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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Rees v 82 Portland Place Investments LLP & Anor [2020] EWHC 1177 (Ch) (15 May 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2020/1177.html Cite as: [2020] EWHC 1177 (Ch) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
CHANCERY APPEALS (ChD)
Rolls Building, Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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SERENA REES |
Appellant/ Claimant |
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- and - |
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82 PORTLAND PLACE INVESTMENTS LLP 82 PORTLAND PLACE (FREEHOLD) LIMITED |
Respondents/ Defendants |
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Philip Rainey QC (instructed by Cripps Pemberton Greenish) for the Respondents
Hearing date: 22 May 2019
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Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE SNOWDEN :
"1. In this Schedule, references to rectification, in relation to alteration of the register, are to alteration which—
(a) involves the correction of a mistake, and
(b) prejudicially affects the title of a registered proprietor.
2.(1) The court may make an order for alteration of the register for the purpose of—
(a) correcting a mistake,
(b) bringing the register up to date, or
(c) giving effect to any estate, right or interest excepted from the effect of registration.
(2) An order under this paragraph has effect when served on the registrar to impose a duty on him to give effect to it.
3.(1) This paragraph applies to the power under paragraph 2, so far as relating to rectification.
(2) If alteration affects the title of the proprietor of a registered estate in land, no order may be made under paragraph 2 without the proprietor's consent in relation to land in his possession unless—
(a) he has by fraud or lack of proper care caused or substantially contributed to the mistake, or
(b) it would for any other reason be unjust for the alteration not to be made.
(3) If in any proceedings the court has power to make an order under paragraph 2, it must do so, unless there are exceptional circumstances which justify its not doing so.
(4) In sub-paragraph (2), the reference to the title of the proprietor of a registered estate in land includes his title to any registered estate which subsists for the benefit of the estate in land.
…
8. The powers under this Schedule to alter the register, so far as relating to rectification, extend to changing for the future the priority of any interest affecting the registered estate or charge concerned."
Background
"I have also referred the matter to my lawyer who has considered Section 54 of the above Act and it appears that, as the effect of your client's notice has been suspended during the currency of the Section 13 notice served by the collective enfranchises, your application for a Unilateral Notice in the register is similarly prohibited.
In the absence of any contrary argument we propose to return your papers to you on 4 November 2011."
The Claim
"…any right of a tenant arising from a notice given under section 13 or 42 shall not be an overriding interest within the meaning of the Land Registration Act [2002]; but a notice given under section 13 or 42 shall be registrable under the Land Charges Act 1972, or may be the subject of a notice or caution under the Land Registration Act [2002], as if it were an estate contract."
"(1) If a registrable disposition of a registered estate is made for valuable consideration, completion of the disposition by registration has the effect of postponing to the interest under the disposition any interest affecting the estate immediately before the disposition whose priority is not protected at the time of registration.
(2) For the purposes of subsection (1), the priority of an interest is protected—
(a) in any case, if the interest—
(i) is … the subject of a notice in the register.."
"The clear intention of section 97 was to make both section 13 and section 42 rights registrable as if they were estate contracts with a view to enabling the purchaser to take free if those rights were not registered. It is clear from the fact that section 97 treats both section 13 and section 42 notices in an identical manner (i.e. that they do not create overriding interests but are registrable as estate contracts), that the section is intended to have the same effect in both cases…."
"77. In my judgment, what comes out of the authorities and what is consistent with the natural construction and interpretation of the Land Registration Act 2002 is for there to be "any other reason making it unjust for the alteration not to be made", the other reason making it unjust must relate to something more than the function and operation in consequences of the failure to register. The very purpose of the system of registration is, to use the word from Wiggins, to immunise a subsequent purchaser for a valuable consideration from anything which has not been registered.
78. If one were to adopt the position that the consequences of the simple or mere consequences of a failure to register, notwithstanding the extremely large amount of money concerned in this case, would of itself be unjust, that to my mind would undermine the very purpose of the legislation and system of registration itself. Furthermore, even if, which it is reasonable to infer, the Second Defendant well understood that a section 42 notice had not been registered against the competent landlord, the fact that it has actual notice, which I am inferring, does not in any way affect the consequences of non-registration as Lady Justice Gloster made clear in Re Wiggins at paragraph 87 lines E-F and has been clear since as long ago as the Midland Bank Trust Co Ltd v Green [1981] AC 513.
…
81. If one thinks a little further about this, and putting what I have already said in a slightly different way, there is nothing unjust in a Claimant having the consequences of a failure to register because that is what Parliament intended and it is the very purpose of the legislation. In certain circumstances, that can result in loss of the interest in question. In this case, certainly initially, it did not result in that loss, as is evident by the fact that the Claimant served a second section 42 notice which, so far as I am aware, is accepted to have been valid.
82. The fact is that when in the normal situation a right is lost by non-registration, it will usually have a value which, again, is a function or consequence of the legislation itself. So the fact that there is a very large financial consequence potentially to the Claimant is not of itself sufficient. Furthermore, had Parliament intended that the mere consequence of non-registration could be relieved by rectification, without more, paragraph 3 would have been drafted in a completely different way."
The Appeal
The power to make a consequential order
"92. It is useful to start by spelling out the essentials of the situation in which paragraph 8, whatever its effect, is intended to apply. It is a situation in which at the point of rectification there are two competing derivative interests—A and B. Interest A has been mistakenly omitted or removed from the register, but that mistake is to be corrected by its reinstatement. Subject to the effect of the rectification, interest B would have priority: otherwise the question of changing priorities would not arise. It is important to appreciate that the only reason why that would be so is because interest B was created before (obviously) the restoration of interest A to the register but after the date of its mistaken omission or removal.
93. The primary effect of paragraph 8 is to confirm that the power of the court or Registrar in that situation is not limited to restoring interest A to the register but "extends" to changing what would otherwise be the priority as between it and interest B—in other words, to giving it the priority which it should have had but for the mistake. The words "for the future" no doubt qualify that power—the question being in what way—but that is the context in which they fall to be interpreted.
94. The appellant's case has to be, and is, that the effect of the words "for the future" is that if interest B has been registered after the mistake but before the rectification, and thus would otherwise enjoy priority, that priority cannot be altered: an alteration to a priority which already exists cannot be described as an alteration "for the future". But if that is right then their effect is to prevent the court from changing priorities in the very situation which paragraph 8 is intended to address. There is no problem of competing priorities once the rectification has been achieved. The only priorities that could be changed relate, necessarily, to interests which have already been created.
95. It is worth recalling that Schedule 4 is concerned with "correcting" mistakes in the register, and it is established by the decisions to which I have referred that the power to do so extends to correcting the consequences of such mistakes. It should be noted that that power is in some circumstances a duty: see paragraph 3(3). The appellant's construction would mean that in all cases where derivative interests have been created during the period of mistaken deregistration that correction would be less than complete and that in some cases, such as the present, it would be valueless.
96. Quite apart from those points, the appellant's construction does not correspond to the words actually used in the statute. What paragraph 8 permits (for the future) is "changing the priority" of an interest. What an interest having priority means is that the owner can exercise the rights which he enjoys by virtue of that interest to the exclusion of any inconsistent rights of the owner of the competing interest. The concept of priority thus bites at the moment that those rights are sought to be enjoyed. Once that is appreciated the effect of the words "for the future" seems to me straightforward. They mean that the beneficiary of the change in priority—that is, the person whose interest has been restored to the register—can exercise his rights as owner of that interest, to the exclusion of the rights of the owner of the competing interest, as from the moment that the order is made, but that he cannot be treated as having been entitled to do so up to that point. The distinction can be illustrated by the facts of this case. The effect of the judge's order is that thenceforward the claimants were entitled to exercise their rights as leaseholders—primarily, that is, their rights to occupy the roof space—to the exclusion of Gold Harp. But until that point they had no such right: they could not, for example, claim mesne profits from Gold Harp or its predecessors in respect of any occupation (though in fact there was none) up to that date."
