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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 >> Bankway Properties Ltd v Dunsford & Anor [2001] EWCA Civ 528 (10 April 2001) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2001/528.html Cite as: [2001] 1 WLR 1369, [2001] WLR 1369, [2001] EWCA Civ 528, [2001] 26 EG 164, [2001] NPC 74, [2001] 2 EGLR 36, [2001] L & TR 27, [2001] 16 EGCS 145, [2002] HLR 42 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL
DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE BRIGHTON COUNTY COURT
HIS HONOUR JUDGE
KENNEDY QC
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL Tuesday 10th April 2001 | ||
B e f o r e :
and
LADY JUSTICE
ARDEN
____________________
Bankway Properties
Limited |
Respondent | |
- and - |
||
Dunsford & Anr |
Appellants |
____________________
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 Stephen Knafler (instructed by Brighton Housing Trust for
the Appellants)
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lady Justice Arden:
Introduction
". . . (b) The rent which shall be payable under this Agreement shall be:-
(i) Until the first review date the initial rent
(ii) During each successive review period until (and inclusive of) the day prior to the last review date a rent (the new rent) equal to the greater of:-
i. The rent payable immediately prior to the relevant review date plus 10% thereof or
ii The rent payable immediately prior to the relevant review date plus the percentage increase in the Retail Price Index
a. In the case of the first review date between the Base Figure and the figure for the month preceding the first review date and
b. In the case of the second and subsequent reviews between the figure for the month preceding the previous review date and the figure for the month preceding the relevant review date
iii The then current open market rent for the Property to be agreed between the parties hereto or in the absence of agreement to be assessed by an independent surveyor appointed by the Landlord such surveyor acting as an expert and not as an arbitrator and whose decision as to the amount of the current open market rent for the property shall be final
(iii) From the last Review Date the sum of twenty five thousand pounds per annum"
The last review date was defined as 11 February 1996.
"Re: 54/55 Marine Parade, Brighton - Flat 1
The enclosed Tenancy Agreement sets out the terms upon which Artesian Competitor plc is prepared to let the above property to you. It is an important document which imposes upon both parties certain contractual and legally enforceable obligations. It is therefore most important that you fully appreciate the terms of the Tenancy Agreement and, if you have any doubts, that you take legal advice BEFORE signing the Agreement.
In particular, we wish to draw your attention to clause 8 of the Agreement pursuant to which the rent will be increased and pursuant to which you may terminate the Tenancy by not less than one month's written notice, such notice not to expire earlier than [15/8/1994].
Finally, we would ask you to note that it is a term of the Tenancy Agreement, and a condition of the Housing Act 1988, that a tenant occupying a dwelling house under an assured tenancy, occupies the property as his/her only or principal home, and that the property is not used for business purposes. . . ."
The letter did not, however, enclose the agreement. What happened was that the agent brought the agreement to the appellants at the property and invited them to read it. The Judge accepted that Mr Penfold-Dunsford did not read the lease properly. Nobody on behalf of the landlord or managing agents ever explained the rent provisions in the agreement. By implication the Judge also accepted that Mr Leech did not read the agreement before he signed it. (He also explains in his witness statement that he has a reading impairment).
(1) the review date should be deferred indefinitely;
(2) the landlord should be entitled to specify a new review date but had to give at least five weeks' written notice ("a review notice");
(3) on the new review date the rent was to increase to £25,000 per annum;
(4) when the landlord gave a review notice specifying the new review date, the appellants were to be able to give 14 days' written notice terminating the agreement;
(5) the landlord was to be entitled to a serve a review notice at any time it thought fit.
These terms were accepted by the appellants who signed a copy of the letter on 17 January 1997.
The Judgment of HHJ Kennedy QC
"The only problem is that it is by a device, that is by arrears of rent which nobody ever expected to pay. That is the problem. It is a device. I do not for a moment say that there was anything devious or dishonest or concealed about it. It is a device. The real problem that I have is that if I find that these tenants recognised that there was a device and went along with it, then they would have a difficult job to persuade this court to help them. I do not see why they should be in any better position because they chose not to read it properly. I think that is a permissible device. That is the word I am going to use."
The statutory framework
By contrast, assured shorthold tenancies have no security of tenure. Although the landlord must comply with statutory machinery and obtain a possession order (see sections 19A to21) and there is a form of rent control (see section 22), the landlord can recover possession by giving notice without having to prove that (for instance) there are arrears of rent (section 21).
Application to file new evidence
Submissions
Appellants' submissions
"Where a landlord creates a tenancy of a flat and reserves the right to go into exclusive occupation at any time of the whole or part of the flat with or without notice, that reservation is inconsistent with the provisions of the Rent Acts and cannot be enforced without an order of the court under section 98. Where a landlord creates a tenancy of a flat and reserves the right to go into occupation of the whole or part of the flat with or without notice, jointly with the existing tenants, that reservation also is inconsistent with the provisions of the Acts. Were it otherwise every tenancy agreement would be labelled a licence and would contract out of the Rent Acts by reserving power to the landlord to share possession with the tenant at any time after the commencement of the term.
Clause 16 is a reservation to Mr Antoniades of the right to go into occupation or to nominate others to enjoy occupation of the whole of the flat jointly with Mr Villiers and Miss Bridger. Until that power is exercised Mr Villiers and Miss Bridger are jointly in exclusive occupation of the whole flat making periodical payments and they are therefore tenants. The Rent Acts prevents the exercise of a power which would destroy the tenancy of Mr Villiers and Miss Bridger and would deprive them of the exclusive occupation of the flat which they are now enjoying. Clause 16 is inconsistent with the provisions of the Rent Acts.
