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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Whitgift Homes Ltd & Ors v Pauline Stocks & Ors [2001] EWCA Civ 1732 (22 November 2001) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2001/1732.html Cite as: [2001] NPC 169, [2001] EWCA Civ 1732, [2001] 48 EGCS 130 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT
CHANCERY DIVISION (Mr Justice Neuberger)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL Thursday 22nd November 2001 |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE JONATHAN PARKER
and
MR JUSTICE BODEY
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WHITGIFT HOMES LIMITED & ORS |
Appellants |
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- and - |
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PAULINE STOCKS & ORS |
Respondents |
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Smith Bernal Reporting Limited, 190 Fleet Street
London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7421 4040, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Mr William Henderson (instructed by Messrs Dawson & Co. for the Respondents)
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Crown Copyright ©
LORD JUSTICE JONATHAN PARKER:
INTRODUCTION
"(1) For a subsequent purchaser of the land subject to the covenant to be bound by the covenant there are three requirements: (a) the covenant must be negative in nature; (b) the covenant must be either (i) for the protection of land retained by the covenantee or (ii) part of a scheme; and (c) the subsequent purchaser must have notice of the covenant.
(2) For a subsequent purchaser of other land to be able to enforce the covenant there are also three requirements: (a) the covenant must, to use the old expression, touch and concern his land; (b) the [benefit of the] covenants must have passed to him by (i) annexation (ii) assignment or (iii) pursuant to a scheme; and (c) there must be no good ground for depriving him of the right to enforce the covenant."
(by ground 1) that the judge erred in law in finding that the covenants imposed on 14 and 16 Ruffetts Close vested in and could be enforced by the owners of 10 and 12 Ruffetts Close and 63 Croham Valley Road;
(by ground 2) that the judge erred in law in finding that the benefit of the covenants were annexed to those three plots; and
(by ground 3) that the judge erred in law in finding that a scheme existed.
THE FACTUAL BACKGROUND
".... an irregular shape, rather like an upside down Italy, somewhat attenuated in the centre".
"In by far the greater portion of the Estate only six houses will be erected to the acre. In a smaller portion, where it is permissible to erect 12 houses to the acre, only nine to the acre have been built."
"At Croham Heights the home seeker obtains the utmost value in the house itself. The discriminating purchaser does not choose his house merely from the standpoint of accommodation. He considers the investment point of view. Croham Heights offers the advantages which attach to an attractive district, the desirability of which is beyond question. The surrounding property, the residential restrictions, the trend of building and the planning of the Estate itself all point to a maintaining and increasing the value of the properties."
"Layout plans etc. can be seen and further information given at our London Offices and Estate Office, which are open during ordinary business hours, the latter being also open on Saturday afternoon."
"It seems that by 1926 some 250 houses had been built in the Southern area and sold off, whereas the Northern part appears to have been developed a little later. The great majority of the houses were built by [the developer] and sold off to individual purchasers. However, some sites containing a number of plots were sold off by [the developer] with a view to houses being developed by purchasers."
"The two plots with which these proceedings are directly concerned are in the Northern area of the estate. They are 14 and 16 Ruffetts Close. Ruffetts Close was not shown on the plan in the first or second brochures. It is a small cul-de-sac with, it would appear, seven pairs of semi-detached houses – four set on larger sites than almost any other house on the estate, and three set on sites which are large by the standards of the estate generally. As a result of the inclusion of Ruffetts Close it appears that the sites of some other houses shown on the plan in the first brochure have either been reduced or have ceased to exist."
"FOR the benefit of the Company's Estate at Croydon the Purchaser (with intent to bind all persons in whom the land hereby conveyed shall for the time being be vested, but not so as to be personally liable for the breach of any restrictive covenant after she has parted with the said land) hereby covenants with the Company that the Purchaser will observe and perform the stipulations and conditions set out in the Second Schedule hereto and will not commit or suffer any breach thereof."
"1. No building other than a Private dwellinghouse with suitable outbuildings appurtenant thereto shall be erected on the said land or any part thereof."
2. No building or erection shall be set up on the said land nearer than 25 feet to the road in front thereof."
"The Vendors shall not be in any way restricted as to the mode of laying out user or enjoyment of any adjoining or neighbouring land which belongs or may hereafter belong to them ....."
"Almost all of the claimants own houses on plots in a triangular site ("the site") in the Northern part of the estate. That site is bounded by three roads, Ballards Way to the North, Crest Road to the East, and Croham Valley Road to the South West. Ruffetts Close runs off Croham Valley Road, North to Ballards Way and is therefore within the site. There are a total of about 90 houses on the site. About 35 of them are owned by claimants in these proceedings, the remaining five claimants owning houses on the other side of roads bordering the site."
"Although the covenants are very similar indeed to those contained in the Conveyances of numbers 14 and 16 [Ruffetts Close], at least in the extract in the Land Registry, the covenant does not expressly state with whom it is entered, let alone what land it is intended to benefit."
THE JUDGMENT
The annexation issue
".... the fact that the covenant is for the benefit of a very large estate should not stand in the way of such a conclusion."
"A covenant relating to any land of the covenantee shall be deemed to be made with the covenantee and his successors in title ...., and shall have effect as if such successors .... were expressed."
".... there was no reason justifying the view that the covenants were not intended to run with the land retained by the [developer] at the time of the Conveyances of 14 and 16 Ruffetts Close".
"Furthermore, if the purpose of the covenant was to assist [the developer] in selling off the remaining lots on the estate which it had not sold at the relevant time, that would seem to support the view that the benefit of the covenants ran with the retained lots when they were sold."
The scheme issue
"Clearly these rules are, with respect to Parker J, no more than general guidance. The fact that there is not a single estate owner from whom all subsequent purchasers can trace title is not an absolute requirement. First, I can see no good reason why two owners of adjoining estates cannot get together and agree a common scheme for the benefit of subsequent purchasers of properties on the two estates to be mutually enforceable: why should equity not enforce such a scheme? .... Secondly, it is clear that there is no need for a prior laying out of the estate.... Thirdly, I do not accept that all the properties have to be sold on this basis. If that was so, then interpretation of provisions such as paragraph 10 will invalidate the existence of the scheme. Yet Parker J himself accepted in Elliston v. Reacher at 389 [that] such a provision is one which could be said to be indicative of the scheme rather than calling it into question."
"There are, therefore, two requirements which are identified .... perhaps most clearly in the passage in the judgment of Buckley LJ which I have just read."
".... it is clear that this is a strict requirement. However, the estate need not be identified in the conveyance by reference to a plan or map ... Extrinsic evidence is admissible. Indeed, even if it is clear there was a plan but it has been lost, the court is still able to find a scheme ...."
"So far as evidence of reciprocity or mutuality is concerned, ideally it should be expressed in the conveyance. However, that is not necessary. Extrinsic evidence is admissible ... If the extrinsic evidence simply shows a [lotted] plan and nothing else that is not enough on its own... Nor is the fact that all the covenants are the same... It should also be mentioned that the form of the covenant may be important."
"... the "Vendors' estate" would have been known by purchasers to be the estate shown on the plans attached to the brochures which I have mentioned, which plan (on a larger scale) I consider would have been seen by any purchaser as one or more of the plans in the estate office had he visited the site office, as he is likely to have done. In my view, on the balance of probabilities, the plan in the estate office would also have shown the plotting of the estate roughly in accordance with the first brochure, which, as I have said, was not merely schematic."
"It can be said that paragraph 10 in this case is the equivalent of the earlier part of stipulation 12 in Allen, and that therefore it tends to support the existence of a scheme."
"The present case is certainly not the strongest I have seen for supporting a scheme, particularly in the light of the terms of the Conveyances. However, to my mind, subject to the points to which I now turn, the factors I have mentioned are strong enough, in the light of the authorities, to lead to the conclusion that there is a scheme.
There are points the other way that I have not so far mentioned and they have to be considered. The first is that the terms of some of the Conveyances of properties in the Northern part are not indicative of the scheme and suggest that the scheme was not imposed in respect of some of the properties, for instance, the covenant by way of indemnity or the land to be benefited is not identified.
Secondly, and to my mind much more significantly, there is very little evidence of the basis upon which properties in the central and Southern parts of the estate were conveyed, but such evidence as there is suggests that at least some of the Conveyances may have been executed earlier than any of the brochures I have seen. That view is strongly supported by the terms of the contemporary newspaper report to which I have been referred. Furthermore, the two Conveyances of properties in the middle or Southern part of the estate do not identify the land to which the covenants are intended to relate; indeed in one of the cases the Conveyance does not appear to identify who the covenantee is.
Thirdly, the estate layout has been changed from that indicated on the only lotting plan I have seen, namely that in the first brochure. Most notably there is no Ruffetts Close on that plan.
Fourthly, some of the covenants in the Conveyances are different, in particular they show different values of properties in paragraph 3, and they require some houses to be detached and some not to be detached, and paragraph 9 is omitted.
