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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 >> TFS Stores Ltd v The Designer Retail Outlet Centres (Mansfield) General Partner Ltd & Ors [2020] EWCA Civ 833 (02 July 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2020/833.html Cite as: [2020] WLR(D) 399, [2020] EWCA Civ 833, [2020] 4 WLR 99 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS
PROPERTY, TRUSTS AND PROBATE LIST
HHJ DAVIS-WHITE QC sitting as a deputy judge of the High Court
The Rolls Building London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
LADY JUSTICE ASPLIN
and
LORD JUSTICE ARNOLD
____________________
TFS STORES LIMITED | Claimant/Appellant/Tenant | |
and | ||
(1) THE DESIGNER RETAIL OUTLET CENTRES (MANSFIELD) GENERAL PARTNER LIMITED | ||
(2) BRITISH OVERSEAS BANK NOMINEES LIMITED | ||
(3) WGTC NOMINEES LIMITED | Defendants/Respondents/LandlordsClaim No.PT-2018-000035 | |
BMG (ASHFORD) LIMITED | ||
UK OM (LP2) (GP) LIMITED | ||
UK OM (LP2) LIMITED | ||
THE DESIGNER RETAIL OUTLET CENTRES (YORK) GENERAL PARTNER LIMITED | ||
UK OM (LP3) (GP) LIMITED | ||
UK (OM) (LP3) LIMITED | Claimants/Respondents/Landlords | |
and | ||
TFS STORES LIMITED | Defendant/Appellant/Tenant |
____________________
Mr Wayne Clark and Mr Joseph Ollech (instructed by Shoosmiths LLP) for the Respondents/Landlords
Hearing date: 24 June 2020
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Covid-19 Protocol: This judgment was handed down by the judges remotely by circulation to the parties' representatives by email and release to Bailii. The date and time for hand-down is deemed to be 14:00pm on 02 July 2020.
Sir Geoffrey Vos, Chancellor of the High Court:
Introduction
"I do not consider that the automatic stay under PD51Z applies to this appeal. [PD 51Z] is restricted to "proceedings for possession brought under CPR Part 55". [Okoro] decides that "proceedings brought under CPR Part 55" includes appeals, but does not otherwise expand the scope of [PD 51Z]. The court emphasised that what was important was how the proceedings were initiated. According to the report of [HHJ Davis-White's decision in this case] the claim was brought by Part 7 claim: not under Part 55. If, as is suggested the possession claim was made by way of counterclaim, that would not have required separate initiation under Part 55.
The guidance given by the CA in Re Children (Remote Hearing: Care and Placement Orders) [[2020] EWCA Civ 583] was principally concerned with [a] hearing at which evidence would be given. In the present case (a) there will be no evidence (b) the parties are legally represented (c) the hearing is not a long one (d) there is adequate technology to enable the parties to attend remotely if they wish to, although their attendance is not required (d) if the press wish to attend they can do so remotely (e) the court is now used to conducting appeals remotely (f) preparation for the hearing is at an advanced stage (g) it appears that the stores will be reopening (or at least be permitted to reopen) from 15 June (h) there is significant prejudice to the landlord in further delay (i) the hearing date was listed in December 2019; lockdown has been in place for nearly three months, yet this application has only just been made (j) if the adjournment were granted the hearing date would be lost; there would be inadequate time to replace it in the court list and there may be significant further delay in relisting".
"In our view PD 51Z cannot be read as formally excluding the operation of CPR [Part] 3.1. As a matter of strict jurisdiction, therefore, a judge retains the power to lift the stay which it imposes. But the proper exercise of that power is informed by the nature of the stay and the purposes for which it was evidently imposed. PD 51Z imposes a general stay on proceedings of the kind to which it applies, initially subject to no qualification at all, and subsequently qualified only in the limited and specific respects provided for in paragraph 2A. The purpose was that during the 90-day period the burden on judges and staff in the County Court of having to deal with possession proceedings, which are an immense part of its workload, would be lifted, and also that the risk to public health of proceeding with evictions would be avoided. That purpose is of its nature blanket in character and does not allow for distinctions between cases where the stay may operate more or less harshly on (typically) the claimant. It would be fatally undermined if parties affected by the stay were entitled to rely on their particular circumstances however special they might be said to be as the basis on which the stay should be lifted in their particular case. Thus, while we would not go so far as to say that there could be no circumstances in which it would be proper for a judge to order that the stay imposed by PD 51Z should be lifted in a particular case, we have great difficulty in envisaging such a case. The only possible such case canvassed before us was where the stay would operate in such a way as to defeat the purposes of PD 51Z and endanger public health".
