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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Christiana Properties Ltd v Annauth [2017] EWCA Civ 1070 (24 July 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2017/1070.html Cite as: [2017] EWCA Civ 1070 |
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ON APPEAL FROM WINCHESTER COUNTY COURT
MR RECORDER LEVENE
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
and
LORD JUSTICE HAMBLEN
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Christiana Properties Limited |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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Mr. Kreeshan Vickram Annauth |
Respondent |
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The Respondent was not represented and did not attend
Hearing date : 12 July 2017
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Hamblen :
Introduction
Factual background
(1) The shop was to be let to Mr Annauth for a period of 15 years from 24 June 2009;
(2) A peppercorn rent was payable up to 29 September 2009; and
(3) The rent after 29 September 2009 was to be £55,000 per year, payable quarterly, with the first instalment for the period between 29 September 2009 and 25 December 2009 to be paid on the date of the lease.
The judgment
(1) The guarantor was entitled to act as Mr Annauth's agent and this was accepted by both Mr Annauth and CPL [1].
(2) Mr Annauth and the guarantor instructed a firm of solicitors, Paris Smith, to negotiate with GRS on their behalf about payment of rent [6].
(3) There was a binding agreement between CPL and Mr Annauth that CPL would accept payment of the debt at £50 per month in exchange for which CPL would not issue proceedings [8].
(4) The guarantor acted as Mr Annauth's agent with his consent, as did Paris Smith. Paris Smith made an offer which resulted in the agreement on Mr Annauth's behalf and CPL "assumed that it was acting as his agent". He accepted the evidence of the guarantor and Mr Annauth that the offer was made jointly and that at no time was CPL or GRL misled [14].
(5) CPL thought that it was dealing and contracting with both Mr Annauth and his sister and agreeing a compromise of the liability of both of them. At no time did CPL suggest that it was reserving the right to claim the full amount from Mr Annauth [16] [18].
(6) It was clearly stated and understood (at least by Mr Scahill and GRS) that CPL would not sue as long as the £50 was being paid. Mr Annauth had stuck to his side of the bargain [19].
(7) One payment was made a day late but "nobody made a fuss about that", thereafter payments were made on time and accepted, time was not of the essence and this was not repudiatory [8][9].
The grounds of appeal
(1) Ground 2 – The judge erred in concluding that Mr Annauth was a party to the compromise agreement which was in fact entered into between the CPL and the guarantor;
(2) Ground 3 – The judge erred in concluding that CPL's covenant not to sue the guarantor extended to and discharged Mr Annauth from payment of the outstanding sum;
(3) Ground 4 – The judge failed to have regard to the fact that, under the compromise agreement CPL impliedly reserved its right to sue Mr Annauth;
(4) Ground 5 – The judge erred in finding that CPL was bound by the covenant not to sue in spite of the fact that the compromise agreement had been breached.
Ground 1A – The judge erred in treating the compromise agreement as enforceable. The debt would never have been discharged and so such a compromise is contrary to the rule in Foakes v Beer (1884) 9 App Cas 605 that a creditor is not bound by a promise to accept part payment as full settlement of a debt.
Grounds (2) – (4)
(1) On 15 January 2013 Paris Smith wrote to GRS on a letter headed "Our Client: Anoushka Annauth". The letter stated that "our client's financial position has not improved from when we were originally dealing with your predecessors", that "our client" has already provided a statement of means, that "she is prepared to make payments of £50.00 per month" which is "all our client can realistically afford at the present time". It also stated that "our clients asks for the return of the items that were left in the premises".
(2) On 16 January at 0938 Mr Scahill responded by email headed "Re: Without prejudice – Our Client – Anoushka Annouth" stating:
"I have received your proposal and the offer will be accepted due to the current economic climate.
The account will be reviewed every 6 months to make sure all payments are up to date. If payments are missed then we will take this that your client has broken their own promise to pay and will be forwarded to the legal team for immediate legal action to take place".
(3) By letter of the same day Paris Smith replied using the same letter heading as before and stating:
"We refer to the above matter and your email of 16th January. Whilst our client is prepared to make payments, she confirms that she will not be able to make the first payment until 28th February 2013, and make payment on the 28th day of each month, thereafter.
We would be grateful if you would confirm whether this is acceptable.
As you will undoubtedly be aware, our client also wanted to collect items from the premises, which the Landlord would not allow because of the outstanding amount due being approximately £27,000.00 as of June 2011, immediately prior to our clients surrender of the lease.
Our client believes that these items consisting of shelving and racking, had a value of approximately £6,000.00, and have either been disposed of by the Landlord, or provided to the current tenants of the premises as part of the fixtures and fittings. Our client considers that this sum should be removed from the total due to your client."
(4) By a further email at 16.15 the same day Mr Scahill responded by email using the same subject heading as before and stating:
"The arrangement we will accept for the 28th February then each month after, the other issue is something you must take up with the client yourself.
I would advise that at the moment since it has been so long since any payment has been made it might be a good idea to get some payments on the board before you ask if he is willing to drop the price of the debt at this moment in time, as once he sees that your client is making some effort to pay this he may be more willing to negotiate with you."
(5) The compromise agreement was thereby concluded.
(1) It was apparent from the January 2013 documents that Paris Smith made the offer on behalf of the guarantor and not Mr Annauth. Those documents refer to Paris Smith's client in the singular and feminine sense.
(2) There was no evidence that Mr Annauth communicated his status of "principal"' to CPL/GRS.
(3) The judge erred in accepting the evidence of Mr Annauth and the guarantor that the offer letter was written on behalf of both of them. He failed to give any reasoning for doing so despite the evidence of the January 2013 documents and despite the judge having evidence that all consideration under the compromise agreement had been provided by the guarantor.
(1) The language used in the January 2013 documents by both Paris Smith and GRS was imprecise. In particular, there was an indiscriminate use of the plural and singular when referring to Paris Smith's clients. Whilst it was accepted that the majority of the references are in the singular, there are uses of the plural as well. For example, the letter of 15 January 2013 from Paris Smith refers to "clients asks" in the penultimate paragraph and GRS' email of 16 January 2013 states "your client has broken their own promise to pay" (emphasis added). In the same sentences, however, reference is made to the singular ("asks", "client"). Further, this does not explain the references made to the client in the feminine or to the guarantor as being the client in the heading of the correspondence.
(2) Given that Mr Annauth was the guarantor's brother it was unlikely that she would seek to extinguish her own liability whilst that of her brother remained. There was, however, good reason for the guarantor to seek to limit her personal liability and £50 per month was only 1/6 of the monthly interest liability.
(3) No separate offer had been put forward by Mr Annauth despite the fact that he was the leaseholder and primary debtor. This is correct but provides all the more reason for the guarantor to seek to limit her own liability.
(4) Mr Annauth was not specifically excluded from the negotiations or discussions, in circumstances where CPL was aware that Paris Smith was representing both him and his sister they had previously negotiated in tandem when surrendering the lease. This is also correct but related to dealings between Paris Smith and CPL's solicitors, Birkett Long, in 2011. In 2012 GRS made frequent attempts to contact Mr Annauth without success. They did, however, succeed in contacting Mrs Annauth and she referred them to Paris Smith. Paris Smith then wrote to GRS on 13 December 2012 referring to "Our Client: Anoushka Annauth", to emails exchanged between her and GRS and to an offer of payment which had been made. This was the immediate background to the January 2013 documents. Whilst Paris Smith had acted for both Mr Annauth and the guarantor in the past, by the end of 2012 they appeared to be acting for the guarantor alone.
Conclusion
Lord Justice McCombe