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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 >> O'Connor & Ors v Old Etonian Housing Association Ltd. [2002] EWCA Civ 150 (20th February, 2002) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2002/150.html Cite as: [2002] 2 WLR 1133, [2002] EWCA Civ 150, [2002] Ch 295 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
CHANCERY DIVISION
The Hon. Mr Justice Blackburne
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL | ||
B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE WALLER
and
LORD JUSTICE BUXTON
____________________
O’Connor and Others | Claimants/ Respondent | |
- and - | ||
Old Etonian Housing Association Ltd | Appellants/ Defendants |
____________________
Smith Bernal Reporting Limited, 190 Fleet Street
London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7421 4040, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Paul Staddon (instructed by Wilson Howard (Donna Humphreys)) for the Respondents
____________________
AS APPROVED BY THE COURT
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Phillips M.R. :
This is the judgment of the Court
Introduction
The issues ordered to be tried
“(1) In a lease to which this section applies there is implied a covenant by the lessor –
(b) to keep in repair and proper working order the installations in the dwelling-house for the supply of water, gas and electricity and for sanitation (including basins, sinks, baths and sanitary conveniences, but not other fixtures, fittings and appliances for making use of the supply of water, gas or electricity).”
“Whether, on the proper construction of section 11(1)(b) of the Landlord and Tenant Act 1985, and on the assumption, for current purposes only, that the supply of water to the premises referred to in the particulars of claim was intermittent and inadequate, the defendant can be liable in law for breach of the implied covenant by reason only of the fact that the pipes supplying the water to the premises are of one inch diameter as opposed to one and a quarter inch diameter and/or that no booster pump was installed at Eton House.”
A re-formulation of the issues
i) Does the requirement to keep an installation for the supply of water, gas or electricity ‘in proper working order’ require the landlord to ensure that the installation is so designed and constructed as to be capable of performing its function at the commencement of the tenancy?
ii) To what extent must the installation be designed and constructed in a manner that will cater for variations in the quantity or character of the water, gas or electricity supplied?
iii) If, because of some change in the quantity or character of the supply, the installation is no longer capable of performing its function, is the landlord obliged to adapt the installation in order to accommodate the change?
The first issue
“It is clear that section 32(1)(b) of the Housing Act 1961 imposes an absolute duty upon the landlord “to keep in repair and proper working order the installations in the dwelling house- ...” It could be said that the opening words (“to keep ...”) apparently limit the landlord’s obligation to preserving the existing plant in its original state and create no obligation to improve plant which was, by its very design, at all times defective and inefficient. But the phrase has to be read as a whole and, as I think, it presupposes that at the inception of the letting the installation was “in proper working order,” and that if its design was such that it did not work “properly” the landlord is in breach.
Bathroom equipment which floods when it ought merely to flush is clearly not in “working order,” leave alone “proper” working order (if, indeed, the adjective adds anything). To say that such whimsical behaviour is attributable solely to faulty design is to advance an explanation that affords no excuse for the clear failure “to keep in ... proper working order.” Just as badly designed apparatus has been held not of “good construction” (Smith v A Davies & Co (Shopfitters) Ltd (1968) 5 K.I.R. 320, per Cooke J), so in my judgment the landlords here were in breach of section 32(1)(b) by supplying bathroom equipment which, due to bad design, throughout behaved as badly as did the Irwins’ cistern. I do not, however, find established any of the other statutory breaches alleged.”
“But it has been decided – and, I think, rightly decided – that, where the premises are not in repair when the tenant takes them, he must put them into repair in order to discharge his obligation under a contract to keep and deliver them up in repair. If the premises are out of repair at any time during the tenancy the landlord is entitled to say to the tenant, “you have now broken your contract to keep them in repair;”...”
