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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 >> Tiger Aspect Holdings Ltd & Anor v Sunlife Europe Properties Ltd [2013] EWCA Civ 1656 (17 December 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2013/1656.html Cite as: [2013] EWCA Civ 1656 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT QUEENS BENCH DIVISION, TECHNOLOGY & CONSTRUCTION COURT
MR JUSTICE EDWARDS-STUART
HT11432
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE LEWISON
and
LORD JUSTICE FLOYD
____________________
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TIGER ASPECT HOLDINGS LIMITED & ANR |
Appellant |
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and SUNLIFE EUROPE PROPERTIES LIMITED |
Respondent |
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Mr Martin Hutchings QC (instructed by Forsters LLP) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 5th December 2013
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Lewison:
"That rule is that, when there is a lease with a covenant to leave the premises in repair at the end of the term, and such covenant is broken, the lessee must pay what the lessor proves to be a reasonable and proper amount for putting the premises into the state of repair in which they ought to have been left."
"Where the action is brought upon the covenant to repair at the end of the term, the damages are such a sum as will put the premises into the state of repair in which the tenant was bound to leave them."
"First, what was the scope of Tiger's obligations under the covenants in the two leases? Second, what is the reasonable cost of putting the building back into the condition in which it should have been if there had been sufficient performance by Tiger of those obligations? Third, Tiger having failed to make sufficient performance of its obligations under the leases, what is the difference between the value of the building in its actual condition at the expiry of the leases and the condition that it should have been in if there had been sufficient performance by Tiger of its obligations? For the purpose of these last two questions, the tenant's obligation is to put and keep the premises in such repair as, having regard to the age, character, and locality of the building, would make it reasonably fit for the occupation of a tenant of the class who would be likely to take it: see Proudfoot v Hart (1890) 25 QBD 42. For shorthand, in the rest of this judgment I shall refer to this hypothetical tenant as the "appropriate type of tenant"."
"…the court must consider what work would have been required at the expiry of the lease in order to put the premises (if properly maintained and put in good condition by the tenant) into a condition that would enable it to be let to the appropriate type of tenant at a fair market rent. This may have two consequences. First, the landlord cannot recover the cost of that additional work from the tenant. Second, the additional work may make worthless some of the work that would have been necessary to put the building into repair with the result that, if such work has not been done, the landlord has suffered no loss and accordingly cannot recover any damages in respect of that breach. This is known as "supersession"."
"It follows, therefore, that if the cost actually incurred by the landlord in seeking to put the building back into the condition in which it should have been left by the tenant is greater than the cost of other work which would be sufficient to put the building into that condition, then the landlord is limited to recovering the costs of the latter."
"… the appropriate test is not whether the landlord has acted reasonably in carrying out remedial works, but rather whether what the landlord has done by way of repair goes no further than was necessary to make good the tenant's breaches of covenant."
"Taking the evidence as a whole I am satisfied that the boilers were not in the condition required by the leases when Tiger moved out. On balance, I conclude that given the uncertainty about the condition of the boilers the appropriate course was to replace them. I consider that Tiger's standards of maintenance were so poor that it could not be safely assumed in their favour that the boilers were in good working order."
"At this point, I should perhaps notice the submission of Mr Berry as to onus of proof. He said that once the landlords had established a diminution in value, the onus shifted to the tenant to show that the diminution was less than the cost of the repairs. He referred me to a number of cases on this, of which Jones v Herxheimer [1950] 2 KB 106 was the latest. This is a case where the landlord had to do some repairs to relet the premises. They were, I think, quite modest repairs. But, again, there was no question there of improvements to the premises. The Court of Appeal were concerned to dispose of a submission that in every case there had to be evidence of values of the reversion, such as I have got here. You cannot start off just by saying this is the cost of the repairs, ergo that is the cost of diminution of the reversion. That had been suggested in the earlier case that I mentioned, Landeau v Marchbank, by Lynskey J, but that idea was exploded in the Court of Appeal. They held that there are cases where the cost of repairs does afford prima facie evidence of the diminution in value, and those cases are where the premises are going to remain the same but where the landlord is going to do the repairs or have them done. In that case, he had in fact done them.
Therefore, one can quite see in that sort of situation that once the landlord has proved those facts, the burden should shift to the tenant then to show that the reversion has not been diminished at all by the repairs because he has done repairs that were totally unnecessary or something of that sort and they have not added to the value of the reversion at all. In that situation one would expect the tenant to have the burden of showing that that was so. But I cannot apply it to the situation here where the premises are inevitably going to be improved, and substantial works, costing well over twice what the repairs are going to cost, are going to be carried out by the Halifax. There is no onus in those circumstances on the tenant, once the landlord has shown that some allowance has been made to the tenant, even though it has been structured in a form attributing the rent allowance to the want of repairs. It has not been proved that any diminution in the value of the reversion is attributable to the allowance for the repairs."
"… I consider that the amount of the diminution in value is to be inferred from the costs of the repairs reasonably necessary to make good the loss caused by Tiger's breaches of covenant, there being no satisfactory evidence that it is any lower amount."
"… the works in the "REMEDIAL WORKS REQUIRED/UNDERTAKEN" column of the Scott Schedule had already been done."
"The Premises are to be valued in repair on the basis that what was originally demised was delivered up in the condition required under the Lease. Accordingly, I have valued the premises in repair with the benefit of an air conditioning system in accordance with what was originally installed, solid floors with perimeter power points, 2 automatic passenger lifts, double glazed aluminium framed windows, carpets, mineral tile suspended ceilings and recessed fluorescent lights. In certain cases, either due to replacement being required, or the disrepair allowing for replacement with credit to be given for betterment (such as the windows) the premises have been improved, but I do not consider that any of the works undertaken are improvements which have added to the letting or capital value of the Premises or caused any supersession in relation to the Defendant's repairing liabilities."
"… the Premises, if left in a good state of repair would have been entirely appropriate for its location. It would be in terms of specification and rental levels what tenants in this area would have been looking for in the open market in late November 2008."
"… only those works in the "APPROPRIATE REMEDY" column of the Scott Schedule had already been done."
"Q. … What you are saying is that if we did all the works that we say ought to have been done, you could have let it for £511,500 per annum?
A. That's my estimate.
Q. Yes, I understand. And that is lower than your estimate of what it could have been let for if the £1.7 million of works were to be done?
A. Yes."
"Q. … Just to be clear, you are saying I think that if we had done all of our works before the lease end then the property in that condition would have fetched £4.85 million pounds?
A. £4.88."
"I've applied a cost of works of just over £1.3 million as compared to his £2.02 million…. So the whole stance of this valuation is that you go further, not because you have to, but because you need to to be able to achieve a letting of the building."
"In fact, valuation (iv) does not simply represent the value of the premises in repair to 1973/74 standards: it has built in to it the assumption that this state of repair can be or could have been achieved by the expenditure identified by Tiger. This is not the case."
"A difficulty with any consideration of Mr Krendel's valuation (iv) is that no breakdown of the calculation has been provided to the court, and neither side is willing to ask for one. However, there are three things that can be said about Mr Krendel's valuation (iv). First, Mr Krendel did not agree with (and, so far as one can tell, probably did not adopt) Tiger's approach to supersession as set out in Mr Smith's valuation (iv). Second, Mr Krendel took Tiger's figures as set out in the Scott Schedule (as the basis of the valuation required him to do). Third, Mr Krendel did not agree with the approach involved in valuation (iv) for the reason recorded in the experts' joint statement…"
"In the absence of the calculations supporting Mr Krendel's valuation (iv), the court is not in a position to adjust it in order to reflect the court's assessment of the cost of the work that was necessary to remedy Tiger's breaches of covenant."
"Although Mr Smith's valuation (iv) has not been proved in evidence, it has been referred to extensively and, as a calculation, it is before the court. It is reasonably clear and the working is self-evident and, so far as the methodology is concerned, much of it is uncontroversial. Mr Smith's figure for valuation (iv) of £4.659 million was slightly lower than Mr Krendel's figure for valuation (iv) of £4.885 million. It seems fair to assume, therefore, that if I adopt Mr Smith's methodology but substitute the figures that I have found to be the cost of the work that represents Sunlife's loss as a result of Tiger's failure to comply with its covenants, I will arrive at an "in repair" valuation that is a fair reflection of the material before the court and my findings."
"Where a party has disclosed an expert's report, any party may use that expert's report as evidence at the trial."
Lord Justice Floyd:
Lord Justice Longmore: