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England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> TFS Stores Ltd v The Designer Retail Outlet Centres (Mansfield) General Partner Ltd & Ors [2019] EWHC 1363 (Ch) (Date : 4 June 2019) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2019/1363.html Cite as: [2019] EWHC 1363 (Ch), [2019] WLR(D) 331, [2019] Bus LR 1970 |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
PROPERTY TRUSTS AND PROBATE LIST (ChD)
Fetter La ne, London EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
(SITTING AS A JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT)
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Case No: P T-2017-000099 |
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TFS STORES LIMITED |
Claimant |
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- and – |
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(1) THE DESIGNER RETAIL OUTLET CENTRES (MANSFIELD) GENERAL PARTNER LIMITED (2) BRITISH OVERSEAS BANK NOMINEES LIMITED (3) WGTC NOMINEES LIMITED |
Defendants |
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And Between: |
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Case No. PT-2018-000035 |
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(1) BMG (ASHFORD) LIMITED (2) UK OM (LP2) (GP) LIMITED (3) UK OM (LP2) LIMITED (4) THE DESIGNER RETAIL OUTLET CENTRES (YORK) GENERAL PARTNER LIMITED (5) UK OM (LP3) (GP) LIMITED (6) UK (OM) LP3) LIMITED |
Claimants |
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-and- |
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TFS STORES LIMITED |
Defendant |
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Mr Wayne Clark and Mr Joseph Ollech (instructed by Shoosmiths LLP) for the Defendant in Claim No. PT-2017-000099 and the Claimants in Claim no. PT-2018-000035
Hearing date: 13-16 May 2019
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Crown Copyright ©
His Honour Judge Davis-White QC:
Introduction
(1) Whether solicitors for the tenant, in the case of two of the tenancies, had authority in each case to accept service of a Warning Notice under the s38A procedure;
(2) Whether a particular employee of the tenant who executed statutory declarations in relation to the same two tenancies, purportedly in compliance with the s38A procedure, had authority to do so;
(3) Whether the relevant statutory declaration was validly completed as regards the description of the tenancy in question in the case of each of the six leases. The relevant wording whose validity is challenged, relates to the commencement date. Two different formulae were used. One in respect of two of the tenancies and one in respect of four of the tenancies.
(1) The Tenant reserved its position for a higher court as regards the question of the validity of service of Warning Notices under the s38A procedure on agents of, rather than directly on, the prospective tenant, accepting that I am bound by authority to the effect that service on an agent will suffice (see Galinski v McHugh (1989) 57 P&CR 539 and Yenula Properties Ltd v Naidu [2002] L&TR 9).
(2) In the light of disclosure, subject to (1) and the question of the details of the "commencement date" in the relevant statutory declarations, the Tenant accepted that no issue remained with regard to the validity of the relevant s38A procedure as regards the tenancies other than those of the Bridgend and Mansfield Premises.
(3) Following cross-examination, the Tenant determined not to pursue further an issue raised on the pleadings, that the statutory declaration regarding the tenancy of the Bridgend Premises was entered into after (rather than before) entry into a legally binding contract to take a tenancy and that therefore the s38A procedure had not been validly followed. At the commencement of the trial this issue had been limited to the tenancy of the Bridgend Premises.