"27. There is no dispute that although section 19(2)(3) does not spell out the consequences of a transfer of the freehold reversion in circumstances in which the initial notice is not noted in the land register, unless the circumstances are such that the statutory fiction in section 19(3) applies, the transferee of the freehold reversion will not be bound."
"41. If one considers the statutory regime as a whole, it is clear that in the simplest of cases, the relevant parties to the enfranchisement process are the "participating tenants" who act through the "nominee purchaser" and the "reversioner". Once the freehold reversion has been transferred to a third party, the original reversioner who received the initial notice, by definition, ceases to be "the reversioner" within the meaning of section 9 and can no longer be the relevant party with whom to engage in the enfranchisement process or against whom to make an application. He is no longer the owner of the freehold reversion and would be unable to convey the freehold under the terms of the 1993 Act were a vesting order made. It seems to me that the proper analysis upon the true construction of the statutory regime can be no different if the reversion is subsequently re-transferred to the original recipient of the initial notice."
"64. The consequences of these findings are, in my judgment, as follows. First, the judge fell into error in paras 34 and 35 of his judgment in so far as he found that the alteration to the register sought by NRAM would constitute a rectification of the register within the meaning of paragraph 1 of Schedule 4. Following the rescission of the e-DS1, NRAM was and remains entitled to be re-registered as proprietor of the 2004 charge and for the register to be altered to bring it up to date.
65. Secondly, the judge's order must be varied in so far as it directs that the register be altered by re-registration of the 2004 charge "as if it had never been removed and with the priority originally held". At the hearing of the appeal, Miss Sandells made clear that NRAM did not seek to sustain this part of the order and would consent to its deletion. In my judgment she was right to do so because the judge was purporting to exercise the power conferred by paragraph 8 of Schedule 4 but, as we have seen, this is limited to cases of rectification. Further and in any event, it is a power to change for the future the priority of any interest affecting the estate and not in some way to backdate the alteration or, in the words of the judge's order, to re-register the charge "as if it had never been removed."
Would it be unjust for the alteration not to be made?
"2.(1) The court may make an order for alteration of the register for the purpose of—
(a) correcting a mistake,…
3.(1) This paragraph applies to the power under paragraph 2, so far as relating to rectification.
(2) If alteration affects the title of the proprietor of a registered estate in land, no order may be made under paragraph 2 without the proprietor's consent in relation to land in his possession unless—
(a) he has by fraud or lack of proper care caused or substantially contributed to the mistake, or
(b) it would for any other reason be unjust for the alteration not to be made.
(3) If in any proceedings the court has power to make an order under paragraph 2, it must do so, unless there are exceptional circumstances which justify its not doing so."
"13.44 First, there is a presumption under paragraph 3(3) that if the register can be rectified it should be rectified. This presumption reflects the general principle that mistakes in the register should be corrected. (It may also reflect a principle that a person who has been deprived of an interest in land through a mistake should be put back in the position he or she would have been in had the mistake not occurred.)
13.45 The general presumption in favour of rectification is subject to the specific presumption in paragraph 3(2) that rectification is not to be ordered against a proprietor in possession of the relevant land. This second presumption embodies a principle that a person's interest in land should be protected if he or she is in possession of the relevant land."
"13.50 In our view, schedule 4 should give more robust protection to those who are in possession of land than it gives to those who have lost an interest in land through a mistake in the register. The reason is straightforward. If the court or the registrar refuses to rectify the register, a disappointed applicant may seek an indemnity. But someone who is in possession of land is likely to be making use of the land, living on it or relying upon it. If the register is rectified so that they lose their interest in the land, they are more likely to suffer prejudice that cannot adequately be compensated by the payment of an indemnity."
"(1) For the purposes of this Act, land is in the possession of the proprietor of a registered estate in land if it is physically in his possession, or in that of a person who is entitled to be registered as the proprietor of the registered estate.
