![]() |
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | |
England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Cadogan v Panagopoulos & Anor [2010] EWHC 422 (Ch) (15 March 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2010/422.html Cite as: [2010] EWHC 422 (Ch), [2010] NPC 33, [2010] L & TR 13, [2010] 2 EGLR 151, [2010] 3 WLR 1125, [2011] 1 P & CR 7 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Buy ICLR report: [2010] 3 WLR 1125] [Help]
CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
____________________
(1) THE EARL CADOGAN (2) CADOGAN ESTATES LIMITED |
Appellants |
|
- and - |
||
(1) ALEXANDER DIMITRIS NICHOLAS PANAGOPOULOS (2) JOHN MATTHEW STEPHENSON |
Respondents |
____________________
Andrew PD Walker (instructed by Bircham Dyson Bell) for the Respondents
Hearing dates: 3, 4, 8 and 9 February 2010
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE ROTH :
The property
"4. The Property faces west and is terraced. It comprises five converted flats or maisonettes on the ground floor and upper floors, and a basement in which there is, below the rear of the main part of the building, a flat hitherto used as a caretaker's flat. The front of the basement is a storage area, with a front exit door into an open area with a staircase up to the street, and access to vaults under the pavement.
5. The various flats are accessed internally by a staircase in the centre of the property beside its north party wall. The only other material feature of the configuration of the Property is a light well in the rear of the Property, open to the sky from the basement floor level. This light well is on the southern side of the Property and mirrors a similar light well in the adjacent property (No 53) to the south. There is a boundary wall between the two light wells about 10 ft high, topped off with railings. The flats in No 51 wrap around three sides of the light well in No 51."
The enfranchisement claim
The statutory framework
"2.—(1) Where the right to collective enfranchisement is exercised in relation to any premises to which this Chapter applies ('the relevant premises'), then, subject to and in accordance with this Chapter—
(a) there shall be acquired on behalf of the qualifying tenants by whom the right is exercised every interest to which this paragraph applies by virtue of subsection (2); and
(b) those tenants shall be entitled to have acquired on their behalf any interest to which this paragraph applies by virtue of subsection (3);
and any interest so acquired on behalf of those tenants shall be acquired in the manner mentioned in paragraphs (a) and (b) of section 1(1).
(2) Paragraph (a) of subsection (1) above applies to the interest of the tenant under any lease which is superior to the lease held by a qualifying tenant of a flat contained in the relevant premises.
(3) Paragraph (b) of subsection (1) above applies to the interest of the tenant under any lease (not falling within subsection (2) above) under which the demised premises consist of or include—
(a) any common parts of the relevant premises, or
(b) any property falling within section 1(2)(a) which is to be acquired by virtue of that provision,
where the acquisition of that interest is reasonably necessary for the proper management or maintenance of those common parts, or (as the case may be) that property, on behalf of the tenants by whom the right to collective enfranchisement is exercised."
"19.—(1) Where the initial notice has been registered in accordance with section 97(1), then so long as it continues in force—
(a) any person who owns the freehold of the whole or any part of the specified premises or the freehold of any property specified in the notice under section 13(3)(a)(ii) shall not—
(i) make any disposal severing his interest in those premises or in that property, or
(ii) grant out of that interest any lease under which, if it had been granted before the relevant date, the interest of the tenant would to any extent have been liable on that date to acquisition by virtue of section 2(1)(a) or (b); and
(b) no other relevant landlord shall grant out of his interest in the specified premises or in any property so specified any such lease as is mentioned in paragraph (a)(ii);
and any transaction shall be void to the extent that it purports to effect any such disposal or any such grant of a lease as is mentioned in paragraph (a) or (b).
(2) Where the initial notice has been so registered and at any time when it continues in force—
(a) any person who owns the freehold of the whole or any part of the specified premises or the freehold of any property specified in the notice under section 13(3)(a)(ii) disposes of his interest in those premises or that property,
(b) any other relevant landlord disposes of any interest of his specified in the notice under section 13(3)(c)(i),
subsection (3) below shall apply in relation to that disposal.
(3) Where this subsection applies in relation to any such disposal as is mentioned in subsection (2)(a) or (b), all parties shall for the purposes of this Chapter be in the same position as if the person acquiring the interest under the disposal—
(a) had become its owner before the initial notice was given (and was accordingly a relevant landlord in place of the person making the disposal), and
(b) had been given any notice or copy of a notice given under this Chapter to that person, and
(c) had taken all steps which that person had taken;
and, if any subsequent disposal of that interest takes place at any time when the initial notice continues in force, this subsection shall apply in relation to that disposal as if any reference to the person making the disposal included any predecessor in title of his."
The issues
i) whether the grant of the Lease was contrary to section 19(1)(a)(i) because it constituted a "disposal severing [the freeholder's] interest" in the Property;
ii) whether the grant of the Lease was contrary to section 19(1)(a)(ii) because it was a lease of or including "common parts" which it was reasonably necessary for the participating tenants to have acquired as set out in section 2(1)(b) and (3)(a), on the grounds that:
a) the caretaker's flat constituted common parts; and/or
b) the patio/light-well constituted common parts;
iii) whether the Lease constituted a disposal "of [the freeholder's] interest" within the terms of section 19(2) so as to render that leasehold interest subject to acquisition on behalf of the participating tenants under section 19(3).