The Parties
Date of lease (Expiry of term) |
Premises | Landlord(s) |
04.11.08 | Unit 50A, BMG McArthur Glen Designer Outlet, East Midlands (the "Mansfield Premises") |
The Designer Retail Outlet Centres (Mansfield) General Partner Limited |
26.08.09 | Unit 4, Bridgend Designer Outlet (the "Bridgend Premises") |
British Overseas Bank Nominees Limited WGTC Nominees Limited |
14.07.17 (31.03.18) |
Unit 25, Ashford Designer Outlet, Kimberley Walk, Ashford (the "Ashford Premises") |
BMG (Ashford) Limited |
14.07.17 (31.03.18) |
Unit 122, Cheshire Oaks Outlet, Kinsey Road, Wirral CH65 9JJ (the "Cheshire Oaks Premises") |
(1) UK OM (LP2) (GP) |
14.07.17 (31.03.18) |
Unit 69, York Designer Outlet, St Nicholas Avenue, York YO19 4TA (the "York Premises") |
Centres (York) General Partner Limited |
10.02.15 (09.11.24) | Unit 122 Swindon Designer Outlet, Kemble Drive, Swindon (the "Swindon Premises") |
(1) UK OM (LP3) (GP) Limited (2) UK (OM) LP3) Limited |
Representation and the evidence
(1) Mr Vadera. In my assessment, until comparatively recently, Mr Vadera did not really understand or focus on the question of what the protections were under the 1954 Act, whether they were excluded and if so what the overall effect was. I am satisfied that as far as he was concerned, he regarded the question of lease renewal as being almost as certain as night following day and he considered that there was no appreciable risk of new tenancies not being successfully negotiated on expiry of any particular term. His fury when, comparatively recently, that proved not to be the position was increased by his perception that the landlords were seeking to let the premises formerly let to his company to his competitors in the same line of business who would also reap the benefit of any goodwill attaching to the premises in question.
(2) Mr Irvin Capper ("Mr Capper"), who has, at various times, been the Head of Property at TFS. He first held that role between about January and March 2013. In his witness statement he said that he then held it between about September 2013 until about October 2015 and thereafter between about September 2017 and June 2018. However, in cross-examination it became clear that there were documents showing him to have held that role outside these periods. I did not regard his mis-recollection on that issue as materially affecting his reliability on the central issues put to him.
(3) Mr David Leonard ("Mr Leonard"). He is the current Finance Director of TFS having held that position since August 2014. He is not a director of TFS within the meaning of the Companies Acts. He joined TFS as financial controller in about April 2010 and retained that position until about August 2014, when he took up the position of Finance Director, originally on an interim basis as finance director designate and was then appointed to the permanent position in about August 2016.
(4) Mr Stephen Thompson ("Mr Thompson"), currently employed as Retail Operations Director of a related company to TFS, TFS Buying Limited, a position that he has held since January 2019. Prior to that, from June 2018, he held the position of Head of Property and Central Operations. Between 2004 and 2007 he was employed by Perfume Point Limited as Retail Director, though this was not a directorship within the meaning of the Companies Acts. In 2007 he was employed by The Fragrance Shop Limited ("TFSL"), following its acquisition by Per Scent Group Limited. In January 2009, TFSL stores were assigned to TFS. Mr Thompson was then made a director, within the Companies Acts sense, of TFS which position he held until September 2013. All of these companies were, at the relevant times, effectively under the control of Mr Vadera. Mr Thompson executed the statutory declarations regarding the relevant tenancies of the Mansfield and Bridgend Premises and one of the issues is whether he had authority to do so.
(5) Helen Marsh ("Ms Marsh"), a solicitor. She is, and has been since February 2015, a partner of, and working in the Commercial Property Law Team at, HRC Law LLP. At the time relevant to events concerning the tenancies of the Mansfield and Bridgend Premises, she was an associate in the firm of K ippa x Beaumont Lewis, Solicitors, ("KBL") the solicitors acting for Perfume Point Limited. At that time Ms Marsh was acting under the supervision of Ms Debbie Roberts.
(1) Helen Hemingray ("Ms Hemingray"), currently a partner at Butcher Andrews LLP but between 2006 and February 2018 an employee at Berwin Leighton Paisner (now Bryan Cave Leighton Paisner LLP) ("BLP"). She joined that firm as a secondee and qualified in April 2007. BLP was employed by the Landlords of the Mansfield and Bridgend Premises in relation to the relevant grant of tenancies in relation to the same. While at BLP, Ms Hemingray worked under the supervision of Camilla Brignall.
(2) Camilla Brignall ("Ms Brignall"), now, and since about August 2015, employed by BPP University Law School as a tutor and centre programme leader. Previously she was employed by BLP as a solicitor in its commercial property team. BLP was exclusively retained in relation to the leasehold management work of the MacArthur Glen Portfolio, encompassing the interests of the Landlords in the six properties with which I am concerned. By 2007, Ms Brignall was the lead non-partner contact for MacArthur Glen and was responsible, among other things, for receiving all new instructions, allocating the instructions within her team and supervising the solicitors who were carrying out the instructions in terms of negotiating and completing the lettings.
Part II of the 1954 Act and Contracting Out: the Background
"The general purpose and policy of the Act of 1954 is clear. It was to provide security of tenure for those tenants who had established themselves in business in leasehold premises so that they could continue to carry on their business there. This objective was identified in the Leasehold Committee Final Report (1950) (Cmd. 7952), as the principal, indeed the only objective then recommended to be achieved by legislation. There was no suggestion, nor did the Act, when enacted, contain any provisions to the effect that business tenants required any greater protection than in fact necessary to enable them to continue their business: no protection, for example, by way of rent control, or other modification of contractual terms."
"[1] Part II of the Landlord and Tenant Act 1954 confers a qualified security of tenure on business tenants. A tenant in occupation of the premises under tenancy for a term of years certain may stay over and request a new tenancy beginning upon its expiry, unless before the tenancy was granted the landlord had served a notice informing the tenant of his rights and the parties then agreed to exclude the relevant provisions of the Act. The tenant may apply to the court under section 24 (1) of the Act for an order granting one. The court is required to make that order unless the landlord makes out one of seven grounds of opposition specified in section 30(1), in which case it is required to refuse one."
In the case of certain grounds of opposition, which, if made out, result in the court being required to refuse to grant a new tenancy, the tenant is entitled to compensation where the ground of opposition is made out.
"(1) It is clear from section 34 that, in contrast to the enactments relating to residential property, Parliament did not intend, apart from certain limitations to protect the tenant from the operation of market forces in the determination of rent; (2) In contrast to the determination of rent, it is the court and not market forces which, with one vital qualification, has an almost complete discretion as to the other terms of the tenancy (which, of course in turn must exercise a decisive influence on the market rent to be ascertained under s34). And (3) in deciding the terms of the new tenancy, as to which its discretion is otherwise not expressly fettered, the court must start by "having regard to" the terms of the current tenancy, which ex hypothesi must either have been originally the subject of agreement between the parties, or themselves the result of a previous determination by the court in earlier proceedings for renewal."
"As originally enacted, the Act contained a total ban on any agreement which purported to exclude the tenant's rights under the Act. In a 1969 review of the Act, however, the Law Commission concluded[1] that this total prohibition against contracting out discouraged landlords from letting premises on a temporary basis, even where the tenant was willing to accept a tenancy. For example, such a situation may arise when the landlord has obtained possession and seeks to sell, demolish or reconstruct the property, but is not ready to do so immediately. He would be reluctant to let the property on a temporary basis, since the tenant would be able to apply for a new tenancy, and so may prefer to leave the property unoccupied. The Commission therefore recommended that it should be possible to grant a tenancy without rights under the Act, subject to the safeguard that the court sanctioned the agreement in advance.
The Act was therefore amended, by the Law of Property Act 1969, to allow the parties to a business lease to make a joint application to the court seeking approval for the grant of a fixed term tenancy in respect of which the tenant's renewal rights will not apply."
"In its 1992 report, the Law Commission concluded that the new provision did not achieve its objective of providing an effective filter to prevent abuse of what is generally assumed to be the landlord's dominant bargaining position. Courts usually approve agreements without any real scrutiny of the circumstances of the application. While recognising the importance of safeguards to ensure that the prospective tenant agrees to contract out only if he understands the nature of the statutory rights he is agreeing to give up, the Law Commission concluded that this objective could be more effectively achieved without the unnecessary formality, delay or expense of a court application.
Accordingly, the Law Commission recommended that the parties should be able to opt out of the renewal provisions without court approval. But to be valid the agreement between the parties would have to comply with the following requirements…"
I need not at this stage go into those requirements, save to say that the current law is modelled on them but with significant variations.
"The Court Service does not maintain records of how many applications are approved. However, they confirm that the court refuses a negligible proportion of applications, and that these refusals are only where there has been a technical defect in the applications."
(1) He accepted the submission of Mr Lewison QC (as he then was) that the purpose of the then section 38(4)(a) was "to enable the court to satisfy itself that the prospective tenant understands that he is forgoing the protection" of Part II of the 1954 Act.
(2) He also accepted Mr Lewison's submission that the court hearing the application was neither empowered nor entitled to consider the fairness of the bargain, as such, which the parties proposed to make.
(3) However, he disagreed with Mr Lewison's submission that approval of the agreement to exclude the protection of Part II of the 1954 Act did not require an analysis of the terms of the lease that the court had approved. Approval by the court did not give a:
" green light to a landlord to make wholesale changes to the draft tenancy submitted to the court when approval was sought. The words "that tenancy" in section 38(4)(a) require its terms to bear a substantial similarity to that before the court when authority was given. In particular, changes material to the need for protection may nullify the authority granted."
An example of such a substantial change, given by Pill LJ, was that of a lease contemplating substantial capital expenditure by the tenant where the term was substantially shortened.
(4) In the instant case, the fact that the draft for the court was different from the terms of the lease as agreed, in that the draft inaccurately set out the agreement as to the dates on which rent was payable, did not invalidate the authorised agreement. It would have made no difference even had the agreement as to the dates for payment of rent been reached after the court approval:
"The court is concerned with whether the tenant understands he is giving up protection. Whether the rent is payable in advance or in arrears has in present circumstances no bearing whatever upon that function."
(1) Normally, at least 14 days before the tenant entered into a tenancy, or, if earlier, at least 14 days before entering into a contractual commitment to take a lease, the landlord would be required to give the tenant notice of the proposal to exclude security of tenure. The notice would contain a prominent "healt h warning". No statutory declaration by the tenant would be required regarding such notice but the lease would contain a specific reference that advance notice had been given and received, in order to validate the agreement to exclude security of tenure.
(2) It would be possible to waive the requirement for 14 days' advance notice, but the tenant would have to sign a statutory declaration that he/she had received the notice, read the health warning and accepted its consequences. The lease would contain a specific reference that the advance notice had been received and the statutory declaration had been made in order to validate the agreement to exclude security of tenure.
"Indeed, there is now more likely to be some incentive for landlords not to offer contracted-out leases, since a lease with security of tenure would be likely to command a higher rent than one where security is excluded. We do not therefore consider that the proposals would remove necessary protection by negating the purpose of the 1954 Act."
"wherever possible, tenants should receive the "health warning" in good time before committing themselves to a contracting out agreement. They would then have time to take a considered view on abandoning renewal rights and the practical opportunity to consider alternative options. The Law Commission's proposals…would not necessarily achieve this. While some tenants would become aware of contracting out proposals by seeing them in a draft lease, in other cases, particularly where the landlord was trying to manipulate the tenant, the tenant would not see the "health warning" until he or she was about to sign the lease. It would then be too late to consider alternative arrangements, as the tenant would have made business arrangements on the assumption that he or she would be occupying the premises concerned."
"impose a minor hurdle for the parties, which would have the effect of encouraging use of the 14 day's notice procedure where practicable…. if the landlord wanted to use the alternative procedure when 14 days' notice were feasible, the tenant might well be reluctant to co-operate. The Department notes that the proposed form of notice recommends the tenant to ask the landlord to use the 14 day notice period where this is feasible".
"First of all, we agree that it is desirable that a tenant should wherever possible receive advance notice that he is to be asked to accept an agreement which excludes his rights under the Act. We also agree, however, that it is in the tenant's interest that there should also be provision for cases where that advance notice cannot be given. The use of a statutory declaration in these circumstances seems a reasonable response to this situation. Although it may seem unduly burdensome, the proposed procedure is less so than the current requirement for court sanction. Further, the Department's contention that it is its very burdensomeness which ensures the maintenance of necessary protection against abuse of the emergency procedure is persuasive. We are therefore satisfied that the burden on both landlord and tenant is proportionate to the benefit of providing a disincentive to waive the 14 days' notice requirement, and of ensuring that the tenant has every chance of appreciating the significance of the agreement that he is entering into."
"We consider that the requirement for a declaration is necessary to ensure the maintenance of necessary protection for the tenant…..A requirement to sign a declaration that he had read the notice and accepted the consequences of the agreement would help to ensure that its significance was not lost on the tenant."
