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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Mackenzie v Cheung & Anor [2024] EWCA Civ 13 (17 January 2024) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2024/13.html Cite as: [2024] EWCA Civ 13 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
APPEALS (ChD)
Mr Justice Miles
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE NEWEY
and
LORD JUSTICE NUGEE
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NEIL JOHN MACKENZIE |
Claimant/ Appellant |
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- and - |
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(1) SHARON SHAC-YIN CHEUNG (2) INFINITY HOMES & DEVELOPMENT LIMITED |
Defendants/ Respondents |
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Carl Fain and Richard Miller (instructed by Davitt Jones Bould) for the Respondents
Hearing date: 13 December 2023
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Newey:
Basic facts
"THE Purchaser for himself his sequels in title and assigns to the intent that the covenant hereinafter contained shall run with the land and bind the same into whosoever hands the same shall come but not so as to render the Purchaser his sequels in title and assigns personally liable in damages after he or they shall have parted with all interest in the property hereby conveyed hereby covenants with the Governors their successors and assigns for the benefit of the adjoining or adjacent land now the property of the Foundation and being that part of the Governors Fox Farm Estate remaining undisposed of at the date hereof and every part thereof that the Purchaser his sequels in title and assigns will at all times hereafter observe and perform the stipulations which are contained in the Second Schedule hereto."
"4. … no part of the said land is to be used as a road or way or means of access to any adjoining property without the written consent of the Governors being first obtained.
…
7. No building shall be erected on the said land except one detached dwelling house and the stables or garage offices and outbuildings thereto, which said property shall not be used at any time otherwise than as a private residence.
8. No building or structure of any kind shall be erected on the land until the plans and elevations and site plan shall have been submitted in duplicate to and approved by the Surveyor for the time being of the Governors and the costs of the approval of such plans and elevations amounting to two guineas in respect of each house and submission shall be paid by the purchaser and the Governors shall retain one copy of such plans. The purchaser shall build strictly in accordance with the approved plans and shall not make any alterations or additions to the property or add any further buildings without submitting plans and elevations of such alterations or additions and obtaining the approval of the Governors.
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10. The property has been stumped out. The Purchaser shall undertake the care and maintenance of the boundary stumps. Should the Purchaser at any time wish to have them restored he can do so by applying to the Surveyor for the time being of the Governors and paying his expenses in the matter.
11. The Governors reserve the right to deal with any of the plots situated upon this estate or any of their adjoining or neighbouring land without reference to and independently of these stipulations and also reserve the right to allow a departure from them in any one or more cases."
"The Governors are allowed to deal with any of the plots that they still owned as from 3rd October 1947 (the date of the Conveyance) as they saw fit, and without reference to the stipulations in the Third Schedule. In other words, to pass, or not to pass, on the benefit of any of the restrictive covenants in the Third Schedule in the said Conveyance."
The judgments below
The Master
"intended only to clarify the fact that the Whitgift Foundation and its predecessors had no obligation, in dealing with other plots on the Estate, or on any of its adjoining or neighbouring land, to have regard to the restrictions contained in the Third Schedule and to clarify, also, that, in dealing with such plots it could, if it so chose, elect, if imposing restrictions, to depart, in any one, or more, case(s) from those imposed by the Third Schedule".
"58. It seems to me to be very unlikely that a paragraph which, so obviously, deals in its opening part with the Estate's future dealings with its unsold land should, then, in its second part, be intended to give a right of departure, or release, from restrictions already imposed in respect of lands already sold out of the Estate.
59. It is, also, I think, striking that, if the latter part of paragraph 11 was intended to give a right of release from the burden of restrictions already imposed, it did not say so in terms. The word 'departure' is, in my view, not obviously apt to describe a right of release. It is a much more appropriate term to use in describing, as I think it was, the Governors' entitlement to depart in new transactions from restrictions it had imposed in previous transactions."