There is separate and alternative reason why clause 16 must be ignored. Clause 16 was not a genuine reservation to Mr Antoniades of the power to share the flat and a power to authorise other persons to share the flat. Mr Antoniades did not genuinely intend to exercise the powers save possibly to bring pressure to bear to obtain possession. Clause 16 was only intended to deprive Mr Villiers and Miss Bridger of the protection of the Rent Acts. Mr Villiers and Miss Bridger had no choice in the matter." (page 462).
"Here the artificiality was in the pretence that two contemporaneous and identical agreements entered into by a man and a woman who were going to live together in a one-bedroom flat and share a double bed created rights and obligations which were several rather than joint. As to the nature of those rights and obligations, the provisions of the joint agreement purporting to retain the right in the respondent to share the occupation of the flat with the young couple himself or to introduce an indefinite number of third parties to do so could be seen, in the relevant circumstances, to be repugnant to the true purpose of the agreement. No one could have supposed that those provisions were ever intended to be acted on. They were introduced into the agreement for no other purpose than as an attempt to disguise the true character of the agreement which it was hoped would deceive the court and prevent the appellants enjoying the protection of the Rent Acts. As your Lordships all agree, the attempt fails." (page 454).
Respondent's submissions
Conclusions
Was clause 8(b)(iii) effectively incorporated in the agreement?
Is clause 8(b)(iii) of the agreement enforceable?
"There was one economic and social relationship where it was claimed that there were palpably lacking the prerequisites for the beneficent operation of laisser-faire - that of landlord and tenant. The market was limited and sluggish: the supply of land could not expand immediately and flexibly in response to demand, and even humble dwellings took more time to erect that those in want of them could spare. Generally, a man became a tenant rather than an owner-occupier because his circumstances compelled him to live hand-to-mouth; the landlord's purse was generally longer and his command of knowledge and counsel far greater than the tenant's. In short, it was held, the constriction of the market and the inequality of bargaining power enabled the landlord to dictate contractual terms which did not necessarily operate to the general benefit of society. It was to counteract this descried constriction of the market and to redress this descried inequality of bargaining power that the law - specifically, in the shape of legislation - came to intervene repeatedly to modify freedom of contract between landlord and tenant. Since Maine the movement of many "progressive" societies has been reversed. The holding of a statutory or a protected tenancy is rather a status than a pure creature of contract." (page 66-67).
"5. (1) An assured tenancy cannot be brought to an end by the landlord except by obtaining an order of the court in accordance with the following provisions of this Chapter or Chapter II below or, in the case of a fixed term tenancy which contains power for the landlord to determine the tenancy in certain circumstances, by the exercise of that power and, accordingly, the service by the landlord of a notice to quit shall be of no effect in relation to a periodic assured tenancy."
Section 7 then confers added protection on the tenant by stipulating the circumstances in which the court can make an order for possession:
"7(1) The court shall not make an order for possession of a dwelling-house let on an assured tenancy except on one or more of the grounds set out in Schedule 2 to this Act; but nothing in this Part of this Act relates to proceedings for possession of such a dwelling-house which are brought by a mortgagee, within the meaning of the Law of Property Act 1925, who has lent money on the security of the assured tenancy.
(2) The following provisions of this section have effect, subject to section 8 below, in relation to proceedings for the recovery of possession of a dwelling-house let on an assured tenancy.
(3) If the court is satisfied that any of the grounds in part 1 of Schedule 2 to this Act is established then, subject to [subsection (5A) and (6)] below, the court shall make an order for possession.
(4) If the court is satisfied that any of the grounds in Part II of Schedule 2 to this Act is established, then subject to subsection (5A) and (6) below, the court may make an order for possession if it considers it reasonable to do so.
(5) Part III of Schedule 2 to this Act shall have effect for supplementing Ground 9 in that Schedule and Part IV of that Schedule shall have effect in relation to notices giving as mentioned in Grounds 1 to 5 of that Schedule. . . "
PILL LJ:
"Many transactions between group companies may be artificial. That does not entitle the court in ordinary circumstance to treat such transactions as null."
1. The landlord's letter of 14 February 1994 underlined that the tenancy was to be within the statutory scheme:
"Finally, we would ask you to note that it is a term of the tenancy agreement, and a condition of the Housing Act 1988, that a tenant occupying a dwelling house under an assured tenancy occupies the property as his/her only or principal home and that the property is not used for any business purposes".
2. In Clause 9 of the lease, the tenant declares that the property is to be his only or principal home.
3. Detailed drafting points in the same direction. Clause 1(g) provides for a review date, under a procedure consistent with long term protection, on February 16 1995 "and every twelve months thereafter" and Clause 8(b)(iii) provides for the fixing of rent after the first review date "during each successive review period". The wording contemplates a lengthy lease and one which is inconsistent with the "last review date" (bringing into effect the rent of £25,000) on 11 February 1996, that is less than two years from the date of the lease.
"Looking at the whole of the instrument, and seeing what one must regard, … as its main purpose, one must reject words, indeed whole provisions, if they are inconsistent with what one assumes to be the main purpose of the contract."