"15. The Department does not see a need to revise its proposals on account of the Palacegate Properties case, which concerned a subsequent change in lease terms. The policy objective is simply to ensure that the tenant is aware of the implications of any proposal to exclude security of tenure. While it considers that tenants would be well advised to reappraise the proposed exclusion of security of tenure in relation to any subsequent changes in the overall package, this is outside the scope of the main policy objective."
Contracting out: the legislative requirements
"38 Restriction on agreements excluding provisions of Part II
(1) Any agreement relating to a tenancy to which this Part of this Act applies (whether contained in the instrument creating the tenancy or not) shall be void (except as provided by section 38A of this Act) in so far as it purports to preclude the tenant from making an application or request under this Part of this Act or provides for the termination or the surrender of the tenancy in the event of his making such an application or request or for the imposition of any penalty or disability on the tenant in that event."
(1) "38A. Agreements to exclude the provisions of Part 2
(2) The persons who will be the landlord and the tenant in relation to a tenancy to be granted for a term of years certain which will be a tenancy to which this Part of this Act applies may agree that the provisions of sections 24 to 28 of this Act shall be excluded in relation to that tenancy.
(2) …
(3) An agreement under subsection (1) above shall be void unless—
(a) the landlord has served on the tenant a notice in the form, or substantially in the form, set out in Schedule 1 to the Regulatory Reform (Business Tenancies) (England and Wales)
(b) the requirements specified in Schedule 2 to that Order are met.
(4) ……"
38. Schedule 2 of the 2003 Order expands upon the requirement to serve a notice which, for convenience, I shall refer to as the "Warning Notice". It also contains the requirements for the tenant to make one of two forms of declarations.
38. The form of Warning Notice is set out in Schedule 1 to the 2003 Order. It is as follows:
SCHEDULE 1 Form of Notice that Sections 24 to 28 of the Landlord and Tenant Act 1954 are Not to Apply to a Business Tenancy
Contracting out in relation to tenancies of the Mansfield and Bridgend Premises in 2007/8
(1) Tenancy of the Bridgend Premises: the transactional documents
(1) The term is described as being "10 Years, commencing on the handover date for the Tenant to commence fitting out of the unit. The lease will be excluded from the provisions of sections 24-28 of the Landlord and Tenant Act 1954.
(2) Having dealt with the quantum of rent, the HOTs provide that "Rent payment will commence to be payable from the later of the 1st September 2007 or three weeks after handover date. For the avoidance of doubt service and promotion charges will commence on the access date."
(3) The permitted use is described as the retail sale at discounted prices of multi- branded perfumes together with toiletries, cosmetics, body care products, handmade greeting cards… haircare and other ancillary items bearing agreed brand names. Such brand names are specified with an ability in the tenant to add additional brands with the prior written consent of the landlord. The landlord is not to permit another retailer to enter the centre to operate a multi- branded fragrance offer without the prior written consent of the tenant. The landlord is also not to permit any existing tenant within the centre not currently having the right to sell personal fragrance under the terms of its lease to commence sale of perfumes (subject to a limited exception where the lease in question requires the landlord to act reasonably in considering a request from the tenant for consent to do the same and refusal of consent would be unreasonable.)
(4) Under the heading "Contacts", a number of contacts are given including (but not limited to) the following. The tenant's solicitors are given as KBL, contact name Helen Marsh. The tenants contact is given as being PPL, with the contact name as Steve Thompson. The tenant's agent's contact is given as Donaldsons LLP, the contact name being Matthew Illingworth. The landlord's solicitor is given as BLP, contact name Chris Cann. The landlord's representative is given as McArthurGlen UK Ltd, contact name Adrian Nelson.
(2) Tenancy of the Mansfield Premises: the transactional documents
(1) The term is described as being "10 Years, commencing on the handover date for the Tenant to commence fitting out of the unit. The lease will be excluded from the provisions of sections 24-28 of the Landlord and Tenant Act 1954.
(2) Having dealt with the quantum of rent, the HOTs provide that "Rent payment will commence to be payable from the later of the 1st September 2007 or three weeks after handover date. For the avoidance of doubt service and promotion charges will commence on the access date."
(3) The permitted use is described as the retail sale at discounted prices of multi- branded perfumes together with toiletries, cosmetics, body care products, handmade greeting cards… haircare and other ancillary items bearing agreed brand names. Such brand names are specified with an ability in the Tenants to add additional brands with the prior written consent of the landlord. The landlord is not to permit another retailer to enter the centre to operate a multi- branded fragrance offer without the prior written consent of the tenant. The landlord is also not to permit any existing tenant within the centre not currently having the right to sell personal fragrance under the terms of its lease to commence sale of perfumes (subject to a limited exception where the lease in question requires the landlord to act reasonably in considering a request from the tenant for consent to do the same and refusal of consent would be unreasonable.)
(4) Under the heading "Contacts", a number of contacts are given including (but not limited to) the following. The tenant's solicitors are given as KBL, contact name Helen Marsh. The tenant's contact is given as being PPL, with the contact name as Steve Thompson. The tenant's agent's contact is given as Donaldsons LLP, the contact name being Matthew Illingworth. The landlord's solicitor is given as BLP, contact name Chris Cann. There are no contact details for the landlord's representative and my suspicion is that the document in evidence is not complete. The 1st HOTs did include such details which are also in the Bridgend HOTs.
(3) The contemporaneous written communications
(4) The Oral evidence
(5) Authority: conclusions
Ratification and estoppel
"must be taken with the qualification, that the act of ratification must be taken at a time, and under circumstances, when the ratifying party might himself have lawfully done the act which he ratified".
Terms of the statutory declarations
"1. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .(name of tenant) propose(s) to enter into a tenancy of premises at. . . . . . . . . . . .(address of premises) for a term commencing on...................................... "
"for a term commencing on the Access Date under the Agreement for Lease pursuant to which the tenancy of the premises will be entered into ".
In the case of the Mansfield Premises, the lease was dated 4 November 2008. The Access Date was 5 November 2007 and that was expressed to be the commencement date under the lease. As regards the Bridgend tenancy the Access Date was 12 November 2007, but the lease was only entered into on 26 August 2009.
" A lease operates as a grant only from the time of its execution, and acts or omissions of the tenant before that date are not normally breaches of covenant, although committed after the date from which the term is expressed to run of the deed. But the duration of the term is to be computed from the day mentioned in the lease for that purpose. So a lease may commence at one day in point of computation, and at another in point of interest.
The law may be summarised as follows:
1. The term created will be a term which commences on the date when the lease is executed, and not the earlier date;
2. No act or omission prior to the date on which the lease is executed will normally constitute a breach of the obligations of the lease;
3. These principles do not prevent the parties from defining the expiration of the term by reference to a date prior to that of the execution of the lease, or from making contractual provisions which take effect by reference to such a date, as by defining the period for the operation of a break clause or an increase in rent;
4. There is nothing in these principles to prevent the lease from creating obligations in respect of any period prior to the execution of the lease;
5. Whether in fact any such obligations have been created depends on the construction of the lease; and there is nothing which requires the lease to be construed in such a way as to avoid, if possible, the creation of such obligations."
(1) In the case of the Swindon Premises:
"for a term commencing on a date to be agreed between the parties"
(2) In the case of the York Premises, the Ashford Premises, and the Cheshire Oak Premises
"for a term commencing on the date on which the tenancy is granted"
(1) the procedure has become more onerous than the previous court application route in the sense that the position reflected by the Palacegate Properties case, where no commencement date etc. was specified in the draft lease approved by the Court as part of the contracting out process, would no longer be a situation in which contracting out was possible. Thus, the contracting out process, rather than being easier would in fact be less flexible and may be more difficult; (2) the aim of encouraging prospective tenants to receive early Warning Notices and to make declarations earlier rather than later would be discouraged (though it is fair to point out that any declaration could be made late but it might have to be made very late). This on the basis that the answer to point (1) was, it was submitted, that declarations could be made very late in the day when the commencement date was known; (3) there may be cases where the commencement date (or grant) could only be guessed at and would almost invariably be wrong: for example in the Bridgend case the lease had to be granted within a 15 day window of relevant works being completed. If on the other hand such formula was effective for the purposes of the 2003 Order then it becomes difficult to sustain the argument that on such facts the tenant necessarily knows the date of the grant of the Lease in such cases. Indeed, Mr Fetherstonhaugh's general submission was that in cases where the date of grant of the lease could not be correctly ascertained in advance but an agreement for a lease had been entered into, then the agreement for a lease would not be specifically enforceable because it would not be possible to grant a contracted-out tenancy and the parties would have to "start again" in terms of following the s38A procedure afresh and entering into new contractual documentation. This seems to me a recipe for confusion, uncertainty and the frustration of perfectly sensible commercial arrangements entered into between prospective landlords and tenants. It also seems to me a situation where, if this is indeed the position, commercial parties might well with justification say that the "law is an ass". I do not consider that this does represent the law.
