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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Raymere Ltd. v Belle Vue Gardens Ltd. [2003] EWCA Civ 996 (17 July 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2003/996.html Cite as: [2004] Ch 29, [2003] EWCA Civ 996, [2003] 3 WLR 1334 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM WINCHESTER COUNTY COURT
His Honour Judge Thompson QC
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE JONATHAN PARKER
and
MR JUSTICE HOLMAN
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Raymere Ltd |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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Belle Vue Gardens Ltd |
Respondent |
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Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited, 190 Fleet Street
London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7421 4040, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Mr Gabriel Fadipe (instructed by Messrs Preston Redman) for the Respondent
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AS APPROVED BY THE COURT
CROWN COPYRIGHT ©
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Jonathan Parker :
INTRODUCTION
THE FACTS
".... the office copy register entries you have supplied are historical in that they pre-date the date of the section 13 initial notices and accordingly do not show the tenants as registered proprietors on the relevant date."
THE RELEVANT STATUTORY BACKGROUND
"(1) This Chapter has effect for the purpose of conferring on qualifying tenants of flats contained in premises to which this Chapter applies on the relevant date the right, exercisable subject to and in accordance with this Chapter, to have the freehold of those premises acquired on their behalf
(a) by a person or persons appointed by them for the purpose, and
(b) at a price determined in accordance with this Chapter;
and that right is referred to in this Chapter as "the right to collective enfranchisement".
....
(8) In this Chapter "the relevant date", in relation to any claim to exercise the right to collective enfranchisement, means the date on which notice of the claim is given under section 13."
"(1) A claim to exercise the right to collective enfranchisement with respect to any premises is made by the giving of notice of the claim under this section.
(2) ....
(3) The initial notice must
....
(e) state the full names of all the qualifying tenants of flats contained in the specified premises and the addresses of their flats, and contain the following particulars in relation to each of those tenants, namely
(i) such particulars of his lease as are sufficient to identify it, including the date on which the lease was entered into, the term for which it was granted and the date of commencement of the term, ....
....
....
(g) specify the date by which the reversioner must respond to the notice by giving a counter-notice under section 21.
....
(9) Where any premises have been specified in a notice under this section and
(a) the notice .... is deemed to have been withdrawn, under or by virtue of any provision of this Chapter ...., or
(b) ....
no subsequent notice which specifies the whole or part of those premises may be given under this section within the period of twelve months beginning with the date of the .... deemed withdrawal of the earlier notice ....
...."
"(1) The reversioner in respect of the specified premises may, within the period of 21 days beginning with the relevant date, give the nominee purchaser a notice requiring him, in the case of any person by whom the initial notice was given, to deduce the title of that person to the lease by virtue of which it is claimed that he is a qualifying tenant of a flat contained in the specified premises.
(2) The nominee purchaser shall comply with any such requirement within the period of 21 days beginning with the date of the giving of the notice.
(3) Where
(a) the nominee purchaser fails to comply with a requirement under subsection (1) in the case of any person within the period mentioned in subsection (2), and
(b) the initial notice would not have been given in accordance with section 13(2)(b) if
(i) that person, and
(ii) any other person in the case of whom a like failure by the nominee purchaser has occurred, had been neither included among the persons who gave the notice nor included among the qualifying tenants of the flats referred to in that provision,
the initial notice shall be deemed to have been withdrawn at the end of that period."
"(1) The reversioner in respect of the specified premises shall give a counter-notice under this section to the nominee purchaser by the date specified in the initial notice in pursuance of section 13(3)(g).
(2) The counter-notice must comply with one of the following requirements, namely
(a) state that the reversioner admits that the participating tenants were on the relevant date entitled to exercise the right to collective enfranchisement in relation to the specified premises;
(b) state that, for such reasons as are specified in the counter-notice, the reversioner does not admit that the participating tenants were so entitled;
(c) ....
...."
"(1) Where
(a) the reversioner in respect of the specified premises has given the nominee purchaser a counter-notice under section 21 which .... contains such a statement as is mentioned in subsection (2)(b) of that section, but
(b) the court is satisfied, on an application made by the nominee purchaser, that the participating tenants were on the relevant date entitled to exercise the right to collective enfranchisement in relation to the specified premises,
the court shall by order made a declaration to that effect.
(2) Any application for an order under subsection (1) must be made not later than the end of the period of two months beginning with the date of the giving of the counter-notice to the nominee purchaser.
....
(6) If an application by the nominee purchaser for an order under subsection (1) is dismissed by the court, the initial notice shall cease to have effect at the time when the order dismissing the application becomes final."
"In a transaction undertaken to give effect to an initial notice the nominee purchaser, the reversioner and any relevant landlord shall, unless they otherwise agree, be bound by Schedule 1 to these Regulations."
"(1) The reversioner may require the nominee purchaser to give him evidence of the occupation on which a qualifying tenant who is claimed in the initial notice to satisfy the residence condition relies, by giving him notice within the period of twenty-one days beginning with the relevant date.
(2) The nominee purchaser shall comply with any such requirement by giving a statutory declaration made by that qualifying tenant to the reversioner within the period of twenty-one days beginning with the date the notice is given."
"(1) Sub-paragraph (2) applies where the reversioner has given a counter-notice complying with section 21(2)(a) (admitting the right to collective enfranchisement) or .... the nominee purchaser has applied to the court for an order under section 25(1) (applications where the reversioner fails to give counter-notice or further counter-notice).
(2) .... the nominee purchaser may require the reversioner to deduce title to the interests proposed to be acquired in accordance with section 13(3)(a) and (c)(i) (matters specified in the initial notice) .... by giving him notice.
(3) The reversioner shall comply with any such requirement by giving the nominee purchaser
(a) in the case of an interest registered in the register of title kept at Her Majesty's Land Registry, all particulars and information which have to be given or may be required to be given on a sale of registered land pursuant to section 110 of the Land Registration Act 1925 (provisions as between vendor and purchaser), and
(b) in the case of any other interest, an epitome of title, within the period of twenty-eight days beginning with the date the notice is given."
"(3) Except as aforesaid, and notwithstanding any stipulation to the contrary, it shall not be necessary for the vendor to furnish the purchaser with any abstract or other written evidence of title ...."
THE JUDGMENT OF THE DISTRICT JUDGE
THE JUDGMENT OF THE JUDGE
"In the instant case I am concerned with the construction of the statute and interpreting, or endeavouring to interpret, what it was that Parliament required, namely where the reversioner sought information what information it was that should be given.
The counter-argument on behalf of the nominee purchaser put forward by Mr Fadipe is this. He says that the position really is clear under section 20(1), and to adopt the approach which is suggested by Mr Radevsky on behalf of the reversioner would involve adding to section 20(1) the words 'at the relevant date' after 'person' ....
So, says Mr Fadipe, one has to add those extra words to section 20(1) to bring about the result which is claimed by the reversioners in this case.
Not so, says Mr Radevsky, it is axiomatic in the wording of the section that the title deduced must be of the persons who are tenants at the relevant date.
I think the arguments here are finely balanced, and the position comes back to this. With considerable hesitation, and I confess that my mind has fluctuated from one way to the other several times during the course of this hearing and when endeavouring to construe the various arguments which are put forward, that I have come to the conclusion that the learned district judge was right in the conclusion to which he came when he said: "If the landlord does not admit the deduction of title it is my view that the landlord must say so in his counter-notice".
I think the position really is fairly straightforward, because obviously when the nominee purchaser advances the application on behalf of the various lessees the reaction or attitude of the landlord at that stage is not known. The landlord may serve a counter-notice under section 21(2)(a) and state that he admits that the participating tenants were on the relevant date entitled to exercise the right to collective enfranchisement in relation to the specified premises, and then simply go on to argue about the price at which he is willing to transfer the freehold to the nominee purchaser. Or, conversely, under section 21(2)(b) the reversioner may state, for reasons which he specifies in his counter-notice, that he does not admit that the participating tenants were so entitled.
I think the learned district judge was absolutely right in saying that if the reversioner is going to contend that the participating tenants were not so entitled, a reason which he may put forward is simply that he does not accept that at the relevant date, namely in this instance 6 August 2001, that the relevant tenants still had title as such at the relevant date, and in those circumstances call upon the nominee purchaser to produce a fresh deduction of title in respect of the relevant tenants.
I think it would be nonsensical, if one looks at the structure of the Act, for a nominee purchaser to proceed with an application of this nature in the first place without satisfying himself on behalf of the participating tenants that they were in a position to deduce title.
If the landlord is then going to require that to be done again, it seems to me that he should give notice to that effect when he serves his counter-notice under section 21(2)(b), and not simply say that the titles produced are not satisfactory, and in that way rely on upon the original notice being deemed to have been withdrawn.
So for these reasons I have come to the conclusion that the decision of the learned district judge was correct, and that this appeal should be dismissed."
THE ARGUMENTS ON THIS APPEAL
".... a nominee purchaser would be well advised to be in a position to deduce title prior to serving the initial notice".
"10. The first question for decision on this appeal, as it seems to me, is whether the judge was right to pose the question which, as he thought, he had to decide in the terms that he did: "whether a reasonable tenant could be misled into thinking that the landlord's counter-notice did not admit the right to a new lease?" Implicit in the question posed by the judge is the assumption that a notice served by a landlord in response to a tenant's notice under section 42 of the Act is capable of being a valid counter-notice under section 45 provided that a reasonable tenant, on receipt of the notice, could not be misled into thinking that the right to a new lease was not admitted. To put the point another way, is it right to assume as the judge did assume that section 42(2)(a) of the Act requires the landlord's notice to do no more than bring home to a reasonable tenant, having a degree of familiarity with the scheme of Chapter II, Part 1, that the landlord does not deny the right to a new lease? Or does section 45(2)(a) of the Act require, as a literal construction of the statutory language would suggest, that the landlord's notice must state that the landlord admits that the tenant had on the relevant date the right to acquire a new lease of his flat?
11. The answer to that question is not to be found in the terms of the landlord's notice. The relevant inquiry is what does the statutory language require. The task is to construe the words which Parliament has used in the context of the statutory scheme. It is only when the court has informed itself of the true nature of the statutory requirement that it can sensibly address the second question: does the notice in this case meet that requirement?"
CONCLUSIONS
Mr Justice Holman:
"The relevant enquiry is what does the statutory language require. The task is to construe the words which Parliament has used in the context of the statutory scheme. It is only when the court has informed itself of the nature of the statutory requirement that it can sensibly address the second question: does the notice in this case meet that requirement ?"
Lord Justice Brooke:
Order; Appeal dismissed; agreed order lodged with court; leave to appeal refused.
(Order does not form part of the approved judgment)