xmlns:atom="http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom"

Statutory Instruments

1994 No. 2680

RATING AND VALUATION

The Valuation for Rating (Plant and Machinery) Regulations 1994

Made

16th October 1994

Laid before Parliament

21st October 1994

Coming into force

1st April 1995

The Secretary of State for the Environment, as respects England, and the Secretary of State for Wales, as respects Wales, in exercise of the powers conferred on them by section 143(2) of, and paragraph 2(8) of Schedule 6 to, the Local Government Finance Act 1988(1)), and of all other powers enabling them in that behalf, hereby make the following Regulations:

1.  These Regulations may be cited as the Valuation for Rating (Plant and Machinery) Regulations 1994 and shall come into force on 1st April 1995.

2.  For the purpose of determining the rateable value of a hereditament for any day on or after 1st April 1995, in applying the provisions of sub-paragraphs (1) to (7) of paragraph 2 of Schedule 6 to the Local Government Finance Act 1988–

(a)in relation to a hereditament in or on which there is plant or machinery which belongs to any of the classes set out in the Schedule to these Regulations, the prescribed assumptions are that:

(i)any such plant or machinery is part of the hereditament; and

(ii)the value of any other plant and machinery has no effect on the rent to be estimated as required by paragraph 2(1); and

(b)in relation to any other hereditament, the prescribed assumption is that the value of any plant or machinery has no effect on the rent to be so estimated.

3.  The valuation officer shall, on being so required in writing by the occupier of any hereditament, supply to him particulars in writing showing what plant and machinery, or whether any particular plant or machinery, has been assumed in pursuance of regulation 2(a) to form part of the hereditament.

4.—(1) Subject to paragraph (2), the Valuation for Rating (Plant and Machinery) Regulations 1989((2)) are revoked.

(2) The Valuation for Rating (Plant and Machinery) Regulations 1989 shall continue to have effect for the purpose of determining the rateable value of a hereditament for any day before 1st April 1995.

Signed by authority of the Secretary of State

David Curry

Minister of State,

Department of the Environment

14th October 1994

John Redwood

Secretary of State for Wales

16th October 1994

Regulation 2

SCHEDULECLASSES OF PLANT AND MACHINERY TO BE ASSUMED TO BE PART OF THE HEREDITAMENT

CLASS 1

Plant and machinery specified in Table 1 below (together with any of the appliances and structures accessory to such plant or machinery and specified in the List of Accessories set out below) which is used or intended to be used mainly or exclusively in connection with the generation, storage, primary transformation or main transmission of power in or on the hereditament.

In this Class–

(a)“transformer” means any plant which changes the pressure or frequency or form of current of electrical power to another pressure or frequency or form of current, except any such plant which forms an integral part of an item of plant or machinery in or on the hereditament for manufacturing operations or trade processes;

(b)“primary transformation of power” means any transformation of electrical power by means of a transformer at any point in the main transmission of power; and

(c)“main transmission of power” means all transmission of power from the generating plant or point of supply in or on the hereditament up to and including–

(i)in the case of electrical power, the first distribution board;

(ii)in the case of transmission by shafting or wheels, any shaft or wheel driven directly from the prime mover;

(iii)in the case of hydraulic or pneumatic power, the point where the main supply ceases, excluding any branch service piping connected with such main supply;

(iv)in a case where, without otherwise passing beyond the limits of the main transmission of power, power is transmitted to another hereditament, the point at which the power passes from the hereditament.

TABLE 1

(a)Steam boilers (including their settings) and chimneys, flues and dust or grit catchers used in connection with such boilers; furnaces; mechanical stokers; injectors, jets, burners and nozzles; superheaters; feed water pumps and heaters; economisers; accumulators; deaerators; blow-off tanks; gas retorts and charging apparatus, producers and generators.

(b)Steam engines; steam turbines; gas turbines; internal combustion engines; hot-air engines; barring engines.

(c)Continuous and alternating current dynamos; couplings to engines and turbines; field exciter gear; three-wire or phase balancers.

(d)Storage batteries, with stands and insulators, regulating switches, boosters and connections forming part thereof.

(e)Static transformers; auto transformers; motor generators; motor converters; rotary converters; transverters; rectifiers; phase converters; frequency changers.

(f)Cables and conductors; switchboards, distribution boards, control panels and all switchgear and other apparatus thereon.

