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England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Central London Commercial Estates Ltd v Kato Kagaku Ltd and another, Axa Equity & Law Assurance Society plc (third party) [1998] EWHC Ch 314 (15 July 1998) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/1998/314.html Cite as: [1998] EWHC Ch 314, [1998] EGCS 117, [1998] 46 EG 185, [1998] 3 EGLR 55, [1998] 4 All ER 948 |
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B e f o r e :
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CENTRAL LONDON COMMERCIAL ESTATES LTD | ||
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KATO KAGAKU LTD AND ANOTHER, AXA EQUITY & LAW ASSURANCE SOCIETY PLC (THIRD PARTY) |
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The issue
The facts
The law
the effect of the 'extinguishment' sections of the Limitation Acts is not to destroy the lessee's estate as between himself and the lessor; and that it would be incorrect to say that if he offers a surrender to the lessor he has nothing to surrender to him in respect of the land in the possession of the squatter.
What the lessee surrendered in this case was the incumbrance on the fee simple in possession which was represented by the term of years … Now … if the landlord then goes to the lessee and gets him to surrender the outstanding term, which incumbers his fee simple in possession, then the squatter's defence against the landlord disappears and, since he has not completed adverse possession against the landlord, he must give way to the rightful owner's claim to the land.
the title of the leaseholder … is extinguished as against the squatter, but remains good as against the freeholder.
The only reason, it seems to me, which can be urged against this conclusion is that it means that a squatter's title can be destroyed by the leaseholder and freeholder putting their heads together. It is said that they can by a surrender - or by a surrender and regrant - destroy the squatter's title completely and get rid of him. So be it. There is no way of preventing it.
15.--(1) No action shall be brought by any person to recover any land after the expiration of twelve years from the date on which the right of action accrued to him or, if it first accrued to some person through whom he claims, to that person…
17 Subject to--
(a) section 18 of this Act; and
(b) section 75 of the Land Registration Act 1925;
at the expiration of the period prescribed by this Act for any person to bring an action to recover land (including a redemption action) the title of that person to the land shall be extinguished.
(1) The Limitation Acts shall apply to registered land in the same manner and to the same extent as those Acts apply to land not registered, except that where, if the land were not registered, the estate of the person registered as proprietor would be extinguished, such estate shall not be extinguished but shall be deemed to be held by the proprietor for the time being in trust for the person, who by virtue of the said Acts, has acquired title against any proprietor, but without prejudice to the estates and interests of any other person interested in the land whose estate or interest is not extinguished by those Acts.
(2) Any person claiming to have acquired a title under the Limitation Acts to a registered estate in the land may apply to be registered as proprietor thereof.
(3) The registrar shall, on being satisfied as to the applicant's title, enter the applicant as proprietor either with absolute, good leasehold, qualified, or possessory title, as the case may require, but without prejudice to any estate or interest protected by any entry on the register which may not have been extinguished under the Limitation Acts, and such registration shall, subject as aforesaid, have the same effect as the registration of a first proprietor; but the proprietor or the applicant or any other person interested may apply to the court for the determination of any question arising under this section.
(f) Subject to the provisions of this Act, rights acquired or in course of being acquired under the Limitation Acts;
As I think that the true meaning of section 75(1) is not at all easy to discover and may have to be fully considered on some other occasion, I think it best on this occasion to say as little about it as possible.
Briefly, section 75(1) appears to set out with the purpose of applying the Limitation Acts and, therefore, the statutory consequences of adverse possession to registered land but then goes on to provide that where the estate of a person registered as proprietor would be extinguished, 'such estate shall not be extinguished but shall be deemed to be held by the proprietor for the time being in trust - for the person who … has acquired title against any proprietor'. It therefore succeeds in making a provision at the end of the subsection which is wholly inconsistent with the conceptions of the Limitation Acts as previously understood and achieves just that 'Parliamentary conveyance' (through the medium of trustee and cestui que trust) which was denied by the decision in Tichborne v Weir. It would certainly be very satisfactory for the appellant if this is what the Act of 1925 has really done, because it would give him just that beneficial interest in the lessee's term which, in my view, he lacks under the Limitation Acts themselves…
I only wish to add that at present I am not at all satisfied that section 75(1) does create a trust interest in the squatter of the kind that one would expect from the words used. So to hold would raise difficulties which I do not now explore; and the trust of the dispossessed owner's title under subsection (1) must somehow be reconciled with the provision under subsection (2) for the squatter to apply to register his own title, which would presumably be his independent possessory title acquired by adverse possession.