It seems to me that the main feature is that the great majority of the Conveyances I have seen in the Northern part, that is at least 90 per cent, show that the properties when they were conveyed were not only conveyed effectively subject to the same covenants but that they were conveyed in terms which indicate that they are for the benefit of [the developer's] "estate" and are not expressed in terms of indemnity. The fact that paragraph 9 is omitted in some conveyances appears to be of no weight whatever, not least because some of the roads may have been adopted... It further appears to me that the variation in the terms of values of the houses, and whether they are to be detached or semi-detached, is indicative of a carefully thought out scheme rather than covenants being mechanistically applied. On an estate of this size one would have expected a carefully thought out scheme to involve different properties having different values in different areas, rather than finding a blind consistency throughout.
The fact that there are some oversights in a few of the properties in the northern half does not impress me. As has been observed in other cases, there might be oversights due to poor conveyancing practice, or mistakes made following amendments put forward by the purchaser's solicitors. That does not prevent there from being a scheme. One has to look at the matter more broadly, particularly in the light of paragraph 10.
In my judgment, so far as the northern part is concerned, the picture is consistent with there being a carefully thought out scheme. The fact that there are one or two omissions due to oversights cannot alter that.
What gives me much more concern is the defendants' second point. I assume that the sale of houses in the southern, and indeed the middle, part of the estate, was by conveyances of which the two I have seen were typical, and that there was no earlier brochure similar to the ones I have seen and no sales office plans. On that basis, I think it would follow that there was no effective scheme enforceable against the properties which were sold in the southern or central part of the estate. Does that invalidate the conclusion I would otherwise have reached to the effect that there is an effective scheme which can be enforced inter se among the owners of properties in the northern part of the estate?
While the issue is not straightforward, I do not think that it does. As between [the developer] and the purchasers of houses in the northern part of the estate, the terms of the conveyances and the circumstances surrounding those conveyances result in the two principal requirements of the scheme being satisfied: the scheme area is identified, and it is the whole of the estate, and the purchasers of those houses appreciated from the circumstances and from their conveyance that there was a scheme intended to benefit and bind them.
The fact that the common vendor appears to have sold off a number of houses on a large part of the estate elsewhere does not alter the fact that as between the common vendor and a very large proportion of the purchasers of houses in a substantial area of the estate there is an agreed scheme. The fact that they have expressed the scheme as extending to an even larger area where it may be ineffective does not, in my view, invalidate the analysis of what they have agreed as a matter of law, nor does it cancel the effectiveness of what they have agreed in terms of practical consequences. They have agreed [the] scheme area as the whole estate. Furthermore, paragraph 10 actually envisages parts of the estate being excluded from the scheme if the common vendor wishes.
It would probably be different if there was no sensible block of property, like the northern area in the present case, or the triangular site including Ruffetts Close, where the scheme could be enforced to a very substantial extent between the owners of nearly all the houses. In such case, I would accept either that there is no scheme which could be enforced in law, or, if there is a scheme, that it is so patchy and valueless that, although it may exist in law, it would be inappropriate for the court to enforce it.
On the present facts, therefore, I conclude that [the developer] and the various purchasers of properties from it in the triangular site in the north of the estate, including numbers 14 and 16 [Ruffetts Close], entered into their conveyances on the basis that there was a scheme extending to the whole estate. The fact that in relation to a substantial part of the estate, not including the site, the scheme may be unenforceable does not mean that the court should conclude that there is no scheme, or thar there is no enforceable scheme, or that there is [a] scheme which should not be enforced in relation to the site.
Mr Clay suggested that this conclusion was inconsistent with the observation of Megarry J in Brunner v. Greeenslade [1971] Ch 93 at 1003, where he suggested that a scheme comes into existence the moment the first property on the estate is sold. By parity of reasoning he said, it may well be that if the first 250 or more properties on this estate were sold without a scheme, it is too late to seek to impose a scheme on the estate including those properties.
I do not think that is a good point. The effect of what Megarry J was saying is that once a vendor sells a property on a given estate, on terms which indicate that there is to be a scheme applicable to the estate, then the scheme comes into existence.
It may be that, if a purchaser has purchased a property on an estate on the basis that there is to be a scheme in relation to the whole estate, in circumstances where the vendor has put it out of his power to impose a scheme in respect of part of the estate, the vendor may be vulnerable to a claim for damages or rescission. But that does not mean to say there is no scheme so far as the vendor and purchaser are concerned. In the present case that question does not arise, because, as I have mentioned, there is the specific provision of paragraph 10.
In these circumstances I reach the conclusion, albeit with a degree of hesitation, that there is a scheme in this case and that it is effective, at least in relation to the site comprising some 90 properties which includes numbers 14 and 16 Ruffetts Close, as well as the properties belonging to many of the claimants.
