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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 >> Scottish & NEWCAstle Plc v Raguz [2003] EWCA Civ 1070 (24 July 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2003/1070.html Cite as: [2003] EWCA Civ 1070 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM BIRMINGHAM DISTRICT REGISTRY
HIS HONOUR JUDGE NORRIS QC
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE MAY
and
LORD JUSTICE SEDLEY
____________________
SCOTTISH & NEWCASTLE PLC |
Respondent |
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- and - |
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RAGUZ |
Appellant |
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Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited, 190 Fleet Street
London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7421 4040, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Mr. Christopher Stoner (instructed by Messrs Eversheds) for the respondents
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AS APPROVED BY THE COURT
CROWN COPYRIGHT ©
Crown Copyright ©
Vice-Chancellor :
"(b) on the part of the transferee, a covenant with the transferor, that during the residue of the term the transferee and the persons deriving title under him will pay, perform, and observe the rent, covenants, and conditions by and in the registered lease reserved and contained and on the part of the lessee to be paid, performed and observed, and will keep the transferor and the persons deriving title under him indemnified against all actions, expenses, and claims on account of the non-payment of the said rent or any part thereof, or the breach of the said covenants or conditions or any of them."
a) the covenant implied by s.24(1)(b) Land Registration Act 1925 is a contract by way of indemnity and not liable to be discharged by misconduct on the part of the creditor/lessor;
b) it is, nonetheless, arguable with real prospects of success that the obligation undertaken pursuant to that covenant does not extend to liabilities resulting from the creditor/assignor's own actions, in particular in relation to the Support Agreement made in August 2000;
c) such a contention could not apply to the rent aggregating £39,978.08 demanded on or before 3rd August 2000 so that summary judgment should be entered for that amount;
d) VAT on such rent was also recoverable so that paragraph 20 of the amended defence should be struck out; and
e) payment of the rent by the Assignor to the Lessor had been established.
There is no appeal by the Assignor from the conclusion summarised in sub-paragraph (b). Mr Raguz appeals from the conclusions summarised in sub-paragraphs (a) and (c) to (e) with the permission of Waller and Jonathan Parker LJJ. I will deal with those issues in that order.
"There is nothing in the structure or language of the usual covenant (now contained in s.24) which suggests that whilst the term is vested in the assignee the obligation to the assignor is one of indemnity, but on a subsequent assignment by him it changes into an obligation of guarantee. The single promise that the assignee and those deriving title under him would perform the covenants in the lease does not suggest that two separate obligations, different in nature, are being undertaken. The actual language used is that of indemnity: and the common understanding of conveyancers is that there exists a chain of indemnities. This established understanding of the nature of the assignee's obligation mirrors the established understanding of the original tenant's obligation. The original tenant's obligation to pay rent does not become a contract of guarantee when he assigns the term."
"I think the true object of the covenant entered into on the assignment of the lease is to indemnify and protect the original lessee against breaches of covenant contained in the lease under which he holds."
That conclusion was approved by the Court of Appeal in Butler Estates Company Ltd v Bean [1942] 1 KB 1. Thus both Warrington J and the Court of Appeal considered that a covenant in the usual form is one of indemnity only. But this was in the context of a contention that it was more than that and provided the basis for an injunction against the successor in title. There was no issue whether the covenant was one of guarantee rather than of indemnity.
"The tenant for itself and its assigns and to the intent that the obligations may continue throughout the term covenants with the landlord as set out in the third schedule hereto."
Walton J rejected that contention. Having referred to, inter alia, s.24(1) Land Registration Act 1925, he considered that
"..it is quite clear that the position is not as between the assignee and the original lessee that of principal debtor and surety."
It is true, as counsel for Mr Raguz pointed out, that the covenant with which Walton J was primarily concerned was that contained in the original lease, not that implied into the assignment. Nevertheless there can be no doubt what Walton J considered to be the legal relationship between the original lessee and an assignee of the term.
"The implied covenant [under s.24(1) Land Registration Act 1925] extends to the whole of the residue of the term. In its simplest form it is a covenant by the transferee with the transferor that during the residue of the term the transferee will pay the rent and will indemnify the transferor against all claims on account of non-payment. The covenant cannot be taken to envisage that if the transferee further assigns the lease, thereafter quarter by quarter the transferee himself will solemnly continue to pay the rent. The obligation must be to see that the rent is paid. Due payment of the rent is being guaranteed by the transferee for the residue of the term."
"Given that the Defendant's obligation is one of indemnity, it is nonetheless only an indemnity against the defaults of the occupying tenant within the scope of the original indemnity. As an indemnifier, the Defendant accepted the risk that the occupying tenant might default through the ordinary operation of the market. But he did not accept the risk that the indemnified party might procure the default, or that the indemnified party might prolong the default. Defaults in these circumstances were not within the ordinary scope of the indemnity covenant."
"The earliest that there is any hint that St. James is in trading difficulties is on 17 April 2000. It is not until 25 May 2000 that an indication in principle is given by the Claimant of its willingness to underwrite trading losses. It is not until the 6 August 2000 that the arrangement is actually entered. I regard it as fanciful to suggest that the Claimant "prolonged" the existence of St. James during this period. It is unrealistic to suggest that (on the footing that the administrative receivers had identified the loss making nature of the business in April 2000) St. James would have been placed in liquidation and a liquidator would have assigned the lease at a forced sale value to a solvent tenant by August 2000. Accordingly in my judgment the argument raised by the Defendant has no application to the notices under Section 17 of the Landlord and Tenant (Covenants) Act 1995 served on the Claimant on the 11 November 1999, 16 June 2000 and 3 August 2000 in respect of each lease, and which total £39,978.08. The Claimant is entitled to judgment under Part 24 in this sum together with interest thereon at 6.5% from the 5 July 2001. That is the date upon which the statutory demands were satisfied."
In a supplemental judgment handed down on 7th January 2003 the judge noted that there was a difference between the amounts claimed in the s.17 notices served on the Assignor by NCP and those covered by the statutory demands. Accordingly he directed that the judgment be drawn up so as to include a declaration of liability to indemnify in the full amount but judgment for payment of only £22,797.36. It has since been agreed that the full amount is £31,764.08, not the figure stated in the order of £39,978.08.
"The argument advanced at the hearing was that VAT was a tax on supply: that the "supply" was actually to the [Tenant]. If [the Tenant] had paid the rent it would also have to pay the VAT. But because there had been no "supply" to the [Assignor] (whose only liability was as original covenantor) the [Assignor] was not liable to pay VAT. I reject this argument (which was not that advanced at the time permission was sought to amend the Defence) as having no realistic prospect of success. The imposition of VAT on rent post-dated the 1967 and the 1969 Underlease. Section 89 of the Value Added Tax Act 1994 provides that where there is a change in the VAT charged on a supply (including a change from no VAT being charged to VAT being charged) then (unless the contract otherwise provides) there shall be added to the consideration for the supply an amount equal to the VAT. Section 89 (2) provides that where a lease does not specifically refer to VAT this is not to be taken as a "provision" that Section 89 (1) shall not apply. Accordingly, in a lease unless there is some specific provision to the contrary, there is to be added to the rent the amount of the VAT. This applies as much to the continuing contractual liability of the original tenant to pay the rent as it does to the liability of the estate owner under the covenant that runs with the land. I do not see that any sensible distinction can be drawn between the "supply" to the occupying tenant and the "supply" to the original tenant."
"(1) Where, after the making of a contract for the supply of goods or services and before the goods or services are supplied, there is a change in the VAT charged on the supply, then, unless the contract otherwise provided, there shall be added to or deducted from the consideration for the supply an amount equal to the change.
[(2)...]
(3) References in this section to a change in the VAT charged on a supply include references to a change to or from no VAT being charged on the supply (including a change attributable to the making of an election under paragraph 2 of Schedule 10).
"The final argument advanced by the Defendant was one advanced only at the hearing (and is not contained in the Amended Defence). It was to the effect that the recitals to the funding agreement dated the 6 August 2000 indicated that Pubs had indemnified the Claimant against any liability that the Claimant had to NCP, and accordingly it might be the case that the Claimant had paid nothing to NCP (the payment actually being made by Pubs). On the state of the evidence before me I do not consider that that argument has a realistic prospect of success. The statutory demands by NCP were actually addressed to the Claimant. Paragraph 5 of the witness statement dated 25 February 2002 of Miss Martin on behalf of the Claimant says that the Claimant paid under the statutory demand (confirming paragraphs 11 and 12 of her first statement). Paragraph 13 of the Particulars of Claim (on which is endorsed a statement of truth by Martyn Fenwick, the Group Estates Manager of S & N), says that the Claimant has paid £346,313. I see no reason to go behind the witness statements or the statement of truth and to speculate that Pubs' indemnity obligation was, in fact, discharged by a direct payment."
"13. In assessing the percentage I take particular account of the following:
- When the application was issued an unarguable defence was being advanced.
- The application to amend the Defence was conducted in such a way that it was necessary for me to "crystallise" the statement of case in a particular form (that contained in Counsel's draft used at the hearing on 26 February 2002) in order that the somewhat fluid arguments being advanced could be addressed: but the Amended Defence as so crystallised did not in fact express the principal point ultimately argued. That only reached its full expression in the skeleton argument for the Part 24 application (whereas the Claimant's Part 24 skeleton addressed the precise case pleaded). The Amended Defence did clearly identify the section 17 arguments.
- Only the Defendant knew precisely what his defence was and he at no time acknowledged that none of its branches could apply to the sum for which judgment was given.
- The claimant restricted the time available to the Defendant to apply his legal argument to the facts by not providing disclosure until late in the day (though that was because they had a legal answer to the precisely pleaded case that would render disclosure unnecessary). However, there was still sufficient time to do.
- The general conduct of the defence gives me no confidence that if the Claimant had confined its summary judgment application to some smaller sum the Defendant would have submitted to judgment.
- The Defendant established that there was a sufficient prospect of success on one limb of his principal argument (despite the absence of any clear authoritative statement supporting it) for the claim to go on trial and to render inappropriate consideration of his other arguments on section 17 and on some smaller points, and the amount which is in issue on those arguments is about 9 times greater than that covered by the judgment.
- The time taken on the Defendant's unsuccessful points (indemnity, VAT and actual payment) was slightly less than the time taken on the successful point (and points which it then became inappropriate to consider).
14. Bearing in mind those particular factors, and having assessed the matter in the round, I order that the Defendant shall pay 40% of the Claimants costs of the Part 24 application."
"The parties must understand that no part of these costs is at issue in the remainder of the action, and that I have ruled upon them. I hope that this both will bring home to the parties the need to conduct litigation on a proportionate basis consistent with their duty under CPR Pt 1.3, and will also facilitate settlement."
May LJ
Sedley LJ