BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Burrell & Ors v Helical (Bramshott Place) Ltd [2015] EWHC 3727 (Ch) (18 December 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2015/3727.html Cite as: [2015] EWHC 3727 (Ch) |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
Sitting as a Deputy High Court Judge
____________________
Mr John Christopher Burrell Mrs Sandra Elizabeth Burrell Mr Alistair Robert Sinclair Bassett Cross Mrs Margaret Victoria Bassett Cross Mrs Evelyn Winifred Morris Mr Frank Ralph Morris Mr Frank Vernon Ogden Mrs Marilyn June Ogden |
Claimants/ Respondents |
|
- and - |
||
Helical (Bramshott Place) Limited |
Defendant/ Applicant |
____________________
Ian Mill QC, Hanif Mussa and Kate Urell (instructed by Mishcon De Reya) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 14 and 15 December 2016
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
David Casement QC :
Background
i) On 24 April 2009, the First and Second Claimants entered into a lease for a property having paid a premium of £475,000. They remain in residence at their property.
ii) On 19 May 2009, the Third and Fourth Claimants entered into a lease for a property, having paid a premium of £445,000. On 10 January 2013, they subsequently assigned their lease to third parties. Upon that assignment, which was effected for a purchase price of £540,000, arrangements were made for the payment of a fee to the Defendant.
iii) On 26 August 2009, the Fifth and Sixth Claimants entered into a lease for a property having paid a premium of £290,000. On 7 September 2013, they subsequently assigned their lease to third parties. Upon that assignment, which was effected for a purchase price of £325,000, arrangements were made for the payment of a fee to the Defendant.
iv) On 22 June 2010, the Seventh and Eighth Claimants entered into a lease for a property, having paid a premium of £492,500. They remain in residence at the property.
Application
Relevant terms of the Leases
Clause 1
"IN consideration of the Premium now paid by the Tenant to the Landlord (the receipt whereof the Landlord acknowledges) and of the covenants on the Tenant's part contained herein the Landlord with full title guarantee DEMISES to the Tenant the Demised Premises TOGETHER WITH the rights referred to in Part I of the Schedule but subject to the exceptions and reservations referred to in Part 2 of the Schedule TO HOLD unto the Tenant for the Term (subject to the provisions for earlier determination contained in this Lease) PAYING to the Landlord during the said Term annually in advance on the 1 April for the first 25 years of the Term the yearly rent of two hundred and fifty pounds (£250.00) such yearly rent to double on every twenty-fifth anniversary of the term commencement date and so in proportion for any broken period of a year where the Demised Premises include a Garage and additional 10% of the yearly ground rent figure is payable by the Tenant"
Clause 2
"THE Tenant COVENANTS with the Landlord as follows:-
…
2.13.3 Not to assign the Demised Premises as a whole save in accordance with each and every one of the following provisions:
(a) the person to whom the Demised Premises is assigned ("the Assignee") shall be a single individual, or if more than one individual shall be limited to two individuals who are either married or living together as if they were married or to two individuals who are related by blood
…
(d) such assignment shall be effected for a premium ("the premium") which shall represent, at the date of such assignment, the open market value of the residue of the term of this lease as agreed between the Landlord and the Tenant and which shall be consistent with the sale price of other like properties on the Village at that time AND any dispute concerning this clause shall be determined in accordance with the Arbitration Act 1996 or any statutory modification thereof for the time being in force such arbitration shall be a Qualifying Surveyor or Estate Agent of at least ten years standing and shall if possible be familiar with property values on the Village and shall be appointed on the application of either party by the President of the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors and such arbitration shall be conducted by means of written representations and written counter representations with no oral hearing
(e) the marketing of the Demised Premises shall be effected on behalf of the Tenant only through such an agent as the Landlord shall from time to time reasonably require, and such agent shall be employed at the expense of the Landlord
…
(g)
(i) no assignment shall be effected save to an Assignee who prior to or contemporaneously with any assignment to him or them (a) pays the relevant percentage of the premium to the Landlord, to the intent that the remaining balance thereof be payable to the Tenant, and (b) executes and delivers to the Landlord a Deed of Covenant in the form required by the Landlord as is referred to in Clause 2.4 hereof and (c) executes and delivers to the Landlord a deed with the Landlord in the form set out in Part 6 of the Schedule
(ii) relevant percentage means:-
5% of the premium if the assignment occurs within three years from (as the case may be) the date of this Lease or of the Assignment of the Lease to the Assignor increasing to 10% of the premium for the next seven years and increasing to 15% of the premium beyond ten years…"
Clause 4.3
"If during the said term the following events or any of them occur, namely:-"
4.3.1 the Tenant's affairs are made the subject of the jurisdiction of the court of protection
4.3.2 the marriage or re-marriage by the Tenant to a person who is not a Qualifying Person
4.3.3 any person other than a Qualifying Person being in occupation of the Demised Premises for a period in excess of 28 days
4.3.4 the Tenant or any spouse of the Tenant being by reason of his medical condition (whether physical or psychological) unfit to remain in occupation of property being part of the Village bearing in mind the interests of each of the other occupiers of the Village, each of the staff employed by the Management Company and the nature of the services supplied by the Management Company
then unless the Tenant or Trustee (as the case may be) has applied to assign the Lease pursuant to Clauses 2 (13) hereof the Landlord shall at any time after the occurrence of such an event or events be entitled to determine the term hereby granted by giving 2 months' previous notice in writing and thereupon this demise shall absolutely determine without prejudice to the rights of either party hereunder in relation to any antecedent breach of covenant and without prejudice to the Tenant's rights under Clause 4.6 of this Lease…"
Clause 4.6
"Within two calendar months of vacant possession of the Demised Premises being give to the Landlord and determination of this Lease (however determined) and the delivery to the Landlord of the original Lease and the Land Registry fee the Landlord shall immediately repay to the Tenant or his personal representatives or trustee in bankruptcy or receiver or other persons entitled to receive the same a sum equal to the open market value of the residue of the term of the Lease as at the date of determination as agreed between the Landlord and the Tenant less the relevant percentage that would have been payable to the Landlord pursuant to clause 2.13.3 (g) (ii) had a permitted assignment occurred on the date of the vacant possession of the Demised Premises and which shall be consistent with the sale price of other like units of accommodation within the Village at that time AND any dispute concerning this clause shall be determined in accordance with the Arbitration Act 1996 or any statutory modification thereof for the time being in force and such arbitrator shall be a qualified surveyor or estate agent of at least ten years standing and shall if possible be familiar with property values in the Village and shall be appointed on the application of either party by the President of the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors and such arbitration shall be conducted by means of written representations and written counter representations with no oral hearing on the open market
ALWAYS PROVIDED that the Landlord shall be entitled to retain from the said monies:-
4.6.1 such sum as may be due and owing at the date of determination or giving up of vacant possession whichever shall be the later in respect of arrears of rent and also such sum as may be required to put the Demised Premises in good decorative repair and condition and in a clean and tidy condition
4.6.2 such sum as may be due and outstanding from the Tenant to the Management Company in accordance with Clause 3 of the said Deed of Covenant
4.6.3 such sum as may be payable to H M Revenue and Customs in respect of stamp duty land tax (or any replacement tax or levy) on the repayment made to the Tenant under Clause 4.6 hereof
Vacant possession shall mean the vacation of the Demised Premises by the Tenant and the removal of all of the Tenant's furniture carpets and personal effects and belongings from the Demised Premises and the surrender up of the keys of the Demised Premises to the Landlord and any dispute concerning any provisions of this Clause 4.6 shall be determined by a single arbitrator in accordance with the Arbitration Act 1996 or any statutory modification or re-enactment thereof for the time being in force appointed on the application of either party by the President of the Royal Institute of Chartered Surveyors and such arbitration shall be conducted by means of written representations and written counter representations with no oral hearing"
Statutory background
Section 8 Consumer Credit Agreements
(1) A consumer credit agreement is an agreement between an individual ("the debtor") and any other person ("the creditor") by which the creditor provides the debtor with credit for any amount.
Section 9 Meaning of credit
(1) In this Act "credit" includes a cash loan, and any other form of financial accommodation.
Section 40 Enforcement of agreements made by an unlicensed trader
(1) A regulated agreement is not enforceable against the debtor or hirer by a person acting in the course of a consumer credit business or a consumer hire business (as the case may be) if that person is not licensed to carry on a consumer credit business or a consumer hire business (as the case may be) of a description which covers the enforcement of the agreement.
Defendant's submissions
i) The relevant provisions of the Leases on which the Claimants rely do not relate to any obligation of the Claimants to make payment of money to the Defendant.
ii) The Claimants have failed to explain (and cannot explain) how those provisions provide for the contractual deferral of any payment that would otherwise have been due earlier.
iii) Furthermore, at the date of entry into the Leases, it was not certain that any payment obligation under the relevant provisions would be engaged at all.
i) the decision to make a payment of the agreed percentage was at all times a voluntary one because it was a matter for the Claimants whether or not they sought to assign and then sought to get around the covenant against assignment by fulfilling the provisos, even then it is entirely voluntary. True it is that there would be no entitlement to assign without the provisos being complied with but that is not the same as an obligation to make payment;
ii) in that event the proviso at clause 2.13(g) provided for the Assignee and not the Claimants to make the payment of the relevant percentage to the Landlord. Nowhere in the Leases are the Claimants obliged to make payment even at the time when they seek to assign the Leases;
iii) when the relevant percentage was to be paid namely at the time of or prior to the assignment the payment being made was in fact to fulfil the provisos under the covenant against assignment, that is to say to allow the assignment to proceed. On that basis there was no significant deferment or any deferment amounting to the granting of credit because the benefit being received is not the Leases themselves, perhaps granted years earlier, but the fulfilment of the proviso to allow assignment to take place.
"56. In Goode Consumer Credit Legislation 1999 vol 1, para 437, p205 contains a discussion of 'The ingredients of credit.' Credit involves, in the view of the editor, Profession Goode:
'…(a) the supply of a benefit; (b) attracting a contractual duty of payment; (c) in money; (d) the duty to pay being contractually deferred; (e) for a significant period of time after payment has been earned; (f) such deferment being granted by way of financial accommodation.'
Each of these elements is present under the agreement between Mrs Dimond and Ist Automotive. In para 443 the following general principle is expressed:
'…debt is deferred, and credit extended, whenever the contract provides for the debtor to pay, or gives him the option to pay, later than the time at which payment would otherwise have been earned under the express or implied terms of the contract.'
57. This principle, in my judgment correctly expresses the test for identifying 'credit' for the purposes of the 1974 Act."
i) The Court considers the position at the time of entry into the agreement, since it must be possible to identify whether credit is being provided at that date so that the parties are able to ensure compliance with any applicable provisions of the CCA 1974: see McMillan Williams v Range [2004] 1 WLR 1858 (CA), at [16] and [20].
ii) The question of whether credit is provided must be addressed by reference to the substance of the contractual obligations rather than the economic consequences of the transaction: see Lavin v Johnson [2002] EWCA Civ 1138.
iii) If at the date of entry into the agreement it is uncertain whether a debt will arise at all, in that it might or might not arise depending on the circumstances, there is no provision of credit in respect of that debt: see McMillan Williams, at [17]; Maple Leaf Macro Volatility Master Fund v Rouvroy and another [2009] 1 Lloyds Rep 475, at [280].
iv) Credit is only provided under an agreement to a person who is subject to an obligation to make a payment, and whose obligation to pay is deferred by the agreement: see, for example, Maple Leaf at [280].
Claimant's submissions
"The Transfer Fee Provisions, in the context of the contract as a whole, do not cause any "significant balance" in the parties' rights and obligations. The revenue from transfer fees is the return on the capital invested by the Defendant in the provision of the central amenities and facilities at its villages. Although residents pay for the day to day running of such facilities through a service charge, the return on the capital investment in those facilities is received through the Transfer Fee. This means that:
(a) Purchasers such as the Claimants can afford to buy properties on a luxury development, and enjoy the facilities the Defendant has created, without having to meet the costs of those facilities up-front in the initial purchase price."
Findings
"The 'debtor' under the 'credit agreement' must be an individual if these provisions of the 1974 Act are to apply. The defendants were not debtors: their obligations to pay might or might not arise under the funding agreement, and without a debt owed by the defendants, there was no credit provided to them: see Nejad v City Index [2001] GCCR 2461 and McMillan Williams (a firm) v Range [2004] EWCA Civ 294 at [16]-[[18], [2004] 1 WLR 1858 at [16]-[18].
[281] The defendants say that the purpose of the agreement was to provide funding to them and that accordingly its purpose was to provide credit to them. This does not seem to me to answer the claimants' point. I do not consider that, unless the arrangements that the parties made were a sham (and it is not suggested that the funding agreement was a sham), the court must consider the structure of the arrangements that were agreed between the parties in order to determine whether the funding agreement is a 'credit agreement.' As Lightman J observed in Wire TV Ltd v CableTel (UK) Ltd [1998] CLC 244 at 258, when examining an agreement that is not a sham, the court recognizes that the parties have a choice as to how a contract is structured and pays appropriate respect of the structure adopted by the parties."
Conclusion