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England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Clear Channel UK Ltd v Manchester City Council [2004] EWHC 2873 (Ch) (14 December 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2004/2873.html Cite as: [2004] EWHC 2873 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
CLEAR CHANNEL UK LIMITED |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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MANCHESTER CITY COUNCIL |
Defendant |
____________________
Mr Jonathan Brock QC (instructed by Manchester City Council Legal Department) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: Monday 22- Thursday 25 November 2004
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Introduction | 1-7 |
Background Facts | 8-37 |
The Advertising Hoardings | 38-43 |
The October 2000 Draft | 44-48 |
The July 2001 Letter | 49 |
The 2003 Draft Agreement | 50-55 |
Evidence | 56-59 |
Street v Mountford: the Starting Point | 60-63 |
The M Sites | |
Clear Channel's Case | 64-75 |
Analysis | 76-103 |
Occupation | 1104-105 |
MCC's Application to Re-Amend | 106-125 |
The Chester Road Site | |
MCC's Case | 126-131 |
Analysis | 132-158 |
Decision | 159 |
Mr Justice Etherton :
Introduction
Background Facts
The Advertising Hoardings
The October 2000 Draft
"The Advertising Display means the advertisements and advertising structures including hoardings whether illuminated or otherwise to be erected on the Sites.
Commencement Date means the date of this Agreement.
The Holding means the complete holding of the Sites at any time during the Agreement.
The Minimum Guaranteed Net Rental ("MGNR") means the sum of TWO HUNDRED AND TWENTY THOUSAND POUNDS (220,000.00) per annum.
Net Revenue means the revenue received by the Contractor for each Site for each year of the Term less deduction of VAT where applicable and the normal outdoor specialist fees and sales house commissions.
The Payments means the payments described in Clause 9 of this Agreement.
The Sites mean land and premises as specified in the Schedule which is owned by the City Council on which the Contractor is permitted to erect or maintain the Advertising Display under the provisions of this Agreement and shown on the location plans attached hereto.
The Term means period from and including the Commencement Date and ending on 31 October 2002 subject to the provisions of the Agreement.
The Approved Documents means the plans elevations sections specifications detailed drawings and other documents previously approved by the City Council in writing ..."
"3. GRANT
3.1 In consideration of the Contractor making the Payments the City Council grants to the Contractor permission to erect and maintain the Advertising Display at the Sites for the Term subject to the provisions of this Agreement."
"4. THE HOLDING
4.1 The Holding shall form the complete holding of the Sites to be available for use by the Contractor for the purpose of this Agreement."
"5. VARIATION OF HOLDING"
5.1 The City Council may withdraw any Site from the Holding by giving 28 days notice to the Contractor for any reason and in such event the Contractor shall be required to reinstate the Site in accordance with Clause 8.14."
"7. THE CONTRACTOR'S OBLIGATIONS
THE Contractor shall:
Erection of The Advertising Display
7.1 To erect the Advertising Displays in material accordance with the Approved Documents.
Payment
7.2 To pay and indemnify the City Council against:-
7.2.1 the rent as calculated in accordance with Clause 9 hereof at the times and in the manner hereinafter appointed and to pay and discharge all rates and other outgoings which shall during the continuance of this Agreement be charged upon the sites and the Advertising Display as a result of the Contractors user thereof.
7.2.2 Value Added Tax ("V.A.T.") which may from time to time be charged on any monies payable by the Contractor under this Agreement and (except to the extent that the City Council can reclaim it) on any payment by the City Council where the Contractor agrees to reimburse the City Council.
…..
Annual Management Charge
7.4 For each and every Site pay the annual management charge to be levied for the continuing administration of this Agreement Such payment to be 2% of the MGNR.
…..
Full Market Prices
7.6 In respect of the exclusive advertising rights to use their best endeavours to sell and obtain the full market price for each and every Site.
…..
Construction and installation
7.9.1 Take each and every Site in its existing condition and bring it into line with the City Council specification and approval (such approval not to be unreasonably withheld or delayed). If an Advertising Display requires replacement for whatever reason the Contractor shall pay for its replacement and shall undertake the work in a manner satisfactory to the Authorised Officer.
7.9.2 bear all costs connected with the laying out installation and maintenance of each and every Site and any Advertising Display including (if the Advertising Display is illuminated) the installation of a separate electric meter for supplying electric current to illuminate the Advertising Display (all of which works and acts shall be carried out and done to the reasonable satisfaction of the Authorised Officer) and shall pay for all electric current consumed.
Nuisance
7.10 Not use or permit to be used the whole or any part of each and every Site or any Advertising Display for any purpose which shall or may be or grow to be a public or private nuisance.
Reinstatement on Termination
7.11 On the termination of the permission granted in respect of any Site in accordance with the provisions of this Agreement if so required by the City Council immediately remove from the Site the Advertising Display and all other works whatsoever and shall make good any damage caused by the removal and in default of such removal and restoration being effected within 5 days of the termination of the permission granted the City Council shall be entitled to do so at the Contractor's expense and the City Council shall without prejudice to any other rights they may possess under this Agreement have a lien upon the Advertising Display until all sums due from the Contractor to the City Council under this Agreement have been paid.
Maintenance
7.12.1 During the continuance of the Agreement at its own expense maintain repair and keep in a clean and tidy condition and free from litter each and every Site and the Advertising Display to the reasonable satisfaction of the City Council in addition to complying with the standard conditions required by the Town and Country Planning (Control of Advertisements) Regulations 1992 or any amendment of or regulations replacing those regulations for the time being in force.
7.12.2 Maintain any paving, landscaping, fencing or screening required by the Advertising Display.
…..
7.12.4 Not to make any material structural alteration to the Advertising Display without the prior approval in writing of the City Council.
…..
Indemnity
7.15 Indemnify the City Council against all claims actions demands losses injuries costs charges expenses and liabilities whatsoever which the City Council may incur or which may arise by reason of a breach by the contractor of their obligation contained herein unless occasioned by any act negligence or default of the City Council its servants agents or employees.
Insurance
7.16 On the erection of any Advertising display to insure and keep the Advertising Display insured against third party risks.
…..
Not to impede Officers etc.
7.18 Not to impede or obstruct in any way the officers servants or agents of the City Council in the exercise by them of the City Council's interests in each and every Site and in particular give all reasonable assistance and facilities to the officers servants or agents in or about their entry into the Site in that connection.
Calculation of rent
9.1 From and including the commencement Date to the expiry or sooner determination of the Term the rent due and payable in respect of the Advertising Display shall be equal to:-
9.1.1 60% of the Net Revenue received by the Contractor for each of the Sites or
9.1.2 the Minimum Guaranteed Net Rental
(Whichever shall be the greater)
9.2 On the date of this Agreement and the beginning of each anniversary of the Term (and proportionately for any period of less than a year) to pay to the City Council the Minimum Guaranteed Net Rental.
…..
10. ADVERTISING DISPLAY NOT FIXTURE
Each Advertising Display shall remain at all times the property of the contractor free from any claim or right of the City Council except as otherwise provided by this Agreement.
11. ADVERTISING BY CITY COUNCIL
THE Contractor shall:
11.1 make available to the City Council at any time during the Term on any of the sites as identified by the City Council eight advertising faces for its own use such faces to be made available at no cost to the City Council subject to the Council giving to the Contractor three months notice of its intention to use the Sites
11.2 make available to the City council the listed panels without agency or commission fees amounting to a 20% discount.
12. TERMINATION BY CITY COUNCIL
12.1 The City Council shall be entitled to terminate this Agreement by giving 14 days written notice:
12.1.1 if the Payments remain unpaid for 28 days after the same shall have become due; or
12.1.2 if the contractor shall default in performing any stipulation or agreement herein contained with due diligence or in a proper skilful efficient and professional manner or to the entire satisfaction of the Authorised Officer; or
12.1.3 shall enter into liquidation (except for the purpose of reconstruction) or shall do any other proceeding in law having effects or results of or similar to those of bankruptcy.
13. TERMINATION BY CONTRACTOR
13.1 Where the whole or any part of the Advertisement Display at a Site is obscured or rendered impossible from any cause or through circumstances outside the control of the Contractor so that the Contractor is prevented from enjoying the full benefit of the right granted then the Contractor may elect either:
(i) to withdraw the Site from the Holding by giving 28 days notice in writing to the City Council to expire on any day; or
(ii) with the consent of the City Council to reduce the MGNR for the Site in proportion to the degree of such interference during such time as such interference shall last.