"In our judgment, however, the words of paragraph 2 of PD 51Z are broader than Mr Paget submitted. They stay "all proceedings for possession brought under CPR Part 55". We have emphasised the word "brought", because it focuses on how the proceedings were initiated. As a matter of ordinary language, we think that proceedings brought under CPR Part 55 are still "brought under CPR Part 55", even when they are under appeal. It is true that the procedure governing the appeal is contained in CPR Part 52, but the proceedings remain proceedings brought under CPR Part 55".
His point was that neither action was "brought" under CPR Part 55. The first action was an action by the tenants for a declaration as to the application of the 1954 Act, with a free-standing counterclaim for possession. CPR Part 20.3(1) provided that "[a]n additional claim shall be treated as if it were a claim for the purposes of these Rules ". The second action was a claim by the landlord for declarations only. The proceedings were never amended to claim possession, even if the parties agreed that such an order should be made to give effect to the judgment. Delay would prejudice the landlords. The enforcement of any possession order would obviously await the end of the stay in any event. If a stay were in place in one case and not the other, the landlords accepted that it was preferable to stay both so that they were determined together. In the course of argument, Arnold LJ suggested that, on any basis, the tenant's claim in the first action was not stayed, so that could proceed alone to determine the substantive issue on whether the leases were protected by the 1954 Act without lifting the stay on any claim for possession at all. The landlords adopted that approach.
The provisions of PD 51Z
"This Practice Direction supplements Part 51
1. This practice direction is made under rule 51.2 of the [CPR]. It is intended to assess modifications to the rules and [PDs] that may be necessary during the Coronavirus pandemic and the need to ensure that the administration of justice, including the enforcement of orders, is carried out so as not to endanger public health. As such it makes provision to stay proceedings for, and to enforce, possession. It ceases to have effect on 30 October 2020.
2. Subject to paragraph 2A, all proceedings for possession brought under CPR Part 55 and all proceedings seeking to enforce an order for possession by a warrant or writ of possession are stayed for a period of 90 days from the date this Direction comes into force.
2A Paragraph 2 does not apply to-
(a) A claim against trespassers, to which rule 55.6 applies;
(b) An application for an interim possession order under section III of Part 55, including the making of such an order, the hearing required by rule 55.25(4), and any application made under rule 55.28(1); or
(c) An application for case management directions which are agreed by all the parties.
3. For the avoidance of doubt, claims for injunctive relief are not subject to the stay in paragraph 2, and the fact that a claim to which paragraph 2 applies will be stayed does not preclude the issue of such a claim".
The issues
i) Does the automatic stay imposed by PD 51Z operate so as to stay the appeals in the first and/or the second action?ii) If the stay only operates on one of, or part of, the appeals before the court, should there be an immediate hearing?
iii) In any event, should the stay be lifted in whole or in part?
Issue 1: Does the automatic stay imposed by PD 51Z operate so as to stay the appeals in the first and/or the second action?
The Order under appeal and the Appellant's Notice
How does the counterclaim in the first action affect the stay of the appeal in the first action?
How does the inclusion, by consent, of the possession orders in the judge's Order relating to three of the four properties in the second action affect the stay of the appeal in the second action?
Issue 2: If the stay only operates on one of, or part of, the appeals before the court, should there be an immediate hearing?
Issue 3: In any event, should the stay be lifted in whole or in part?
Conclusion
Lady Justice Asplin:
Lord Justice Arnold:
"The purpose was that during the 90-day period the burden on judges and staff in the County Court of having to deal with possession proceedings, which are an immense part of its workload, would be lifted, and also that the risk to public health of proceeding with evictions would be avoided."
"There are some 138,000 possession claims brought every year in the County Court Many defendants to possession claims are vulnerable and unrepresented, and only realise that action is required from them very late in the day."
Note 1 See paragraph 3 of PD 51Z. [Back] Note 2 Which is stated to be a guide to the meaning of certain legal expressions as used in these Rules, but it does not give the expressions any meaning in the Rules which they do not otherwise have in the law. [Back]