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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Avon Ground Rents Ltd v Canary Gateway (Block A) RTM Company Ltd [2023] EWCA Civ 616 (30 May 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2023/616.html Cite as: [2023] 1 WLR 3516, [2023] WLR 3516, [2023] EWCA Civ 616, [2023] WLR(D) 279 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE UPPER TRIBUNAL (LANDS CHAMBER)
Martin Rodger KC, Deputy Chamber President
LC-2022-199
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE NEWEY
and
LADY JUSTICE ELISABETH LAING
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AVON GROUND RENTS LIMITED |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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CANARY GATEWAY (BLOCK A) RTM COMPANY LTD |
Respondent |
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Mark Loveday and James Castle (instructed by Jobsons Solicitors Ltd) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 11 May 2023
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Newey:
The statutory framework
"(2) Subject to section 77, a lease is a long lease if—
(a) it is granted for a term of years certain exceeding 21 years, whether or not it is (or may become) terminable before the end of that term by notice given by or to the tenant, by re-entry or forfeiture or otherwise,
(b) it is for a term fixed by law under a grant with a covenant or obligation for perpetual renewal (but is not a lease by sub-demise from one which is not a long lease),
(c) it takes effect under section 149(6) of the Law of Property Act 1925 (c. 20) (leases terminable after a death or marriage or the formation of a civil partnership),
(d) it was granted in pursuance of the right to buy conferred by Part 5 of the Housing Act 1985 (c. 68) or in pursuance of the right to acquire on rent to mortgage terms conferred by that Part of that Act,
(e) it is a shared ownership lease, whether granted in pursuance of that Part of that Act or otherwise, where the tenant's total share is 100 per cent., or
(f) it was granted in pursuance of that Part of that Act as it has effect by virtue of section 17 of the Housing Act 1996 (c. 52) (the right to acquire).
(3) 'Shared ownership lease' means a lease—
(a) granted on payment of a premium calculated by reference to a percentage of the value of the demised premises or the cost of providing them, or
(b) under which the tenant (or his personal representatives) will or may be entitled to a sum calculated by reference, directly or indirectly, to the value of those premises.
(4) 'Total share', in relation to the interest of a tenant under a shared ownership lease, means his initial share plus any additional share or shares in the demised premises which he has acquired."
These subsections are central to the present appeal.
"Section 76 and 77 specify what is a 'long lease' for the purposes of the right to manage. The provisions mirror the relevant existing provisions for the right to collectively enfranchise. A long lease is principally any lease originally granted for a term certain exceeding 21 years, but includes also certain other types of lease regardless of term, including leases of leaseholders whose long leases have expired and who remain as tenants under the provisions of Part 1 of the Landlord and Tenant Act 1954 or Schedule 10 to the Local Government and Housing Act 1989. Where the lease is a shared ownership lease, it is only counted as a long lease for the purposes of the right to manage if the leaseholder owns a 100 per cent share of the lease."
"For consistency, we propose that in general RTM should be exercisable by those leaseholders who would be eligible for collective enfranchisement under the Leasehold Reform, Housing and Urban Development Act 1993 …. The right would be exercisable by qualifying tenants, as defined in the 1993 Act. These are essentially leaseholders with a lease which was originally granted for a term exceeding 21 years. Where the lease in question is a shared ownership lease, the leaseholder would have to hold a 100 per cent share of the equity. Tenants with business or commercial leases would not be qualifying tenants."
"(a) a lease granted for a term of years certain exceeding 21 years, whether or not it is (or may become) terminable before the end of that term by notice given by or to the tenant or by re-entry, forfeiture or otherwise;
(b) a lease for a term fixed by law under a grant with a covenant or obligation for perpetual renewal (other than a lease by sub-demise from one which is not a long lease) or a lease taking effect under section 149(6) of the Law of Property Act 1925 (leases terminable after a death or marriage);
(c) a lease granted in pursuance of the right to buy conferred by Part V of the Housing Act 1985 or in pursuance of the right to acquire on rent to mortgage terms conferred by that Part of that Act; or
(d) a shared ownership lease, whether granted in pursuance of that Part of that Act or otherwise, where the tenant's total share is 100 per cent or
(e) a lease granted in pursuance of that Part of that Act as it has effect by virtue of section 17 of the Housing Act 1996 (the right to acquire)".
Previous authorities
"15. Mr Arden [i.e. counsel for the landlord] drew to my attention another curious feature of the 1993 Act. Shared ownership leases, as defined in section 7, are always, or virtually always, for a term of years exceeding 21 years. Such leases have, or are expected to have, a capital value: they have either been granted on payment of a premium, or confer on the tenant a right to a proportion of the value of the premises; they must therefore be for a term having a realisable value, and that means a term of 60 or 99 years or more. It follows that in practice all shared ownership leases are long leases within the meaning of section 7(1)(a) of the 1993 Act. On the face of it, therefore, para (d) of section 7(1) is otiose. Indeed, the restriction of the paragraph to a shared ownership lease where the tenant's share is 100% suggests that a tenant under such a lease with a share of 90% of the value of the premises is not a qualifying tenant. It was for this reason that Mr Arden submitted that paragraph (a) has to be read as referring to leases other than a shared ownership lease. Despite the curious result that paragraph (d) appears to have no practical effect, I cannot accept this submission, which does violence to the words of section 7 of the 1993 Act. Parliament cannot be taken to have intended to restrict the unqualified ambit of paragraph (a) of section 7(1) by adding a paragraph purporting to widen rather than to narrow the definition of 'long lease'.
16. The same observation may be made in relation to paragraph (c) of section 7(1) of the 1993 Act. A lease of a flat acquired under the right to buy provisions of the Housing Act 1985 will always be for a minimum term of 50 years, since if the landlord's term was less than this the right to buy provisions are excluded by paragraph 4(b) of Schedule 5 to the 1985 Act. Thus it appears that paragraph (c) too is otiose.
…
23. It is less surprising that section 5(2)(b) of the 1993 Act should have little if any practical effect when one sees that other provisions of this part of the 1993 Act have no or little effect. Paragraph (c) of section 7(1), as has been seen, adds nothing to paragraph (a). Paragraph (d) is probably a left-over from the unamended Act, which as originally enacted excluded long leases let otherwise than at a low rent. Shared ownership leases are seldom at a low rent, since a rent must be paid in respect of the landlord's retained share. Paragraph (d) made the tenant a qualifying tenant once he had bought out his landlord's share. It became otiose when the exclusion of long leases let otherwise than at a low rent was removed by the 2002 Act, but Parliament omitted to delete it from the remaining provisions of the 1993 Act."
"18. [Counsel for the appellant] very properly referred me to s.76 which defines 'long lease'. Section 76 provides:
'A lease is a long lease if it is a shared ownership lease, whether granted in pursuance of the Housing Act 1985 or otherwise, where the tenant's total share is a hundred per cent.'
There is then a definition of 'total share' which is defined to mean:
'In relation to the interests of a tenant under a shared ownership lease, his initial share plus any additional share or shares in the demesne premises which he has acquired.'
19. In this case [the appellant's] initial share was 50 per cent. She had not acquired any additional shares and so her share remained 50 per cent and so her total share is not 100 per cent but only 50 per cent and so she does not fulfil the condition in s.76(2)(e) and her lease is, therefore, not a long lease as defined."
There is no reference in the judgment to either section 76(2)(a) of the 2002 Act or Brick Farm, which does not appear to have been cited.
"The starting point is always to consider what the most natural meaning of the section is. The definitions in section 76(2)(a) to (f) can either be read as a series of gateways; so it is enough to pass through any gate to qualify as a 'long lease'. Or it can be read as a stack of sieves; so a lease can fall through (a) but then be caught by the specific mesh of (e). In my judgement s.76 makes much more sense if it is read in the former way. The definitions of a long lease in s.76(2)(a)–(f) are additive: a lease qualifies as a 'long lease' if it falls under any one of those definitions. Thus if a lease that is a shared ownership lease is granted for a term of years certain exceeding 21 years and comes under (a), it is a 'long lease'. It does not also have to qualify under (e), so it does not matter if it does not do so. The draughtsman did not intend (e) to operate to exclude a shared ownership lease that would otherwise have qualified under (a). As Burnton J. put it in [15] of the Brick Farm case:
'Parliament cannot be taken to have intended to restrict the unqualified ambit of paragraph (a) of section 7 (1) by adding a paragraph purporting to widen rather than to narrow the definition of "long lease".'
He preferred to concentrate on the natural meaning of the relevant sections, as do I. Certainly Burnton J.'s comments were obiter and about a different statute. However the wording of the definition of 'long lease' and 'shared ownership lease' is almost identical, the purposes of the legislation similar and I find Burnton J.'s analysis very persuasive ….
16. I conclude that the appellant succeeds on this point. The tenants under the shared ownership leases held 'long lease' under s.76(2)(a) and were the qualifying tenants who needed to be and were served with notice."
The Decision
"39. Apart from the difficulties with that construction explained by Stanley Burnton J and Judge Mole, which would attribute to the Parliamentary draughtsman a curious change in drafting style, so that what appears to be an additional class of qualifying interests operates by implication to cut down the width of a previous class, I cannot accept the premise of Mr Bates's argument. Shared ownership leases as defined in the 1993 and 2002 Acts include bespoke agreements made by landlords and tenants, with no restriction on length of term, under which a tenant (or their PRs) may become entitled to a sum calculated as a share of the value of the demised premises. Parliament was legislating for a broader class of shared ownership lease, not a limited statutory model that uses a much longer term of years.
40. In any event, it is an outside possibility that at some stage a right to buy lease or a shared ownership lease could be granted for a term of 21 years or less ….
…
42. The reality is therefore that, however unusual it might be in practice, Parliament did recognise the possibility of leases for 21 years or less being granted pursuant to the [Housing Act 1985]. That, and the fact that shared ownership leases can include non-statutory models of any duration, explains why Parliament provided for such cases in s. 76(2)(d)-(f) of the 2002 Act: such leases would not fall within s. 76(2)(a) even though the vast majority of right to buy, shared ownership, rent to mortgage and right to acquire leases would fall within it."
"The observations of Stanley Burnton J in Brick House Management on statutory interpretation were, with respect, clearly right, even if the particular reason why s. 7(1)(d) of the 1993 Act was not otiose was incorrectly identified (an exception to the low rent requirement would be needed in the case of shares of less than 100%, not for 100% shares where no rent would be paid in respect of the landlord's share). Corscombe Close is in my judgment correctly decided. The Deputy Judge in the Richardson case did not have the relevant statutory material and previous authority referred to him and his reasoning on shared ownership leases should not be followed."
Discussion
Conclusion
Lady Justice Elisabeth Laing:
Lady Justice King: