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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Hawkesbrook Leisure v The Reece-Jones Partnership [2003] EWHC 3333 (Ch) (18 November 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2003/3333.html Cite as: [2003] EWHC 3333 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand London WCA 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
BETWEEN
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HAWKESBROOK LEISURE | CLAIMANT | |
-v- | ||
THE REECE-JONES PARTNERSHIP | DEFENDANT |
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190 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2AG
Telephone 020 7404 1400 Fax No: 020 7831 8838
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
MR G CAMPBELL appeared on behalf of the DEFENDANT.
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Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE ETHERTON:
"whether the Claimant a company limited by guarantee carried on a business and occupied the premises identified in the Particulars of Claim for the purposes of that business within the meaning of Part II of the Landlord and Tenant Act 1954 such as to entitle it to the protection afforded to business tenants by that part of the Act."
"23(1) Subject to the provisions of this Act, this part of this Act applies to any tenancy where the property comprised in the tenancy is or includes premises which are occupied by the tenant and are so occupied for the purposes of a business carried on by him or for those and other purposes.
(2) In this part of this Act the expression 'business' includes a trade, profession or employment and includes any activity carried on by a body of persons, whether corporate or unincorporated."
"To carry on all or any of the businesses of proprietors, managers, tenants, lessors and lessees of leisure and sports grounds and other places of amusement and entertainment; and to acquire, construct, equip and maintain, carry on and manage club or clubs, halls, leisure and sports grounds, and places of amusement and entertainment generally for the use and accommodation of persons admitted to membership and their friends with all necessary and usual conveniences and amenities and generally to afford and provide to such members and friends all the usual privileges, advantages, equipment, facilities, offices, conveniences and accommodation of a club and in connection therewith or otherwise; to organise and promote dances, balls, fetes, galas and similar functions and public and private entertainment of all kinds; to carry on all or any of the businesses of proprietors and licencees of clubs, inns, restaurants, shops, hotels, licenced victuallers, caterers and refreshment contractors, dealers in cooked and prepared foods, provisions and comestibles of all kinds, dealers in wines, spirits, ales, soft drinks, mineral and aerated waters, cigars, cigarettes, tobacco, novelties and articles of every description, and to buy, sell, manufacture and deal in goods, wares, merchandise, commodities, materials, produce, articles and things of every description capable of being dealt with in connection with the above mentioned businesses, or any of them, or likely to be required by customers of or persons having dealings with the Company."
"Application of income and property.
The income and property of the company must be applied solely towards the promotion of the object of the company as set out in this memorandum; and no distribution may be paid or transferred directly or indirectly, by way of dividend or bonus, or otherwise by way of profit, to the persons who at any time are or have been members of the company or to any of them. (Provided that nothing contained in this memorandum of association prevents payment in good faith of remuneration to any member of the company or other person, in return for any services actually rendered to the company)."
"The substance of paragraph 3 of the Claimant's Reply and of the witness statement evidence of Mr Harvey, is that an aim to trade for a profit is not a pre-requisite of qualification under the Act by an individual tenant. The Defendants contend that this is incorrect, and that such an aim is required. The Claimant's own evidence establishes that no such intention was ever held. Accordingly, neither lease was ever protected under the terms of Part II of the Act of 1954."
"The word 'business' is an etymological chameleon; it suits its meaning to the context in which it is found. It is not a term of legal art and its dictionary meanings, as Lindley LJ pointed out in Rolls v Miller (1884) 27 ChD 71, 88, embrace
'almost anything which is an occupation, as distinguished from a pleasure - anything which is an occupation or duty which requires attention is a business.'
That was said by the Lord Justice in connection with the construction of a covenant in a lease against the carrying on of any trade or business on the demised premises; and ever since then there has been a consistent line of cases in which this broad meaning has been ascribed to the word 'business' in the context of covenants in leases restricting the permitted user of the demised premises. It appears to me to be clear beyond argument that the use made of the premises that are the subject of the instant appeals to accommodate civil servants engaged in what consistently with common usage could be quite properly described as 'government business' would constitute a breach of a covenant in a lease against permitting any business to be carried on upon the premises. The Crown or government through its servants is carrying out there a duty which requires attention."
"In this part of this Act 'business' includes any trade, profession or vocation…"
"I turn back to the words of the statute. This tax is to be charged only where a taxable supply is made 'by a taxable person in the course of a business carried on by him.' By s.45(1) 'business' includes any trade, profession or vocation. It is clear, and there is much authority to support it, that 'business' is or may be in a particular context a word of very wide meaning. Nevertheless, the ordinary meaning of the word 'business' in the context of this Act, excludes, in my judgment, any activity which is no more than an activity for pleasure and social enjoyment.
The primary meaning of all these words, 'business, trade, profession and vocation' is an occupation by which a person earns a living. It is clear that all ordinary businesses, trades, professions and vocations can be carried on with differences from this standard and norm in regularity or seriousness of application in the pursuit or disregard of profit or earnings and in the use or neglect of ordinary commercial principles of organisation. As the decision in the Morrison's Academy case has shown, the absence of one common attribute of ordinary businesses, trades, professions or vocations, such as the pursuit of profit or earnings, does not necessarily mean that the activity is not a business or trade etc, if in other respects the activity is plainly a business."
"…it is not essential to the carrying on of a trade that the persons engaged in it should make, or desire to make, a profit by it. Though it may be true that in the great majority of cases the carrying-on of a trade does, in fact, include the idea of profit, yet the definition of the mere word 'trade' does not necessarily mean something by which a profit is made. But putting aside the question whether they carry on a trade, how can it be denied that the Council carry on a business? They are incorporated; they have a secretary; they employ editors, reporters, and printers; they print books; they sell those books; they do all that is ordinarily done in carrying on the business of a bookseller. It is said that though they make a profit, they cannot, by the terms of their memorandum of association, put that profit into their own pockets. Be it so; they are carrying on a business in which, by the terms of its constitution, they are prevented from making a profit to their own benefit. One can suppose the case of co-operative stores founded upon the principle that no profit shall be made by the members. They buy and sell, and if any profit is made, their articles of association compel them to dispose of it in this or that way, but prevent the members putting any money into their own pockets. They also would probably employ secretaries, and other persons engaged in their warehouses and in buying and selling goods all over the country. Could it possibly be denied that such an association of persons were not carrying on a business? Though their objects might be more extended and numerous, I cannot see that in principle such an association could be distinguished from that in question in the present case."
"Not only is the enterprise not carried on with a view to profit, it is not carried on as a trading activity, but rather in a spirit of public benevolence. As such it is not a trade, profession or employment, nor is it any kind of business."