Double Value
1. Persons holding over Lands, &c., after Expiration of Leases, to pay double the yearly Value.
In case any Tenant or Tenants for any Term of Life, Lives or Years, or other Person or Persons, who are or shall come into Possession of any Lands, Tenements or Hereditaments, by, from or under, or by Collusion with such Tenant or Tenants, shall wilfully hold over any Lands, Tenements or Hereditaments, after the Determination of such Term or Terms, and after Demand made, and Notice in Writing given, for delivering the Possession thereof, by his or their Landlords or Lessors, or the Person or Persons to whom the Remainder or Reversion of such Lands, Tenements or Hereditaments shall belong, his or their Agent or Agents thereunto lawfully authorized; then and in such Case such Person or Persons so holding over, shall, for and during the Time he, she and they shall so hold over, or keep the Person or Persons intitled, out of Possession of the said Lands, Tenements, and Hereditaments, as aforesaid, pay to the Person or Persons so kept out of Possession, their Executors, Administrators or Assigns, at the Rate of double the yearly Value of the Lands, Tenements and Hereditaments so detained, for so long time as the same are detained, to be recovered in any of his Majesty's Courts of Record, by Action of Debt…
"It has been held that "wilfully" means "contumaceously," but I can see no reason why the old English word "wilfully" does not exactly express the true meaning of the statute. The statute does not mean that a tenant is a contumaceous tenant. It deals only with the moment of time when the tenancy comes to an end. At that moment of time a tenant may say: "I shall stay on. I think I have a right to do so." His staying on is not wilful. On the other hand, a tenant may say: "I will stay on, although I know I have no right to do so." That is wilful, and well illustrates the now sometimes forgotten distinction between "I shall" and the insistent "I will."
"…if a man holds over under a supposition that he has a right, that is a different case; but here we must assume that it was clear the defendants had none, and that the tenancy began on the 1st of July. This is the ordinary form of notice, which has been adopted in order to prevent the tenant from turning round and setting up a different commencement of the tenancy; and we must suppose the tenant knew the time of its expiration as well as the landlord, and that the custom did not apply."
Similarly, Parke B said:
"…all that can be said on that point is, that if there be a real doubt as to the period of the expiration of the tenancy, an argument may be drawn from the uncertainty of the notice, to shew that the holding over was not wilful. If there were a reasonable doubt, and the defendant bonâ fide acted on it, that would be a fair question to be left to the jury. But here the only mode of raising any doubt was by a reference to the custom of the country; but that clearly did not apply, nor raise any fair claim to hold over on the ground of right. There was, therefore, no misdirection, nor was the verdict wrong."
"Where the tenancy was only from year to year, the usual written notice to quit is a sufficient demand and notice to satisfy the statute, and no further demand or notice need be made after the tenancy has ceased. But the notice must amount to a valid and binding notice to quit."
The authority relied upon for this proposition (Johnstone v Hudlestone (1825) 4 Barnewall and Cresswell 922) does not consider the point I am considering and deals with the position of a tenant's notice to quit and the application of s18 of the Distress for Rent Act 1737 (dealing with double value after a tenant's notice to quit) but the general thrust of the judgment is that a valid notice to quit will suffice to trigger liability under the 1730 Act (or the 1737 Act) and that nothing more is needed. There is no general requirement that such a notice must be served personally.
Conclusion
Note 1 Landlord and Tenant. Report On the Landlord and Tenant Act 1954 Part II (Law Com. No. 17), [1969] EWLC 17. [Back]