"It would, in my opinion, be wrong to disregard the fact that, while the 1993 Act may to some extent be regarded as expropriatory of the landlord's interest, nevertheless it was passed for the benefit of tenants. It is the duty of the court to construe the 1993 Act fairly and with a view, if possible, to making it effective to confer on tenants those advantages which Parliament must have intended them to enjoy."
Section 19(1)(a)(i): "disposal severing his interest"
""disposal" means a disposal whether by the creation or the transfer of an interest, and includes the surrender of a lease and the grant of an option or right of pre-emption, and "acquisition" shall be construed accordingly (as shall expressions related to either of these expressions)"
"(1) Where a residue unexpired of not less than two hundred years of a term, which, as originally created, was for not less than three hundred years, is subsisting in land, whether being the whole land originally comprised in the term, or part only thereof, —
(a) without any trust or right of redemption affecting the term in favour of the freeholder, or other person entitled in reversion expectant on the term; and
(b) without any rent, or with merely a peppercorn rent or other rent having no money value, incident to the reversion, or having had a rent, not being merely a peppercorn rent or other rent having no money value, originally so incident, which subsequently has been released or has become barred by lapse of time, or has in any other way ceased to be payable;
the term may be enlarged into a fee simple in the manner, and subject to the restrictions in this section provided.
(2) This section applies to and includes every such term as aforesaid whenever created, whether or not having the freehold as the immediate reversion thereon; but does not apply to—
(i) Any term liable to be determined by re-entry for condition broken; or
(ii) Any term created by subdemise out of a superior term, itself incapable of being enlarged into fee simple.
…
(4) A rent not exceeding the yearly sum of one pound which has not been collected or paid for a continuous period of twenty years or upwards shall, for the purposes of this section, be deemed to have ceased to be payable."
"(xxiii) "Rent" includes a rent service or a rentcharge, or other rent, toll, duty, royalty, or annual or periodical payment in money or money's worth, reserved or issuing out of or charged upon land, but does not include mortgage interest; "rentcharge" includes a fee farm rent"
"In consideration of the rents and covenants by the Lessee hereinafter respectively reserved and contained the Lessor hereby DEMISES AND LEASES unto the Lessee ALL THOSE the Demised Premises being part of the Building TOGETHER WITH the rights and easements set out in the Second Schedule hereto AND the rights and easements set out in the Third Schedule hereto TO HOLD the Demised Premises unto the Lessee for the Term YIELDING AND PAYING therefore [sic] during the Term and so in proportion for any less time than a year first the Yearly Rent (if demanded) and SECONDLY by way of further rent the Insurance Rent payable in accordance with the Fourth Schedule hereto and THIRDLY by way of further rent the Service Charge payable in accordance with the Fourth Schedule hereto"
"1. The Lessee shall pay the Lessor upon demand by way of Insurance Rent attributable to the Demised Premises a sum equivalent to such percentage (if any) as the Lessor may from time to time consider to be a fair and proper percentage of the cost of insuring the Building and its appurtenances as set out in Part 2 of this Schedule
2. The Lessee shall pay to the Lessor upon demand by way of Service Charge attributable to the Demised Premises a sum equivalent to such percentage (if any) as the Lessor may from time to time consider to be a fair and proper percentage of the cost of providing services to the Building and its appurtenances as set out in Part 3 of this Schedule"
"3.1 During the Term to pay the said rents hereinbefore reserved to the Lessor on the days and in manner herein appointed for payment thereof" (my emphasis).
"Seeing that the current statutory provisions derive from others enacted in the 18th and 19th centuries, I regard it as axiomatic that they refer to rent in its correct sense being (i) a periodical sum, (ii) paid in return for the occupation of land, (iii) issuing out of the land, (iv) for non-payment of which a distress is leviable. All those attributes were enjoyed by the rents payable under the leases in Robinson and Cooper-Smith. Each of those leases, by providing that service charge should be deemed to be sums due by way of additional rent, had the effect of conferring the like attributes on the service charge, an effect confirmed by the further provision that it should be recoverable as rent. To hold thus is to do no more than give full effect to the agreement between the parties."
"(ix)"Land" includes land of any tenure, and mines and minerals, whether or not held apart from the surface, buildings or parts of buildings (whether the division is horizontal, vertical or made in any other way) and other corporeal hereditaments; also a manor, an advowson, and a rent and other incorporeal hereditaments, and an easement, right, privilege, or benefit in, over, or derived from land; . . . and "mines and minerals" include any strata or seam of minerals or substances in or under any land, and powers of working and getting the same . . .; and "manor" includes a lordship, and reputed manor or lordship; and "hereditament" means any real property which on an intestacy occurring before the commencement of this Act might have devolved upon an heir;"
Section 19(1)(a)(ii): common parts
""common parts", in relation to any building or part of a building, includes the structure and exterior of that building or part and any common facilities within it;"
"The adjective "common" stands on its own. This suggests that it has been used here more generally, to include anything that is shared between the premises and other parts of the development or in some other way benefits or is of concern to the occupiers of them.
Parts of the structure of the building, such as the roof and the external walls, appear to us to fall naturally within the scope of this expression. So long as they are not designed for the exclusive benefit of one part only of the building development, they may properly be said to be common to the various premises which are included within them."
(a) The caretaker's flat
"17. A distinction could be drawn between (a) a scheme that required a lessor to provide caretaking facilities and (b) a scheme that required a lessor to provide the services of a resident caretaker. In the former the lessor may, for its own convenience, decide to house the caretaker in a flat retained by it, but it would not be obliged to do so: the services could be provided by a non-resident caretaker. With such a scheme the retained flat would not amount to a common part.
18. However in this case the sublessees were entitled to the services of a resident caretaker. The services provided by that caretaker and enjoyed by the sublessees of the maisonettes were a common facility within the definition contained in section 101 of the Act. The caretaker's flat was essential to the provision of the residential caretaking facilities. To put it another way the Nominee Purchaser would not be able to fulfil its obligations, as a lessor, under the maisonette subleases unless it acquired the caretaker's flat."
"While it is understandable, and indeed commendable, for the LVT to have searched for a practical solution to what it saw as the caretaker problem, the issue is necessarily one of statutory construction, and,…I do not think that the statutory provisions in their terms permit the result that the LVT sought to achieve."
"any premises other than –
(a) a flat contained in the relevant premises which is held by a qualifying tenant,
(b) any common parts of those premises, …"
"(1) This Chapter does not apply to premises falling within section 3(1) if—
(a) any part or parts of the premises is or are neither—
(i) occupied, or intended to be occupied, for residential purposes, nor
(ii) comprised in any common parts of the premises; and
(b) the internal floor area of that part or of those parts (taken together) exceeds 25 per cent. of the internal floor area of the premises (taken as a whole).
…
(3) For the purpose of determining the internal floor area of a building or of any part of a building, the floor or floors of the building or part shall be taken to extend (without interruption) throughout the whole of the interior of the building or part, except that the area of any common parts of the building or part shall be disregarded."
"It is intended to demise all the other flats in the Building (other than the flat occupied by the caretaker hereinafter mentioned) upon terms covenants and conditions similar to those herein contained …"
"That…the Lessor will at all times during the said term provide and use his best endeavours to maintain the services of a full-time caretaker resident in the caretaker's flat for the performance of [various specified duties]" : clause 3(7).
"Employing maintaining and providing within the Building accommodation for the caretaker hereinbefore referred to": paragraph A(iv) of the First Schedule."
(b) The light-well/patio
"… the present case is that of a light well, entirely enclosed within the building fabric originally constructed for the very purpose of enabling the better enjoyment of the Building, and whose only use is to facilitate the use of the Building and its exterior maintenance and repair. Anyone buying the whole Building would expect to get the light well as well.
In my judgment that brings the light well quite naturally within the concept of the 'exterior' of the Building for the purposes of the Act, and therefore within the umbrella of 'common parts.'"
I respectfully agree.
"1. The right of free passage and running of electricity gas water and soil as heretofore and from time to time enjoyed and used from and to the remainder of the Building and any other adjoining or neighbouring buildings or land through the wires cables pipes channels drains sewers and other service media now or hereafter in over or under the Demised Premises.
2. The right for the Lessor and all persons authorised by them at reasonable times and upon reasonable notice except in cases of emergency to enter the Demised Premises:
2.1 To inspect cleanse connect to repair replace alter add to or execute any works to the wires cables pipes channels drains sewers and other service media referred to above.
2.2 To view the state and condition of and repair maintain alter extend and rebuild the Building and adjoining neighbouring premises."
Section 19(2) and (3): disposal "of his interest"
"There are constraints on what a reversioner can do with the premises pending the process, under section 13,[3] but these do not appear to preclude the landlord from granting a long lease of one flat..."
Conclusion
i) the Lease does not fall within the scope of section 19(1)(a)(i);
ii) the Lease is void on the basis that it consists of the caretaker's flat and fulfils the conditions of section 19(1)(a)(ii);
iii) if it had not been void, the grant of the Lease would not have engaged the provisions of section 19(2) and (3).
Note 1 All statutory references are to the 1993 Act, save as otherwise specified. [Back] Note 2 Although Warren J observed later in his judgment that he would be reluctant to apply by analogy a construction of the 1993 Act to the Landlord and Tenant Act 1987, that was as regards the statutory context of “common parts”; I do not see any distinction as between the two Acts when considering the everyday concept of a “building.” [Back] Note 3 It would appear that this may be a typographical error and that the intended reference was to section 19: see the passage from Hague on Leasehold Enfranchisement (4th edition) to which Lloyd LJ referred. [Back]