Judgment
1 BRYSON J: The plaintiffs challenge a determination by a valuer of the current market rental value of commercial premises on the exercise of an option to renew a lease. The challenge is based on the treatment of Goods and Services Tax (GST). The defendants conduct a Vartex branded Service Station on the leased land at 127-129 Marion Street, Leichhardt at the corner of Edith Street. The plaintiffs as lessors granted to the defendants as lessees a lease of the land for a term of five years from 1 August 1995 to 31 July 2000 with an option to renew for five years. In the schedule to the lease Item 3 showed the yearly rent as $50,868.72. There was no provision for annual market reviews. It is not disputed that the option to renew the lease was duly exercised and that the defendants are entitled to the grant of a lease for five years from 1 August 2000.
2 The Summons claims a declaration that the valuer's determination is not a final and binding determination, an order that it be set aside and an order that the parties instruct the valuer to determine the current market rental pursuant to the lease. The claim for a declaration and the claim to set aside the determination are claims for legal remedies, in the case of the declaratory order for a statutory remedy. The claim for an order requiring the parties to go on with the valuation process is a claim for an equitable remedy, specific performance of part of their obligations on renewal of the lease. If the Court ordered specific performance the order would not be limited to part of their obligations. However there is no indication in the evidence that either party is unwilling to enter into a new lease on whatever may be the proper terms, or that any equitable remedy is necessary.
3 In the lease cl.2.2 deals with Option to Renew and contains the following provisions:
2.2.3 In the event that the Lessee exercises an option to renew this Lease the Lessor will, within 1 month of the date of service of the Option Notice, submit a lease to the Lessee on the same terms and conditions as this Lease except that:-
(a) the provisions of this Clause 2.2 will not appear in such lease;
(b) the rental to be specified in Item 3 of the Reference Schedule to such lease will be such amount as the parties may agree, within 7 days of the date of service of the Option Notice, to be the market rental for the Premises as at the Commencing Date of such lease or, in the absence of agreement by that date, such amount as may be determined to be the market rental for the Premises as at the Commencing Date of such lease in accordance with clause 2.2.4.
2.2.4 If the parties fail to agree, within 7 days of the date of service of the Option Notice, on the amount to be inserted in Item 3 of the reference schedule to such lease, such amount will be the amount determined to be the current market rental for the Premises as at the Commencing Date of such lease by a person agreed upon by the parties within 7 days of the date of service of the Option Notice or, failing agreement, by the President for the time being of the Australian Institute of Valuers and Land Economists (NSW Division) Inc or his nominee in accordance with the following principles:-
(a) the current market rent for the Premises is the rent that, having regard to the terms and conditions of this Lease and such other matters as are relevant to the assessment of current market rent, would be reasonably expected to be paid for the Premises if they were unoccupied and offered for renting for the use to which the Premises may be put in accordance with this Lease;
(b) the value of the goodwill created by the Lessee's occupation and the value of the Lessee's fixtures and fittings in the Premises are to be ignored for the purposes of the assessment of current market rent;
(c) the parties are to pay the costs of a valuation pursuant to this clause in equal shares unless the amount determined to be the current market rent for the Premises equals or exceeds any amount proposed by the Lessor prior to the appointment of such valuer, in which case the Lessee will pay all such costs.
4 The parties did not agree on the rental amount for the new lease and the lessors' solicitors applied to the President of the Australian Institute of Valuers and Land Economists (NSW Division) Inc to appoint a valuer. The President nominated Mr Michael Paris, a certified practising valuer who is a director of Handley Paris & Partners, Property Valuers, Consultants and Land Economists who practise at 36 Clarence Street, Sydney. Mr Paris undertook the determination, and gave the parties an opportunity to make submissions to him; and one party did. Then on 1 September 2000 Mr Paris gave to the parties his determination in writing (Exhibit A, Tab 6).
5 The determination contains six pages. The determination identifies and describes the property and gives particulars of it such as zoning details, particulars of the lease, description of the property and improvements, land dimensions and title details. The determination does not expose on its face the underlying facts such as comparable agreements for leases or other material on which the valuer relied, and does not state any analysis or reasoning showing how the rental as determined was derived. It is not what it has been called in the case law a "speaking valuation".
6 The determination included the following statement:
We have been instructed by letter dated 16 June 2000 from the Australian Property Institute to determine the current market rental value of the "Vartex" branded service station property at 127-129 Marion Street corner Edith Street, Leichhardt NSW 2040, as at the 1st of August 2000 subject to the terms and conditions of the lease. Lessor Salvatore Orti-Tullo and Antonia Orti-Tullo and Lessee Daniel Sadek.
7 At p.6 under the heading "Rental Valuation" appears the following:
We received a letter and verbal submissions from the lessee Daniel Sadek including various letters between the lessor and lessee regarding rent, together with profit and loss statements for the years 1999 and 2000. No submission was received from the lessor.
Details in the submission were noted and the writer carried out independent research to check the information supplied and in addition to the submissions we carried out our own research into fuel throughputs, shop turnovers together with rentals paid for the various components and lease rentals paid for service stations as near as comparable to the subject property.
After having regard to and analysising the relevant market transactions we have determined the market rental.
We are of the opinion that the current market rental value of the subject property at 127-129 Marion Street the corner of Edith Street Leichhardt, taking into account the existing terms and conditions of the current lease as at the 1st of August 2000, is SIXTY THOUSAND DOLLARS ($60,000) PER ANNUM .
We have not sighted an Environmental Audit nor are we aware of any soil contamination which may have affected this property but we reserve the right to amend any report accordingly should the presence of soil contamination be established by soil analysis above standard levels.
This rental valuation is for the use only of the parties to whom it is addressed and no responsibility is accepted by this company to any third party in respect of the whole or part of its contents.
8 The determination also includes a summary in which this appears.
Rental Determination :
In accordance with the foregoing report and after taking into account the terms and conditions of the subject lease we assess the current market rental value of the subject property, as at the 1st of August 2000 at SIXTY HOUSAND DOLLARS ($60,000) PER ANNUM .
9 The determination does not refer to GST. It does not explain in any way how the valuer treated GST, or any other charge or levy.
10 After the determination was made there was correspondence between the solicitors for the parties about the terms of the new lease, and a draft was prepared by the lessor's solicitors. In some way Mr Paris must have been asked how he treated GST in the determination. Whatever it was that led him to deal with this further does not appear by evidence. On 10 November 2000 Mr Paris wrote a letter to the lessors' solicitors (Exhibit A, Tab 14) which, apart from formal parts says no more than this: "We wish to confirm that our rental determination dated 1 August 2000 for the above property did not include Goods and Services Tax (GST)".
11 The lease did not contain any provision dealing in terms with the incidence of taxes levied on or in respect of the premises or the lease. There was no GST legislation when the lease was entered into. The lease was engrossed on a standard form which included cl.4.2 Outgoings Contributions dealing with payment of water sewerage and drainage rates and charges. This clause was struck out at or before execution of the lease. It did not deal with GST, or with land tax, income tax or any other tax. The terms of a clause which the parties did not adopt but struck out have no influence on my decision.
12 A complex scheme of legislation relates to GST, which burdens taxable supplies made on or after 1 July 2000. The basic rules relating to liability for GST are set out in Ch.2 of A New Tax System (Goods and Services Tax) Act 1999. By s.9-10 leasing land for occupation is a supply having regard to subs.2(d) with the definition of "real property" in s.195-1, and to subs.2(e). Section 7-1 imposes GST on taxable supplies and s.9-40 imposes the liability on the supplier. Under s.9-70 the rate is 10 per cent of the value of the taxable supply, and the value is determined by a formula in s.9-75. Instalments of rent collected at the rate of $60,000 per annum will render the lessors liable to payments of GST at the rate of $5,454 per annum so that the rent as determined will yield the lessors $54,545 after GST. The lessors' overall position in relation to GST is probably more complex as they may be entitled to some input credit. The GST levied on the taxable supply becomes an input credit in the lessees' liability for GST which they incur on taxable supplies which they make in their Service Station.
13 Special provision relating to periodic supplies under agreements spanning 1 July 2000 is made by Pt.3 of A New Tax System (Goods and Services Tax Transition) Act 1999. The effect of subs.13(2) with the definition of "review opportunity" in subs.(5) is that rent paid under Mr Paris' determination is not free of GST.
14 As appears from the terms of cl.2.2.4, the amount of rent in the renewed lease is to be the amount determined by the nominee valuer; that is the effect of the parties' agreement. The parties did not agree that the amount of the rent would be what objectively is the current market rent in accordance with the principles stated in subcll.(a) and (b); and a decision of the Court on what the current market rent is on those principles would not establish the parties' rights.
15 As I have said, in my opinion Mr Paris' determination is not a speaking valuation in the sense in which that expression has been used in case law. The expression was used by Lord Denning MR in Arenson v. Arenson [1973] Ch 346 at 363 and in Campbell v. Edwards [1976] 1 WLR 403 at 407, which form parts of a series commencing with Dean v. Prince [1953] Ch 590. If the determination should be read with Mr Paris' letter of 10 November 2000 it still would not be a speaking valuation because the letter does not explain the underlying reasoning. In my opinion the susceptibility of a valuation to review by the Court does not depend on whether it is a speaking valuation: see Horwitz Grahame Books Pty Ltd v. Mid-City Centre Pty Ltd (1990) NSW ConvR 55-514 at 58,843-5. There is a significant body of opinion which does not accept this: authorities to different effect were referred to in Strang Patrick Stevedoring Pty Ltd v. James Patrick & Co. Pty Ltd (1993) 32 NSWLR 538 at 587 and see Ricciardello v. Caltex Oil (Aust.) Pty Ltd [1991] ANZ ConvR 445.
