The SDLT burden on shared ownership trusts was reduced in
the recent Budget. Laurence Target explains why this should
make them a more attractive form of shared ownership.
Affordable housing has been
boosted by Gordon Brown’s
Budget opening up commonhold
as a realistic option for the
development of mixed private and
social housing by reducing the stamp
duty (SDLT) burden.
Those who cannot afford to buy a
home outright and wish to buy a share in
a property through a shared ownership
trust will benefit from the tax break
announced in the Budget which allows
owners to pay SDLT incrementally – on
the first of the series of transactions and
then only on the balance that takes the
owner over an 80% holding.
The shared ownership trust allows a
joint owner to increase their share in the
property. This break on stamp duty
could make all the difference to a low
income family’s ability to be able to
afford their home and has removed a
major obstacle to commonholds.
Previously the unintentional burden
of SDLT that fell on shared ownership
trusts, but not the traditional shared
ownership lease, was viewed by some
as a disadvantage of the trust model.
Without a suitable comparator to shared
ownership leases, commonhold would
have struggled to find an even playing
field. Trowers & Hamlins has recently
worked with the Housing Corporation
and the government to secure a provision
in this year’s Finance Bill to
harmonise the SDLT treatment of shared
ownership, whether delivered by a lease
or a trust.
Background
Commonhold arrived in 2004 but was not
the property big bang many hoped for.
Was this simply because of the imagined
problem of delivering shared ownership?
Perhaps not – certainly while leases still
sell, developers and their advisers may
see no benefit in commonhold, preferring
to stick with the familiar. Finding a way to
deliver shared ownership within commonhold
has been critical though to
enable commonhold to deliver all it
promised. Registered social landlords
(RSL) in particular can use commonhold
to deliver housing policy objectives –
developing responsible and sustainable
communities in good quality housing.
Leases – familiar but flawed
Shared ownership has been central to
enable a wider socio-economic sector to
enjoy home ownership. Long leases are
the most common form – but leases are
far from perfect for owner occupation,
particularly of housing. The problems
(wasting assets vulnerable to forfeiture,
the lack of standard terms, etc) are
widely known.
The commonhold solution
Commonhold units are freeholds (so no
wasting asset or forfeiture to worry about)
and, with standard documentation
employed, eventually transaction costs
should be reduced. Moreover, commonhold
obligations bind successive unitholders;
it is altogether a more inclusive
arrangement for property management.
Only unit-holders can be members of the
commonhold association. The directors
are chosen by, and owe their duties to, the
unit-holders. The directors will consult on
services provision/cost (the assessment)
but their decision is final.
A bar to shared ownership?
There is a bar on granting out of a commonhold
unit residential leases for a
term of more than seven years. This rule applies to shared ownership leases as
well as leases granted on the open
market. No exception was made for
shared ownership leases. Had it been,
all the problems commonhold was
developed to avoid would have been reintroduced.
A solution was needed that
did not need a lease that achieved the
principal objectives of a shared ownership
lease.
Key features of shared ownership leases
The shared ownership lease is specialist,
and relatively uncommon – it is
restricted to social housing. Its key features
are:
(1) The landlord – an RSL – grants a
long lease to a tenant for a premium
that is only a part of the capital
value of the property.
(2) The tenant pays rent calculated by
reference to the difference between
the premium paid and the market
value.
(3) The tenant may ‘staircase’, ie pay
further premiums in exchange for
reductions in rent – and if the property
is a house, may buy the
reversion having staircased up to
100% of the original market premium.
‘Shared ownership lease’ is therefore
something of a misnomer. The RSL
owns the reversion and the tenant owns
the term. Many of the problems with
leases still apply.
Tenants will still need to borrow to
fund the capital payment on commercial
terms. The lender will need security. It is
obvious that these are not the best borrowers,
and the costs of the increased risk
must be met somehow. To encourage
commercial lenders, shared ownership
arrangements typically give the commercial
lender first rights to use the RSL
landlord’s share in the property if the
tenant (borrower) does not keep up their
payments under the commercial mortgage.
Despite that, many lenders are still
reluctant to lend on the security of shared
ownership leases.
Conventional trusts of land
Trusts of land are well-established in
English law. They are flexible, secure,
and resilient. Interests under them are
well protected. They are used in vast
property holdings, as well as for modest
homes.
All cases of co-ownership (eg
spouses or civil partners who own their
homes together) are trusts of land. The
trust of land for co-owners is genuine
shared ownership of a single asset,
unlike the division of ownership in separate
legal estates with interrelated
rights and promises involved with
shared ownership leases.
Trusts need not be complex. Usually
where couples own their homes
together the trusts that arise by implication
from co-ownership itself are
perfectly acceptable. Of course good
solicitors will recommend an express
declaration of trust deed and not rely on
implication. Even such a deed need not
have to be complicated.
In a trust of land the legal estate may
be vested in up to four persons, who
necessarily hold the property as joint
tenants at law. Beneficially, in equity, the
property may be:
• held as joint tenants, which means
that on the death of the penultimate of the co-owners the property is
held for the survivor absolutely; or
• held as tenants in common, meaning
that on the death of any
co-owner their share passes to their
estate.