In paragraph 67, the Master said:
"There is nothing at all unreasonable or unlikely in the construction that I have placed on the paragraph [i.e. paragraph 11 of the Third Schedule] and nothing at all to warrant moving away from what I regard as the natural meaning of the paragraph, set in its context. The reservation of a power of release, in respect of a restriction, to be exercised by a settlor, or grantor, without recourse to, or agreement by, those entitled to the benefit of the restriction, is, or would be, a very unusual thing and not one that the court should be constrained to impose, by way of construction, on the grounds of commercial common sense."
The Judge
Entitlement to the benefit of the covenants given in the 1947 Conveyance
"if the available evidence establishes the existence of a scheme under which similar restrictive covenants imposed on a number of properties in a defined area are mutually and reciprocally enforceable as between the respective owners for the time being of those properties (commonly referred to as a 'building scheme'), then the owner for the time being of each of those properties will be able to enforce the covenants against the owners for the time being of each of the other properties subject to the scheme. Thus, in the case of an estate which is sold off by a developer in various plots, the owner for the time being of each plot will be able to enforce the covenants against the owners for the time being of all the other plots, regardless of whether such plots were sold off by the developer before or after his own plot."
Mr Mackenzie's case in outline
Analysis
"Where development land is sold off in plots without imposing a building scheme, it is likely that the developer will wish to retain exclusive power to give or withhold consent to a modification or relaxation of a restriction on building which he imposes on each purchaser; unfettered by the need to obtain the consent of every subsequent purchaser to whom (after imposing the covenant) he has sold off other plots on the development land. If it were otherwise he would create a situation in which the ability of a purchaser of one plot to enforce covenants against the owner of another plot depended on the order in which the plots had been sold off; a situation described by Ungoed-Thomas J in Eagling v Gardner [1970] 2 All ER 838, 846d, as 'a building scheme in Alice's Wonderland'."
Earlier in his judgment, Chadwick LJ had said in paragraph 41:
"As Brightman LJ pointed out [in Federated Homes Ltd v Mill Lodge Properties Ltd [1980] 1 WLR 594] … , a developer who is selling off land in lots might well want to retain the benefit of a building restriction under his own control. Where, as in Roake v Chadha [1984] 1 WLR 40 and the present case, development land is sold off in plots without imposing a building scheme, it seems to me very likely that the developer will wish to retain exclusive power to give or withhold consent to a modification or relaxation of a restriction on building which he imposes on each purchaser; unfettered by the need to obtain the consent of every subsequent purchaser to whom (after imposing the covenant) he has sold off other plots on the development land."
"It is a general principle of law that, if one man agrees to confer a particular benefit on another, he must not do anything which substantially deprives the other of the enjoyment of that benefit: because that would be to take away with one hand what is given with the other."
"In the case of a lease or tenancy agreement what has been granted is the right to exclusive possession of the land, for the term of the lease or tenancy, on the terms of the lease or tenancy. If a landlord exercises rights in accordance with the terms of the lease or tenancy that cannot amount to a derogation from grant, because those rights are part of the grant itself."
Similarly, the exercise by the Foundation of a power granted by the Third Schedule itself cannot, as it seems to me, amount to a derogation from any grant of the benefit of the covenants given in that schedule.
"What was effected by the deed was that the land was conveyed subject to stipulations set forth in the schedule, which were the local law that had been imposed by the original vendor. Then comes the covenant, which was both with the person who conveyed and also with the owners of any land to which the stipulations related, other than the land thereby conveyed, to observe, perform, and comply with the said stipulations. It seems to me that it is merely a covenant to obey the law of the locality as it stood, and when we examine what that law was we find it was a law which could be varied at the option of Mr. Webb, the original vendor, who reserved by the sixteenth condition the right of allowing a departure from the stipulations in any one or more cases. I think, therefore, that in this case there has been no breach of the covenant, and consequently the question of the right of the plaintiff to sue the present defendants does not arise."
Conclusion
Lord Justice Nugee:
Lord Justice Peter Jackson: