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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> John Hanson/CHT v Sweb Property Developments Ltd [2001] EWCA Civ 1377 (27 July 2001) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2001/1377.html Cite as: [2001] EWCA Civ 1377, [2002] 1 P & CR 35 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE YEOVIL COUNTY COURT
(HIS HONOUR JUDGE COTTERILL)
Strand London WC2 Friday, 27 July 2001 |
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B e f o r e :
-and-
LORD JUSTICE DYSON
____________________
JOHN HANSON/CHT | Appellant | |
- v - | ||
SWEB PROPERTY DEVELOPMENTS LIMITED | ||
(SUED AS SOUTH WEST ELECTRICITY BOARD) | Respondent |
____________________
Smith Bernal Reporting Limited
190 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2AG
Telephone No: 020 7421 4040
Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
MR T MORSEHEAD (instructed by Osborne Clarke, Bristol BS1 4HE) appeared on behalf of the Respondent
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Friday, 27 July 2001
"1. Definition clause:
"The completion date" means the later of the following dates
(a) 19 March 1997(b) the date which shall be 10 working days after this Agreement shall become unconditional under clause 19.
2. The Vendor shall sell and the Purchaser shall purchase the Property for the price of THIRTEEN THOUSAND FOUR HUNDRED AND TWENTY EIGHT POUNDS (£13,428).
4(1) The purchase of the Property shall be completed before 1.00pm on the Completion Date at the offices of Messrs Osborne Clarke or elsewhere as they may reasonably direct.
(3) The Vendor shall not be bound to complete unless the Purchaser either
(a) tenders at completion the amount then required to be paid to the vendor in pounds sterling in the form of a banker's draft issued by a clearing bank in London or(b) has by means of a telegraphic or other direct transfer transferred and the Vendor's Solicitors have received as cleared funds before 1.00pm the amount required at completion to the credit of the Vendor's Solicitors' client account...
14. The National Conditions of Sale (20th Edition) ("General Conditions") shall apply to this Agreement so far as the same are applicable to a sale by private treaty and are not varied by or inconsistent with the provisions hereof save that...
19(1) This Agreement is conditional upon the completion of the following works
(a) the laying of two cable ducts under that part of the Property which is shown coloured brown on the Plan(b) the removal of the existing wall between the Property and the Retained Property and its replacement with a more substantial wall which complies with all statutory requirements and the requirements of all relevant competent authorities(c) the replacement of the existing three phaseelectricity supply to the Property with a domestic supply the meter board to be installed adjacent to the main door of the building on the property(d) the provision of a direct water supply to the Property.
(2) The Vendor will carry out or procure the carrying out of the Works at its own expense and as soon as reasonably practicable. If despite using all reasonable endeavours the Works shall not have been completed by 25th December 1996 the Vendor shall be entitled to rescind this Agreement by giving notice in writing to the Purchaser to that effect and thereupon the provisions of General Condition 10(2) shall apply.
[then]
(4) For the period commencing on the date on which the Purchaser shall give to the Vendor vacant possession of the working area and reasonable access to the remainder of the property and ending on the date 48 hours after the Vendor shall notify the Purchaser that the Works have been completed the Vendor will pay the Purchaser a sum equal to the cost of accommodation on a full board basis and the Alexandra Hotel Lyme Regis.
(5) The Agreements shall become unconditional upon the Vendor or its solicitors giving written notification to the Purchaser or his solicitors that the Works had been completed. Upon the Agreement becoming unconditional the Vendor shall pay to the Purchaser a contribution of £500 plus Value Added Tax to the Purchaser's solicitors costs in relation to this Agreement."
"22(1) At any time on or after the completion date, either party, being ready and willing to fulfil his own outstanding obligations under the contract may (without prejudice to any other right or remedy available to him) give to the other party or his solicitor notice in writing requiring completion of the contract in conformity with this condition."
"1. Remove rubbish from site (SWEB)
2. Move out SWEB doors (SWEB)
3. Burning fuel to stay
4. Clear broken glass, remove temporary screen and sweep through the floor (SWEB)
5. Adjust the doors so they shut (Hanson Contract)
6. Provide mahogoney filetts around the edge of the doors and the oak feather edging to make weatherproof (Hanson Contract)
7. Plumbing to be completed (SWEB Contract)
8. Fill the hole in floor (SWEB Contract)
9. Fit a new door handle so doors can be closed and fit a security chain (Hanson contract)."
"The first item relates to rubbish on the site and clearly that was the responsibility of SWEB or their contractors but the scale of this problem is perhaps to be measured by Mr Hanson, the plaintiff, saying that he himself removed that rubbish in the course of various other activities over a week. The scale of the task, in my view, was minimal.
The second item refers to the moving of SWEB doors. This has apparently been done and ceases to be a matter of concern.
Items 3 says 'burning fuel to stay', which relates to the plaintiff's election to retain the timber component of a temporary structure which was erected in the building and is not a matter of complaint at all.
Item 4, 'clear broken glass, remove temporary screen and sweep through the floor'. The scale of the problem with broken glass is not at all clear to me but the temporary screen was erected to protect the plaintiff's part of the premises from the dust and the like generated by the contractor's work. It is quite clear from the correspondence that the defendants were willing to remove that temporary screen at a far earlier date than the plaintiff was prepared to see it go because he found from it he enjoyed a degree of protection, not merely from the works but from the risk of unlawful entry by somebody who took advantage of the insecurity of the doors to which I shall come. The fact that the temporary screen was not removed seems to me to be not a matter which can be laid at the door of SWEB.
Turning to item 7 'plumbing to be completed', as to this there is some complaint as to the point at which the pipework is brought out of the ground and the ease with which it can or cannot be concealed from view. It seems to me, from the description given to it by Mr Hanson, to be a matter of little account and certainly something which could be corrected by a very few hours of work. He complained to me that the plumbing leaks and, as he says, needs to be re-laid. The scale of that problem was described by him as a minor leak to which he had not found it necessary to have attention given by any independent contractor and I dismiss that as trivial and of no account whatsoever.
Item 8 requires the filling in of a hole in the floor. The size of that has been described by the plaintiff. It is clear that it would occupy a tradesman no more than a few moments to make good, and a half-competent DIY man could do the same in only marginally more time.
The last item involves fitting a new door handle so that the door can be closed and a security chain fitted. That relates back to items 5 and 6."
"... the execution of the works, was at the very, very lowest substantially performed and the service of the notice of completion was, as I find, wholly justified."
"Accordingly, the difference between us is now £3093 ½ for completion after 19.3.97 and I hereby instruct Nantes Wylde to complete forthwith @ £2962 ½ and hold the balance of £3093 ½ pending the court's decision on the correct figure for completion."
"They [that is the respondents] do not agree your completion statement and they will not complete the sale of this property to you unless they receive in full the sum of £6,056 as set out in our letter of 27 March. You will be wasting your time if you instruct Nantes Wylde to send us less than this sum."
The issues
(a) the notice was invalid because at the time that it was served, the respondent was not willing to fulfil its outstanding obligations under the contract as required by condition 22(1) of the National Conditions of Sale: there was an implied term of the contract pursuant to which it was obliged to carry out the outstanding items of work, and it was in breach of that obligation;
(b) even if the notice was valid, the appellant's letter to Osbourne Clark of 5 April (copied to his solicitors) was a sufficient performance of his completion obligation as to payment. He genuinely believed that the sum that he instructed his solicitors to pay was all that he was obliged to pay;
(c) it is not open to the respondent to say that he did not even tender the sum to which he referred in his letter of 5 April, because the failure to tender that sum was caused by the respondent's letter of 7 April.
The first issue
"However, in the context of these conditions and the ordinary framework of a contract of sale and purchase of land, it is, in my judgment, clearly intended that the procedure allowed by condition 22 is only available to a party who is not in default; and just as a vendor who had not delivered a complete abstract of title could not serve a notice under condition 22, so, in my judgment, a vendor who has not yet disclosed existing tenancies cannot serve a valid notice."
The second issue
"Megarry J, in addressing that point held, at p335, that notwithstanding the error in the completion statement, it was the purchaser's duty to attend at the time and place fixed for completion and to tender the correct amount of the purchase moneys.
I agree with that view. There being no contractual obligation to provide a completion statement, in my judgment, it is not a repudiation by the vendor if in the completion statement he asks for more than that to which he is entitled. So to hold would give rise to great disputes in vendor/purchaser matters since the exact calculation of the purchase money is often a matter of some difficulty. The completion statement is often the subject of negotiation between the parties to arrive at the correct figure.
What then happens if there is no agreement as to that amount? In my judgment, there would be a complete stalemate in the conveyancing procedure if it were open to the purchaser merely to say: 'I do not agree your statement and I will therefore do nothing.' In my judgment, Megarry J was right in saying that the duty then is for the purchaser to come forward and tender the money which he says is the amount due if he wishes to avoid being in breach of contract. It may be, although I express no concluded view on the matter, that if a purchaser is unable to calculate the amount which is due under the contract without information provided from the vendor (for example, in working out any necessary apportionments) the vendor might be deprived of his ability to rely on the default in tendering, but that is not this case. It is clear in this case that the purchaser could make his calculation of the sums which he said were due on completion."
"I can see no answer to Mr Lightman's contention that, apart from my decision on the first point, the purchaser's answer was to attend for completion on November 5 and tender whatever he accepted as being the correct sum. I cannot see that the demand for too much was any ground for not attending at all on November 5, and making no attempt to complete until November 6."
The third issue
Conclusion