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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Scottish & Newcastle Plc v Raguz [2004] EWHC 1835 (Ch) (27 July 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2004/1835.html Cite as: [2004] EWHC 1835 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
From the Birmingham District Registry
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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SCOTTISH & NEWCASTLE PLC. |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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ZELJKO STEPHEN RAGUZ |
Defendant |
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Ms. Marion Lonsdale (instructed by LHP Law LLP) for the Defendant.
Hearing date: 9th July 2004
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Hart:
"1) The background to the case is as follows. Scottish & Newcastle, who are the claimant, were the original tenant, under an underlease of 17th March 1967, of the Abbey Motor Hotel in Leicester. By another underlease of 7th March, Scottish & Newcastle took an underlease of premises adjacent to the hotel.
2) In September 1982, Scottish & Newcastle assigned its interest under the two underleases to the defendant for £30,000. There is to be implied into the assignments the covenant contained in section 24 of the Land Registration Act 1925, concerning the effect of which there has been some dispute in the case.
3) In 1983, Mr Raguz assigned the two underleases to a third party, so he only held them for a short period of time. Thereafter there were further assignments which resulted in the underleases becoming vested in Hotel St James Limited. That tenant failed to pay the rent and went into administrative receivership in October 1999. At that stage, there was a rent review outstanding under the underleases due in 1995.
4) In November 1999, the claimant received the first of a series of notices under section 17 of the Landlord and Tenants Covenants Act 1995 from the landlord, National Car Parking Limited ("NCP"). Those notices demanded sums which eventually exceeded £461,000. That total sum included the rents said to arise from the implementation of the 1995 rent reviews. Scottish & Newcastle paid NCP, pursuant to those notices, a sum which I understand was in the region of £346,000 and in these proceedings seeks to recover that amount of money from Mr Raguz, the defendant.
5) These proceedings were commenced in September 2001. The defence was subsequently substantially amended, following which Scottish & Newcastle applied for summary judgment. That matter came before His Honour Judge Norris, who gave summary judgment for a sum which was ultimately quantified at approximately one tenth of the full claim, being the sums which had fallen due prior to 3rd August 2000 when an agreement was made between Scottish & Newcastle and the receivers of the ultimate tenant company, Hotel St James.
6) By that agreement, Scottish & Newcastle agreed to support the trading losses of the hotel. The thinking behind it appears to have been that they remained liable as original lessees under the lease. It was very much in their interests that the hotel should remain a trading entity with a view to it being marketed more readily and assigned to an assignee who would take over the obligation to pay the rent.
7) The point taken by the defendant before His Honour Judge Norris was that the conduct of Scottish & Newcastle in supporting trading being continued, at a time when the tenant was effectively insolvent, had the effect of discharging Mr Raguz from his liability under the implied covenant of indemnity. It was argued before the judge that the implied covenants were in the nature of guarantees rather than covenants of indemnity.
8) The judge, however, held that the implied covenants were covenants of indemnity and not of guarantee, and so the rules about interfering with contractual obligations without the permission of a guarantor did not apply. He nevertheless concluded that it was arguable that Scottish & Newcastle's conduct, as alleged by Mr Raguz, might have had the effect of discharging the applicant's obligations under the covenants of indemnity. So he did not grant summary judgment in respect of any part of the sum which related to rent accruing after 3rd August 2000.
9) There was an application for permission to appeal, permission having been refused on paper. That came before the Court of Appeal on 27th March 2003. Jonathan Parker LJ, who had initially refused permission on paper, was persuaded at an oral hearing to change his mind.
10) One of the factors which weighed with him particularly was a witness statement from Mr Dominic Plessier of Mr Raguz's solicitors, in which Mr Plessier explained that disclosure was not complete; that, at the time when the judge heard the application for summary judgment, some 2,500 pages of documents, which had subsequently been disclosed, had not been disclosed, and that it was in those circumstances unsatisfactory to give summary judgment, even for one tenth of the claim.
11) Jonathan Parker LJ reached the preliminary view that in those circumstances it would be right to grant permission to appeal. After hearing argument, he remained of that view and said that it was at least arguable that summary judgment ought not to be given on any part of the claim in circumstances where disclosure was still incomplete.
12) The case was then heard by the full court, the Vice- Chancellor, May and Sedley LJJ on 24th July. As far as I can see, the question of disclosure played very little part in their consideration of the issues.
13) The learned judge had held, firstly, that the covenant implied by section 24 of the 1925 Act was a contract of indemnity and not liable to be discharged by misconduct on the part of the creditor or lessor.
14) Secondly, that although it was arguable that the obligation undertaken pursuant to that covenant did not extend to liabilities resulting from the creditor's own actions (in particular in relation to the support agreement), nevertheless such a contention could not apply to the rent demanded on or before 3rd August 2000.
15) There was a further point about VAT. The judge had held that VAT on rent was also recoverable. He had also held that payment of the rent by the assignor to the lessor (that is, by Scottish & Newcastle PLC to the lessor) had been established.
16) The Court of Appeal did not see fit to overrule the judge in any of those respects. They did not, as I say, base their decision on the inadequacy of disclosure as at the date that the learned judge had heard the application for summary judgment."
" The Claimant do disclose by list to be served by 5th December 2003 documents or copy documents which are or at any time have been in its control containing or evidencing or in any way relating to:
1. The rent review of the Hotel St James Ltd. Premises;
2. The disposal of the said premises;
3. The agreement of the Administrative Receivers of Hotel St James Ltd. and Scottish and Newcastle Pubs and Restaurants Ltd. ("Pubs") by which financial support was to be provided to Hotel St James Ltd. ("the maintenance agreement").
4. The agreement between the claimant and Pubs by reason of which Pubs entered into the said maintenance agreement, insofar as such documentation has not already been disclosed but not limited to:
a) all internal communications within the claimant's group of companies concerning the same;
b) communications by the claimant or any other of the claimant's group of companies concerning the same with the claimant's agents, including but not limited to, Messrs Eversheds and Humberts Leisure, and with third parties, including but not limited to Messrs BDO Stoy Hayward, Fleurets, Hamlins, Nelson Bakewell, NCP, Nabarro Nathanson, Christies, Conrad Ritblat Erdman, whether by the claimant communicating direct with such third parties or through its agents
and covering the period from October 1999 to end of February 2003 "