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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Pineport Ltd v Grangeglen Ltd [2016] EWHC 1318 (Ch) (13 June 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2016/1318.html Cite as: [2016] EWHC 1318 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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Pineport Limited |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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Grangeglen Limited |
Defendant |
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Mr Jamal Demachkie (instructed by Blaser Mills LLP) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 6 and 7 April 2016
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Crown Copyright ©
Chief Master Marsh:
i. ground rent of £100 per annum;
ii. a sum equivalent to the amount expended by the landlord in insuring Unit 4;
iii. a service charge as defined in clause 4(7).
i. A quarterly advance payment of an amount considered to be fair and reasonable by the landlord.
ii. A balancing payment in respect of the sum shown to be due by the account produced by the landlord supported by a certificate of the landlord or the landlord's managing agent produced as soon as reasonably practicable after the end of the service charge year. Clause 4(7)(b) makes provision for the information to be provided with the certificate. In the event that the tenant has overpaid for the service charge year, the overpayment is held by the landlord as a credit against the following year's service charge.
i. An order for disclosure was made in accordance with CPR 31.5(7)(b), requiring the parties to serve the documents upon which they relied by 16 December 2015 with requests for specific disclosure and response by fixed dates. There was no order for standard disclosure.
ii. Witness statements were ordered to be exchanged by 29 January 2016.
The parties
Statements of case
i. Prior to forfeiting the underlease the Defendant made repeated attempts to contact the Claimant to ascertain why the arrears had not been paid and to require payment.
ii On 8 August 2014 the Claimant's solicitors acting in the criminal proceedings, Makwanas, contacted the Defendant's solicitors and said a freezing order had been made against the Claimant. However, there was no follow up to that conversation.
iii. It was not until 12 June 2015 that the Claimant's current solicitors made contact and said an application for relief was to be made.
iv. The Defendant has incurred costs and expenses since the date of re-entry and the costs and expenses have increased by virtue of the delay. They are described as falling into four general categories namely (a) management, insurance and security, (b) dealing with vehicles found at Unit 4, (c) business rates and (d) preparing an application to the Land Registry to vacate reference to the underlease from the Defendant's title. The costs and expenses are particularised in a schedule served with the defence.
v. In addition, it is said that the Defendant has been prejudiced by the delay on the part of the Claimant in making the application for relief. The claim to prejudice is based upon the increase in costs and expenses incurred by the Defendant resulting from the delay.
vi. In the alternative, the Defendant requires payment of all sums which would have fallen due for payment had the lease continued and an indemnity for all costs and expense the Defendant has incurred.
"8. …. Matters of fact and evidence in seeking to persuade the court to exercise its discretion shall be provided in witness evidence. For completeness, the Claimant is entitled to relief from forfeiture on the following basis:
a. On 7 August 2013 the Claimant and its sole director Mr Shorab Jadunandian were served with a Restraint Order freezing the Claimant's assets ("the Order") and causing some financial hardship to the Claimant and access to funds. The Order was made in separate criminal proceedings against Mr Shorab Jadunandian.
b. Despite financial hardship the Claimant took steps to mitigate arrears by subletting Unit 4 ….. ("the Property") to Adil Yusek t/a A.K. Motors on 5 October 2013. The Claimant also holds the leasehold interest in Unit 5 …. next to the Property which is sublet to Zeus Security and Electrical Limited.
c. The claimant did however fall into service charge arrears for the Property and Unit 5 … On or about 25 March 2014, the Defendant instructed bailiffs to attend Unit 5 and collect arrears from the Claimant. The Claimant informed the bailiffs of the order and provided them with a copy. The Claimant made clear that whilst there was an order in place it was willing to make payment of all arrears and the bailiffs telephoned the Defendant's solicitors on site during the visit. Between the period of 25 March 2014 and 13 May 2014 the Claimant paid approximately £4,807.84 in rent arrears which it believed would be apportioned between Unit 4 and Unit 5.
d. However, on 24 April 2014 the Defendant peaceably re-entered the Property without any notice to the Claimant. The Claimant put the Defendant to strict proof of its "repeated attempts to contact the Claimant to ascertain why payment of arrears had not been paid", as set out in paragraph 8(2)(a). The Defendant was aware of the Order and the Claimant's circumstances at the time of forfeiture. Paragraph 3 of the Reply above is repeated.
e. The Claimant was contacted by Mr Adil Yusef t/a A.K. Motors to whom the Property had been sublet on 24 April 2014 and both the Claimant and Mr Adil Yusef contacted the Defendant's solicitors informing them that they were willing to make payment of the arrears. The Claimant has from the outset expressly set out its intention to seek relief from forfeiture.
f. Due to Mr Jadunandian's ill health and state of mind the Claimant delayed in seeking legal advice and making its application for relief from forfeiture. Mr Jadunandian as the sole director of the Claimant was diagnosed with depression in or around 10 March 2014. During the immediate period after forfeiture took place Mr Jadunandian struggled to face reality and was unable to engage in day to day activity. Due to the stress and anxiety caused by criminal proceedings against him, Mr Jadunandian continues to suffer from depression and has been prescribed antidepressants."
