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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 >> Joseph v Nettleton Road Housing Co-Operative Ltd [2010] EWCA Civ 228 (16 March 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2010/228.html Cite as: [2010] 2 P & CR 12, [2010] HLR 30, [2010] NPC 35, [2010] EWCA Civ 228 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE WOOLWICH COUNTY COURT
District Judge Lee
Claim No. 8WO00110
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
and
LORD JUSTICE PATTEN
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ELTON JOSEPH |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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NETTLETON ROAD HOUSING CO-OPERATIVE LIMITED |
Respondent |
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Ranjit Bhose (instructed by Glazer Delmar) for the Respondent
Hearing date : 23rd February 2010
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Patten :
"6.17 The tenant shall not, without the Co-operative's written permission:
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6.17.6 Keep any pet in the premises. Such permission will only be granted by the Co-operative if it has the agreement of all other tenants affected."
"12.1 The tenant may bring the tenancy to an end by giving the Co-operative 4 weeks written notice.
12.2. The Co-operative may bring the tenancy to an end by giving the tenant 4 weeks written notice to quit. This shall only be in the following circumstances:
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12.2.3 If the tenant has committed any breach of the agreement and the Management Committee has given the tenant written notice of the breach complained of and the tenant has failed to remedy it within the period of time stated in the notice.
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12.3 When a notice to quit has been served by the Co-operative and has expired the Co-operative may apply to the court for a possession order."
"7. He was obviously aware of why any reasonable neighbour would be aggrieved at the dog being in the property, because he concurred that there was no 100% guarantee that the dog would not be a nuisance, and if he were to leave it alone in the property at any time, there would be no safeguard against it barking for prolonged periods. Taking all this into account, I was somewhat taken aback by his intransigence over the dog, and could sympathise with the claimant's view that whatever they tried to do to ameliorate the position, he would not have changed his stance anyway. For instance, in his witness statement he admits he was "a little intransigent" at the meeting on the 13th January 2008. Indeed, when asked if he had any proposals, he had none – and so it was decided that the proceedings would continue. It had been plainly put to him that he had adamantly insisted that the dog was his, and the sudden news that it was somebody else's was novel to the other members. Indeed it appeared that as late as the 11th February 2008 meeting, it was not entirely clear the dog had gone. I do not believe, on the balance of probabilities, that the dog was other than his own. All this highlighted an obduracy on the part of the defendant that demanded a robust response from the claimant. He had been given fair warning."
"33. In the face of the defendant's assertion that the time for removing the dog was insufficient, Mr Potts, witness for the claimant, stated that there were dogs' homes around which would be willing to take the dog in. Had the defendant been more proactive in conveying any difficulties he may have had, more time might have been considered. I can see no objection to 14 days being given as reasonable, where the landlord has been confronted with a situation that could potentially cause mutiny within the ranks of the other occupiers on account of nuisance by way of noise, smell and hygiene which were complained of in the Minutes of the meetings. Any reasonable landlord would look upon time being of the essence in such circumstances. What is more, Mr Joseph candidly admitted in cross-examination that when he went to seek advice from the Evelyn 190 Centre, he never told them that he thought the time was too short, so he himself must have had some inkling that it would not have been impossible to meet the time allowed.
34. However an important point is that, as it turned out, Mr Joseph had longer than the two weeks to remove the dog, so he had ample time to consider his position, despite his obduracy. He himself ultimately recognised that permission was required, so he could never have acted to his detriment. He was served with the letter of warning around 25th September 2007. The general meeting that noted he had not yet removed the dog was on the 15th October 2007, and the next crucial meeting when the issue was again discussed was on the 11th November 2007, when the defendant was present and when a decision was made to issue the notice. The defendant had already had seven weeks by then to remove the dog. But still at that meeting he would not recognise the need to comply, despite objections voiced by the other tenants over faeces in the garden and other problems. I do not see any justification in implying that the breach had to be "serious". The parties had agreed in clause 12.2 that the agreement could be terminated by "any" breach. Even so, given the very sore contentions over the dog on all sides, I could not conceivably classify such breach as not serious, nor the notice as being draconian."
"Now it is said that when in the present case the tenant entered pursuant to the agreement and paid a yearly rent he became a tenant from year to year on the terms of the agreement including clause 6 which prevents the landlord from giving notice to quit until the land is required for road widening. This submission would make a nonsense of the rule that a grant for an uncertain term does not create a lease and would make nonsense of the concept of a tenancy from year to year because it is of the essence of a tenancy from year to year that both the landlord and the tenant shall be entitled to give notice determining the tenancy."
"A tenancy from year to year is saved from being uncertain because each party has power by notice to determine at the end of any year. The term continues until determined as if both parties made a new agreement at the end of each year for a new term for the ensuing year. A power for nobody to determine or for one party only to be able to determine is inconsistent with the concept of a term from year to year: see Doe d. Warner v. Browne, 8 East 165 and Cheshire Lines Committee v. Lewis & Co., 50 L.J.Q.B. 121 . In In re Midland Railway Co.'s Agreement [1971] Ch. 725 there was no 'clearly expressed bargain' that the term should continue until the crack of doom if the demised land was not required for the landlord's undertaking or if the undertaking ceased to exist. In the present case there was no 'clearly expressed bargain' that the tenant shall be entitled to enjoy his 'temporary structures' in perpetuity if Walworth Road is never widened. In any event principle and precedent dictate that it is beyond the power of the landlord and the tenant to create a term which is uncertain.
A lease can be made for five years subject to the tenant's right to determine if the war ends before the expiry of five years. A lease can be made from year to year subject to a fetter on the right of the landlord to determine the lease before the expiry of five years unless the war ends. Both leases are valid because they create a determinable certain term of five years. A lease might purport to be made for the duration of the war subject to the tenant's right to determine before the end of the war. A lease might be made from year to year subject to a fetter on the right of the landlord to determine the lease before the war ends. Both leases would be invalid because each purported to create an uncertain term. A term must either be certain or uncertain. It cannot be partly certain because the tenant can determine it at any time and partly uncertain because the landlord cannot determine it for an uncertain period. If the landlord does not grant and the tenant does not take a certain term the grant does not create a lease."
Lord Justice Ward: