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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> The Picture Warehouse Ltd v Cornhill Investments Ltd. [2008] EWHC 45 (QB) (23 January 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2008/45.html Cite as: [2008] EWHC 45 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ON APPEAL FROM HHJ SIMPSON
CLAIM NUMBER 6CL51036
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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THE PICTURE WAREHOUSE LIMITED |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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CORNHILL INVESTMENTS LIMITED |
Respondent |
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Mr David Warner (instructed by Gillhams) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 21st December 2007
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Jack :
"Our client [ie the tenant, presumably in the person of Mr Scott] has written to your client requesting an assurance letter re: the availability of parking on the forecourt outside the building."
The letter referred to has unfortunately not been found: it may well have been helpful as to Mr Scott's state of mind. Beside the passage quoted Mr Orriss noted in manuscript 'Agree dim with Nigel', 'dim' being short for 'demise' and 'Nigel' being Mr Scott. There is nothing, however, to suggest that that happened. The agents for the landlord replied to the three points in a letter delivered by hand dated the next day, 20 October. In respect of the parking the letter stated:
"You, your customers and deliveries are allowed to park on the front block paved area for maximum of 30 minutes (pick-up, drop-off point). I can confirm that this must be adhered to avoid [sic] further conflict with the London Borough of Camden."
"(21) Not to allow any vehicles belonging to the Tenant its staff or invitees to remain on any access way or road other than for the purpose of collection or delivery of goods and not to obstruct the free access of adjoining occupiers."
"Counsel: And yet you accept that my clients have the rights for their visitors to stop in that area to pick up and drop off?
Mr Orriss: Now, you know, they're allowed to do that because I've agreed that that's what they could do, and I stand by that. Even today they're allowed to do it."
"The right to park within the area edged green on the plan annexed hereto during the hours which the tenant is open for business any car, van, motorcycle or other vehicle belonging to the tenant, its employees, customers, suppliers or any visitor to the demised premises for the purpose of delivering to or collecting from the demised premises goods and/or materials in connection with the tenants business provided that (1) no more than one vehicle shall be parked at any one time and (2) no vehicle shall remain parked for more than 30 minutes at a time."
At the hearing of the issue the reference to 'no more than one vehicle' was corrected to 'no more than two vehicles'. I emphasise "The right to" … .
"32(3) Where the current tenancy includes rights enjoyed by the tenant in connection with the holding, those rights shall be included in a tenancy ordered to be granted under section 29 of this Act, except as otherwise agreed between the landlord and the tenant or, in default of such agreement, determined by the court."
"23(3) In the following provisions of this Part of this Act the expression "the holding", in relation to a tenancy to which this Part of this Act applies, means the property comprised in the tenancy, there being excluded any part thereof which is occupied neither by the tenant nor a person employed by the tenant and so employed for the purposes of a business by reason of which the tenancy is one to which this Part of this Act applies."
Here the property comprised in the tenancy is the area within the building demised to the tenant under the 2003 lease, and that is 'the holding'.
"35(1) The terms of a tenancy granted by order of the court under this Part of this Act (…..) ….. shall be such as may be agreed between the landlord and the tenant or as, in default of such agreement, may be determined by the court; and in determining those terms the court shall have regard to the terms of the current tenancy and to all relevant circumstances."
"The object of Part II of the Act is to give security of tenure to business tenants by, inter alia, conferring power on the court to order a new tenancy on the property comprised in "the holding", ….. and, however widely expressed, section 35 cannot, in our judgment, consistently with the scheme found in Part II, be construed to enable the court to enlarge the holding, for example, by ordering the grant of an easement over the landlord's land or conferring rights over the landlord's land not hitherto enjoyed."
This concept was referred to with approval by Peter Gibson LJ giving the leading judgment in the Court of Appeal in Murphy & Sons Ltd v Railtrack [2202] 2 EGLR 48 at 51. What would be permissible here is to include in the lease a provision conferring on the tenant a right no greater than that given by the letter of 20 October. Such a term could be drafted. It would be very different from that proposed by the tenant, which I have previously set out. The judge declined to exercise his discretion to insert such a provision. He held that it was a bare licence that could be determined at any time. I have disagreed that it was a bare licence in the sense of being unsupported by consideration. I have made no finding as to whether it can simply be determined at the whim of the landlord, though that is the landlord's case. I do nonetheless think that the judge exercised his discretion correctly in the circumstances of the case. The landlord had previously refused to include a provision for parking in the lease: the tenant had accepted that both in October 2000 and in 2003 when the lease was finally entered into. The tenant has not established any case to have a term in the lease giving him an irrevocable right to have parking for two cars outside the building. I should say that it is plain that the tenant seeks a right to have space rather than a permission which is shared with other tenants with no certainty of space. I think that in these circumstances it is plainly right to leave the tenant to rely on the terms of the letter for such rights as the letter gives it. As Mr Orriss said in evidence in the passage I have quoted earlier, and in another passage, those rights are still available to the tenant.