I doubt if …[section 75(1)] puts registered land on a very different footing from unregistered land. It is machinery so as to apply the Limitation Acts to registered land but it does not alter the substantive position very materially. A registered leaseholder clearly remains liable on the covenants and subject to the conditions of the lease, including the proviso for re-entry: and I do not see why, on a surrender, the freeholder should not recover possession from a squatter, just as he can on a forfeiture. The freeholder has no notice of the trust in favour of the squatter and his interests are not to be prejudiced by the fact that the leasehold is registered.
To my mind the words [of section 75(1)] are clear and unequivocal: the squatter claims to have acquired a title to 'a registered estate in the land' (ie the leasehold interest) and applies to be registered as a proprietor 'thereof' (my emphasis). Therefore under section 75(2), references to the squatter having acquired title to a registered estate must include the rights which under the Limitation Act 1939 the squatter acquires in relation to leasehold interests. Section 75(2) then refers to the squatter applying to be registered as proprietor 'thereof'. This word can, in my judgment, only refer back to the registered estate in the land against which the squatter has acquired title under the Act of 1939, ie the leasehold interest. The clear words of the Act therefore seem to require that, once the 12 years have run, the squatter is entitled to be registered as proprietor of the lease itself, and is bound to be so registered if he applies for registration. It follows that in my judgment the defendant (as the squatter) is correctly registered as proprietor of the lease itself in accordance with the clear requirements of section 75. If that is right, … [the leaseholder] cannot be entitled to rectification of the register as against the defendant, and she can therefore never get into a position in which she is competent to surrender the lease to the plaintiff.
I am not deciding anything as to the position during the period between the date when the squatter obtains his title by adverse possession and the date on which he obtains registration of it. This is the period covered by section 75(1) which is the subsection on which Lord Radcliffe in St Marylebone Property Co v Fairweather … and Sir John Pennycuick in Jessamine Investment Co v Schwartz [1978] QB 264, at p275 were commenting. It may well be, as their dicta suggest, that during the period preceding any registration of the squatter's rights, the documentary lessee (as registered proprietor of the lease) and the freeholder can deal with the legal estate without reference to a person whose rights are not recorded on the register. But once the Act provides for registration of the squatter's title, it must in my judgment follow that the squatter's rights (once registered) cannot be overridden.
I should be very reluctant to introduce a substantive distinction in the application of a provision of the Limitation Act to registered and unregistered land respectively, based upon what is plainly a conveyancing device designed to adapt that provision to the former class of land.
I therefore approach this question on the basis that one would expect that substantive legal rights would be the same whether the land is registered or unregistered but that clear words in the Act of 1925 must be given their natural meaning even if this leads to a divergence.
The arguments
Subject to the provisions of this Act as to settled land, neither the registrar nor any person dealing with a registered estate or charge shall be affected with notice of a trust express implied or constructive, and references to trusts shall, so far as possible, be excluded from the register.
Conclusions
(A) the right against the plaintiff to remain in possession of the west courtyard until the expiry of the term of the headlease (namely December 25 2028) or, alternatively, until the expiry of the term of the underlease, namely December 15 2028; and
(B) the beneficial interest in the registered leasehold title to the west courtyard under title no LN69 (the headlease) or LN5401 (the underlease); and/or
(C) the right to be registered at HM Land Registry with possessory title of the surface of the west courtyard for a term of years to December 25 2028 or, in the alternative, to December 15 2028?
2. And have the rights of the first defendant described in para 1 of this schedule been extinguished or diminished as a result of the purported surrender to the plaintiff of the headlease on December 20 1996 by Axa Equity & Law Life Assurance Society plc?
3 And, if the answer to question 2 is in the affirmative, are the matters there mentioned capable of giving rise to a cause of action by the first defendant against the third party?
The electronic text of this judgment was provided by Estates Gazette, whose assistance is gratefully acknowledged.