procedure can be illustrated by an example: assume a house with 36 years presently left on the lease, a fixed annual ground rent of £15 and an estimated freehold vacant possession value of £75,000.
The freehold interest in a house occupied by a leasehold tenant is an investment. The freeholder's money is tied up in the ownership of the house and in return he receives a rent. The rent, divided by the value of the interest, is called the yield. This is a similar concept to the interest received on a building society account. The rate of interest an investor receives on his money is also the yield. If building societies are currently offering accounts at 10% per annum, the account yields 10% on the money invested. Investors look at the property interest in much the same way and what they are prepared to pay for them, depends upon the yield they are seeking. From his knowledge and experience of the investment market, the valuer will determine the yield the freeholder could expect to receive for the rent payable under the lease and, by multiplying the rent receivable by the yield for the remaining term of the lease (the "Years Purchase", a figure which can be found from valuation tables) will calculate the value of the freeholder's interest during the term of the lease: for the example the yield is assumed at 7%.
The calculation provides a figure representing compensation to the freeholder for his loss of the rental income over the remaining period of the lease. Therefore £195 is taken as a today's value of the right to receive £15 a year for the next 36 years. It is not correct just to multiply the ground rents by the remaining years of the term.
The next step will be to value the modern ground rent. The whole valuation is carried out at the date of claim and values are not projected forward in time. Therefore the valuer is looking for the value of the land on which the house stands at the date of the Notice of Claim. There is rarely any evidence available of sales of individual plots of land therefore the only way of deciding on the value of the land is to look at it as a percentage of the value of the house. The valuer will have to assess the value of the house on a freehold basis assuming there is vacant possession and, under this basis of valuation, that the house has been developed to its full potential.
Having valued the house the valuer will then use his local knowledge and experience to determine what percentage of that value will be attributable to the cost of the land, the site value. Depending upon the location and nature of the house the percentage is likely to be in the band 30% to 50%. Having arrived at a site value he will then "decapitalise" it, probably using the same yield as for the ground rent, in order to arrive at the modern ground rent.
This rent is then valued as a future income in perpetuity, that is, the value of the site to the landlord is a today's rights to receive the modern ground rent forever but starting at a point in he future, in our example, in 36 years time:
The purchase price for the freehold is, therefore the sum of the values of the term and the reversion;
If the current lease has only a few years to run the original valuation method may be applied slightly differently. As stated above, the calculated modern ground rent is usually valued in perpetuity as the end of the term of the existing lease plus the assured 50 year extension is too remote to give any value to the reversion. However, in cases where the present term is short there may still be value in the reversion at the end of the term and this may be calculated.
Again this can be illustrated: assume the same house as the previous example, having an annual ground rent of £15 and a freehold vacant possession value of £75,000 but this time with only 10 years left on the lease.
The term is valued and the modern ground rent calculated as before but, this time, the modern ground rent is valued not in perpetuity but for the 50 year term and then the reversion calculated at the end of the 60 years (the 10 years remaining on the present lease plus the assumed 50 year extension):
The 1967 Act provides no statutory guidance as to the inclusion or not in the calculation of the value of the tenant's improvements for valuation under the original valuation basis (these are specifically excluded from the special valuation basis).
In the absence of such guidance the inclusion of improvements may make a difference in the estimation of the vacant possession value of the house, from which the site value is assessed. The matter hinges on the assessing of a modern ground rent and the value of the land must be affected by what stands or could stand on it, that is, the value of an average house in the street, or a building appropriate to the area. It is important to understand, when assessing site value, that it is a matter of what could be put onto the site that is relevant, not what stands on it at present. That is, the house a developer would build on the site today, not what he built at the start of the lease.
For example, if all the neighbouring houses have back additions or conservatories but the subject house does not, it would be reasonable to assume that if a house was to be built on the site it would also have the same back addition or conservatory. The valuer has to take the actual or non-existent improvements into account when valuing the house for site value purposes.
Therefore any improvements that have been carried out to the house should be taken into account in relation of what is reasonable for the area. For example, the improvements may comprise the installation of a bathroom and internal WC where none existed before. These would place the house in keeping with the average house in the street, assuming that they have also been brought up to the same standard. (Bear in mind the requirement for a modern ground rent). In this case it would be quite legitimate to include the value of the tenant's improvements in the valuation.
The only way in which tenant's improvements should not be included is where they are of a nature to make the property substantially better than the average.
The Special Valuation Basis (market value)
The alternative method of valuation is rather different and is based on the reality that the freeholder will gain possession of a house and not a cleared site. The method also recognises the leaseholder's special interest in the purchase and this is applied as marriage value to be added to the open market value of the landlord's interest when the long lease expires.
Marriage value is a concept used by valuers, which describes the increase in value which is produced when two interests in the same property, formerly owned by different people, come into the ownership of one person. For example, a house with, say, a 60-year lease may have an open market value of £100,000, where the same house, in the same condition, might be worth £115,00 if it was freehold. So on purchase of the landlord's interest in the house (the freehold), the value of the house would immediately increase from £100,000 to £115,000. Now, assuming the value of the landlord's interest in the freehold is £3,000 then the tenant will, in expending £3,000, make a "profit" of £12,000 from the uplift in value of the house. It is this "profit" which is the marriage value and, in this case, the cost of the freehold would be the £3,000 plus half of the £12,000.
In the calculation of the Marriage Value the leaseholder's and freeholder's valuers will rely on local knowledge and experience to assess the increase in value in the house arising from acquisition of the freehold.
The Act requires that the marriage value should be shared equally between the tenant and the freeholder. No marriage value is payable in cases where the unexpired period of the lease is more than 80 years.
Again, valuation by the special valuation basis can be illustrated by an example:
A house with an unexpired term of 65 years and a rent of £50 a year. Its vacant possession value, with the 65 year lease, is estimated at £120,000.
As in the previous example the future ground rent income is capitalised to produce a value, based on what an investor would be prepared to pay for it.
The yield rate of 7% is the same as used in the previous example although Tribunals are less reluctant to consider higher yields in special valuation basis calculations. In this light it is worth saying a little more about the effect of varying the yield rate.
The valuer will estimate the assumed yield percentage from a close scrutiny of other transactions, particularly local freehold auction prices, calculating back the yield from evidence of what freehold investments have achieved in the open market. In effect the valuer, being able to see from the particulars of auctioned properties the unexpired terms and the ground rents and knowing the prices actually paid, will be able to do the above calculation in reverse producing an indicator of the yield percentage being achieved. It is important in analysing these transactions for the valuer to know the individual circumstances of the sale as the base information obtainable from the auction results may not always provide completely accurate evidence on which to base other calculations. This can lead to disagreement in estimates of yield percentage by opposing valuers working from the same local market information. The yield is a most important element in valuation and one likely to be the subject of difference between the leaseholder's and freeholder's valuers.
It should be borne in mind however that present ground rents are generally low and so their capitalised values are not greatly affected in real terms by the yield rate multiplier. Depending on the length of lease it is the reversionary value which will be subject to the greatest variations according to yield rate.
Unlike the previous method there is now no assumption that the lease will be extended by 50 years. So, on expiry of the lease the freeholder will receive the house with vacant possession and will be able to realise its full value. It is therefore necessary to estimate its freehold vacant possession value, deferred until the end of the existing lease.
It is in the nature of a leasehold tenancy for the value to diminish as the lease expires. Therefore, it can reasonably be assumed that, on acquisition of the freehold, the house will be worth more than it is on its present lease. How much more will be heavily dependent upon the unexpired length of the lease at the time of purchase and its general saleability, there are no hard fast rules for assessing the new value. It is this that the valuer will have to establish, the present leasehold value of the house and the potential freehold value, based on his research into sales of local comparable properties.
Although the valuer's figures are not based on a theoretical uplift in value, this is used as the basis of the example simply to demonstrate the principles.
For the purpose of the example, it is assumed that the acquisition of the freehold will produce an increase in value of 10%.
Improved value £120,000 + 10% = £132,000
A valuer may also account for the leaseholder's right to occupy the property after the lease has ended. The law provides that when a long lease expires the leaseholder can continue to occupy the property, under an assured tenancy, paying a market rent. This right can in some cases reduce the value of the freehold interest. This is ignored for the purpose of this example.
As with the previous example the full present value of the house is deferred to produce an investment value - what is the promise of £132,000 in 65 years time worth today? The multiplier, taken from tables, is applied at the same yield rate used for capitalising the rental income:
The investment value of the freehold - the freeholder's interest - is therefore represented by the sum of the values of the term and the value of the reversion
and is the sum that the interest is likely to achieve in an open market sale.
As described earlier, marriage value is the increase in the value of the property following the completion of the enfranchisement or a lease extension. This reflects the additional market value of a longer lease or the freehold. In that this potential "profit" only arises from the freeholder's compulsion to sell, the legislation requires that it be shared equally between the parties.
Taking the figures from the previous example above:
| the improved value of the property is | £132,000 |
| from this is subtracted: | |
| the leaseholder's present interest | £120,000 |
| and: | |
| the freeholder's interest | £2,329 |
| In this case the Marriage Value is | £9,671 |
With the 50:50 split between the freeholder and the enfranchising leaseholder, the leaseholder would have to pay half this figure - £4,835 - in addition to the value of the freeholder's interest.
In this example it can be seen that marriage value can considerably exceed the value of the freeholder's interest. Its calculation is dependent upon the relative values of the house with its present lease and the house after acquisition of the freehold and, clearly, the lower the gap between these values the lower will be the marriage value. This is an area where the input of a valuer with local knowledge is of paramount importance to both parties in order to provide substantive comparable evidence of the local market and how, if at all, house values will be affected.
As the length of the current lease increases so the difference between its value and the freehold value becomes smaller until eventually the marriage value disappears.
In calculations under the special valuation basis any additional value in the property arising from improvements by the leaseholder should be ignored; the leaseholder should not pay any additional premium in respect of value added by improvements carried out at his own expense, or that of a predecessor to the lease.
The purchase price for the freehold is, therefore, the sum of the values of the freeholder's interest and the agreed share of the marriage value:
It will be obvious from the example the areas for difference between the parties, notably the potential increase in the value of the house after enfranchisement and the proportional division of the marriage value.
The role of the Valuation Surveyor
Given the complexity of the leasehold reform legislation it is important to have good professional advice. A valuer can offer assistance in the following areas:
| i) | to advise on whether the leaseholder qualifies under the Leasehold Reform Act and the basis for valuation |
| ii) | to carry out the valuation |
| iii) | to advise on the possible purchase price, based on experience and preparation of "best and worst case" valuations |
| iv) | to advise on the offer to be made to the freeholder in the Notice of Claim |
| v) | to advise on the response to the freeholder's Counter-Notice |
| vi) | to conduct negotiations with the freeholder on behalf of the leaseholder |
| vii) | to provide expert evidence at the Leasehold Valuation Tribunal |
You would be prudent to consult a valuer who is a qualified surveyor - a fellow or associate of the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors.
Not all surveying practices specialise in this kind of work and you should make careful enquiries relating to the practice's experience of the legislation before proceeding. Advice on local practices can be obtained from the professional body referred to above or from the list of surveyors produced by LEASE.
Summary
1. Qualification Requirements
To be a Qualifying Tenant you must:
* the rural exclusion relates to a house which is within an area designated as a rural area and the freehold of the house is owned together with adjoining land which is not occupied for residential purposes. Information about rural area designation is available from local Leasehold Valuation Tribunals.
Where the tenant of the whole house is a head-lessee of a house divided into flats let on long leases then the tenant (head-lessee) does not qualify unless he lives in a flat in the house and has done so for two years (or periods amounting to two years in the last ten).
2. Long leases
A long lease is:
* The present unexpired term is not relevant, qualification is governed by the original term of the lease when first granted.
How to establish which valuation method should be usedMost houses qualifying under the legislation will be valued according to the Special Valuation Basis, including marriage value.
For the house to be eligible for the Original Valuation Basis (site value) it will need to meet the following qualifications, based on rent and values, plus the further value limit.
1. The original low rent test*
(Your local authority will be able to provide the rateable value details but only a valuation surveyor can advise you on letting values).
* The original low rent test has been abolished for eligibility for right to acquire but still plays a part in setting the means of valuation.
2. Value limits
These are dependent upon when your lease was granted.
if your house first appeared in the rating list before 1 April 1973, its rateable value on 23 March 1965, or on the first date it appeared in the rating list, if later, must not have been more than £400 in Greater London or £200 elsewhere;
or: if the house first appeared in the rating list on or after 1 April 1973: its rateable value on the first day it appeared on the list must not have been more than £1,500 in Greater London or £750 elsewhere.
if your house first appeared in the rating list before 1 April 1973, its rateable value on 23 March 1965, or on the first day it appeared on the rating list, if later, must not have been more than £400 in Greater London or £200 elsewhere.
or: if your house first appeared in the rating list on or after 1 April 1973 its rateable value on the first day it appeared on this list must not have been more than £1,000 in Greater London or £500 elsewhere.
P is the purchase price paid when the lease was granted (if none was paid, P is 0)
I is 0.06
T is the number of years granted by the lease
R must not be greater than £25,000.
Further value limits
Where the house satisfies all of the above qualifications it will qualify under Section 1, but must meet the following further limits to be valued by the Original Valuation Basis: