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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 >> Keay & Anor v Morris Homes (West Midlands) Ltd [2012] EWCA Civ 900 (11 July 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2012/900.html Cite as: [2012] 1 WLR 2855, [2012] WLR(D) 201, [2012] 2 P&CR 18, [2012] 2 EGLR 173, [2012] EWCA Civ 900 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
CHANCERY DIVISION
BIRMINGHAM DISTRICT REGISTRY
His Honour Judge Barker QC
Case No: 0BM30608
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE RIMER
and
LORD JUSTICE PATTEN
____________________
(1) DAVID NORMA KEAY (2) LINDA MARY KEAY |
Claimants/Respondents |
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- and - |
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MORRIS HOMES (WEST MIDLANDS) LIMITED |
Defendant/Appellant |
____________________
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A Merrill Communications Company
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Mr Jeremy Cousins QC and Mr Andrew Charman (instructed by Moran & Co) for the Respondents, Mr and Mrs Keay
Hearing date: 19 April 2012
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Rimer:
Introduction
Section 2 of the Law of Property (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 1989
'2. Contracts for sale etc of land to be made by signed writing
(1) A contract for the sale or other disposition of an interest in land can only be made in writing and only by incorporating all the terms which the parties have expressly agreed and in one document or, where contracts are exchanged, in each.
(2) The terms may be incorporated in a document either by being set out in it or by reference to some other document.
(3) The document incorporating the terms or, where contracts are exchanged, one of the documents incorporating them (but not necessarily the same one) must be signed by or on behalf of each party to the contract. ….'
'27 … Section 2 is concerned with contracts for the creation or sale of legal estates or interests in land, not with documents that actually create or transfer such estates or interests. So a contract to transfer a freehold or a lease in the future, a contract to grant a lease in the future or a contract for a mortgage in the future are all within the reach of the section, provided of course that the ultimate subject matter is land. However, an actual transfer, conveyance or assignment, an actual lease, or an actual mortgage are not within the scope of section 2 at all.
28 … [Section 2] was directed to tightening up the formalities required for contracts for the creation or transfer of interests or estates in land and it was not concerned with documents that actually create or transfer legal estates or interests in land. ….'
'43. … It enables parties to land contracts who have changed their minds to look around for expressly agreed terms which have not found their way into the final form of land contract which they signed, for the precise purpose of avoiding their obligations, on the ground that the lack of discipline of their counterparty, or even their own lack of discipline, has rendered the contract void.'
The facts
The issues in the proceedings
'23. Following [such] meeting …, and on the same day, there were further discussions between [Mr Keay] and Mr Lambley of [MHL]. [Mr Keay] agreed on behalf of the [Keays] and Imzax that they would reduce the overall price under the Sale Agreement by a further £200,000, making a total price reduction of £700,000, so that the purchase price became £3.8 million.
24. This agreement to reduce further the price was made on the basis that, in return, [MHL] would enter into the section 106 agreement with [BCC] (which would lead to planning consent) and, following completion of the purchase under the sale agreement, promptly get on with the Block A building works so as to enable the shell of the Medical Centre to be completed, and [the Keays] to gain access to deal with the fitting out works ("the Collateral Agreement").
25. On the 14th March 2005 a supplemental agreement was entered into recording the reduction of the purchase price to £3.8 million.'
'20. If (contrary to [MHL's] denial hereinabove) [MHL] and [Mr Keay] did orally agree on 14 March 2005 a contractual term that [MHL] would (following completion of the purchase under the Sale Agreement) promptly get on with works to enable the shell of the Medical Centre to be completed, then such oral agreement is void and without legal effect.
(a) The said oral agreement would be an agreement for the variation of the Sale Agreement, and so would be an agreement for the variation of a contract for the sale of land. Accordingly, by virtue of the provisions of [section 2 of the 1989 Act], the said oral agreement is ineffective to vary the Sale Agreement (not being made in writing signed by or on behalf of [the Keays] and [MHL]).
(b) It is denied that the said oral agreement would be a contract separate and distinct from the Sale Agreement and/or the Supplemental Agreement, and it is denied that it was merely collateral to the Supplemental Agreement. The terms of the said oral agreement would (together with the Supplemental Agreement) be part of a composite transaction to vary the Sale Agreement. Accordingly, the said oral agreement is ineffective by virtue of the provisions of [section 2].'
'7. Paragraph 20, and the relevance of [section 2] is expressly denied:
(a) The Collateral Agreement, which was a separate agreement, had no effect upon the efficacy of the Sale Agreement. Self-evidently this was the case since the Collateral Agreement, in terms, imposed an obligation upon [MHL] in relation to matters following completion of the purchase of [sic: under?] the Sale Agreement.
