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The Residential Property Tribunal Service (or RPTS) was an administrative organisation which provided support for three statutory tribunals and five regional rent assessment panels in England, all of which make decisions on residential property matters. [1] Its tribunals were replaced by the First-tier Tribunal from 1 July 2013, [2] by the ...
Rent Repayment Orders are not obtained through the court's system but through a Residential Property Tribunal. Housing academic David Cowan writing in Housing Law and Policy cites the case Newham London Borough Council v Ring to demonstrate that a local authority can use a rent repayment order to reclaim housing benefit. [5]
Rent assessment committees still exist in Wales, as part of the Residential Property Tribunal Wales. It consists of two or three tribunal members, [10] and operates under the provisions of the Rent Act 1977, hearing appeals from a landlord or tenant on the decisions of the local council rent officer on whether the rent charged is fair. [11]
Special Educational Needs Tribunal for Wales; Residential Property Tribunal for Wales; Welsh Language Tribunal - deal with appeals against decisions by the Welsh Language Commissioner in relation to Welsh Language Standards. [9] The Valuation Tribunal for Wales is self-administered. [10]
This is a list of judgments given by the Supreme Court of the United Kingdom between the court's inception on 1 October 2009 and the most recent judgments. Cases are listed in order of their neutral citation and where possible a link to the official text of the decision in PDF format has been provided.
The Residential Property Tribunal Wales (RPTW) is a collective of tribunals sponsored by the Welsh Government that deal with disputes related to housing and residential property. [ 1 ] It was established by the Housing Act 2004 and also has powers under the Mobile Homes Act 1983 and Rent Act 1977 .
Other types of tribunal decisions might result in the allowance or disallowance of a benefit, leave or refusal to stay in the UK, or about the provision of special educational help for school-age children. The ordinary courts enforce tribunal decisions in cases of difficulty, and tribunals do not usually hold funds or order deposits. [25]
The composition of the Tribunal will depend on from which First-tier Chamber it is hearing an appeal from. For instance: [4] Housing and Property Chamber appeals can be heard by a single sheriff; Tax chamber appeals can be heard by a single legal member; It may share members with the First-tier Tribunal for Scotland. [6]