(g)Water wheels; water turbines; rams; governor engines; penstocks; spillways; surge tanks; conduits; flumes; sluice gates.

(h)Pumping engines for hydraulic power; hydraulic engines; hydraulic intensifiers; hydraulic accumulators.

(i)Air compressors; compressed air engines.

(j)Windmills.

(k)Shafting, couplings, clutches, worm-gear, pulleys and wheels.

(l)Steam or other motors which are used or intended to be used mainly or exclusively for driving any of the plant and machinery falling within this Class.

(m)Aero-generators; wind turbines.

(n)Solar cells; solar panels.

CLASS 2

Plant and machinery specified in Table 2 below (together with the appliances and structures accessory to such plant or machinery and specified in paragraph 2 of the List of Accessories set out below) which is used or intended to be used mainly or exclusively in connection with services to the land or buildings of which the hereditament consists, other than any such plant or machinery which is in or on the hereditament and is used or intended to be used in connection with services mainly or exclusively as part of manufacturing operations or trade processes.

In this Class, “services” means heating, cooling, ventilating, lighting, draining or supplying of water and protection from trespass, criminal damage, theft, fire or other hazard.

TABLE 2

(a)GENERAL

Any of the plant and machinery specified in Table 1 and any motors which are used or intended to be used mainly or exclusively for driving any of the plant and machinery falling within paragraphs (b) to (f) of this Table.

(b)HEATING, COOLING AND VENTILATING

(i)Water heaters.

(ii)Headers and manifolds; steam pressure reducing valves; calorifiers; radiators; heating panels; hot-air furnaces with distributing ducts and gratings.

(iii)Gas pressure regulators; gas burners; gas heaters and radiators and the flues and chimneys used in connection therewith.

(iv)Plug-sockets and other outlets; electric heaters.

(v)Refrigerating machines.

(vi)Water screens; water jets.

(vii)Fans and blowers.

(viii)Air intakes, channels, ducts, gratings, louvres and outlets.

(ix)Plant for filtering, washing, drying, warming, cooling, humidifying, deodorising and -perfuming, and for the chemical and bacteriological treatment of air.

(x)Pipes and coils when used for causing or assisting air movement.

(c)LIGHTING

(i)Gas pressure regulators; gas burners.

(ii)Plug-sockets and other outlets; electric lamps.

(d)DRAINING

Pumps and other lifting apparatus; tanks; screens; sewage treatment plant and machinery.

(e)SUPPLYING WATER

Pumps and other water-lifting apparatus; sluice-gates; tanks, filters and other plant and machinery for the storage and treatment of water.

(f)PROTECTION FROM HAZARDS

Tanks; lagoons; reservoirs; pumps, hydrants and monitors; fire alarm systems; fire and explosion protection and suppression systems; bunds; blast protection walls; berms; lightning conductors; security and alarm systems; ditches; moats; mounds; barriers; doors; gates; turnstiles; shutters; grilles; fences.

LIST OF ACCESSORIES

1.  Any of the following plant and machinery which is used or intended to be used mainly or exclusively in connection with the handling, preparing or storing of fuel required for the generation or storage of power in or on the hereditament–

2.  Any of the following plant and machinery which is used or intended to be used mainly or exclusively as part of or in connection with or as an accessory to any of the plant and machinery falling within Class 1 or Class 2–

(i)foundations, settings, gantries, supports, platforms and stagings for plant and machinery;

(ii)steam-condensing plant, compressors, exhausters, storage cylinders and vessels, fans, pumps and ejectors; ash-handling apparatus;

(iii)travellers and cranes;

(iv)oiling systems; earthing systems; cooling systems;

(v)pipes, ducts, valves, traps, separators, filters, coolers, screens, purifying and other treatment apparatus, evaporators, tanks, exhaust boxes and silencers, washers, scrubbers, condensers, air heaters and air saturators;

(vi)shafting supports, belts, ropes and chains;

(vii)cables, conductors, wires, pipes, tubes, conduits, casings, poles, supports, insulators, joint boxes and end boxes;

(viii)instruments and apparatus attached to the plant and machinery, including computers, meters gauges, measuring and recording instruments, automatic or programmed controls, temperature indicators, alarms and relays.

CLASS 3

The following items—

(a)railway and tramway lines and tracks and associated fixed accessories and equipment;

(b)lifts, elevators, hoists, escalators and travelators;

(c)cables, wires and conductors, or any system of such items, used or intended to be used in connection with the transmission, distribution or supply of electricity other than such items or parts of such items which are comprised in the equipment of and are situated within premises;

(d)poles, posts, pylons, towers, pipes, ducts, conduits, meters, switchgear and transformers, and any associated supports and foundations, used or intended to be used in connection with any of the items included in (c) above;

(e)cables, fibres, wires and conductors, or any system of such items, or any part of such items or such system, used or intended to be used in connection with the transmission of communications signals, and which are comprised in the equipment of and are situated within premises;

In this paragraph

(i)“premises” means any hereditament which is used, or intended to be used, mainly or exclusively for the processing or the transmission of communications signals excluding any part of such a hereditament within which there is equipment used mainly for the processing of communications signals;

(ii)“processing of communications signals” means the conversion of one form of communications signal to another form or the routing of communications signals by switching; and

(iii)“equipment used mainly for the processing of communications signals” includes:

(f)poles, posts, towers, masts, mast radiators, pipes, ducts and conduits, and any associated supports and foundations, used or intended to be used in connection with any of the items included within (e) above;

(g)a pipe-line, that is to say, a pipe or system of pipes and associated fixed accessories and equipment for the conveyance of any thing, not being–

(i)a drain or sewer; or

(ii)a pipe-line which forms part of the equipment of, and is wholly situated within, relevant premises;

and where a pipe-line forms part of the equipment of, and is situated partly within and partly outside, relevant premises, excluding–

(iii)in the case of a pipe-line for the conveyance of any thing to the premises, so much of the pipe-line as extends from the first control valve on the premises; and

(iv)in the case of a pipe-line for the conveyance of any thing away from the premises, so much of the pipe-line as extends up to the last control valve on the premises;

but not excluding so much of the pipe-line as comprises the first or, as the case may be, last, control valve.

In this paragraph, “relevant premises” means a factory or petroleum storage depot, a mine, quarry or mineral field or a natural gas storage or processing facility or gas holder site. For this purpose–

(a)“factory” has the same meaning as in the Factories Act 1961((3));

(b)“mine” and “quarry” have the same meanings as in the Mines and Quarries Act 1954((4));

(c)“mineral field” means an area comprising an excavation being a well or bore-hole or a well and bore-hole combined, or a system of such excavations, used for the purpose of pumping or raising brine or oil or extracting natural or landfill gas, and so much of the surface (including buildings, structures and works thereon) surrounding or adjacent to the excavation or system as is occupied, together with the excavation or system, for the purpose of the working of the excavation or system;

(d)“petroleum storage depot” means premises used primarily for the storage of petroleum or petroleum products (including chemicals derived from petroleum) or of materials used in the manufacture of petroleum products (including chemicals derived from petroleum).

CLASS 4

The items specified in Tables 3 and 4 below, except–

(a)any such item which is not, and is not in the nature of, a building or structure;

(b)any part of any such item which does not form an integral part of such item as a building or structure or as being in the nature of a building or structure;

(c)so much of any refractory or other lining forming part of any plant or machinery as is customarily renewed by reason of normal use at intervals of less than fifty weeks;

(d)any item in Table 4 the total cubic capacity of which (measured externally and excluding foundations, settings, supports and anything which is not an integral part of the item) does not exceed four hundred cubic metres and which is readily capable of being moved from one site and re-erected in its original state on another without the substantial demolition of any surrounding structure.

TABLE 3

TABLE 4

Explanatory Note

(This note is not part of the Regulations)

These Regulations revoke with effect from 1st April 1995 the Valuation for Rating (Plant and Machinery) Regulations 1989 and replace them with provisions reflecting the recommendations contained in the Report of the Expert Advisory Committee chaired by Mr Derek Wood QC (Cm 2170). The Committee reviewed the rating of plant and machinery with a view to updating and harmonising it throughout the United Kingdom. The Regulations specify the plant and machinery which is to be assumed from 1st April 1995 to be part of a hereditament for the purposes of valuation for non-domestic rating.

These Regulations apply irrespective of the method of valuation adopted.

(1)

1988 c. 41. Paragraph 2(8) of Schedule 6 was amended by paragraph 38(8) of Schedule 5 to the Local Government and Housing Act 1989 (c. 42).Seesection 146(6) for the definition of “prescribed”.

(2)

S.I. 1989/441.