The jurisdiction to grant relief and the relevant principles
"In summary, the basic jurisdiction to relieve from forfeiture for non-payment of rent is the old equitable jurisdiction; that equitable jurisdiction (and the statutory application thereof in the county courts) is subject to a separate code of statutory provisions modifying and limiting the equitable jurisdiction in certain respects, particularly in relation to time; however the old equitable jurisdiction to relieve, without limit of time, continues to apply where there has been a forfeiture by peaceable re-entry." Per Nicholls LJ
"For the purposes of [the equitable jurisdiction], the six months' limitation period under the Common Law Procedure Act does not apply; but the six month period will be taken as a guide rather than as a strict limit."
It is also pointed out at paragraph 17.187 that it may be inequitable to grant relief under the 1852 Act within the six month period. Thus, the 1852 Act does not operate in a similar way to the Limitation Act which provides fixed periods with a bar to recovery only in the event of a claim being issued outside that period.
"As I understand the old equitable doctrine, the court would not grant relief in respect of stale claims. Furthermore, if there were a statute of limitation applying at common law, equity followed the law and applied the statute to strictly analogous proceedings in Chancery. But there is no question in the instant case of a Limitation Act applying to the present situation; and it seems to me to be contrary to the whole sprit of equity to boggle at a matter of days, which is all that we are concerned with here, when justice indicates relief.
I think that a court of equity … would look at the situation of the plaintiff to see whether in all the circumstances he acted with reasonable promptitude. Naturally it would also look at the situation of the defendants to see if anything has happened, particularly by way of delay on the part of the plaintiff which would cause a greater hardship to them by the extension of the relief sought than by its denial to the plaintiff."
"Equity follows the law. This is not to say that courts of equity should now grant relief without any regard to the statutory provisions. Equity follows the law, but not slavishly nor always: see Cardozo C.J. in Graf v. Hope Building Corporation (1930) 254 N.Y. 1, 9. On this we have the benefit of guidance elsewhere in the field of relief from forfeiture. Section 210 of the Common Law Procedure Act 1852, which is still in force, limited to six months after judgment the period within which a tenant could apply for relief in the non-payment of rent cases to which that statute applied, viz., where the rent was six months in arrears. Courts of equity have due regard to this statutory limitation in non-payment of rent cases where the statute does not apply: in cases of forfeiture by peaceable re-entry, and in cases where possession has been taken under a court order where less than six months' rent was in arrears. In Howard v. Fanshawe [1895] 2 Ch 581, the landlord re-entered without the aid of the court. Stirling J. said, at pp. 588-589:
"it does not follow that a court of equity would now grant relief at any distance of time from the happening of the event which gave rise to it. It appears to me that, inasmuch as the inconvenience of so doing has been recognised by the legislature, and a time has been fixed after which, in a case of ejectment, no proceedings for relief can be taken, a similar period might well be fixed, by analogy, within which an application for general relief in equity must be made. A court of equity might possibly say that the action for relief must be brought within six months from the resumption of possession by the lessor."
"The concurrent equitable jurisdiction can only be invoked by those who apply with reasonable promptitude. What is reasonable will depend on all the circumstances, having due regard to the statutory time limits."
"In the eyes of equity, the proviso for re-entry was merely a "security" for the rent. Equity is in the "constant course" of relieving against forfeiture where the tenant pays the rent and all expenses. Thus save in exceptional circumstances the function of the court is to grant relief when all that is due for rent and costs has been paid up. The same applies where the breach for which forfeiture has occurred is non-payment of sums analogous to rent such as service charges. The fact that the tenant is insolvent does not make any difference; if he pays the rent in arrear, interest and costs, he is normally entitled to relief."
"… save in exceptional circumstances, the function of the court in exercising this equitable jurisdiction is to grant relief when all that is due for rent and costs has been paid up, and (in general) to disregard any other causes of complaint that the landlord may have against the tenant. The question is whether, provided all is paid up, the landlord will not have been fully compensated; and the view taken by the court is that if he gets the whole of his rent and costs, then he has got all he is entitled to so far as rent is concerned, and extraneous matters of breach of covenant, and so forth, are, generally speaking, irrelevant.
But there may be very exceptional cases in which the conduct of the tenant has been such as, in effect, to disqualify them from coming to the court and claiming any relief or assistance whatever. The kind of case I have in mind is that of a tenant falling into arrear with the rent of premises which he was notoriously using as a disorderly house: it seems to me that in a case of that sort …. the court, on being apprised that the premises were being consistently used for immoral purposes, would decline to give the tenant any relief or assistance which would in any way further his use or allow the continuance of his use of the house for those immoral purposes. In a case of that sort it seems to me that it might well be going too far to say that the court must disregard the immoral user of the premises and assist the guilty tenant by granting him relief.
