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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> The Corporation of Trinity House of Deptford Strond v 4-6 Trinity Church Square Freehold Ltd [2018] EWCA Civ 764 (18 April 2018) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2018/764.html Cite as: [2018] WLR(D) 230, [2018] L &TR 13, [2018] HLR 27, [2018] 1 WLR 4876, [2018] 2 P &CR 11, [2018] WLR 4876, [2018] EWCA Civ 764 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE UPPER TRIBUNAL (LANDS CHAMBER)
Martin Rodger QC and Andrew Trott FRICS
[2016] UKUT 484 (LC)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE MOYLAN
and
LADY JUSTICE ASPLIN
____________________
THE CORPORATION OF TRINITY HOUSE OF DEPTFORD STROND |
Appellant |
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- and – |
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4 – 6 TRINITY CHURCH SQUARE FREEHOLD LTD |
Respondent |
____________________
(Piers Harrison instructed by Ashley Wilson Solicitors LLP) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 27th March 2018
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Crown Copyright ©
Lady Justice Asplin:
The Act
"(3) Subsection (2)(a) applies to a property if at the relevant date either –
. . .
(b) it is property which any such tenant is entitled under the terms of the lease of his flat to use in common with the occupiers of other premises (whether those premises are contained in the relevant premises or not)."
"The right of acquisition in respect of the freehold of any such property as is mentioned in subsection 3(b) shall, however, be taken to be satisfied with respect to that property if, on the acquisition of the relevant premises in pursuance of this Chapter, either-
(a) there are granted by the person who owns the freehold of that property –
(i) over that property, or
(ii) over any other property,
such permanent rights as will ensure that thereafter the occupier of the flat referred to in that provision has as nearly as may be the same rights as those enjoyed in relation to that property on the relevant date by the qualifying tenant under the terms of his lease; or
(b) there is acquired from the person who owns the freehold of that property the freehold of any other property over which any such permanent rights may be granted."
As I have already mentioned, the "relevant date" for the purposes of section 1(3) is defined as the date on which the notice of the claim for collective enfranchisement is given under section 13 of the Act: see section 1(8). In this case, therefore, the relevant date was 3 July 2015 which was before the licence to use the Garden was revoked. Any terms of acquisition which cannot be agreed are to be determined by the appropriate tribunal on an application made under section 24.
The Leases
"The Lessee shall be entitled as Licensee only to use in common with others the garden shown for the purposes of identification only coloured green on the said plan annexed hereto and marked "Plan A" upon the following conditions:
(i) The garden shall be used for recreational purposes and then only provided that no nuisance or annoyance is thereby caused to the other lessees of the flats in the Building
(ii) The Licence hereby granted may be revoked in writing by the Lessor at any time."
Further in each lease, by paragraph 1 of the First Schedule the tenant is granted the following qualified rights in common with others:
". . . for all purposes incidental to the occupation and enjoyment of the Flat (but not further or otherwise and without prejudice to the right of the Lessor to make such regulations as may be reasonable with regard to the security of the Building) to use on foot only the entrance halls . . . and passages leading to the Flat and (during the currency of the Licence granted by Clause 7 of this lease) the garden hereinbefore referred to."
Submissions and Upper Tribunal reasoning in outline
"45. Where the rights originally enjoyed by a qualifying tenant under the lease of the flat were revocable, the requirement of permanence therefore means that they must become irrevocable on the completion of the transfer. Section 1(4)(a) contemplates that the rights to be enjoyed may not be identical in every respect to the original rights, but must be "as nearly as may be the same". The possibility of modification is necessary because the replacement rights may be granted over different property, but also because of the overriding requirement of permanence which may be inconsistent with the original formulation of the rights."
"The statutory purpose is to ensure that the lessees end up in a reasonably similar position to the position they would have been in if they had acquired the freehold of the additional premises; i.e. to use the gardens and leisure complex as they pleased effectively in perpetuity."
In the Snowball case, the Upper Tribunal held that the FTT had been correct in deciding that the nominee purchaser was entitled to acquire the freehold of the additional premises which comprised a garden and leisure complex because the rights offered by the freeholder under section 1(4)(a) did not satisfy the "equivalence test" and that in any event, the lessees enjoyed permanent rights over the additional premises but if that was wrong, insofar as anyone had a right to withdraw the provision of the garden or the leisure complex it was the management company in which all the lessees were shareholders: [74], [76] and [84]. At [85] HHJ Huskinson went on to confirm that he considered his reasoning in the Fluss case to have been correct. The Upper Tribunal in this case referred to the Snowball decision at [49] and noted that it did not concern precarious rights and that the Tribunal's adherence to its reasoning in Fluss had not been part of its core reasoning. It went on as follows:
"50. For our part we would distinguish between a power to regulate rights and a power to terminate them. Our reasons for finding that revocable rights are not sufficient for the purpose of section 1(4)(a) are the same as Judge Huskinson's, namely that a revocable right is not permanent. That conclusion does not require any focus on the precise mode of enjoyment of the rights on the relevant date; all that matters is that the right conferred by the lease was one belonging to the qualifying tenant on that date. We consider that too close a focus on the relevant date should not be allowed to detract from the requirement that the rights should, as nearly as may be, be the same rights as those enjoyed under the terms of the tenant's lease. The requirement of equivalence seems to us to mean that rights conferred by the lease should continue to be enjoyed subject to the same restrictions as existed on the relevant date, and subject also to any power existing on that date to regulate the enjoyment of the rights, whether or not the power had yet been exercised. We test that proposition by putting a counter example to Judge Huskinson's. Take the case of qualifying tenants who enjoyed an irrevocable right to use a swimming pool or gym under their leases. If the swimming pool or gym happened to be closed for a day for repairs so that the tenants' rights to use them were temporarily suspended on the relevant date by regulations governing their use, could it really be the intention of the statute that an initial notice given on that day would carry no entitlement to permanent rights under section 1(4)(a)? We think not, since that would leave the tenants with no rights after the expiry of their current leases, which would not be "as nearly as may be" the same as their existing rights on the relevant date, when they had a right to resume their use of the pool and gym in future, once the repairs were completed.
51. It follows that we respectfully disagree with the Tribunal's conclusion in paragraph 36 of Fluss on the issue of the continuation of a previously unexercised power to make regulations, although we agree with the example given in that paragraph so far as it relates to the issue of termination. Like Judge Huskinson we also agree with the arguments advanced by leading counsel for the nominee purchaser in Snowball (at paragraphs 47(4) and 49 to 51, accepted at paragraph 85)."
"That formerly temporary rights should be replaced, on enfranchisement, by perpetual rights should not be regarded as an improbable result. First, because the whole purpose of the enfranchisement code is to replace the limited leasehold rights enjoyed by qualifying tenants with permanent rights; and secondly because the Act provides for landlords whose interests are diminished in value, or who sustain damage in respect of land other than the specified premises, to be compensated in the form of the premium payable by the tenants under Schedule 6."
Conclusion
Lord Justice Moylan:
Lord Justice McCombe: