This was an appeal at the Upper Tribunal (Lands Chamber) (UT) brought by Unite Group PLC against the lower tribunal’s decision to make a RRO against them/the amount of such an award.
Their appeal grounds were:
Dealt with as follows:
On ground 1, Unite did not provide any evidence for this but only relied on the surprise expressed in emails from front line staff at Haringey when Unite applied. The staff were unlikely to have been involved in the designation’s details and policy. That the same staff were surprised was by Unite’s failure to license was not astonishing (§34):
“…the housing team responsible for licensing HMOs were taken aback to receive, three years into the period of the scheme, a request from the appellant to licence 221 HMOs of which the officers had previously been unaware” (our emphasis).
Ground 4 was addressed in relation to the above: had Unite called for a judicial review (JR) of the Additional licensing scheme designation it might then have had evidence for ground 1. But it did not, so had not. It was not the FtT’s suggestion that Unite should have called for a JR years after the event.
Unite had produced no evidence for ground 2 that Haringey’s consultation had been defective in any way, as for ground 1.
On ground 3, UT found that Unite had misinterpreted the FtT judgment which had instead criticised Unite’s “passive approach to its licensing responsibilities”. In a telling aside, UT commented:
“The FTT’s characterisation of the appellant’s case was not inaccurate.” §40
On the cross appeals, we had argued the following in written submissions:
In the end we did not pursue ground 3 and grounds 1 & 4 were refused permission. So it was all down to whether utility payments should have been deducted.
There were 2 legs to this argument:
On the deduction of utilities, UT dismissed our arguments:
- On the lack of evidence for utilities payments, UT relied on its judgment in Acheampong v Roman [2022] UKUT 239 (LC) :
“…if precise figures are not available an experienced tribunal will be able to make an informed estimate.” §20
In its final paragraph of the decision (§80), UT states that
“the statutory direction also necessarily requires that the assessment take account of other relevant circumstances, one of which will often be that the landlord has paid the cost of utilities consumed by the tenant.”
UT did not base its argument s here on law, other than its own judgments, so that
this is probably not the final paragraph on this issue.
In conclusion, the FtT’s judgement is preserved intact. It is difficult to see how a further appeal would be allowed.
Congratulations to my colleague George Penny of 187 Chambers for successfully defending this appeal -and arguing our x-appeals.
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