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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 >> Gala Unity Ltd v Ariadne Road RTM Company Ltd [2012] EWCA Civ 1372 (23 October 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2012/1372.html Cite as: [2013] HLR 3, [2012] EWCA Civ 1372, [2013] L &TR 5, [2012] 44 EG 9, [2012] WLR(D) 307, [2012] 44 EG 94, [2013] 1 WLR 988, [2012] 3 EGLR 79, [2012] 50 EG 105 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE UPPER TRIBUNAL (LANDS CHAMBER)
GEORGE BARTLETT QC, PRESIDENT
[2011] UKUT 425 (LC)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE SULLIVAN
and
LORD JUSTICE PATTEN
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GALA UNITY LIMITED |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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ARIADNE ROAD RTM COMPANY LIMITED |
Respondent |
____________________
Ellie Cameron-Daum for the Respondent
Hearing date: 4TH October 2012
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Sullivan:
Introduction
Statutory framework
"71 The right to manage
(1) This Chapter makes provision for the acquisition and exercise of rights in relation to the management of premises to which this Chapter applies by a company which, in accordance with this Chapter, may acquire and exercise those rights (referred to in this Chapter as a RTM company).
(2) The rights are to be acquired and exercised subject to and in accordance with this Chapter and are referred to in this Chapter as the right to manage.
72 Premises to which Chapter applies
(1) This Chapter applies to premises if
(a) they consist of a self-contained building or part of a building, with or without appurtenant property,
(b) they contain two or more flats held by qualifying tenants, and
(c) the total number of flats held by such tenants is not less than two-thirds of the total number of flats contained in the premises.
(2) A building is a self-contained building if it is structurally detached.
(3) A part of a building is a self-contained part of the building if
(a) it constitutes a vertical division of the building.
(b) the structure of the building is such that it could be redeveloped independently of the rest of the building, and
(c) subsection (4) applies in relation to it.
(4) This subsection applies in relation to a part of a building if the relevant services provided for occupiers of it
(a) are provided independently of the relevant services provided for occupiers of the rest of the building, or
(b) could be so provided without involving the carrying out of works likely to result in a significant interruption in the provisions of any relevant services for occupiers of the rest of the building.
(5) Relevant services are services provided by means of pipes, cables or other fixed installations."
"Appurtenant property" is defined in section 112 (1) as follows:
"appurtenant property", in relation to a building or part of a building or a flat, means any garage, outhouse, garden, yard or appurtenances belonging to, or usually enjoyed with, the building or part or flat "
Factual background
"On the land there stand the two blocks of flats to which the claim notices relate and also two free-standing "coach houses", which are first-floor flats with parking spaces underneath. The land is bounded on the north, east and west by estate roads that curve round it and on the south by other residential buildings. There is a short, brick-surfaced road that runs across the land from east to west, providing access on the north side to the 10 flat block and on the south side, where it opens out into a courtyard, to the two-flat block and the coach houses. On its western side the roadway also serves a house that is not within Gala's ownership. There are defined parking spaces on the roadway and the courtyard area and at the front of the 10-flat block. There is a free-standing dustbin store adjacent to the roadway and this serves all the flats on the land. Immediately to the north of the 10-flat block is an area of garden bounded by a wall but with open access. Between the estate roads that curve round the development and the 10-flat block and the garden area is a grassed area of varying width on which trees have been planted. There is also a small grassed area between the 2-flat block and the estate road. On the south side of the coach houses there is a courtyard accessible only on foot."
"The leases of the 14 flats on the land are in similar terms. I was provided with copies of the leases of 28 Ariadne Road (a second-floor flat in the 10-flat block) and 14 Ariadne Road (one of the two flats in the other block). Forming part of the demise of each lease is a numbered car port. (In the leases of other flats, I understand a car parking space rather than a car port forms part of the demise.) Each lease is for a term of 125 years from 1 July 2006 and is expressed to be made between the lessor, "the Management Company" (Hazelvine Ltd) and the lessee. The lessee pays rent to the lessor (under clause 2.1) and a service charge to the Management Company (under clause 2.2). The lessor covenants (clause 4.1 and paragraph 6-2.1 of Schedule 6) to provide the services set out in Schedule 7. Schedule 7 specifies six categories of services and sets out under them the particular services that are to be provided. One of these (Category D) relates to lifts and has no application because there are no lifts in any of the buildings. The other categories are as follows:
Category A, relating to the Estate Common Parts (excluding the Car Park);
Category B, relating to the Building Main Structure;
Category C, relating to the Building Common Parts;
Category E, relating the Car Park; and
Category F, relating to Insurance."