14. NO TENANCY CONFERRED
14.1 This Agreement shall constitute a licence in respect of each Site and confers no tenancy on the Contractor and possession of each Site is retained by the City Council subject however to the rights and obligations created by this Agreement.
14.2 Pursuant to the authorisation by an order of the Manchester County Court made on the 2000 (case number ) under the provisions of the Landlord and Tenant Act 1954 Section 38(4) (as amended by the Law of Property Act 1969 Section 5) the parties agree that the provisions of Sections 24-28 inclusive of the Landlord and Tenant Act 1954 should be excluded in relation to this Agreement.
15. NO ASSIGNMENT OR SUB-CONTRACTING
The Contractor shall not assign or sub-contract any of its rights or duties under this Agreement without the consent in writing of the City Council save that the Contractor can assign this Agreement to any company within the same group of companies as the Contractor without consent.
…..
17. COMPENSATION EXCLUDED
17.1 It is agreed and declared for the avoidance of doubt that if the City Council requires possession of any Site and withdraws the Site from the Holding the Contractor shall not be entitled to any compensation in respect of the loss of the Site save that where possession is required within six months from the date a site is added to the Holding or the Advertising Display is erected then the Council shall refund to the Contractor the cost of the erection of the Advertising Display and where possible offer an alternative site of equivalent advertising quality.
…..
24 . HEADINGS
Headings contained in this Agreement are for reference purposes only and should not be incorporated into this Agreement and shall not be deemed to be any indication of the meaning of the clauses to which they relate."
The July 2001 Letter
"1. More O'Ferrall will be responsible for obtaining all necessary consents and approval required including planning permission in respect of the proposed design which will incorporate 4 x 96 back illuminated units within the overall structure.
2. The rental will be £200,000 p.a.
3. The term of the agreement will be 5 years.
4. More O'Ferrall will pay a lump sum figure of £500,000 (which represents the first 2½ years of the rental for the 5 year term) up front from the date upon which the structure is erected and advertising is posted upon it. After the first 2½ years the remaining rental will be payable quarterly in advance in the normal manner.
5. (a) In the first year of the contract the 96 sheet which faces traffic coming into the City along and closest to Chester Road together with the adjacent 96 sheet will be available for the Councils usage free of charge for the 2 weeks prior to the Commonwealth Games and the 2 weeks of the Games themselves.
b) One 96 sheet (facing traffic coming into the City along Chester Road) will be available to the Council free of charge for eight weeks during each of the remaining 4 years of the contract.
6. The Commonwealth Games sponsors will get a 10% reduction on the cost of sheetage when purchasing direct from More O'Ferrall.
7. At the termination of the contract the structure together with the back-illuminated units will become the property of the City Council.
8. More O'Ferrall will indemnify the City Council and its officers, officials or representatives against all action, claims, loss, damage, expenses or liability whatsoever caused either director or indirectly by its use of the said property.
9. More O'Ferrall will be responsible for the payment of rates and all other outgoings.
10. More O'Ferrall will maintain the whole of the structure and equipment, other works and services, together with all additions, improvements and alterations thereto in good and substantial repair and condition and insure the same to the full replacement value thereof at all times.
11. Access to the site for the purpose of the construction and maintenance thereafter will be subject to the approval of the City Council.
12. More O'Ferrall will not assign sublet or part with possession of the structure. This wall of cause not preclude normal advertising lettings of the hoarding themselves.
13. More O'Ferrall will be responsible for the City Council's legal costs and surveyors fees in connection with the Agreement. Surveyors fees to amount to £3000.
14. More O'Ferrall will sign a formal Agreement as provided for above to be prepared by the City Solicitor which will contain such other terms, clauses and conditions as may be considered appropriate."
The 2003 Draft Agreement
"1.2 "the Lessor" includes the persons for the time being entitled to the reversion expectant on the determination of the term hereby granted
1.3 "the Lessee" includes the persons deriving title under the Lessee
1.4 "the Demised Premises" means the premises described in the Schedule hereto
1.5 "the Term" means 5 years from and including the 15th June 2002
1.6 "Rent Commencement Date" means the 15th day of June 2002
1.7 "the Rent" means the sum of Two Hundred and Twenty Thousand Pounds per annum (£220,000)."
