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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Lejonvarn & Anor v Cromwell Mansions Management Company Ltd [2011] EWHC 3838 (Ch) (24 November 2011) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2011/3838.html Cite as: [2011] EWHC 3838 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
7 Rolls Buildings London EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
(Sitting as a Deputy Judge of the High Court)
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JASON VICTOR LEJONVARN BASIA SAROLA PACZNYSKI LEJONVARN |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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CROMWELL MANSIONS MANAGEMENT COMPANY LIMITED |
Defendant |
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Quality House, Quality Court, Chancery Lane, London WC2A 1HP
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MR. D. HOLLAND QC (instructed by Bevan Kidwell LLP) appeared on behalf of the Defendant.
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Crown Copyright ©
THE DEPUTY JUDGE:
Introduction:
"The Lessor hereby demises unto the tenant all that the Ground Floor and Basement and Cellar Flat (hereafter called the 'Flat') numbered 1 and being on the Ground Floor and Basement and Cellar of the Building and including one half part in depth of the structure between the ceilings of the Flat and floors of the Flat above it, and the internal and external walls of the Flat up to the same level, together with the land being the garden as is shown coloured pink on a plan hereto annexed, together with the easements, rights and privileges mentioned in the First Schedule hereto ..."
Construction:
"No clothes or other articles should be hung or exposed out the Flat (except in the garden), and no mats shall be shaken out of the windows of the Flat."
Mr. Tanney rightly said that obviously in this part of the lease the draftsman had thought about the garden. It seems to me that this is a piece of drafting that has neutral significance because the draftsman clearly has deliberately used the defined term "Flat", but in using the exception, as he does, I take the view that what he was intending to do there was to make clear that there was, in fact, in any event permission to put clothes and other articles out for hanging in the garden. I do not find that to be a provision that justifies me in saying that "Flat" is really used with two different meanings within this lease.
"(a) the main structure and exterior and common interior parts of the Building including (without limitation) the load bearing walls, structural timbers, foundations and the roof thereof with the gutters."
"Full right and liberty for the tenant and all persons authorised by him (in common with all other persons entitled ...) at all times and for all purposes in connection with the permitted user of the ... flat and the said garden that go past and pass through the steps and main entrance ...
(2) A free and uninterrupted passage and running for water and soil, gas and electricity from and to the ... flat through the sewers, drains, channels and water courses, cables, pipes and wires which now are or may at any time during the term hereby created be in or under or passing through the building or any part of thereof."
"(1) Easements, rights and privileges over and along and through the flat equivalent of those set forth in para.2 of the First Schedule."
What Mr. Tanney says is that if you construe the demised premises as including the sub-soil then para.(1) is totally consistent with that because that is all that is necessary. There would be no need for any further wording in para.1 of the Second Schedule.
The presumption of inclusion of the sub-soil:
"A conveyance of land is presumed to carry with it the air space above and the soil below. There are, however, no clear presumptions determining boundaries as between individual parts of a building."
"The better view, as the Court of Appeal recognised [2010] Ch 100 para. 59, is to hold that the owner of the surface is the owner of the strata beneath it, including the minerals that are to be found there, unless there has been an alienation of them by a conveyance, at common law or by statute to someone else."
In the previous paragraph, 26, Lord Hope had stated that the "brocard", his description of the "usque ad' principle, was a proposition of law which commanded general acceptance.
"....one of the conclusions which would inevitably follow in this case is that the lessee's repairing obligations would not extend to the roof of a building or buildings. Plainly that could not have been intended in the case of this lease. I add that this lease, being a long lease of a whole building of whole rooms is quite different from a lease or tenancy of a top floor flat or a building which has been divided, for example, into flats,"
Sir Roger Ormrod concluded by making the point that if the demise of the top floor flat included the roof and the roof space then the same would apply as to the demise of the whole building.
"In my opinion, the authorities do not support the proposition advanced by Mr. Harpum that there is a presumption in any lease of, or including, a roof that it extends upwards to the full height of the airspace available to the lessor. Davies v. Yadegar was a case in which the demise included the whole of the top floor and the whole of the roof. The passage emphasised in the judgment of Woolf LJ. above suggests that, where the demise is of the roof of a small part of the building, in circumstances in which its use could affect tenants on other floors, no such presumption applies. I agree with Lewison on Interpretation of Contacts, 4th ed. at §11-12 that there are no clear presumptions relating to divisions of individual parts of a building."
It may be that the judgment of Mr. Strauss, para.43, is misquoted because I doubt that he intended to say that the authorities did not support the proposition that there could be a presumption usque ad where there is a demise of the roof space. The authorities, it seems to me, leave the question open as to whether it would be appropriate to apply the presumption in the case of leases. I note that Mr. Strauss went on to approach the issue unhampered by any presumption.