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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 >> Cosmichome Ltd v Southampton City Council [2013] EWHC 1378 (Ch) (23 May 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2013/1378.html Cite as: [2013] WLR(D) 207, [2013] 1 WLR 2436, [2013] EWHC 1378 (Ch), [2013] WLR 2436 |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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COSMICHOME LTD |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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SOUTHAMPTON CITY COUNCIL |
Defendant |
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Philip Coppel QC and Katie Helmore (instructed by Southampton City Council) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 29 and 30 April and 1 May 2013
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Crown Copyright ©
Sir William Blackburne:
Introduction
The covenants
"3. The Purchaser for itself and its successors in title hereby covenants with the Council pursuant to Section 33 of the Local Government (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 1982 and for the benefit and protection of so much of the adjoining or adjacent land of the Council as is capable of being benefited thereby or any part or parts thereof with the intent of binding the Property into whosesoever hands the same may come that the Purchaser and the persons deriving title under it will at all times hereafter observe and perform the obligations stipulations and restrictions set out in the Second Schedule hereto"
"1. The property is to be solely occupied by the Purchaser (being the BBC or the BBC and any wholly owned subsidiary or other licensed broadcaster to whom the BBC's franchise is in whole or part devolved by Act of Parliament) for the purpose of a Broadcasting Centre ("the permitted use") PROVIDED THAT this covenant may be removed by the written Agreement under Seal of the Council ("the Discharge") and a further covenant that where this restriction is lifted and planning permission granted for any use other than radio television studio with ancillary offices 50% of any resulting enhanced value accruing on the Property shall be paid by the owner for the time being of the property to the Vendor ("the Development Charge").
2. In the event that the property or any part becomes surplus to the requirements of the Purchaser and/or it ceases to require the property for the permitted use the Purchaser shall notify the Vendor in writing. The Vendor may thereupon within three months of the date of such written notification serve formal written notice on the Purchaser requesting the Purchaser to convey the freehold interest of the property or the relevant part and the rights appurtenant thereto to the Vendor with vacant possession within 6 months of the Vendor so demanding. The purchase price shall be the open market value of the property and the buildings thereon or the relevant part free of the restrictive covenants in clause 1 and calculated on the basis of a deemed general permitted use as radio/television studios with ancillary offices (not restricted to sole Purchaser use) with the deemed benefit (or relevant apportioned benefit) of the car park lease hereinafter described at the date upon which the Vendor serves notice the value to be agreed within 3 months of such date or failing agreement between the parties, shall be settled by arbitration provided in the event that the Purchaser conveys the freehold interest in the property or the relevant part and the rights appurtenant thereto to the Vendor the consideration for the surrender of the car park lease or relevant part shall be one pound. For the purposes of this paragraph time shall be of the essence.
3. In the event that the Vendor does not serve notice as aforesaid the Purchaser is free to dispose of the property and the buildings thereon or the relevant part and the rights appurtenant thereto subject to the following restrictions:
(1) In the event of a sale for use as radio/television studios with ancillary offices ("the general permitted use") The Vendor shall execute the Discharge and impose a similar obligation on a Purchaser
(2) In the event of a sale for use other than the general permitted use the Vendor shall in the event of a sale of the whole
(i) execute the Discharge
(ii) on recovery of the Development Charge remove the restriction on the property relating to the same
and in the event of sale of part (i) execute the Discharge in relation to that part only and make available a proportionate part of the car parking (ii) on recovery of the Development charge relating to the enhanced value of that part remove the restriction on that part of the Property hereby transferred Provided that the Vendor's reasonable legal fees incurred under clauses 3.3(1) and (2) shall be met by the Purchaser.
4. Notwithstanding the provisions of clause 1 the Vendor agrees the Purchaser may lease, sub-let, share-use, or hire out any part of the property provided the total amount of any land so leased or hired as aforesaid shall not exceed 25% of the lettable floor space and provided no legal estate or interest greater than a lease for a term of 20 years is created and any planning permission obtained in connection with the same shall not give rise to the Development Charge."
The claim
The restrictive covenant
Is the restrictive covenant enforceable against successors in title?
"If an owner of land, on selling part of it, thinks fit to impose a restriction on user, and the restriction was imposed for the purpose of benefiting the Land retained, the court would normally assume that it is capable of doing so. There might, of course, be exceptional cases where the covenant was, on the face of it, taken capriciously or not bona fide, but a covenant taken by the owner of an agricultural estate not to use a sold-off portion for other than agricultural purposes could hardly fall within either of these categories."
"The practical and usual course is for the vendor to impose covenants the benefit of which will not be attached to any particular parcel of land, but will be enforceable by the vendor for the general benefit of his unsold estate for the time being. Nor do I think that the vendor must on each occasion of enforcement show that the result will in fact be to benefit his remaining estate. Benefit or detriment is often a question of opinion on which there may be the greatest divergence of view, and the greatest difficulty in arriving at a clear conclusion. It is, in my judgment, sufficient for the vendor to say, at any rate in the first instance, that the bargain was that he should be protected against certain acts which were recognized as being likely to prove noxious or detrimental to his building estate treated as a whole. The covenantor, being then, in my judgment, bound at the very least to show that the estate remaining to the covenantee at the date of the action was not intended to be protected by the covenants, or that the breach of the covenants could not possibly hurt such remaining estate, the question arises whether this onus has been discharged..."
"If a restriction is bargained for at the time of sale with the intention of giving the vendor a protection which he desires for the land he retains, and the restriction is expressed to be imposed for the benefit of the estate so that both sides are apparently accepting that the restriction is of value to the retained land, I think that the validity of the restriction should be upheld so long as an estate owner may reasonably take the view that the restriction remains of value to his estate, and that the restriction should not be discarded merely because others may reasonably argue that the restriction is spent…"
"… 'money payment' covenants must be distinguished from restrictive covenants properly so called. Modern authority stresses the distinction between covenants imposed to protect, or preserve amenity and those imposed to protect, or allow recovery of an increase in value. This latter purpose, often described as 'overage' or 'clawback' may be regarded as one lying outside the scope of the benefit of a restrictive covenant. But note that the right to a payment of money, whether on account of an increase in the value of the covenantor's land, or otherwise is not related to the preservation of the value, or the amenity of the covenantee's land. Such a right is more in the nature of a privilege which is designed to enhance the value of the covenantee's pocket rather than his land. However, the fact that a covenant requires the payment of a sum of money will not prevent it from 'touching and concerning' the land as long as it is connected with something to be done on or in relation to the land; e g for the approval of building plans; see the fourth category of covenant referred to in… P&A Swift Investments v Combined English Stores Group PLC. But a covenant which is imposed purely to lead to a payment of money (e.g. as a ransom payment) is not one which should be regarded as being capable of benefiting other land and should not be enforceable as a restrictive covenant against successors in title of the original covenantor…"
"…the question arises where a restriction on use is limited to 'the purchaser' or some other defined individual and where the defined use of the land (e.g. for a specific purpose, such as only as a theatre, or as a restaurant) is such that the 'personality' of that individual will be important in so far as the nature, or quality of the use takes its 'tone' from the individual and is significant in context; e g a use which requires a high standard in order to maintain the high class nature of the locality. It may be possible to take other obligations in the same document imposing the covenant (e.g. a right of pre-emption) and argue that the context, with that right of pre-emption present, suggests that the covenant is a personal one. Consent provisions may also be material here. Even definitions which include successors in title within the words 'the purchaser' might be held to be inapplicable where the restriction is clearly aimed at a particular individual working within that restriction, and when that individual's role comes to an end on a proposed sale of the burdened land, the covenantee has control over what is to happen next. This latter factor stresses the personal nature of the restriction."
The right of pre-emption
Has the Council lost the right by notice given in July 2004?
"It is not intended as a part of this transaction that the BBC's occupation of the premises will be in any way changed. The BBC has no current intention to further sublet or part with possession or occupation of the premises, nor to change the use…"
"Turning to the transfer of 13 July 1989, we note that the Second Schedule contains certain pre-emption and other provisions. However, we consider that none of the conditions which might give rise to those provisions (as contained in paragraphs 1, 2, and 3 of the Second Schedule) will arise on this sale and leaseback. … Counsel has confirmed that in his opinion this sale and leaseback will not trigger any of those provisions. The property will continue to be occupied by the BBC for the purpose of a Broadcasting Centre (paragraph 1) and it has not become surplus to the requirements of the BBC, nor does it cease to require the property for the permitted use (paragraph 2). Although, therefore, the sale and leaseback will not give rise to any of the provisions of paragraphs 1, 2, and 3 of the Second Schedule, we felt it was appropriate to advise the Council of the BBC's intentions for the property."
Section 9(2) of the 1964 Act
"9 Options relating to land
(1) The rule against perpetuities shall not apply to a disposition consisting of the conferring of an option to acquire for valuable consideration an interest reversionary (whether directly or indirectly) on the term of a lease if—
(a) the option is exercisable only by the lessee or his successors in title, and
(b) it ceases to be exercisable at or before the expiration of one year following the determination of the lease.
This subsection shall apply in relation to an agreement for a lease as it applies in relation to a lease, and "lessee" shall be construed accordingly.
(2) In the case of a disposition consisting of the conferring of an option to acquire for valuable consideration any interest in land, the perpetuity period under the rule against perpetuities shall be twenty-one years, and section 1 of this Act shall not apply:
Provided that this subsection shall not apply to a right of pre-emption conferred on a public or local authority in respect of land used or to be used for religious purposes where the right becomes exercisable only if the land ceases to be used for such purposes."
10 Avoidance of contractual and other rights in cases of remoteness
Where a disposition inter vivos would fall to be treated as void for remoteness if the rights and duties thereunder were capable of transmission to persons other than the original parties and had been so transmitted, it shall be treated as void as between the person by whom it was made and the person to whom or in whose favour it was made or any successor of his, and no remedy shall lie in contract otherwise for giving effect to it or making restitution for its lack of effect."
…
15 Short title, interpretation and extent
(2) In this Act—
"disposition" includes the conferring of a power of appointment and any other disposition of an interest in or right over property, and references to the interest disposed of shall be construed accordingly;
…
(6) This Act shall apply in relation to a disposition made otherwise than by an instrument as if the disposition had been contained in an instrument taking effect when the disposition was made."
"54. … First, it seems to me that where section 9 (2) refers to "the conferring of an option to acquire...any interest in land", the draftsman has in mind, not only the conferring of an option in the strict sense, but also the creation of a right of pre-emption. In other words, he is treating a right of pre-emption as a sub-class of an option. It seems to me that that construction follows from the proviso to section 9 (2). The proviso makes no sense at all unless the draftsman regarded a right of pre-emption as having fallen within the concept of an option to acquire an interest in land for the purposes of subsection 9 (2). In other words, it seems to me that the draftsman is treating a right of pre-emption as a species of option, and saying that the perpetuity period created by section 9 (2) applies to a right of pre-emption as a species of option.
55. If I am wrong in that, however, I reject Mr Gilchrist's alternative submission as to the way in which you apply section 9 (2) at the point when the clause 17 (iii) right is converted from a right of pre-emption into an option by the seller's offer to sell the land. It seems to me that when section 9 becomes engaged, so that the perpetuity period becomes 21 years, the only sensible way of measuring that period is from the date of the disposition which conferred the right of pre-emption in the first place. I cannot conceive that the draftsman had in mind a period of 21 years that would start to run from the (difficult to define) point in time at which, in the circumstances of the present case, the seller and grantor first made an offer to sell the land. It seems to me that the 1964 Act was seeking to achieve clarity in terms of the running of time for the applicable perpetuity period. Such clarity is to be achieved by having a clearly ascertainable, and definable, start date for that period. That start date, it seems to me, is the date of the disposition which conferred the right in question. It may be that it is only an offer for sale which will start the perpetuity period running; but I see no reason why the length of that perpetuity period should not be capable of being defined, and ascertained, by reference to the earlier date of the disposition which created the right in question. In this case, that date was the date of the 1984 agreement."
"Rights of option and rights of pre-emption share one feature in common; each prescribes circumstances in which the relationship between the owner of the property which is the subject of the right and the holder of the right will become the relationship of vendor and purchaser. In the case of an option, the evolution of the relationship of vendor and purchaser may depend on the fulfilment of certain specified conditions and will depend on the volition of the option holder. If the option applies to land, the grant of the option creates a contingent equitable interest which, if registered as an estate contract, is binding on successors in title of the grantor and takes priority from the date of its registration. In the case of a right of pre-emption, the evolution of the relationship of vendor and purchaser depends on the grantor, of his own volition, choosing to fulfil certain specified conditions and thus converting the pre-emption into an option. The grant of the right of pre-emption creates a mere spes which the grantor of the right may either frustrate by choosing not to fulfil the necessary conditions or may convert into an option and thus into equitable interest by fulfilling the conditions. An equitable interest thus created is protected by prior registration of the right of pre-emption as an estate contract but takes its priority from the date when the right of pre-emption becomes exercisable and the right is converted into an option and the equitable interest is then created. The holder of a right of pre-emption is in much the same position as a beneficiary under a will of a testator who is still alive, save that the holder of the right of pre-emption must hope for some future positive action by the grantor which will elevate his hope into an interest. It does not seem to me that the property legislation of 1925 was intended to create, or operated to create an equitable interest in land where none existed."
(3) Does the right of pre-emption bind Cosmichome in any event?
The second declaration