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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Eyre & Ors v McCracken [2000] EWCA Civ 501 (10 March 2000) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2000/501.html Cite as: (2000) 80 P & CR 220, [2000] L & TR 411, (2001) 33 HLR 16, [2000] EWCA Civ 501 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE CENTRAL LONDON COUNTY COURT
(HIS HONOUR JUDGE LEVY QC)
The Strand London |
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B e f o r e :
and
LADY JUSTICE HALE
B E T W E E N:
____________________
(1) CHARLES GEORGE SAMUEL EYRE (2) JAMES HENRY ROBERT EYRE (3) PETER LOMAS (4) HUGH JOHN LOMAS (as Trustees of the Eyre Estate) |
Respondents/Claimants |
|
and |
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ROBERT McCRACKEN |
Appellant/Defendant |
____________________
Smith Bernal, 180 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2HD
Telephone 0171 421 4040
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
ORG) appeared on behalf of THE APPELLANT
MR KIRK REYNOLDS QC and MR W HANSEN (instructed by Messrs Lee
Pemberton, London SW1X OBX) appeared on behalf of THE RESPONDENTS
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Crown Copyright ©
Friday 10 March 2000
"To put the premises .... in good and substantial repair and condition"
"The house was built with no damp-proof course at all. It was built on a shallow foundation and there was no evidence that the damp-proof course was inserted before the tenant did something himself after he took the lease. The building dated back from 1841. There were no trial bore holes. It was common ground that in the early years of the century, when the house was built, the heating from the ground floor up may well have stopped damp from coming into the property, which no longer applies with so-called modern methods of heating. Bricks suck up hydroscopic salt and attract moisture from damp atmospheres, and salt present in the wall draws in the moisture from the building. The rising damp is compounded by salt. The construction of the time probably led to the problem, and modern buildings on clay subsoils, as has this property, have foundations 1.2 metres below the surface, and if there is a tree in the vicinity, as there is in this property, much further below. It was also accepted that similar problems had arisen in two houses in Clifton Hill.
As I may have already said, it was also accepted by Mr Hanlon that if a modern damp-proof course was now put in the building, it might add a very long lease of life to it which would not otherwise be the case."
"It seems to me that the correct approach is to look at the particular building, to look at the state which it is in at the date of the lease, to look at the precise terms of the lease, and then come to a conclusion as to whether, on a fair interpretation of those terms in relation to that state, the requisite work can fairly be termed repair. However large the covenant it must not be looked at in vacuo. (Sachs LJ's emphasis)
Quite clearly this approach involves in every instance a question of degree...."
"Thus the exercise involves considering the context in which the word 'repair' appears in a particular lease and also the defect and remedial works proposed. Accordingly, the circumstances to be taken into account in a particular case under one or other of these heads will include some or all of the following: the nature of the building, the terms of the lease, the state of the building at the date of the lease, the nature and extent of the defect sought to be remedied, the nature, extent, and cost of the proposed remedial works, at whose expense the proposed remedial works are to be done, the value of the building and its expected lifespan, the effect of the works on such value and lifespan, current building practice, the likelihood of a recurrence if one remedy rather than another is adopted, the comparative cost of alternative remedial work and their impact on the use and enjoyment of the building by the occupants. The weight to be attached to these circumstances will vary from case to case.
This is not a comprehensive list. In some cases there will be other matters properly to be taken into account."
"The first question which arises in this case is what was the nature of the obligation to repair. In order to ascertain that, it is first necessary to consider the nature of the premises which had to be repaired under the covenant. I think that, for the purposes of this case, the principle which has never been doubted, is to be found stated in a short passage in a judgment of Lord Esher, MR, in Lister v Lane & Nesham. That is a case which has been subsequently followed and approved in Lurcott v Wakely & Wheeler. In Lister v Lane & Nesham, after reviewing the earlier authorities, Lord Esher, MR, who was speaking there of a tenant, says, at pp 216,217:
'Those cases seem to me to show that, if a tenant takes a house which is of such a kind that by its own inherent nature it will in course of time fall into a particular condition, the effects of that result are not within the tenant's covenant to repair. However large the words of the covenant may be, a covenant to repair a house is not a covenant to give a different thing from that which the tenant took when he entered into the covenant. He has to repair that thing which he took; he is not obliged to make a new and different thing ....'
Applying that to a landlord, in the same way as it is in that case applied to a tenant, if the counterclaim here made by Mrs Lamdin be correct, she is entitled to receive at the hands of this landlord 'a different thing' form that which she took when she entered into the covenant. She took this old house with a cellar without any waterproof protection, and she is asking the landlord so to repair that house as to give her a cellar which has a waterproof protection and is dry. That is not a right which she can possibly maintain, because the obligation of the landlord is to repair that which is demised, and not to give her something much drier in its nature than that which was demised."
"To my mind it is unarguable that the state of that flat in particular, bearing in mind the age, character and locality of the flat was such as to be quite unfit for the occupation of a reasonably minded tenant of a class who would be likely to take it -- very probably unfit for any tenant...."