I cannot, however, find any facts in the present case approaching the exceptional state of affairs I have in mind."
"It is an invariable condition of relief from forfeiture for non-payment of rent that the arrears, if not already available to the lessor, shall be paid within a time specified by the court. If the tenant cannot pay the arrears relief may be refused. It appears there must be evidence before the Court that the rent will definitely be paid rather than that it may be repayable in the future and that there is no discretion otherwise to grant relief. The tenant will normally also have to pay the landlord's costs.
The landlord is not bound to accept tender of the arrears from a third party."
"The principle which underlies the exercise of the court's discretion is that provided the lessor can be put in the same position as before, the lessee is entitled to be relieved against the forfeiture on payment of the rent and any expenses to which the lessor has been put, prima facie the lessor is entitled to be put into the position he would have been in if the forfeiture had not occurred. This principle has often been endorsed by the Court of Appeal."
"The period fixed for the payment of arrears must be one within the immediately foreseeable future, so that the court can say with a sufficient degree of certainty that the rent outstanding will be paid. Even then, the tenant has no right to relief. The court may decline to grant relief if, for example, the landlord has changed his position before the tenant makes an application for relief (see Gill v Lewis [1956] 2 QB 1) because there has been excessive delay in making the application for relief… there has to be evidence that [the tenant] will be able to pay the arrears within a fixed time."
"Having given closer consideration to the authorities on the appropriate basis of costs than was possible during the hearing of the appeal, I have come to the conclusion that the indemnity basis should apply as a general principle…normally this should require that the Applicant for relief should pay the landlord's costs on the indemnity basis, rather than only on the standard basis."
The issues
i. Should the Claimant's delay in making the application for relief preclude the grant of relief?ii. Should account be taken of the Claimant's use of Unit 4 for illegal activity? Does that activity bring this case within the band of exceptional cases whereby relief should be refused albeit but for the illegal activity relief would have been granted?
iii. What other circumstances should be taken into account? Should the court take account of the value of the underlease measured against the size of the arrears of rent and, if any, prejudice to the Defendant resulting from the non-payment of rent?
iv. Upon what terms should relief be granted and is the Claimant in a position to comply with such terms?
The evidence
i. The Claimant did not fail to comply with the order for exchange of witness statements altogether. A full witness statement from Shorab was provided.
ii. A error was made about the extent of the evidence which was needed. Shorab's witness statement failed to deal with this one point.
iii. There has been no prejudice to the Defendant and the trial was able to proceed without being affected by the later evidence.
iv. Given that the sentence of imprisonment was passed after Shorab's statement was served, it was inevitable that some additional evidence in chief would be required and no objection was taken to Shorab explaining his position when giving evidence. In the light of the sentence of imprisonment Shorab became unable to work and clearly could not conduct the Claimant's business. There has been a change of circumstances. Shorab could have given evidence about his understanding of his brother's willingness to assist with the payment of any sums which are ordered to be paid but it is clearly preferable to have Rodion's evidence on the point.
"… the Defendant has suffered prejudice as it has been unable to re-let the Forfeited Property for in excess of 18 months since forfeiture took place."
However, when cross-examined, Mr Thompson was unable to explain further the assertion that prejudice had been suffered and he was unaware of anything the Defendant had been unable to do as a consequence of the sum due not having been paid.
"25. Amongst other things, the Defendant has carried out work to secure the Forfeited Property and ensure that the Forfeited Property is in a suitable condition to be let to prospective tenants. The Defendant has attempted to remove vehicles from the Forfeited Property, installed concrete barriers to ensure the Forfeited Property remains secure.
26. As a result of the improvements to the Forfeited Property, if the Claimant is granted relief from forfeiture in this claim, the Claimant will have a better Property with a substantially increased value of the Leasehold as a result of their numerous breaches of the Forfeited Lease."
i. Mr Thompson was not able to provide any help with the basis upon which the loss of rent is calculated. The schedule of loss refers to an email from Mr Butler but it has not been disclosed.
ii. He was able to provide a limited amount of help about the claim for legal expenses. He said much of the work which has been invoiced was carried out by him at a charging rate between £200 and £225 per hour. However, he said the Defendant was not relying on any of the invoices.
iii. He was unable to provide any help about the calculation of service charges after the forfeiture and has not seen the annual certificate which the underlease requires to correct payments on account.
iv. His understanding, without having first-hand knowledge, is that the concrete barriers installed in the parking area were there to maintain the security of the unit by stopping anyone parking close to the shutters of Unit 4.
Decision
Insurance | £2,361.46 |
Business rates | £14,043.66 |
Electricity | £112.86 |
Bailiff's fee | £644.88 |
Land Registry Fee | £12.00 |
DVLA fee | £12.50 |
Shutters | £230.00 |
Ground rent | £200.00 |
Service charges up to forfeiture | £2,155.00 |
TOTAL | £19,772.36 |