(2) In the case of the following relationships, land which is (or is treated as being) in the possession of the second-mentioned person is to be treated for the purposes of subsection (1) as in the possession of the first-mentioned person—
(a) landlord and tenant;"
"We consider that the requirement in paragraph 3(2)(b) to show that it would be unjust to refuse rectification imposes a more demanding test than the requirement in paragraph 3(3) to show that there are exceptional circumstances. We endorse the following account of the tests in paragraph 3(2) and (3) given by Professor Martin Dixon:
In order to rectify against an innocent proprietor in possession, usually by taking something from them, it must be "unjust not to rectify": not exceptional, but positively unjust not to rectify. So it is a high hurdle in order to do something which would not otherwise be done. The "exceptional circumstance" provision is not only weaker, it operates conversely: it is a reason not to [do] something which would otherwise be done. The two concepts express different policies at different levels of intensity."
I agree with that analysis of the language and structure of Schedule 4.
i) A "serious and deliberate mistake" by the Land Registry in refusing to register the unilateral notice in 2011.
ii) Actual knowledge on the part of the Second Defendant that the section 42 notice was unprotected.
iii) Substantial detriment to Ms. Rees in the form of a likely £1.8 million increase in the premium for a new lease.
iv) A corresponding windfall to the First Defendant as the new competent landlord, having taken the new concurrent lease for a nil premium and at a nominal rent.
I shall consider the relevance of those factors separately.
Mistake by the Land Registry
Knowledge
"8. Neither of the Defendants was a party to the correspondence between [Ms. Rees' former solicitors] and the Land Registry. The first sight that the Defendants had of this correspondence was when it was disclosed (upon my request) under cover of a letter … dated 14 December 2017.
…
24. As I have said, the failure of the application for a unilateral notice was not in any way the fault of the Defendants. It was not known why the section. 42 notice was not protected by registration against the Old Freehold title until after the 2011 correspondence was disclosed."
"…The very purpose of the system of registration is, to use the word from Wiggins [at paragraph 89], to immunise a subsequent purchaser for a valuable consideration from anything which has not been registered.
…. even if, which it is reasonable to infer, the Second Defendant well understood that a section 42 notice had not been registered against the competent landlord, the fact that it has actual notice, which I am inferring, does not in any way affect the consequences of non-registration as Lady Justice Gloster made clear in Re Wiggins at paragraph 87 lines E-F and has been clear since as long ago as Midland Bank Trust Co Ltd v Green [1981] AC 513."
"In my judgment, as the new leases were registrable dispositions, and were granted for valuable consideration, the failure to register the initial notice against the superior interests meant that the companies as lessees under the new leases took free from the claim of Mr Wiggins and the other participating tenants. The fact that the companies had actual notice in their different capacities as relevant landlords under the old leases was clearly irrelevant. In the absence of registration a disponee takes free of an unregistered interest, irrespective of his actual notice: see Midland Bank Trust Co Ltd v Green [1981] AC 513."
"… as all the Law Commission reports acknowledge, the Act was not intended to provide for absolute indefeasibility. Schedule 4 explicitly recognises that the rectification has the potential to prejudice the interests of third parties who have relied in good faith on the register. The carefully structured provisions of paragraphs 2 and 3 (and their equivalents in the case of rectification by the Registrar), with the special protection given to a proprietor in possession, allow a fair balance between the competing interests to be struck in any particular case; and Schedule 8 gives the loser the right to an indemnity."
Detriment and windfall
"… It is quite clear from the evidence that at all material times, both before and after completion, Olympia believed that it was going to have to make land available for the roundabout without payment … The whole basis on which Olympia acquired the gas board site was that land would be taken from it for the purposes of the roundabout. Were the register not to be rectified then it would have acquired a windfall which would be potentially very significant indeed. The scope of that windfall in financial terms was not debated before me—its size might depend on whether compulsory purchase powers could and would be exercised as against it, or whether Olympia would be in a position to demand a ransom payment from Sainsbury's, but on any footing Olympia would be in a position which no-one ever contemplated they would be in, and which (as a matter of conveyancing) it ought not to have been in … I am quite satisfied that it would be unjust not to rectify the register so as to register the option."
Conclusion