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15.3 Local Rating List
15.7 Alterations
15.8 Person who can make a proposal
15.1 Valuation Officer
The Valuation Officer is appointed by the Commissioners of the Inland Revenue and is responsible for preparing the local rating list. Crown properties appear in a separate central rating list and the Commissioners also appoint a Central Valuation Officer with responsibility to produce and maintain that list. The Valuation Office has an excellent web site where appeals and rating lists are covered in great detail and you may wish to visit it at http://www.voa.gov.uk/.
15.2 Valuation Officer Powers
The Valuation Officer has the power to serve a notice on any owner or occupier requiring them to supply information to enable him to carry out his duties. If the owner or occupier fails to provide information that is within their knowledge and control, or knowingly provides false information, they may be subject to a fine. The Valuation Officer has the power of entry to conduct a survey and valuation. At least 24 hours notice must be given to the person who controls entry to the property and anyone who delays or obstructs the entry may be subject to a fine.
The first local rating list was compiled with effect from April 1990 and a new list is compiled every five years. The list shows a rateable value for every business property in a billing authority's area. The rateable values reflect the annual rental value of a property and the production of a new list every five years enables changes in the general levels of rents to be reflected in changes in rateable values.
Preparation of a new local rating list is started prior to it coming in to force and therefore the values reflect the situation at an earlier date than when the list comes in to force. For example the list that came into force in April 2000 was based on values as at April 1998 and April 1998 is known as the 'antecedent date'. There are prescribed rules about the contents of the local rating list which include defining which properties should appear and what details of those properties will appear.
15.4 Contents of the Local Rating List
The list must contain an entry for every property that is land, a mine, a right to advertise or a building used wholly or partly for business purposes. The technical name of an entry is a 'hereditament' and the entry must show the description of the 'hereditament' ('Shop', 'Office', 'Factory' etc.), its address, and a unique reference number for the entry.
Some properties have a mixed residential and business use and it is not possible to separately identify those parts for council tax and business rate purposes. Such properties are called 'composite properties. The entry in the local rating list will identify such properties and the rateable value will be assessed on the rental value of the business part only.
15.5 'Every Property'
15.6 Valuation
A local rating list may be altered in prescribed circumstances following a proposal having been made to the Valuation Officer by a person who satisfies a prescribed description. The Valuation Officer will supply a copy of the proposal to the billing authority and if someone other than the ratepayer makes the proposal then a copy will also be supplied to the occupier.
If the Valuation Officer believes the proposal is well founded he will alter the local rating list as soon as practicable. Where the Valuation Officer does not find the proposal well founded it may be settled by agreement or where there is no agreement, will be submitted as an appeal to the Valuation Tribunal. The effective date of any alteration is determined in accordance with prescribed rules.
The occupier, owner, leaseholder or tenant of a property may make a proposal as regards a property. Where the 'person' is a company, a person or company that is a subsidiary of that company may act on their behalf. A proposal may only be made under one or more of prescribed circumstances. A billing authority may also make a proposal for any property in their area but they may only make a proposal under the circumstances covered by items b), d), f) and i) of the prescribed circumstances.
15.9 Form of a proposal
15.10 Proposals - Prescribed Circumstances
15.11 Settled by Agreement
15.12 Effective Date
15.13 Effective date to correct inaccuracies
The effective date to correct an inaccuracy in the list, and amended as the result of a proposal made before October 2000, can be backdated to April 2000. If the proposal was made between October 2000 and March 2001 the amendment can be backdated to no earlier than October 2000 and if the proposal is made after March 2001 the amendment can be backdated to no earlier than the beginning of the year in which the proposal was made.
Where a proposal is made to correct a previous alteration the effective date will be the date the original alteration had effect and if not made as a result of a proposal from April of the year the alteration is made.
15.14 Effective date for changes