The second issue
“The lessees contend that, despite the words of the paragraph ‘installations in the dwelling-house’, [in paragraph (b) of section 32(1)] the paragraph applies to anything outside the flat, the proper functioning of which is required in order to enable the installation within the flat to function as it is intended to do. If it were not for the words ‘proper working order’ in para (b) it would, we think, be difficult to find any support for the lessees’ contention. But the inclusion of those words does provide some possible support. It would, however, produce very odd results if that were so. First, there is nothing in s 32 which requires a lessor to provide such installations. Any such obligation would have to be derived from either non-statutory terms of the lease itself, which would be a matter of contractual negotiation, or from some other statute. Secondly, if ‘proper working order’ did include, for example, the necessity of a supply of hot water to a radiator, or water to a cistern there would be imposed by statute an absolute obligation, with no qualifications, which in some respects would be quite outside the lessors’ control. For example, the central heating boiler in the basement may be operated by gas. The gas supply is cut off by the Gas Board for some reason outside the control of the lessors; or the water supply is cut off, or limited to certain times of the day, by the water authority. The hot water radiator, or the water cistern, while in perfectly good repair and perfectly good ‘working order’, cannot perform their function. If the covenant has the meaning suggested by the lessees, the lessors are liable for breach of the implied covenant.
In our judgment, the meaning of para (b) is as contended for by the lessors. The installations in the physical confines of the flat must be kept in repair and capable, so far as their own structural and mechanical condition is concerned, of working properly. But no more than that. The lessors may be under additional obligations but, if so, they do not arise from this statute.”
“I do not think that a water installation in a cottage ceases to be in proper working order within the statutory provision just because the water in one of the pipes freezes. ... In my opinion the phrase “proper working order” in its context relates to the physical or mechanical condition of the installation as such and involves that it shall be capable of working properly as an installation.”
“In my judgment, the proper analysis in this case is that the physical condition of the installation was such that it was perfectly capable of working properly as an installation, provided only that water was supplied by the statutory undertaker at a sufficient pressure. I conclude, therefore, that on the agreed facts the claimants are unable to show that these defendants have at any time failed to keep in proper working order the installations for the supply of water at the affected premises, either within the meaning of section 11(1)(b) of the Act of 1985, or pursuant to the express terms of the Tenancy Agreement applicable in each case.”
“Putting the matter in my own words, the landlord’s obligation under section 11, insofar as it relates to keeping in proper working order the installation for the supply of water, is to ensure that the installations in each flat, and also in the remainder of Eton House so far as they serve directly or indirectly the flats in question, are physically or, if one likes, mechanically capable of supplying water to the flats. That does not merely mean that they should be so capable, given certain minimum water pressures; nor does it mean that the obligation is absolute and unqualified such that the landlord will be in breach even if there is an interruption in water supply for which the landlord is not responsible. It merely means, in my judgment, insofar as there is a supply of water to Eton House, that the installations in the building for the supply of water to each flat must be physically capable of ensuring that a supply of water is maintained.”
The third issue
“Drinking water is supplied to Eton House by the statutory undertaker and thence into the pipework in the common parts provided by the defendant [that is the landlord] which pipework is described in the statement of facts as the communal pipework. Water is then carried through the common parts in the communal pipework and into individual flats. The communal pipework was replaced by the defendant in 1986/87 and one inch pipes were installed in place of pipes with a wider bore. No works of repair or improvement or alteration have been done to the communal pipework since then. Prior to the replacement, the existing wider pipes had provided an adequate supply of water to the flats and had no serious defects. From the summer of 1992 onwards and on intermittent but regular and lengthy occasions, there has been an inadequate supply of water to the pipes in the individual flats. At all material times the communal pipework has been in repair in the sense of not having deteriorated from any earlier state. It has, however, not been in repair in the sense of carrying out its function of supplying an adequate water supply. (The use of ‘repair’ in this paragraph is descriptive only and no legal significance is intended to be attached to its use.) If the communal pipework had been of one and a quarter inch bore rather than one inch bore, at all material times the pipes in the individual flats would have received an adequate supply of water. Further, if, on notice of the problem, the defendant had installed a booster pump and break tanks at the block, an adequate supply would have been achieved. The inadequate supply of water to the pipes in the individual flats was caused by the fact of demand in the surrounding areas for water increasing, having a negative effect on the water pressure at which the statutory undertaker supplied water into the communal pipework. This state of affairs ceased once a new pumping station at Maiden Lane Reservoir was built and in service in about 1998. The provision of one and a quarter inch pipes and/or a booster pump and break tanks would have effected an adequate supply from 1992 to 1998. Since about 1998 none of the claimants [the tenants] have suffered any inadequate water supply on any occasion to any of their individual flats. Provision of a booster pump and break tanks would have cost in the region of £8,750 plus VAT.”