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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> RHJ Ltd v FT Patten (Holdings) Ltd & Anor [2008] EWCA Civ 151 (12 March 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2008/151.html Cite as: [2008] 11 EG 93, [2008] EWCA Civ 151, [2008] Ch 341, [2008] 18 EG 128, [2008] L & TR 18, [2008] 2 WLR 1096, [2008] 2 EGLR 11, [2008] NPC 29 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT
CHANCERY DIVISION
MR JUSTICE LEWISON
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE LLOYD
and
LORD JUSTICE LAWRENCE COLLINS
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RHJ LIMITED |
Claimant Appellant |
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- and - |
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(1) FT PATTEN (HOLDINGS) LIMITED (2) FT PATTEN PROPERTIES (LIVERPOOL) LTD |
Defendants Respondents |
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Andrew Francis (instructed by DLA Piper UK LLP) for the Respondents
Hearing date: 21 February 2008
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Lloyd:
Introduction
The facts
The 1980 lease
"Except and reserving to the Lessor and its lessees and others entitled to the like rights … (i) the full and free right to erect build rebuild and/or alter as they may think fit at any time and from time to time any buildings or bays or projections to buildings on any land adjoining the demised property and/or on the opposite sides of the adjoining streets and access ways."
"Provided always that nothing herein contained shall operate to grant by way of implication or otherwise any estate right or easement not hereby expressly granted or not hereafter expressly granted by the Lessor over or in respect of any land retained by or belonging to the Lessor whether now held on lease from the Lessor or not or over any land to be hereafter acquired by the Lessor."
"3(a) In further pursuance of the said agreement and in further consideration of the rights hereinbefore granted the Council hereby admits that it has no right to the access of light from the said land edged red on the said Plan No 4 to any of the windows in the building recently erected on the land edged blue on the said Plan and that the enjoyment of any such light is and shall be on sufferance
(b) The Council shall pay to Standard Life the sum of five pence per annum on each anniversary of the date of this deed (if demanded) as an acknowledgment that its enjoyment of the access to light is not as of right but by the permission of Standard Life and the Secretary of State only Provided that the failure to demand or to make such payments from time to time shall not operate to the prejudice of Standard Life or the Secretary of State or be deemed to be an admission on their part that the said light is being enjoyed or has been enjoyed otherwise than by permission under this deed
(c) The agreement herein contained shall be deemed to be an agreement within the meaning of Section 3 of the Prescription Act 1832 and Section 1 of the Rights of Light Act 1959 and to preclude the prescriptive acquisition of a right to light in respect of the said windows over the said land edged red on the said Plan under the said statutes or otherwise"
The 1832 Act
"When the access and use of light to and for any dwelling house, workshop, or other building shall have been actually enjoyed therewith for the full period of 20 years without interruption the right thereto shall be deemed absolute and indefeasible any local usage or custom to the contrary notwithstanding unless it shall appear that the same was enjoyed by some consent or agreement expressly made or given for that purpose by deed or writing."
"While the reference to "consent" envisages a permissive enjoyment of light, I do not think that the word "agreement" necessarily does. The function of the agreement is to prevent the enjoyment of light from being deemed to be "absolute and indefeasible". If, therefore, an agreement provides for the enjoyment of light not to be absolute and indefeasible it will, in my judgment, be sufficient to prevent the deeming provision from taking effect."
Counsel's submissions
Previous decided cases
"Whether or not a document constitutes such a consent or agreement is a question of construction. In this context, care must be taken to distinguish between provisions designed to protect the servient owner by negativing the implication of a grant of an easement or the grant of analogous rights under the doctrine of non-derogation from grant or to establish by agreement the existing legal rights of the parties; and provisions designed to authorise the servient owner at a future date to carry out works or build as he pleases unrestricted by any easement of light in favour of the dominant land and notwithstanding any resultant injury to the light enjoyed. Provisions of the former character do not constitute either consents or agreements by the servient owner licensing or consenting to the future enjoyment of the access to light and accordingly do not prevent acquisition of light by prescription (see Mitchell v Cantrill (1887) 37 Ch D 36); but provisions of the latter character may be construed as consents or agreements permitting the enjoyment of light during the interim period and accordingly (as provided in Section 3) preclude any easement arising by prescription under the Act (see Willoughby v Eckstein [1937] Ch 167)."
The judge thus drew attention pertinently to the difference between acquisition by grant at the date of the disposition and acquisition by prescription based on actual enjoyment after that date.
"Now does this clause which I have read bring it within that? In my opinion it does not. It is not an agreement given for the purpose of the enjoyment of the light, but it is simply an exception out of the grant made of appurtenances and rights, so as to prevent the lessee from urging as against the landlord or anybody claiming through him, before a right had been obtained under the statute, that the landlord could not derogate from his own grant either by his building or granting to anybody else a right to build so as to interfere with the Plaintiff's lights. That is the reasonable, and I think, the only meaning of this clause. It was in effect saying, "If I grant this house to you without protecting myself, you will say, if I build up any adjoining house, that is derogating from my own grant; and this clause is to prevent any such contention being made." But if independently of the grant the lessee has enjoyed the use of these windows for twenty years he will have the same right as against the adjoining lessee as against a stranger. There was certainly no case referred to in the argument to shew that such claim as is contended for by the Plaintiff exists. But he has the right simply by the effect and operation, not of the grant, but of the statute, and in my opinion he is entitled to enforce that.
Then there was another point which was suggested, that this must be considered an agreement between the landlord and the lessee, that the landlord should be at liberty if he thought fit to do anything, even although it would operate so as to interfere with his right to light; but I do not think that is the true meaning of it. If you had an express proviso in the contract between the parties that, notwithstanding the grant to the Plaintiff, the landlord should be at liberty to build so as to interfere with his right, that would be another point, but that is not the express form of it, and in my opinion the fair and clear meaning of this clause, construing it without reference to the consequences to one party or the other, is not anything of that sort."
"The last words in the section mean that when you find an agreement under which the light is enjoyed you must look at that agreement and see what, if any, right to light is expressly given by it. Here the Plaintiff falls under the words of the statute, and it appears to me the contention of the Defendant is not warranted by the words at the end of the section. There is nothing except the grant coupled with the words which Cotton LJ has alluded to, and which obviously are for the purpose of preserving to the lessee a right, until an adverse right is acquired, of doing what he likes with the adjoining property. Under the grant he could deal with that property as he liked within the twenty years, and within that period he might have blocked up all these lights; but after the Plaintiff has enjoyed them without interruption for twenty years the statute confers upon him the right to their future enjoyment. I think therefore this appeal should be allowed."
"Enjoyment of light for twenty years would prima facie, under section 3 of the Prescription Act 1832, give a right to the light. Those who deny that the right has been acquired must show that the right has been cut down by the proviso to section 3. Looking at what has been done in this case, I will assume that the stone tablet contained an agreement and that it was in writing. But the question still remains whether that which appears upon this stone is an express agreement relating to light and made for that purpose. Looking at the possible reasons why the parties may have agreed to this inscription, I am wholly unable to say that it is so. I cannot say why the parties agreed to put this tablet up. If I were to do so, I should be doing that which the tablet itself has carefully avoided doing. I cannot come to the conclusion that it was in the minds of the parties that this tablet was intended to be a reservation as to the acquisition of a right to light. I can imagine it possible that the parties desired to preserve the boundary, when we see the statement as to "nine inches." I cannot, then, come to the conclusion that the right to obstruct the access of light to the windows of these houses was expressly reserved by an agreement expressly made for that purpose."
"but without including any rights of light or other easements over other ground or premises and subject nevertheless to all rights and easements belonging to any adjacent property and subject to the adjacent buildings or any of them being at any time or times rebuilt or altered according to plans both as to height elevation extent and otherwise as shall or may be approved of by the ground landlord for the time being."
"It is to be observed that the exception to be operative must fulfil three conditions: (a) the agreement must be by deed or writing, (b) it must be express, and (c) it must also have been entered into for the purpose referred to in the section. There is no difficulty with regard to (a) and (b). The real difficulty appears to me to arise on (c). The purpose referred to in the exception to the section is described in the section as "that purpose.""
After his review of the authorities he said this at page 173:
"I think the principle to be deduced from these decisions is that in order to prevent the acquisition of a statutory right to light under the Prescription Act there must be an express written agreement under which the actual enjoyment of light by a lessee is permissive throughout the whole of the term created by the lease."
"Taken in conjunction with the exception they appear to me to constitute a grant by the lessee of the right to build during the full term of the demise on the adjacent land including No. 15 Balfour Mews, notwithstanding the effect of such building on the light to No. 13 Balfour Mews; and to constitute, together with the exception from the demise of any right to light, an agreement by the lessee of No. 13 Balfour Mews that any enjoyment of light in respect of the premises demised to her was to be permissive only throughout the whole of the term."
Accordingly he held that the agreement did come within the terms of section 3.
Must the provision refer expressly to light?
"Clauses of the second kind may prevent the acquisition of a right of light by prescription if what they authorise would interfere with light. If, on a fair reading of the clause they do, then it is not necessary, in my judgment, for the clause to use the word "light". Nor, in my judgment, is it necessary, in my judgment, for the clause to provide that the enjoyment of light is "permissive". What is needed is that the clause makes it clear that the enjoyment of light is not absolute and indefeasible. The court must "find out the substance of the contract": in other words it is a question of interpretation of the clause in question. Once the clause has been interpreted, that interpretation will have been "expressly" agreed. A clause in a lease which authorises the landlord to build as he pleases is likely to satisfy the test."
He then applied that approach to the facts of the case and found paragraph (i) did constitute an agreement within section 3.
The correct approach to interpretation of a relevant provision
The true construction of the 1980 lease
Lord Justice Lawrence Collins
"Then there was another point which was suggested, that this must be considered an agreement between the landlord and the lessee, that the landlord should be at liberty if he thought fit to do anything, even although it would operate so as to interfere with his right to light; but I do not think that is the true meaning of it. If you had an express proviso in the contract between the parties that, notwithstanding the grant to the Plaintiff, the landlord should be at liberty to build so as to interfere with his right, that would be another point, but that is not the express form of it, and in my opinion the fair and clear meaning of this clause, construing it without reference to the consequences to one party or the other, is not anything of that sort."
Lord Justice Mummery