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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 >> Frasers Islington Ltd v The Hanover Trustee Company Ltd & Ors [2010] EWHC 1514 (Ch) (25 June 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2010/1514.html Cite as: [2010] EWHC 1514 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
ON APPEAL FROM MASTER BOWLES
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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FRASERS ISLINGTON LIMITED |
Claimant/ Respondent |
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- and - |
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THE HANOVER TRUSTEE COMPANY LIMITED ROBERT ANTHONY BOURNE SALLY ANNE GREENE ALAN LAWRENCE BANES (TOGETHER THE TRUSTEES OF THE RAB PENSION TRUST) |
Defendants/ Appellants |
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Mr Romie Tager QC and Mr Justin Kitson (instructed by Howard Kennedy, 19 Cavendish Square, London W1A 2AW) for the Defendants/Appellants
Hearing dates: 15th – 16th June 2010
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Briggs:
"The Landlord hereby grants to the Tenant licence to enter onto the remainder of the Site owned by the Landlord and not demised by this Lease with workmen plant and materials to undertake the Tenant's obligations contained in this Schedule."
As is apparent from that language the Schedule also set out in some detail the developer's obligations in relation to the construction project which I have briefly described.
"13(1) Notwithstanding that practical completion of the redevelopment or sections thereof shall have been certified the Tenant shall not be considered to have fully complied with the Tenant's obligations hereunder if:
…
(b) any electricity gas telephone and water services are not connected to main public supplies."
The parties did not consider it necessary to amend the Schedule upon becoming aware of the requirement for transformers. I infer that they concluded, as is the case, that equipment to transform voltage from 11,000 to 240 volts is part of the process and system for connection of electricity services to main public supplies.
i) For as long as the residential transformer remained in the LHC, FIL could not give vacant possession of the demise promised under the Commercial Lease. That was a breach (albeit small) of an essential term of the contract constituted by the exercised option, so that there was no jurisdiction to grant specific performance.ii) FIL had no intention to perform its obligations under the contract when the contract was made (which occurred, he submitted, on exercise of the option). Therefore specific performance should be refused.
iii) This was a case in which FIL was not unable to perform its obligations, but chose not to do so. It could include the LHV within the Commercial Lease if it first removed the residential transformer, and it would not incur disproportionate cost in doing so.
iv) The contract which included the option did not on its true interpretation authorise the installation of the residential transformer in either the LHC or the RHC prior to the exercise of the option and the consequential transfer of the freehold. Accordingly, by installing the transformer at an earlier date, FIL had committed a deliberate breach of its obligations, and a trespass, for the selfish commercial purpose of accelerating the date when it could commence the marketing of the residential part of the development. It had, in short, jumped the gun, and should be denied specific performance without first restoring the status quo ante by removing the residential transformer.
v) FIL did not come to equity with clean hands, because it had both deliberately authorised a breach of contract and a trespass in relation to the LHC, and subsequently covered it up for its own commercial gain.
vi) Specific performance without a lease of the LHC to RAB would be unfair, because it would deprive RAB of the opportunity to use the LHC for the construction of a lift down to the basement, a beneficial project which could not be achieved within or from the RHC.
1: Breach of an Essential Term
"In exercising its jurisdiction over specific performance [a] Court of Equity looks at the substance and not merely at the letter of the contract. If a vendor sues and is in a position to convey substantially what the purchaser has contracted to get, the Court will decrease specific performance with compensation for any small and immaterial deficiency, provided that the vendor has not, by misrepresentation or otherwise, disentitled himself to his remedy."
"The question as to whether or not the plaintiff has been and is ready and willing to perform the contract is one of substance not to be resolved in any technical or narrow sense. It is important to bear in mind what is the substantial thing for which the parties contract and what on the part of the plaintiff in a suit for specific performance are his essential obligations. Here the substantial thing for which the defendant bargained was the payment of the price: and, unless time be and remain of the essence, he obtains what he bargained for if by the decree he obtains his price with such ancillary orders as recompense him for the delay in its receipt. To order specific performance in this case would not involve the court in dispensing with anything for which the vendor essentially contracted."
2: No Intent to Perform when the Contract was Made
3: Ability to Perform at Proportionate Cost
4 and 5: Jumping the Gun – Followed by Cover-up
6: Alternative Use for the LHC
CONCLUSION