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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 >> Horne & Meredith Properties v Cox & Anor [2014] EWCA Civ 423 (19 March 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2014/423.html Cite as: [2014] EWCA Civ 423 |
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ON APPEAL FROM STOKE ON TRENT COUNTY COURT
(HIS HONOUR JUDGE MAIN QC)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE RYDER
SIR STANLEY BURNTON
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HORNE & MEREDITH PROPERTIES |
Applicant |
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-v- |
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(1) COX (2) BILLINGSLEY |
Respondent |
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(DAR Transcript of
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Mr J Randall QC (instructed by Wragge & Co) appeared on behalf of the Applicant
Mr A Farrell appeared on behalf of the Respondents
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"the tenant ought not to be granted a new tenancy in view of other substantial breaches by him of his obligations under the tenancy or for any other reason connected with the use or management of the holding."
"In the following provisions of this Part of this Act the expression 'the holding' in relation to a tenancy to which this Part of this Act applies means the property comprised in the tenancy, there being exclude any part thereof which is occupied neither by the tenant nor by a person employed by the tenant and so employed for the purposes of a business by reason of which the tenancy is one to which this Part of this Act applies."
"The claimants maintain that they have been subjected to a remorseless campaign of the defendants' issuing legal proceedings against them, regardless of the legal advice they are likely to have received, chopping and changing their solicitors when one or other dislikes the legal advice received, seemingly oblivious to the substantial costs of their actions (both to themselves and the claimants). No fewer than nine different solicitors have been involved (four additional firms refused to accept the retainer) over some 16 years or so, since proceedings were first commenced in 1996, with the involvement of at least as many barristers, not to mention those barristers that refused to get involved with the first defendant. They have been subjected to no fewer than ten separate sets of proceedings, over very spurious or exaggerated legal infringements of the defendants' rights as tenants or as persons whose rights of way by the side of number 8 Whitburn Street and over the car park to the rear of the premises, have allegedly been infringed. The cost to the claimants as landlords had been absolutely colossal - their own legal costs' bills for just one set of consolidated proceedings in October 2007 being around £300,000. Such proceedings have included wholly baseless allegations of fraud, commenced by the first defendant in person (when he had solicitors acting for him), which were struck out by the court, only to be repeated; the issue of fresh proceedings (the two actions later consolidated) in 2008, which seek to revisit old issues which have been resolved in previous agreements resulting in the entering into of a Tomlin order and a later deed of variation; the issuing of numerous without notice applications, without a request for judicial hearing. All this, contend the claimants, resulting in the imposition of a limited civil restraint order (LCRO) imposed by District Judge Brown on 18 May 2011 against both defendants. If ever there was behaviour that engaged the provisions of section 30(1)(c), say the defendants, this is it. In the case of these defendants, the past is in every sense a good and reliable guide to likely future conduct."
"34. I approach this issue by recognising first that both parties accept that the relationship between them has irretrievably broken down. Moreover, I am entirely satisfied that the approach of the first defendant to his own perceived sense of wrong and interference with his legitimate interests, as he sees it, will not change. Solicitors will continue to have to be involved at every step, in any dealings between the parties. - the ongoing litigation will be rekindled by the first defendants given half a chance (and the leave of District Judge Brown) and what has happened over the last 16 years, is only likely to continue. I very much doubt that the first defendant would disagree with a word of what I have just stated. His response, genuinely held, I do not doubt, is that he is entitled to protect what he sees as his legitimate interests as he has embarked on this course of litigation, regardless of the costs - and it has cost him an enormous sum (approaching £500,000 just for the consolidated hearings by his own account) in an entirely reasonable fashion.
35. Having set out the broad chronology of these various actions - the orders made in his various proceedings, I can only observe that the first defendant's approach to litigation has grotesquely exceeded any reasonable balance or judgment on his part. He remains transfixed by allegations of wrong doing and fraud on the part of the claimants and the directors of that company (among others), yet time and again, his assertions have been struck out as being baseless and an abuse of process. He does not await the outcome of a judicial investigation into an already alleged wrong - well advanced, proceeding to trial - he just issues fresh applications, (without notice) makes yet further allegations (reiterating old allegations, many of which have been resolved in the consolidated proceedings resulting in the drawing up of the Tomlin order). His remedy in the event that he proves any breach of that compromise agreement is to seek to enforce it. Yet the first defendant embarks on a separate course of litigation which goes so much further, in a way that in my judgment is both unreasonable and unnecessary. The first defendant incurs himself repeatedly in wasted costs orders, as he chops and changes his solicitors and barristers and in so doing can only be regarded as a legal menace so far as the claimants, as his landlords, are concerned. Very few companies in the position of the claimants would have been able easily to accommodate all the costs and expense brought about by the actions of the defendants. Accordingly, I am entirely sympathetic to their wish to see an end to their relationship with him as their tenant."
"It would to my mind be an affront to require a landlord to grant protection to such a tenant who lost no opportunity allege and repeat and persist in repeating that directors were frauds, dragging the company through the mire in wasted legal expenses when the assertions had been found to be totally without merit."
"Other substantial breaches by him of his obligations under the tenancy or for any other reason connected with the use or management of the holding."
"The latter words in paragraph (c) are quite wide. I do not think that they require the court to look only at alleged breaches of any tenancy agreement or lease that may have taken place in the past. I think that they entitle the court to look at everything which the court thinks is relevant in connection with the tenant's use or management of the holding past, present or future which may enable the court fairly to exercise its discretion under that section."
"The words in the latter part of section 30 (1) (c) of the Landlord and Tenant Act 1954 cannot be confined to matters connected with the relations between landlord and tenant."
"I think the judge here was not confined to the breach of the tenant in carrying on the translation business of the Interlingua organisation. It was I think open to him to look at all of the circumstances in connection with that breach. Also, I may add, to look at the conduct of the tenant as a whole in regards to his obligations under the tenancy."