"2.0 Demise
The Lessor hereby demises to the Lessee the Demised Premises TO HOLD the Demised Premises to the Lessee for the Term SUBJECT to the Rights YIELDING AND PAYING to the Lessor from the Rent Commencement Date the Rent such Rent to be paid by equal quarterly payments in advance on the usual quarter days in every year and proportionately for any period of less than a year the first such payment to be paid on the date of this Lease."
"The advertising hoarding and any wires cables electrical or other equipment the Lessee may install is and shall remain at all times the Lessee's property and only removable by the Lessee."
"Exclusion of Landlord and Tenant Act 1954
PURSUANT to the authorisation by an Order of the Manchester County Court made on the day of 2003 (Case Number ) under the provisions of the Landlord and Tenant Act 1954 Section 38(4) (as amended by the Law of Property Act 1969, Section 5) the parties agree that the provisions of Section 24-28 inclusive of the Landlord and Tenant Act 1954 shall be excluded in relation to the tenancy created by this Lease."
Evidence
Street v Mountford: the Starting Point
"The whole of the document must be looked at; and if, after it has been examined, the right conclusion appears to be that, whatever label may have been attached to it, it in fact conferred and imposed on the grantee in substance the rights and obligations of a tenant, and on the grantor in substance the rights and obligations of a landlord, then it must be given the appropriate effect, that is to say, it must be treated as a tenancy agreement as distinct from a mere licence."
"Both parties enjoyed freedom to contract or not to contract and both parties exercised that freedom by contracting on the terms set forth in the written agreement and on no other terms. But the consequences in law of the agreement, once concluded, can only be determined by consideration of the effect of the agreement. If the agreement satisfied all the requirements of a tenancy, then the agreement produced a tenancy and the parties cannot alter the effect of the agreement by insisting that they only created a licence. The manufacture of a five-pronged implement for manual digging results in a fork even if the manufacturer, unfamiliar with the English language, insists that he intended to make and has made a spade."
…..
"Parties cannot turn a tenancy into a licence merely by calling it one. The circumstances and the conduct of the parties show that what was intended was that the occupier should be granted exclusive possession at a rent for a term with a corresponding interest in the land which created a tenancy."
"My Lords, the only intention which is relevant is the intention demonstrated by the agreement to grant exclusive possession for a term at a rent. Sometimes it may be difficult to discover whether, on the true construction of an agreement, exclusive possession is conferred. Sometimes it may appear from the surrounding circumstances that there was no intention to create legal relationships. Sometimes it may appear from the surrounding circumstances that the right to exclusive possession is referable to a legal relationship other than a tenancy. Legal relationships to which the grant of exclusive possession might be referable and which would or might negative the grant of an estate or interest in the land include occupancy under a contract for the sale of the land, occupancy pursuant to a contract of employment or occupancy referable to the holding of an office. But where as in the present case the only circumstances are that residential accommodation is offered and accepted with exclusive possession for a term at a rent, the result is a tenancy."
The M Sites
Clear Channel's Case
"(3) Factual possession signifies an appropriate degree of physical control. It must be a single and [exclusive] possession, though there can be a single possession exercised by or on behalf of several persons jointly. Thus an owner of land and a person intruding on that land without his consent cannot both be in possession of the land at the same time. The question what acts constitute a sufficient degree of exclusive physical control must depend on the circumstances, in particular the nature of the land and the manner in which land of that nature is commonly used or enjoyed…Everything must depend on the particular circumstances, but broadly, I think what must be shown as constituting factual possession is that the alleged possessor has been dealing with the land in question as an occupying owner might have been expected to deal with it and that no-one else has done so."
Analysis
Occupation
"…where the property comprised in the tenancy is or includes premises which are occupied by the tenant and are so occupied for the purposes of a business carried on by him or for those and other purposes."
MCC's Application to re-amend
"…there is, in my judgment, implicit in a condition that the tenancy agreement negotiated between the parties should be subject to the making of a court order under s 38(4) of the 1954 Act, a term that unless and until the court order is obtained no legally binding grant or acceptance of the tenancy should be made."
"Thus, in what used to be the ordinary case of a tenancy unaffected by statutory prolongation or protection coming to an end and the parties giving and receiving rent but not expressly agreeing on the creation of a new tenancy, the preferred solution that the law has adopted is a periodic tenancy, on the footing that that is what the parties must have intended or be taken to have intended. Ultimately it is the intentions of the parties in all the circumstances that determines the result of the giving and acceptance of rent. Tenancies where there is no statutory protection of one sort or another are no longer the norm. Where statutory protection does exist, that has been treated as a significant factor in evaluating the parties' intention in paying and receiving rent. The high water maker of that reasoning is to be found in Ormrod LJ's judgment in Longrigg Burrough & Trounson v Smith (1979) 251 EG 847 at 849, where he is recorded as saying:
'The old common law presumption of a tenancy from the payment and acceptance of a sum in the nature of rent dies very hard. But I think the authorities make it quite clear that in these days of statutory controls over the landlord's right of possession, this presumption is unsound and no longer holds. The question now is a purely open question; it is simply: is it right and proper to infer from all the circumstances of the case, including the payments, that the parties had reached an agreement for a tenancy? I think it does not now go any further than that.'"
"The tenant's interpretation of a concluded grant of a tenancy protected by the 1954 Act seems to me less compatible with the intentions of the parties in agreeing on a tenancy subject to the approval of the court under s 38(4), and paying and accepting rent in accordance with the terms of those proposed tenancies before they came into force, than is a tenancy at will. It is clearly established that it is legitimate to have regard to relevant statutory protection in determining whether or not the acceptance of rent is a factor from which a new tenancy could be created (see per Scarman LJ in Longrigg Burrough & Trounson v Smith (1979) 251 EG 847 at 849). Once one takes into account the machinery of the 1954 Act and the parties' knowledge of its operation it seems to me very clear that they did not intend to create a periodic tenancy pending the grant which both sides anticipated, of a tenancy approved by the court under s 38(4). Nor do I see any compelling reason why the court should impute such an intention to them, if as is factually perfectly possible, they gave no serious thought to the legal repercussions of the payment and acceptance of rent."
"As with other consensually-based arrangements, parties frequently proceed with an arrangement whereby one person takes possession of another's land for payment without having agreed or directed their minds to one or more fundamental aspects of their transaction. In such cases the law, where appropriate, has to step in and fill the gaps in a way which is sensible and reasonable. The law will imply, from what was agreed and all the surrounding circumstances, the terms the parties are to be taken to have intended to apply. Thus if one party permits another to go into possession of his land on payment of a rent of so much per week or month, failing more the inference sensibly and reasonably to be drawn is that the parties intended that there should be a weekly or monthly tenancy. Likewise, if one party permits another to remain in possession after the expiration of his tenancy. But I emphasise the qualification: 'failing more'. Frequently there will be more. Indeed, nowadays there normally will be other material surrounding circumstances. The simple situation is unlikely to arise often, not least because of the extent to which statute has intervened in landlord-tenant relationships. Where there is more than the simple situation, the inference sensibly and reasonably to be drawn will depend on a fair consideration of all the circumstances, of which the payment of rent on a periodical basis is only one, albeit a very important one. This is so, however large or small may be the amount of the payment.
To this I add one observation, having in mind the facts of the present case. Where parties are negotiating the terms of a proposed lease, and the prospective tenant is let into possession or permitted to remain in possession in advance of, and in anticipation of, terms being agreed, the fact that the parties have not yet agreed terms will be a factor to be taken into account in ascertaining their intention. It will often be a weighty factor. Frequently in such cases a sum called 'rent' is paid at once in accordance with the terms of the proposed lease: for example, quarterly in advance. But, depending on all the circumstances, parties are not to be supposed thereby to have agreed that the prospective tenant shall be a quarterly tenant. They cannot sensibly be taken to have agreed that he shall have a periodic tenancy, with all the consequences flowing from that, at a time when they are still not agreed about the terms on which the prospective tenant shall have possession under the proposed lease, and when he has been permitted to go into possession or remain in possession merely as an interim measure in the expectation that all will be regulated and regularised in due course when terms are agreed and a formal lease granted.
Of course, when one party permits another to enter or remain on his land on payment of a sum of money, and that other has no statutory entitlement to be there, almost inevitably there will be some consensual relationship between them. It may be no more than a licence determinable at any time, or a tenancy at will. But when and so long as such parties are in the throes of negotiating larger terms, caution must be exercised before inferring or imputing to the parties an intention to give to the occupant more than a very limited interest, be it licence or tenancy. Otherwise the court would be in danger of inferring or imputing from conduct, such as payment of rent and the carrying out of repairs, whose explanation lies in the parties' expectation that they will be able to reach agreement on the larger terms, an intention to grant a lesser interest, such as a periodic tenancy, which the parties never had in contemplation at all."
"Entry into possession while negotiations proceed is one of the classic circumstances in which a tenancy at will may exist (see Scarman LJ in Hagee (London) Ltd v A B Erikson & Larson (a firm) [1975] 3 All ER 234 at 237, [1976] QB 209 at 217)."
The Chester Road Site
MCC's Case
Analysis
"…first I must consider a feature central to the statutory structure: the requirement that the property must be "occupied" by the tenant. As has been said on many occasions, the concept of occupation is not a legal term of art, with one single and precise legal meaning applicable in all circumstances. Its meaning varies according to the subject matter. Like most ordinary English words "occupied", and corresponding expressions such as occupier and occupation, have different shades of meaning according to the context in which they are being used…
This is not surprising. In many factual situations questions of occupation will attract the same answer, whatever the context. A tenant living alone in a detached house under a residential lease would be regarded as the sole occupier of the house. It would need an unusual context to point to any other answer. But the answer in situations which are not so clear cut is affected by the purpose for which the concept of occupation is being used. In such situations the purpose for which the distinction between occupation and non-occupation is being drawn, and the consequences flowing from the presence or absence of occupation, will throw light on what sort of activities are or are not to be regarded as occupation in the particular context. In Part II of the Act of 1954 "occupied" and "occupied for the purposes of a business carried on by him" are expressions employed as the means of identifying whether a tenancy is a business tenancy and whether the property is part of the holding and qualifies for inclusion in the grant of a new tenancy. In this context "occupied" points to some business activity by the tenant on the property in question. The Act seeks to protect the tenant in his continuing use of the property for the purposes of that activity. Thus the word carries a connotation of some physical use of the property by the tenant for the purposes of his business."
"If it is shown that the tenant, having possession of the premises and having given to no person the right to exclude the tenant from any part of the premises or to limit the tenant's access thereto, is by himself, his servants or agents physically present on the premises to such extent and exercising control of them to such extent as would reasonably be expected having regard to the nature of the premises and the terms of the tenancy, and is so present and exercising control for the purposes of the business or activity carried on by the tenant, then for my part it would seem likely at least that an observer, knowing the facts and applying the ordinary and popular meaning of the phrase "occupation for the purposes of a business or activity", would hold that tenant to be in occupation.
I accept, of course, that a tenant who has a right to possession may choose not to go into actual occupation, and, as set out above, the authorities show that "occupation" for the purposes of section 23 means actual occupation in the popular sense of that word. But if, as is clear from Eveleigh LJ's judgment in Hancock & Willis v GMS Syndicate, the physical occupation need not be continuous provided the right to occupy continues, then the sort of occupation to which I have referred should in most cases qualify.
That which is a minimum sufficiency of physical presence or control cannot, in my view, be determined by the court independently of the facts of a particular case by reference to the number of visits per day or per week or per month. When the facts of a particular case are regarded, as they must be, I can see no standard for the judgment of the minimum sufficiency of physical presence or control in a case where there are no subtenants or licensees competing for the role of occupier other than that established by the nature of the premises in question regarded in the light of the statutory purpose, which is to enable tenants occupying property for business purposes to obtain new tenancies in certain cases, as enlarged by the provision to include an activity carried out by a body of persons."
"…I agree with Mr Craig's submission that this was not a borderline case but a clear case. The council were physically present upon and exercised control over the piece of land by their servants or agents at least as much as would, in my judgment, be reasonably expected by the parties to the lease when it was made. If the ordinary man, knowing the facts, were asked: "Who is in occupation of this open space?", I have no doubt whatever that, applying the ordinary and popular meaning of the word, he would answer "The council is". No one else is. The council is there, as necessary, to do all that is required to maintain the place in decent order for use by the public."
Decision