A Court of Appeal decision suggests there is now more
flexibility for the occupation of houses subject to an agricultural occupancy
restriction than previously thought.
This could have implications on those who may now qualify to
legally live in such a property and in turn have a positive impact on its value.
The appeal in
the case of Shortt v Secretary of State (2015) concerned the meaning of “dependants” in an
agricultural occupancy condition attached to a planning permission of the
property in which the Shortt family lived.
The
condition stated: “The occupation of the dwelling shall be limited to persons
employed or last employed solely or mainly and locally in agriculture as
defined by Section 290(1) of the Town and Country Planning Act, 1971, or in
forestry and the dependants (which shall be taken to include a widow or
widower) of such persons.”
The farm
was run by Mrs Shortt, but her husband had an independent business which in
practice supported the farm. In reality Mrs Shortt spent less than a day per
week on the farm which had never made a profit.
It was
therefore questioned whether the family’s occupation of the property complied
with the agricultural occupancy condition, as the husband and children were not
financially dependent on Mrs Shortt as an agricultural worker.
However,
the Planning Court and Court of Appeal decided the family’s occupation did
comply with the agricultural occupancy condition. This was on the basis that the reference to
dependency in the planning condition did not have to mean financial dependency
- the support provided to the family as a wife and mother meant that the
agricultural occupancy condition was complied with.
On the face
of it this may open up the possibility of properties subject to such a
condition being sold on the open market to a much wider cohort of society than
has been the case before, which in turn may increase the value of these
properties.
Conventionally
it has been considered that because of the occupancy restriction, such a
property would be worth about 30 per cent less than a similar property without
such a restriction. This level of discount may now be brought into question.
However, this could be a double edged sword as in some
instances the owners of such properties look to get the tie lifted on the
grounds there is no longer any demand for the property subject to the tie. But if the potential qualifying occupiers of
the property are now rather more widely cast, it may be increasingly difficult
to prove that demand no longer exists.
We will have to wait and see how the market interprets this
new case law before we can detect its full impact on the type of people legally
living in agriculturally tied property and the value of the property itself.
James Stephen MRICS FAAV
Partner
Rural Practice Chartered Surveyor, Wells
T: 01749 683381
E: james.stephen@carterjonas.co.uk
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