Trusts of land and social housing
While an RSL and shared owner clearly
could not be joint tenants, they could
co-own as tenants in common – creating
what used to be called ‘a tradesmen’s
trust’. It would be simple enough to
record the amount of each co-owner’s
share in a professionally drafted declaration
of trust (otherwise the position
would necessitate working out who
contributed what to acquire the property,
a matter often litigated absent an
express statement). Other matters for
the trust deed would include:
Identity of the trustees
Most obviously, the trustees should be
the RSL and the occupant. Each should
be able to appoint up to two trustees,
and to remove any whom they have
appointed. Each party’s lenders would
want similar rights. There should also
be provision for the replacement of
trustees.
Dealings with the property
This should need concurrence of all the
trustees. Each trustee should be on the
registered title as owner (subject to the
limitation to four named persons).
The RSL’s return on its capital
This should be equivalent to the rent
that it would charge under a shared
ownership lease.
The occupant’s right to buy a greater ‘share’
The occupant may have the option to
buy part or all of the share of the RSL in
the property. The deed should prescribe
how such shares will be valued.
The circumstances in which a sale will be required
The trust of land creates a trust for sale –
the land is to be sold unless the trustees
exercise their power to postpone the
sale. Clearly the RSL and the occupant
want the power exercised to provide a
home for the occupant. The right to
require sale must be carefully regulated.
Under s14 Trusts of Land and Appointment
of Trustees Act 1996 (TOLATA)
the courts have power to regulate the
way trustees perform their functions,
and that includes making any decision
to sell the property.
The RSL’s return on capital
Section 13 of TOLATA created a statutory
framework for what happens when
one beneficiary occupies trust land but
the others do not. It allows the trustees
to require payment of what is usually
called an occupation rent. It is not technically
rent, but performs the same
function. The beneficiary who is not
occupying gets an income to make up
for their not occupying, the equivalent
of rent on their share in the property.
The trust deed should set out the way to
calculate this occupation rent, including
provisions for revaluations of the
property and the shares of the occupant
and the RSL. (Shared ownership leases
only require revaluation when staircasing
takes place. RSLs use housing
subsidy to achieve below market rent
levels, and so want to keep to a minimum
any increases in the occupation
rent under the trust.) Revaluations on
staircasings enable the RSL to recalculate
the share on which the occupation
rent will be charged which, coupled
with automatic RPI-based increases,
will be a way of delivering this.
Staircasing
It is easier for a trust deed to include
more flexible options for staircasing than
shared ownership leases. Transaction
costs are low – really just those of recording
the transaction – so the amounts by
which the occupant’s share in the trust
fund can be increased do not have to be
restricted to large shares in the property
– often 25% under shared ownership
leases. RSLs want to encourage staircasing,
and so will hardly mind if an
occupant wants to exercise an option to
buy more than twenty-one years after it
was granted.
It should be possible to construct
staircasing merely as part of the way of
calculating the respective interests of the
occupant and the RSL as beneficiaries
under the trust, and so even this technical
difficulty from the little-loved
Perpetuities and Accumulations Act
1964 can be circumvented.
Using trusts as a route to shared ownership
in social housing does not require
new law. Trust law is well established. It
is flexible. While trust law is predominantly
judge-made rather than statutory, two statutes, though, do effectively regulate
trusts of land: the Trustee Act 1925
and TOLATA. This statutory framework
provides a robust default position where
there is no express provision in the
declaration of trust.
Even playing field for SDLT
The Budget move extends to shared
ownership trusts the beneficial treatment
of SDLT available to staged
purchases of shared ownership properties
brought through long leases.
Acceptable security?
The interests of each of the occupants and
the RSL under the trust could be used
as mortgage security, although because
they are equitable interests the mortgages
would be equitable mortgages. Equitable
mortgagees would still be protected – by
notice to the trustees under ss136 and 137
Law of Property Act 1925, by using the
right to appoint trustees (see above), and
by using restrictions in Land Registry
Form N.
RSLs’ lenders are legally and financially
sophisticated, and have good
enough legal advice, to understand the
protections and rights given, and to operate
them safely – it has the same essential
structure as a securitisation. It is as
good for lenders to the occupant, and
they ought to be able to put such procedures
in place.
High street lenders may, however, find
a legal mortgage more reassuring, and
may prefer to keep to one simple set of
security mechanisms than to risk too
much complexity with high street delivery,
and so prefer a legal mortgage over
the whole of the trustees’ commonhold
interest to secure a specified debt (plus
interest and costs). Acknowledging no
recourse to the RSL itself may be the preferred
structure. Because their interests
are at the same risk as with mortgages of
shared ownership leases, this should be
acceptable to RSLs.
The shared ownership trust is a
relationship of shared ownership, not of
landlord and tenant. Both occupants
and RSLs will have to think differently.
They will be trustees who both have to
behave as responsible owners, taking
decisions in a trustee-like manner. They
will have to consult, and both will have
to act in the interests of the beneficiaries
as a whole, giving weight to their
respective interests in the trust fund, the
property. It should be a better and more
equal relationship.
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