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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Tweedie & Anor v Souglides [2012] EWCA Civ 1546 (04 December 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2012/1546.html Cite as: [2012] EWCA Civ 1546, [2013] 1 CH 373, [2013] 9 EG 94, [2013] 1 P &CR 15, [2012] 50 EG 100, [2013] Ch 373, [2013] 2 WLR 930, [2013] 1 EGLR 65, [2012] WLR(D) 367 |
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ON APPEAL FROM HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE,
CHANCERY DIVISION
The Hon. Mr Justice Newey
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE RIX
and
LORD JUSTICE PATTEN
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(1) THOMAS CUNNINGHAM TWEEDIE (2) JOHN MATHIESON TWEEDIE |
Appellants |
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- and - |
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JOHN ZENO SOUGLIDES |
Respondent |
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Marilyn Kennedy-McGregor (instructed by B D Laddie) for the Respondent
Hearing date : 14 November 2012
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"the right to require that the Freeholders shall grant to the Lessee an extension lease for a term of 60 years from 25th December 2028, such right not to become exerciseable…until the 25th day of December 2008 and cease to be exerciseable if not exercised by 20th December 2028."
The consideration payable on the exercise of such option was, as provided by clause 2, to be "one red rose". By clause 6 the parties requested the Registrar to note the terms of the Option in the registered titles of the freehold and underlease. The lessee and underlessor, 53 Ennismore Gardens Residents Association Ltd, was not a party to the Option.
"(1) The rule against perpetuities shall not apply to a disposition consisting of the conferring of an option to acquire for valuable consideration an interest reversionary (whether directly or indirectly) on the term of a lease if—
(a) the option is exercisable only by the lessee or his successors in title, and
(b) it ceases to be exercisable at or before the expiration of one year following the determination of the lease.
This subsection shall apply in relation to an agreement for a lease as it applies in relation to a lease, and 'lessee' shall be construed accordingly.
(2) In the case of a disposition consisting of the conferring of an option to acquire for valuable consideration any interest in land, the perpetuity period under the rule against perpetuities shall be twenty-one years …."
(1) Was the Option void for perpetuity?
(2) Was the Option capable of being assigned to the Society?
(3) Was the Option validly transferred to the Claimant and his wife?
(4) Did the Option become nugatory when the 1994 Deed was executed?
For the reasons given in his judgment handed down on 12th March 2012 (now reported at [2012] 3 WLR 1071) Newey J held that the Option was not void for perpetuity, was capable of being assigned to the Alliance Building Society, had been validly transferred to Mr Souglides and his former wife and was not rendered nugatory by the Second Deed of Variation. Accordingly, he made the order sought by Mr Souglides.
(1) Mr Souglides was not, when he purported to exercise the Option, the successor in title to Thomas Tweedie in respect of the Underlease as varied by the First Deed of Variation for the purposes of either
(a) the Option, or
(b) s.9(1)(a) Perpetuities and Accumulations Act.
(2) The benefit of the Option was incapable of being assigned to the Alliance or, in consequence, by the Alliance to Mr Souglides so as to be exerciseable by him.
So far as necessary I will deal with those issues in that order.
"53. While, however, the 1994 Deed brought about a surrender and re-grant as a matter of law, it can also be described as varying the Underlease. In fact, the 1994 Deed is called "Supplemental Deed of Variation", explains in a recital that the parties "are desirous of altering the terms of the Lease" and provides that, save as modified, the Lease is to "continue in full force and effect in all respects" (emphasis added). In a similar way, the Land Registry referred to a term "created by a Supplemental Deed of Variation which varied the extent of an earlier Lease dated 2 June 1975 (as varied by a Supplemental Deed dated 2 October 1986)" (emphasis added). Likewise, the Option itself identified the "Lease" with which it was concerned as the Underlease "as extended by a Supplemental Deed dated 2nd October 1986" (emphasis added).
54. Further, the 1994 Deed did not remove any premises from the Underlease; it added to them. The Claimant remains lessee of all the premises comprised in "the Lease", as that expression is used in the Option.
55. In the circumstances, it seems to me that the 1994 Deed will not have affected the Claimant's position as one of the First Defendant's "successors in title". I do not consider that the expression "successors in title", as used in either section 9(1)(a) of the 1964 Act or the Option, was intended to exclude a person in the Claimant's position. I cannot see why Parliament should have wanted a lessee whose lease was "varied" by the addition of extra premises to lose the benefit of an option. Nor, to my mind, would the Option have conveyed to a reasonable person that it would cease to be exercisable in such circumstances (compare the first of the principles of construction given by Lord Hoffmann in Investors Compensation Scheme Ltd v West Bromwich Building Society, at 912-913)."
"The undertaking to execute in the document of April 1950, was an assignment in equity, because it was conceded that it was a document for valuable consideration. That raised the short question of the construction of the option clause, and what was the meaning therein of the words "successors in title." It was an "option engrossed" as dealt with in Griffith v. Pelton, [1958] Ch. 225, which set out the law on this subject. The obvious intention of the 1937 agreement was to give the freeholders of 75 and 76, London Road, the right to purchase the neighbouring land in order to protect the use of their windows in any subsequent sale of No. 74. The meaning of "successors in title" in the option clause was successors being owners in fee of No. 76. Accordingly, the assignment in April, 1950, was wholly inoperative because the insurance company did not own the freehold of No. 76."
Not only does this case show that occupation is not enough but that the title to which the claimant must have succeeded is that denoted in the original grant.
"In our judgment, having regard to the nature and purport of the option agreement and to the intimate relation between the agreement and the lease already noticed, the terms of the definition in the agreement must have been intended to limit its effect to the two parties thereto so long as they retained the quality of being respectively "lessors" and "lessees" and thereafter to those who should succeed to the reversion immediately expectant on the lease, on the one hand, and to the lease on the other. No doubt an express assignment of the benefit of the option agreement would be necessary to its effective implementation by subsequent holders of the plaintiffs' title under the lease. But it follows in our judgment inevitably from our last conclusion that, according to the true construction of the agreement, and in particular of clause 2 thereof, the option would only be exercisable by the plaintiffs or by any assignees of the benefit of the option agreement so long as the lease continued to subsist and the plaintiffs or such assignees respectively continued to have vested in them the term of the lease."
On the face of it that decision supports the argument of counsel for the Tweedies, not counsel for Mr Souglides.
Lord Justice Rix
Lord Justice Patten