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Use Not Appearance Determines Whether Property Qualifies as a House

Published 18 October 2012, 13:37

The meaning of the word 'house' has been the subject of legal debate on many occasions. Many of these disputes have had their origin in the Leasehold Reform Act 1967, the act that gives leaseholders the right to buy the freeholds of their properties in certain circumstances.

Academy of expertsThe Supreme Court has recently ruled on whether two properties originally built as houses but now used for commercial purposes (in one case as an 'aparthotel' and in the other as a solicitors' office) are houses for the purpose of the Act.

Under the Act, for the leaseholder to apply for 'enfranchisement' (the right to buy the freehold), the property must be 'designed or adapted for living in'.

The Court ruled that in the case of the self-catering hotel, the building was not to be regarded as a house on the basis that it was used for wholly commercial purposes. A place that allows short-term occupation cannot be said to be a place that is 'lived in'.

Similarly, a building that is used for commercial purposes as offices is not a house, but an office, no matter what the superficial appearance of it may be.

In both decisions, the Court put weight on the use to which the building was put when the enfranchisement application was commenced.