"The Estate Common Parts' means the areas and amenities in the managed estate available for use in common by the Lessee and the owners and all persons expressly or by implication authorised by them, including pavements, footpaths, forecourts, visitor car parking spaces, cycle store, roads, drives, landscaped areas, gardens and areas designated for the keeping and collecting of refuse, but not limited to them.
'The Managed Estate' means the land shown edged blue on the Plan and includes the Buildings and all other structures (including boundary walls and fences) erected on the Managed Estate."
Under Schedule 2 the Lessee and all persons authorised with him are given rights of way, in common with the Lessor and all other persons having a like right, over and along the roads, drives, forecourts and pavements on the Development, the right to use appropriate areas of the Estate Common Parts, the right to use car parking spaces available for common use and the right to use the dustbin area.
The President's decision
"15. Thus the right to manage in the present case extends to the two blocks of flats and to appurtenant property. Property is appurtenant for this purpose, in my view, if it is appurtenant to a flat within the block. The appurtenant property attaching to each flat under the lease of it is of two sorts. Firstly there is the car port or car parking space that is included in the demise, and there can be no doubt, in my judgment, that each flat's car port or parking space is appurtenant property for the purposes of the statutory provisions. The second sort of appurtenant property consists of the incorporeal rights of way and other rights granted under Schedule 2 of each flat's lease. These are rights that are not exclusive to the particular flat but are shared with all or some of the other flats, including flats within the Managed Estate that are not within either of the two blocks in respect of which the claim notices were served. There is, I think, no reason why the right to manage should not extend to the maintenance of land over which tenants have incorporeal rights (cf, in relation to the appointment of a manager under Part II of the Landlord and Tenant Act 1987, Cawsand Fort Management Ltd v Stafford (LRX/145/2005 at paragraph 17)).
16. There is clearly an argument, however, that it is implicit that "appurtenant property" should be construed as relating to land that appertains exclusively to the premises, excluding, therefore, land over which the tenants of the premises have rights in common with others whose flats (the two coach houses) are not the subject of the right to manage claim. The reason for such a construction would be that, if such land were included in the right to manage this could conflict with the rights in relation to that land of both the tenants of the coach houses and the landlord and any management company. Moreover section 97(2), which removes the landlord's entitlement to do what the RTM company is required or empowered to do, might be thought to lend some support for this. I had myself reached the conclusion that this was indeed the correct approach, so that in the present case "the premises" would only extend to the buildings themselves and the car ports and parking spaces that were included in each demise, and I inquired of the RTM company whether, in the light of this, it wished to pursue its claims. Its response was that it did wish to do so. One further consideration I do not think that "appurtenant property" is to be so narrowly construed. There is nothing in the wording itself that would suggest this, and, although the scope for conflict of the sort that I have mentioned exists, this is insufficient reason for imposing a restriction on the meaning of the provisions."
"The landlord is still required, and therefore entitled, under the leases of the coach houses to provide the services in categories A, B, C, D and F, including, therefore, maintenance of those parts of the Managed Estate over which those tenants have rights; and the tenants of those flats are still liable to pay to the landlord the service charge as provided under their leases. However, it would seem to me that if the landlord and management company continued to provide services in relation to those parts of the estate that the RTM company is obliged to the tenants of the 12 flats in the two blocks to maintain, the cost of such services would not be reasonably incurred and could be disallowed under section 19(1) of the Landlord and Tenant Act 1985."
Submissions
Discussion
Conclusion
Lord Justice Patten:
Lady Justice Arden: