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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Smith v Spaul [2002] EWCA Civ 1830 (16 December 2002) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2002/1830.html Cite as: [2003] 2 P&CR 300, [2003] QB 983, [2002] EWCA Civ 1830, [2003] 2 WLR 495, [2003] 1 All ER 509, [2003] 1 P&CR D36, [2003] 17 EG 148 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM CENTRAL LONDON
COUNTY COURT (His Honour Judge Goldstein)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL | ||
B e f o r e :
and
LADY JUSTICE ARDEN
____________________
Piera Smith | Appellant | |
- and - | ||
Ashfaq Ahmed Spaul | Respondent |
____________________
Mr Richard Alomo (instructed by Messrs Dhalokia Cummings-John) for the Respondent
Hearing dates : 15 November 2002
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lady Justice Arden :
"'Lessee' includes an original or derivative under-lessee, and the persons deriving the title under a lessee; also a grantee under any such grant as aforementioned and the persons deriving title under him," (s146(5)(b))
"(3) Where a counter-notice is served by a lessee under this section, then, notwithstanding anything in any enactment or rule of law, no proceedings, by action or otherwise, shall be taken by the lessor for the enforcement of any right of re-entry or forfeiture under any proviso or stipulation in the lease for breach of the covenant or agreement in question, or for damages for breach thereof, otherwise than with the leave of the court."
"speculators buying up small property in an indifferent state of repair, and then serving a schedule of dilapidations upon the tenants which the tenants cannot comply with. I am not saying that was this case, but it is the general mischief, that the speculator buys at a very low price, turns out the tenants and gets the reversion which he has never paid for, which is a great hardship to the tenants" (per Lord Goddard CJ in National Real Estate and Finance Company Ltd v Hassan [1939] 2 KB 61, CA).
"Accordingly in the case of a mortgagee by subdemise that mortgagee is always at the risk of a lessor obtaining re-entry for breach of covenant without the mortgagee knowing anything about it; in which case the mortgagee is completely shut out. Every mortgagee, therefore, knows that this is the risk he runs. If, after taking a covenant from his mortgagor to observe the covenants in the lease, he takes no steps whatsoever to satisfy himself from time to time that no breach of covenant is taking place, he is always exposed to the risk that, behind his back and without his knowledge, the lessor will succeed in re-entering, and so determining the lease, with the result that all possibility of relief from forfeiture is lost to the mortgagee. That is one of the risks of the game."
"where the word 'lessee' appears in this section it can only refer to the lessee in possession or one who has a subsisting lease at the time when proceedings for forfeiture or re-entry are taken."
Later the judge held that the protection afforded by the 1938 Act was intended to be confined to lessees in possession or lessees having a present estate or interest in the premises.
"The purpose underlying the requirement in section 146(1) of service of notice on the lessee is the practical one that the lessor wants something done and that the lessee served may choose to do what is required of him to be done by the notice and so avoid forfeiture. The lessee in possession is ordinarily the person best able to do what is required. Being the person required in practice to comply with the notice, he is the person entitled to choose the protection of the 1938 Act, particularly if he considers that the landlord is guilty of the kind of abuse that the 1938 Act was designed to prevent and that the landlord is not likely to obtain the lease of the court under section 1(5). Put another way, the person entitled to be served is 'the person who is interested in getting the notice so that he can make up his mind what if anything he can do about avoiding forfeiture', as Lord Russell of Killowen said in Old Grovebury Manor Farm Ltd v W Seymour Plant Sales & Hire Ltd (No.2) [1979] 3 All ER 504 at pp 505-506, where it was held that a notice served on a former leaseholder who had assigned the term was invalid because the assignee, the present leaseholder, was interested in receiving the notice in the absence of which forfeiture could not be had.
If the mortgagor has lost possession of the leasehold property because the mortgagee has taken possession, so that any retaking of possession would be a trespass (it might even be a contempt of court if possession had been given to the mortgagee by a warrant having been executed), service of a section 146 notice on the mortgagor would be pointless because he cannot lawfully do anything to remedy the breach. The landlord cannot forfeit without serving a notice. In such a case it must follow that the only person who could remedy, and hence the only person the landlord can require to remedy, the breach is the mortgagee in possession. True it is, in such a case, the mortgagor retains an estate in the term, but he has no possession of the property. Even the estate is under the control of the mortgagee, and, in the absence of redemption, can be assigned away by the mortgagee in exercise of the mortgagee's statutory power to sell it. In such a case, the mortgagee has both an estate or interest in the term, or the equivalent if he is a legal chargee, and possession of the property. He also has control over the mortgagor's estate."
Conclusions
"(4) A notice served under subsection (1) of section one hundred and forty-six of the Law of Property Act 1925, in the circumstances specified in subsection (1) of this section, and a notice served under subsection (2) of this section shall not be valid unless it contains a statement, in characters not less conspicuous than those used in any other part of the notice, to the effect that the lessee is entitled under this Act to serve on the lessor a counter-notice claiming the benefit of this Act, and a statement in the like characters specifying the time within which, and the manner in which, under this Act a counter-notice may be served and specifying the name and address for service of the lessor."
"(1) A right of re-entry or forfeiture under any proviso or stipulation in a lease for breach of any covenant or condition in the lease shall not be enforceable, by action or otherwise, and until the lessor serves on the lessee a notice –
a) specifying the particular breach complained of; and
b) if the breach is capable or remedy, requiring the lessee to remedy the breach; and
c) in any case, requiring the lessee to make compensation in money for the breach;
and the lessee fails, within a reasonable time thereafter, to remedy the breach, if it is capable of remedy, and to make reasonable compensation in money, to the satisfaction of the lessor, for the breach."
Lord Justice Kay