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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 >> Pavledes & Anor v Hadjisavva & Anor [2013] EWHC 124 (Ch) (31 January 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2013/124.html Cite as: [2013] EWHC 124 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
7 Rolls Buildings Fetter Lane |
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B e f o r e :
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(1) ANDREAS PAVLEDES (2) ARGYROULLA PAVLEDES |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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(1) THEODOROS HADJISAVVA (2) REVECCA HADJISAVVA |
Defendants |
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Tom Weekes (instructed by DKLM LLP) for the Defendants
Hearing dates: 2 November 2012
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R JUSTICE DAVID RICHARDS
Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice David Richards :
"Until we were instructed very recently, our clients' architect has tried to negotiate and agree a way forward with your client. Unfortunately, this has not been possible to date. Therefore, our clients are now in the process of instructing their own specialist Rights of Light Surveyor to prepare a Rights of Light Report.
This Report will establish whether Mr Palos' conclusions about the impact that our clients' proposed development would have on light in Units 15-21 are correct.
It will be necessary, amongst other things, to ascertain whether Mr Palos has:-
1. Adopted the correct measurements for, and the correct locations of, the apertures in the eastern elevation of number 15-21; and
2. Properly given credit for light obtained from other sources.
Our clients' specialist will report on the extent and nature of any "cut backs" which may be necessary should it be the case, which is not admitted, that the development as currently proposed would infringe or affect your client's rights of light."
"As we have previously stated, our client cannot, at least at present, acknowledge that the proposed development will breach your client's rights of light. Our client has yet to receive a report from a specialist rights of light surveyor, albeit that he is now in the process of obtaining such a report.
Our client is, however, prepared to provide a rather wider undertaking than he has previously provided. In our letter dated 30 January 2012, we stated that "our client will undertake not to carry out any works which will change the existing top floor and roof line of the current building without first providing to your client (through yourselves) with 14 days prior written notice." Our client now goes further. He agrees not to carry out any further works to implement the proposed development without first providing you with 14 days written notice.
Especially given that wide undertaking, it would, (in our view) obviously, be premature and inappropriate for your client to commence proceedings.
There is no call to litigate the issue of whether the development would interfere with your client's rights of light at a time when our client (and his lawyers): (i) are unable to form their own view on that issue without input from a rights of light surveyor; and (ii) are obtaining a report on that issue from such a surveyor. Also, if your client (quite unreasonably) did seek to litigate that issue, he would not, as things stand, be entitled to an injunction. A claimant is entitled to a quia timet injunction only if there is a "strong possibility" of unlawful conduct (see Lloyd v Symonds [1998] EWCA Civ 511); and, at least until such time as our client notifies you that he proposes to proceed with the development, there is no prospect that your client's rights of light will be interfered with.
More generally, litigation should be regarded as a last resort."
"We refer to your earlier letter of today and whilst pleased to note the undertaking now being given you seem to have totally overlooked the fact that:
1. Our respective clients have been in correspondence for 2 years now as such our client has to date been most patient.
2. Throughout this time your client chose to be represented by Mr Betham despite our client repeatedly informing him that Mr Betham is not a right of light specialist.
3. Our client has had to incur substantial legal and professional fees in defending its position.
In the circumstances, we are of the view that our client as a condition of accepting the undertaking now being given can insist that your client must agree to pay his legal and professional fees. In the absence of this, we shall proceed to issue proceedings which in any event are now drafted."
"In light of the contents of that report (and in relation to paragraphs 4-7 of the Particulars of Claim), the Defendant: (i) admits that the Property enjoys prescriptive rights of light over 27 Arcola Street; (ii) (on the assumption that the technical analysis carried out by Mr Palos is accurate) accepts that the Development would (unlawfully) interfere with those rights of light; (iii) intends, at least for the foreseeable future, to proceed on the assumption that Mr Palos' technical analysis is correct; and (iv) confirms that he and his wife do not intend to carry out the Development or, indeed, any other development that would interfere with any of the Property's rights of light (indeed, the Defendant and his wife have decided, rather than carrying out any development at 27 Arcola Street, to let that property in its existing state)."
"18. I have now obtained Mr Harris' report. In essence, Mr Harris has advised me that I cannot proceed with the development in its current form without infringing Mr and Mrs Pavledes' rights of light.
19. My wife and I accept that advice. We accept that Mr and Mrs Pavledes enjoy rights of light over No.23-27. At least for the foreseeable future, we are content to proceed on the basis that the detailed technical analysis carried out Mr and Mrs Pavledes' surveyor is correct. We do not intend to do anything that would infringe Mr and Mrs Pavledes' rights of light.
20. My wife and I have decided that, in view of the problems with the right of light issues, we will not carry out any development at No.23-27 for the time being. Instead, we will let the entirety of the property under a 5 year lease in its existing state. The proposed letting of No. 23-27 is now well advanced. We have found a tenant and my solicitors are instructed to deal with the grant of the proposed lease."
In a further witness statement dated 30 October 2012, Mr HadjiSavva confirmed that he and his wife were proceeding to let the property for a term of five years.
"In a quia timet action, a court should grant an injunction, or make a declaration, only if the defendant is threatening or intending to act unlawfully – with the result that there is an "imminent" or "immediate" threat that the claimant's rights will be infringed."
A "quia timet action" means an action based on a threat by a defendant to act contrary to a claimant's rights, no actual infringement having (yet) occurred. In support of this principle, Mr Weekes relied on three authorities, decided in 1877, 1937 and 2012, to which I refer below.
"…. a court of civil jurisdiction is concerned with legal rights only when the aid of the court is invoked by one party claiming a right against another party, to protect or enforce the right or to provide a remedy against that other party for infringement of it, or is invoked by either party to settle a dispute between them as to the existence or nature of the right claimed. So for the court to have jurisdiction to declare any legal right it must be one which is claimed by one of the parties as enforceable against an adverse party to the litigation, either as a subsisting right or as one which may come into existence in the future conditionally on the happening of an event.
….. the jurisdiction of the court is not to declare the law generally or to give advisory opinions; it is confined to declaring contested legal rights, subsisting or future, of the parties represented in the litigation before it and not those of anyone else."
"(1) The power of the court to grant declaratory relief is discretionary.
(2) There must, in general, be a real and present dispute between the parties before the court as to the existence or extent of a legal right between them. However, the claimant does not need to have a present cause of action against the defendant.
(3) Each party must, in general, be affected by the court's determination of the issues concerning the legal right in question."
With the qualification to paragraph (2) that the dispute could relate to legal rights which might come into existence in the future (as Lord Diplock acknowledged in Gouriet), Moore-Bick LJ agreed with this summary in Milebush Properties Ltd v Tameside Metropolitan Borough Council [2011] EWCA Civ 270; [2012] 1 P&CR 3 at [87].
"It seems to me impossible for the court to say that the council shall not hold such a meeting. When they hold their meeting, if they elect to expel the plaintiff for some reason which is not a good and sufficient reason, or if, in seeking to expel the member, they are acting ultra vires in any way, then no doubt this court will interfere, and will say at once that the resolution purporting to expel the plaintiff is ultra vires, and that, in the circumstances, he has not been expelled, but has remained a member. Then the court, no doubt, would restrain the association, if necessary, from purporting to expel him. But to come to the court and to ask the court to restrain the council from holding a meeting before the meeting has been held – which is something in the nature of a quia timet action – when nobody knows what is going to happen at the meeting, seems to me again to be a misconception of the whole position."
"In these circumstances the defendants through their counsel submit that the claim is premature and bound to fail. They suggest that it is premature because, first, the third defendant does not own the relevant land and may never do so, second, that the first and second defendants, who do own the relevant land, have no proposals for its development which could infringe any rights to light of Aviva and, third, that no planning permission has been granted to anyone to do any work anywhere in such a way as might infringe those rights. Counsel submits that the claim is bound to fail because there is no immediate threat such as to justify a quia timet injunction, and he relies on Cowley v Byas [1877] 5 Ch D 944. He says there is no chance of a declaration being granted either, in reliance on Draper v The British Optical Association [1938] 1 All ER 115. Finally, he contends that there is no risk that delay in proceedings at this stage would prejudice the rights of Aviva in the future, for which purpose he refers to an oddly named case called HKR UK II CHC Limited v Healey [2010] EWHC 2245."
"It is convenient to start with reference to the authorities to which I have been referred. They fall into two categories; the principles regarding the grant of a declaration and the principles relating to the grant of quia timet injunctions. They are, as might be expected, broadly similar."
At [24], the Chancellor referred to and cited from Draper v British Optical Association and then commented in relation to it:
"Thus, in relation to prematurity the rules in relation to declarations are much the same as for quia timet injunctions."
"Thus for the grant of a quia timet injunction there must be an immediate threat to do something which requires the intervention of the court to prevent it. That principle is asserted in similar language in all the subsequent cases to which I have referred."
"In summary, I consider that the claim against the third defendant by Aviva for the declaration it seeks is misconceived because it is premature and would serve no useful purpose now. In addition I have considerable doubt as to the possibility of any meaningful definition of the relevant issues, given that the development does not have the benefit of any planning permission and may change substantially in the next five years anyway."
"I also consider that the claim for an injunction is misconceived. There is not now and cannot be for at least five years an immediate threat by the third defendant to infringe the rights to light claimed by Aviva. None of the matters on which Aviva relies can alter the indisputable fact that it is impossible for the third defendant to infringe the rights to light Aviva claims before 2017 at the earliest."
"justice to the claimant, justice to the defendant, whether the declaration would serve a useful purpose and whether there are any other special reasons why or why not the court should grant the declaration."