16 The law relating to the examinability of valuations was considered extensively in the judgment of McHugh JA in Legal & General Life of Australia Ltd v. A. Hudson Pty Ltd (1985) 1 NSWLR 314 particularly at 331-336. Although the Legal & General Life case was disposed of on other grounds, both in the Court of Appeal and in the Privy Council (1986) 61 ALJR 280, McHugh JA's judgment has often been referred to and followed. McHugh JA discussed the cases dealing with the concept of a speaking valuation at 332-335.
17 McHugh JA dealt with the significance of a mistake in a valuation at 335D to 336D. His Honour pointed out that the significance of a mistake for legal remedies may differ from its significance for equitable remedies. In the course of a valuable exposition McHugh JA said at 335G:
While mistake or error on the part of the valuer is not by itself sufficient to invalidate the decision or the certificate of valuation, nevertheless, the mistake may be of a kind which shows that the valuation is not in accordance with the contract. A mistake concerning the identity of the premises to be valued could seldom, if ever, comply with the terms of the agreement between the parties. But a valuation which is a result of the mistaken application of the principles of valuation may still be made in accordance with the terms of the agreement. In each case the critical question must always be: was the valuation made in accordance with the terms of a contract? If it is, it is nothing to the point that the valuation may have proceeded on the basis of error or that it constitutes a gross over or under value. Nor is it relevant that the valuer has taken into consideration matters which he should not have taken into account or has failed to take into account matters which he should have taken into account. The question is not whether there is an error in the discretionary judgment of the valuer. It is whether the valuation complies with the terms of the contract.
18 In Holt & Anor v. Cox (1997) 23 ACSR 590 the decision of the Court of Appeal proceeded on the basis that the law is as stated by McHugh JA in Legal & General Life at 335-336. It was common ground between the parties that it should: see Mason P at 595; but the Court of Appeal lent its authority to the concession. It appears from the leading judgment delivered by Mason P that the majority approved of the law as stated by McHugh JA, although Mason P emphasised (at 596-597) that it is the task of the Court to classify the mistake which is brought to its attention and said "As Sir Frederick Jordan once reminded us, 'there are mistakes and mistakes' …". Mason P referred (at 596) to the operation of judicial restraint but did not depart from the grounding in the parties' contract which McHugh JA gave for the limits of the Court's powers. Cole JA, who dissented, also cited McHugh JA's judgment with approval. See too in Western Australia WMC Resources Ltd v. Leighton Contractors Pty Ltd (1999) 20 WAR 489 and in Victoria Commonwealth of Australia v. Wawbe Pty Ltd (1999) ANZ ConvR 597.
19 The lease does not expressly provide to the effect that the determination of the valuer is to be final and binding upon the parties, but the intention that it should be so clearly appears from the terms of cl.2.2.3. Words such as "final and binding" would be superfluous when the parties have expressly stated in cl.2.2.3 that the amount determined under cl.2.2.4 is to be the amount specified in the Reference Schedule of their new lease. See Holt v. Cox at 605.
20 Central to the plaintiffs' argument is formulation of the mistake on which the attack on the valuation is based. In his written submissions counsel said that the question is whether the valuer assessed the current market rent for the premises as at 1 August 2000 in accordance with cl.2.2.4 of the Lease. Counsel there said that the valuer's rental determination was exclusive of GST or, to put it slightly differently, did not allow for the impact of GST on the lessors. It was also said that the overall result for the parties of the rental determination is that the lessors will receive $54,545 as rent, the lessees will pay $60,000 as rent and receive an input tax credit of $5,454; and counsel contended that this demonstrates that the valuer failed to determine the current market rent for the premises in accordance with cl.2.2.4.
21 Counsel's written submissions continued:
His valuation ($60,000) could not be the current market rent that having regard to the terms and conditions of the lease would be reasonably expected to be paid by a willing lessee to a willing lessor for the premises if they were unoccupied when the lessor would be liable to pay GST on that sum without recovery from the lessee who would, nonetheless, derive the benefit of an input tax credit. It is clear that the valuer had no regard to the terms and conditions of the lease as they would operate in a GST setting or to the impact of the GST on the lessors' supply of real property to lessees for consideration on and after 1 August 2000. His valuation was based on a state of affairs which no longer existed, i.e, where there was no GST legislation. That old state of affairs no longer constituted the market in which lessors and lessees negotiated with respect to the letting of commercial premises. As a matter of common sense, his valuation could not be the 'current market rent'.