(b) Since the sale of the land has been completed, ands [sic: as is?] expressly admitted by [MHL] at paragraph 24, there remains no executory contract for the sale of land to which the section can apply. Further, or in the alternative, it would be a fraud upon [the Keays] for [MHL] to have taken the benefit of the price reduction pleaded at paragraph 24 of the Particulars of Claim, on the basis of the Collateral Agreement, and having done so now to assert that the same is void and/or unenforceable by reason of the section pleaded, and [MHL] is precluded from doing so.'
The Grossman point
'… It is obvious that (save in most exceptional circumstances) if a contract for the sale of the carpets and curtains has been made in advance of the contract for the sale of the house, it will be conditional upon the sale of the house. The question is whether the contract for the sale of the house is conditional upon the sale of the carpets and curtains.'
'That was simply a matter of concurrence common to them both. They were in agreement that it should happen …. There was no need for any contractual term about it, and no such term was created.'
Schiemann LJ agreed with the reasoning in these respects of both Chadwick LJ and Sir Christopher Staughton.
'46. A party seeking to avoid a land contract under section 2 must identify a term which the parties have expressly agreed, which is not to be found in the single, or exchanged, signed document. It is not sufficient merely to show that the land contract formed part of a larger transaction which was subject to other expressly agreed terms which are absent from the land contract. The expressly agreed term must, if it is required by section 2 to be included in the single document, be a term of the sale of the land, rather than a term of some simultaneous contract (whether for the sale of a chattel or the provision of a service) which happens to take place at the same time as the land contract, and to form part of one commercial transaction. Section 2(1) does not prohibit parties from structuring a transaction, for example, for the sale of the whole of a company's assets, in such a way that the land sale is dealt with in a different document from the sale of stock, work in progress or goodwill, unless the sale of the land is conditional upon the sale of the other assets. For an illustration of this point, see Grossman v. Hooper [2001] 2 EGLR 82, paras 19-22, per Chadwick LJ. …
54. In my judgment, the apparent disharmony constituted by the dicta on this point may be reconciled as follows: (i) Nothing in section 2 of the 1989 Act is designed to prevent parties to a composite transaction which includes a land contract from structuring their bargain so that the land contract is genuinely separated from the rest of the transaction in the sense that its performance is not made conditional upon the performance of some other expressly agreed part of the bargain. Thus, in Chadwick LJ's example in Grossman v. Hooper [2001] 2 EGLR 82, parties may agree to the sale and purchase both of a house and of its curtains and carpets in a single composite transaction. None the less it is open to them to agree either (a) that completion of the purchase of the house is dependent upon the sale of the carpets and curtains, or (b) that it is not. They are free to separate the terms of a transaction of type (b) into two separate documents (one for the house and the other for the carpets and curtains) without falling foul of section 2. They may also agree to structure a transaction which includes the sale of two or more parcels of land by way of separate contracts for each, so that none of the land contracts is conditional upon the performance of any of the others. (ii) By contrast, the parties to a composite transaction are not free to separate into a separate document expressly agreed terms, for example as to the sale of chattels or the provision of services, if upon the true construction of the whole of the agreement, performance of the land sale is conditional upon the chattel sale or service provision. That would, albeit for reasons which seem to me to frustrate rather than serve the purposes for which the 1989 Act was passed, fall foul of section 2(1), however purposively construed. So would a series of separate contracts for the sale of separate parcels of land, if each was conditional upon the performance of the other. (iii) Since the splitting into separate contracts of parts of a composite transaction is inherently likely to give rise to uncertainties as to whether performance of the one is conditional upon performance of the other, the parties are free, and in my opinion should be positively encouraged, to make plain by express terms whether or not that conditionality exists. To do so serves rather than evades or frustrates the purposes of section 2, an important part of which is to encourage clarity rather than uncertainty in land transactions.'
The Tootal point
'1. Section 2, superseding and replacing section 40 of the Law of Property Act 1925, is dealing with the circumstances in which a valid and enforceable contract for the sale or other disposition of an interest in land can come into existence. As Hoffmann J put it in Spiro v. Glencown Properties Ltd [1991] 2 WLR 931, at 933; 62 P & CR 402, at 404:
"Section 2 was intended to prevent disputes over whether the parties had entered into a binding agreement or over what terms they had agreed."
2. However, section 2 is of relevance only to executory contracts. It has no relevance to contracts which have been completed. If parties choose to complete an oral land contract or a land contract that does not in some respect or other comply with section 2, they are at liberty to do so. Once they have done so, it becomes irrelevant that the contract they have completed may not have been in accordance with section 2.
3. In the present case, the parties having agreed all the terms under which the new 25 year lease would be granted, including those relating to the shop-fitting works and the contribution by [G] of £30,000 towards the cost incurred by [T] in carrying out the shop-fitting works, chose to incorporate the terms in two documents instead of one, namely the lease agreement and the supplemental agreement. They then completed the lease agreement. The lease agreement thereupon ceased to be an executory contract. The question whether section 2 of the 1989 Act would, because not all the terms of the contractual bargain had been incorporated into the lease agreement, have rendered the lease agreement unenforceable became irrelevant. All that was left was the supplemental agreement. The supplemental agreement was not and is not itself a land contract, or, at least, if it is, by incorporation therein of the terms of the lease agreement, a land contract, then there is no issue in the case that need detain the court. But on the footing that the supplemental agreement by itself is not a land contract, which is the contention of Mr Ritchie for [G], there was no longer, after the completion of the lease agreement, any executory land contract in existence to which section 2 of the 1989 Act could apply. There was simply a contract recorded in writing signed by each party, for the payment of £30,000 in a certain event by one party to the other.
4. I am of the opinion, speaking for myself, that even before completion of the lease agreement on August 31, 1990, section 2 would not have prevented the enforcement of the lease agreement. If parties choose to hive off part of the terms of their composite bargain into a separate contract distinct from the written land contract that incorporates the rest of the terms, I can see nothing in section 2 that provides an answer to an action for enforcement of the land contract, on the one hand, or of the separate contract on the other hand. Each has become, by the contractual choice of the parties, a separate contract.
5. But it is not necessary for us on the present appeal to decide that point. It suffices, in my judgment, to say that once the lease agreement had been executed by completion, section 2 had no relevance to the contractual enforceability of the supplemental agreement, whether or not that supplemental agreement was negotiated as part of one bargain that included the terms of the lease agreement.
6. I would therefore allow this appeal. [G] has, in my opinion no defence to the action.
'I also agree. The order under appeal provides as follows:
"The contract specified in paragraph 2 of the Statement of Claim [which is the supplemental agreement] is one to which Section 2 of the Law of Property (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 1989 applies.
If one looks only at the supplemental agreement it does not appear on its face to be a contract for the sale or other disposition of land at all. The declaration which is made therefore appears to be defective. It can only be made a contract to which section 2 of the Act applies if, by reason of its reference to the agreement for the lease and the terms thereof, the two must be read together. If one reaches the conclusion therefore that the supplemental agreement is a contract for the sale or other disposition of land or purported so to be, it follows that all the terms of section 2 must have been complied with, because all the terms must be in that document. Accordingly, it appears to me that either the matter of the supplemental agreement falls wholly outside section 2, or, if it does fall within section 2, it does not avail the landlords because section 2 would then have been fully complied with. I agree that the appeal should be allowed and that there is no defence.'
'198. However, Tootal Clothing Ltd v. Guinea Properties Ltd Management Ltd (1992) 64 P & CR 452 does appear to support Mr Purle's submission; and although other parts of that decision were doubted in Grossman v. Hooper [2001] EWCA Civ 615; [2001] 3 F.C.R 666 [a reference to Scott LJ's obiter observations in paragraph 4], this part was not. Tootal binds me; and I must therefore apply it. What Tootal appears to me to decide is that s. 2 applies only to an executory contract for the sale or disposition of an interest in land; and that once all the land elements of an alleged contract have been performed, the remaining parts of the alleged contract can be examined without reference to s.2….'
Mr Randall acknowledged that that encapsulated the so-called Tootal point upon which the Keays rely. He submitted, however, that Lewison J wrongly elevated what Scott LJ had said in paragraph 5 to the status of ratio decidendi and that that was not what Tootal decided.
'... there was no longer, after the completion of the lease agreement, any executory land contract in existence to which section 2 … could apply. There was simply a contract recorded in writing, signed by each party, for the payment of £30,000 in a certain event by one party to the other.'
Scott LJ, after his obiter observations in paragraph 4, then said much the same again in paragraph 5.
'The ratio of [Tootal] was that since the land contract had been fully performed by the grant of the lease, there was nothing in section 2 adversely to affect the enforceability of the terms relating to the shop-fitting. …'.
As to that, I say simply that I do not regard it as an accurate explanation of the decision in Tootal.
Disposition
Lord Justice Patten :
Lord Justice Laws :