It therefore follows that [it is] not only the owners of numbers 10 [Ruffetts Close], 12 [Ruffetts Close] and 63 [Croham Valley Road] who can rely on section 78 and enforce the covenants against the owners of numbers 14 and 16 [Ruffetts Close]. but the other claimants in this case can also do so because there is a scheme."
THE ARGUMENTS
The scheme issue
".... the plan in the estate office would also have shown the plotting of the estate roughly in accordance with the first brochure ..."
".... inherently unlikely that the sort of negative covenants imposed by paragraphs 1, 2 and 3 [of the Second Schedule] would have been other than for the benefit of the land ".
The annexation issue
CONCLUSIONS
The scheme issue
"It may be, indeed, that this is one of those branches of equity which work best when explained least."
"What are some of the essentials of a building scheme? In my opinion there must be a defined area within which the scheme is operative. Reciprocity is the foundation of the idea of a scheme. A purchaser of one parcel cannot be subject to an implied obligation to purchasers of an undefined and unknown area. He must know both the extent of his burden and the extent of his benefit. Not only must the area be defined, but the obligations to be imposed within that area must be defined. Those obligations need not be identical. For example, there may be houses of a certain value in one part and houses of a different value in another part. A building scheme is not created by the mere fact that the owner of an estate sells it in lots and takes varying covenants from the various purchasers. There must by notice to the various purchasers of what I may venture to call the local law imposed by vendors upon a definite area."
"For the application of the principle [of a building scheme] it is, I think, essential to establish as a matter of fact the following state of things: that the vendor expressly or by implication contracted with the defendant in the action or his predecessor in title (whom I will call the purchaser) upon the footing that at the date of that contract the vendor told the purchaser that he was proposing to deal with a defined estate in a defined way, and that he offered to sell to the purchaser a plot forming a part of that defined estate on the terms that the purchaser should enter into such restrictive covenants relating to his plot as the scheme contemplated upon the footing that the purchaser should reciprocally have the benefit of such restrictive covenants relating to the other plots on the estate as were indicated by the scheme. There can be no building scheme unless two conditions are satisfied, namely, first, that defined lands constituting the estate to which the scheme relates shall be identified, and, secondly, that the nature and particulars of the scheme shall be sufficiently disclosed for the purchaser to have been informed that his restrictive covenants are imposed upon him for the benefit of other purchasers of plots within that defined estate with the reciprocal advantage that he shall as against such other purchasers be entitled to the benefit of such restrictive covenants as are in turn to be imposed upon them. Compliance with the first condition identifies the class of person as between whom reciprocity of obligation is to exist. Compliance with the second discloses the nature of the obligations which are to be mutually enforceable. There must be as between the several purchasers community of interest and reciprocity of obligation."
"Secondly, and to my mind much more significantly, there is very little evidence of the basis upon which properties in the central or southern parts of the estate were conveyed, but such evidence as there is suggests that at least some of the conveyances may have been executed earlier than any of the brochures I have seen. That view is strongly supported by the terms of the contemporary newspaper report to which I have been referred. Furthermore, the two conveyances of properties in the middle and southern part of the estate do not identify the land to which the covenants are intended to relate; indeed in one of the cases the conveyance does not appear to identify who the covenantee is."
"What gives me much more concern is the defendants' second point. I assume that the sale of houses in the southern, and indeed the middle, part of the estate was by conveyances, of which the two I have seen were typical, and that there was no earlier brochure similar to the ones I have seen and no sales office plans. On that basis, I think it would follow that there was no effective scheme enforceable against the properties which were sold in the southern or central part of the estate."
"Does that invalidate the conclusion I would otherwise have reached to the effect that there is an effective scheme which can be enforced inter se among the owners of properties in the northern part of the estate?"
"On the present facts, therefore, I conclude that [the developer] and the various purchasers of properties from it in the triangular site in the north of the estate, including numbers 14 and 16 [Ruffetts Close], entered into their conveyances on the basis that there was a scheme extending to the whole estate. The fact that in relation to a substantial part of the estate, not including the site, the scheme may be unenforceable does not mean that the court should conclude that there is no scheme, or that there is no enforceable scheme, or that there is [a] scheme which should not be enforced in relation to the site."
"I hold that there is a building scheme affecting that property not only which was offered for sale [at the auction] but that which was described in the plan annexed to the particulars and conditions of sale, and which included property which had been sold prior to the auction."
The annexation issue
MR JUSTICE BODEY:
LORD JUSTICE JUDGE: