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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 >> Craftrule Ltd.v 41-60 Albert Palace Mansions (Freehold) Ltd [2010] EWHC 1230 (Ch) (27 May 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2010/1230.html Cite as: [2010] 1 WLR 2046, [2010] 31 EG 64, [2010] NPC 64, [2010] 2 EGLR 45, [2010] EWHC 1230 (Ch), [2010] L & TR 19, [2010] WLR 2046, [2010] 3 All ER 952, [2010] 22 EG 107 (CS) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
CRAFTRULE LIMITED |
Appellant (Defendant) |
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- and - |
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41-60 ALBERT PALACE MANSIONS (FREEHOLD) LIMITED |
Respondent (Claimant) |
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Mr Philip Rainey (instructed by Butcher Burns) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 3 March 2010
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Henderson:
Introduction
The relevant statutory provisions
"3 Premises to which this Chapter applies
(1) Subject to section 4, this Chapter applies to any premises if-
(a) they consist of a self-contained building or part of a building …;
(b) they contain two or more flats held by qualifying tenants; and
(c) the total number of flats held by such tenants is not less than two thirds of the total number of flats contained in the premises.
(2) For the purposes of this section a building is a self-contained building if it is structurally detached, and a part of a building is a self-contained part of a building if –
(a) it constitutes a vertical division of the building and the structure of the building is such that that part could be redeveloped independently of the remainder of the building; and
(b) the relevant services provided for occupiers of that part either –
(i) are provided independently of the relevant services provided for occupiers of the remainder of the building, or
(ii) could be so provided without involving the carrying out of any works likely to result in a significant interruption in the provision of any such services for occupiers of the remainder of the building;
and for this purpose "relevant services" means services provided by means of pipes, cables or other fixed installations."
"4 Premises excluded from right
…
(3A) Where different persons own the freehold of different parts of premises within subsection (1) of section 3, this Chapter does not apply to the premises if any of those parts is a self-contained part of a building for the purposes of that section.
…"
None of the other exceptions in section 4 is relevant for present purposes.
"(ii) is not less than one half of the total number of flats so contained."
By virtue of section 5, a person is a qualifying tenant of a flat if he is tenant of the flat under a long lease, defined in section 7 as meaning a lease granted for a term of years certain exceeding 21 years and some other categories of lease, subject to various immaterial points of detail. Broadly speaking, therefore, the right to give notice of enfranchisement is conferred on long leaseholders who between them are tenants of 50% or more of the total number of flats in the specified premises. Section 13(3) then sets out the matters that must be contained in the initial notice, starting with a plan showing the premises of which the freehold is proposed to be acquired, and including a statement of the grounds relied upon in support of the claim, the proposed purchase price, and the full names and particulars of all the qualifying tenants of flats contained in the specified premises.
"(8) Where any premises have been specified in a notice under this section, no subsequent notice which specifies the whole or part of those premises may be given under this section so long as the earlier notice continues in force.
(9) Where any premises have been specified in a notice under this section and –
(a) that notice has been withdrawn, or is deemed to have been withdrawn, under or by virtue of any provision of this Chapter or under section 74(3), or
(b) in response to that notice, an order has been applied for and obtained under section 23(1),
no subsequent notice which specifies the whole or part of those premises may be given under this section within the period of twelve months beginning with the date of the withdrawal or deemed withdrawal of the earlier notice or with the time when the order under section 23(1) becomes final (as the case may be).
(10) In subsections (8) and (9) any reference to a notice which specifies the whole or part of any premises includes a reference to a notice which specifies any premises which contain the whole or part of those premises; and in those subsections and this "specifies" means specifies under subsection (3)(a)(i)."
The facts in more detail
"3. The property forms part of a terrace known as Albert Palace Mansions, which is built along one side of Lurline Gardens. The Mansions are a late Victorian/early Edwardian building, consisting of five floors. They are of traditional construction. The mansions are arranged in "handed" pairs of 20 flats. The property comprises such a pair of 20 flats, numbered 41-60. [The judge then refers to a plan, and photographs in the bundle, which show the location of the property and its external appearance.]
4. Within a pair, there are separate entrances to the left and right half, giving access to separate common parts and separate staircases which serve each half of the 20 flats. The premises at 41-50 and 51-60 comprises such halves. Each half has a separate entry phone system. There is a dividing wall between each half, which is vertically continuous from the parapet wall above roof level. There is no communal hot water or space heating system. Each flat has its own gas supply. Each half has its own mains water riser. Each half has its own main electricity supply. Each half has its own drainage within the building itself. The drain at the front of 41-50 may connect externally into the manhole and drains serving 51-60. The flats have cable TV as well as telephone lines. Each flat's telephone line or TV cable is a separate cable leading into the building.
5. The entirety of Albert Palace Mansions may be considered to be a self-contained building for the purposes of section 3(1)(a) of the Act. The property is not structurally detached. 41-50 and 51-60 are not structurally detached. The property constitutes a vertical division of the building and the structure of the building is such that the property could be developed independently of the remainder of the building. The relevant services provided for occupiers of the property are provided independently of the relevant services provided for occupiers of the remainder of the building. The premises at 41-50 constitute a vertical division of the building and the structure of the building is such that 41-50 could be redeveloped independently of the remainder of the building. The relevant services provided for occupiers of 41-50 are provided independently of the relevant services provided for occupiers of the remainder of this building. The premises at 51-60 constitute a vertical division of the building and the structure of the building is such that 51-60 could be redeveloped independently of the remainder of the building. The relevant services provided for occupiers of 51-60 are provided independently of the relevant services provided to occupiers of the remainder of the building.
6. Turning to the leases of the flats, all of the flats in the property are demised under long residential leases for a term certain of more than 21 years. They are registered at HM Land Registry. The tenants of flats 42-49 inclusive and 51-60 inclusive are qualifying tenants as defined by section 5 of the Act, by reason of their respective flats being let under long residential leases, for terms certain of more than 21 years. The service charge provisions in the long leases are defined by reference to the property, which is treated as a single unit with a single service charge regime. The property accordingly comprises 20 flats, of which 18 are let to qualifying tenants.
7. On 20 March 2008, the initial notice dated … 17 March 2008 was given to the Defendant. There is no other landlord to whom the initial notice was required to be given. The initial notice was served by the qualifying tenants of 10 of the flats in the property, namely the qualifying tenants of flat[s] 45, 48, 49, 52, 54, 55, 56, 57, 59 and 60. The claimants seek to acquire the freehold reversionary interest in the whole of the property. The initial notice was served by the qualifying tenants of not less than half of the flats contained in the property. The property is a set of premises to which none of the exclusions contained in section 4 applies. If the property constitutes premises to which Chapter I of the 1993 Act applies, as defined by section 3, then the initial notice was served by a sufficient number of qualifying tenants to constitute a valid and effective notice for the purposes of section 13. The initial notice specified 27 May 2008 as the date by which the Defendant was required to serve a counter-notice pursuant to section 21. The Defendant failed to serve a counter-notice, whether by the specified date or at all. If the property constitutes premises to which Chapter I of the Act applies, as defined by section 3, then in the circumstances the Claimant is entitled, pursuant to section 25(1), to acquire the whole of the Defendant's interest in the property in accordance with the proposals contained in the initial notice, including those as to price."
The rival arguments
(a) decisions on section 3 of the 1993 Act;
(b) decisions on Part I of the Landlord and Tenant Act 1987;
(c) ministerial statements said to be admissible under the rule in Pepper v Hart [1993] AC 593;
(d) subsections 4(3A) and 13(8) to (10) of the 1993 Act; and
(e) the implications of the construction contended for by the claimant.
"where (a) legislation is ambiguous or obscure, or leads to an absurdity; (b) the material relied upon consists of one or more statements by a Minister or other promoter of the Bill together if necessary with such other Parliamentary material as is necessary to understand such statements and their effect; (c) the statements relied upon are clear."
"21. … Unless the lease has been granted for hundreds of years, it eventually becomes a wasting asset. The capital originally invested in it dwindles away. Eventually the lease becomes unmortgageable and unmarketable. The leaseholder therefore needs to negotiate the purchase of the freehold or a lease extension from the landlord. But, as the authors of Hague on Leasehold Enfranchisement, 4th ed (2003), para 1-14 observe, "there are few comparable situations where the bargaining positions are quite so unequal". There is also a positive disincentive to the leaseholder to spend any more money than absolutely necessary in maintaining or improving the flat.
…
23. The 1993 Act was passed to remedy the problems arising from long leaseholds of flats by enabling leaseholders to acquire either the whole premises or a new lease at a price which the legislators thought fair."
Conclusions
"I am sure the Committee will agree that enfranchisement needs to relate to self-contained units to ensure that the premises for enfranchisement are viable and that any remaining part of the block which is not enfranchised is also viable. We have provided the smallest viable units able to be enfranchised separately, because the aim of enfranchisement is to give long leaseholders the right to control just the immediate premises in which they have a financial stake. They should also make a block simpler to manage after enfranchisement.
I consider that this amendment would frustrate the aim of ensuring that enfranchisement is exercisable over the smallest viable unit. The effect might be to require a larger unit to be purchased, possibly at greater expense to individual tenants than the cost of separating a smaller block …"
"In [these amendments] the concern is about the effective enfranchisement of those tenants who do not wish to enfranchise when part of the block has been separated. It is right that the Committee should be assured that they continue to maintain their block and not be adversely affected by the enfranchisement. I share that concern and perhaps it might help the Committee if I explain how our provisions ensure that the interests of all parties are maintained.
We have provided that the smallest viable unit should be able to be enfranchised. That will ensure that leaseholders may only enfranchise the property in which they have an immediate financial interest and should ensure that the block enfranchised will be simpler to maintain. We have also ensured that separation of a block can be achieved only where services are separate or where the separation of services does not result in significant disruption. Both these provisions ensure that leaseholders who do not wish to enfranchise are not unduly affected. There is a balance to be struck here. Clearly enfranchisement may have some impact upon leaseholders who remain in a block. Their interests must be balanced against the aim of giving leaseholders control of their own property, and we consider that we have got that balance about right.
…
I consider it important to ensure that the right to enfranchise should relate just to the immediate property in which long leaseholders have a financial stake. I consider that in achieving this aim there is sufficient protection for other parties …"
In the light of these assurances, none of the three amendments was moved.