BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
High Court of Justice in Northern Ireland Chancery Division Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> High Court of Justice in Northern Ireland Chancery Division Decisions >> Jones v. Jones and Jones and Jones [2000] NICh 49 (27th October, 2000) URL: http://www.bailii.org/nie/cases/NIHC/Ch/2000/49.html Cite as: [2000] NICh 49 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
1. This
case raises a number of important issues on the nature of a right of residence
and the extent of the rights thereby created or reserved. Although the
granting and reserving of rights of residence is a common feature of Irish
agricultural land transactions and is a tribute to the Irish sense of family
obligation the precise nature of such rights has long been a matter of judicial
and academic debate. In resolving the issues in this case it is necessary to
attempt an analysis of the rights.
2. The
plaintiff and her late husband William Jones Senior (“the
deceased”) were married in the early 1940’s. Early in their
marriage they decided to buy a farm of land near Templepatrick, County Antrim
which they then farmed. Their farming activities were successful and over the
years they acquired further land, eventually owning a land holding of some 90
acres. They built a substantial farmhouse at 28 Rickamore Brae, Templepatrick
(“the house”) and moved into that house some 40 years ago. They
brought up a family of six children on the farm but only one child wanted to
carry on farming, namely their son William Jones (“William”),
the first defendant. He worked hard with his parents in helping to run the
farm and early in 1980 the deceased, with a view to retiring, decided to
transfer the farming stock and equipment to William. In 1983 William indicated
to his parents that he was minded to sell the stock and equipment unless the
land itself was transferred to him. The deceased agreed to transfer the lands
to him and a form of agreement was entered into and signed on 11 November 1983.
Clause 1 of the agreement provided –
3. Under
clause 2 it was provided that the deceased agreed to execute all documents
necessary to give effect to the agreed transfer and to give up “clear
vacant possession of all outhouses and buildings necessary for the proper
running of the farm when required by the said William Jones Junior and to
retire from all activities relating to the running of the farm.” By
clause 3 William agreed to pay all rates, taxes and outgoings in respect of
premises and maintain them in good and tenable order and condition. The
deceased agreed to maintain the insurance for his contents of the dwelling and
to pay all charges for telephone and heating.
4. At
the time the parties entered into the agreement William was living in a
separate dwelling house which he had built in 1980 close by number 28 Rickamore
Brae. The plaintiff and the deceased lived on their own in the house and it
would appear that they owned all the contents, furnishings and fittings therein.
5. The
agreement was carried into execution with the transfer being registered on
11 February 1985. The right of residence referred to in the agreement was
registered as a burden on Folio 9238 County Antrim in the following terms –
6. The
right of the plaintiff and her late husband to be paid £200.00 per month
was also registered as a burden on the land but that burden was subsequently
cancelled. Mr Maxwell on behalf of the plaintiff in the course of the
proceedings conceded that the plaintiff was not claiming to recover any further
payments on foot of the agreement in that regard.
7. Following
the 1983 agreement the plaintiff and the deceased continued to live in the
house on their own, treating it as their home and maintaining its interior with
William looking after the exterior. The deceased died in May 1997 and the
plaintiff remained on in the house on her own.
8. As
the plaintiff aged her health deteriorated. She had a heart attack in 1994 and
she required much care and attention which was provided by William’s wife
Florence. Subsequently in 1998 she developed complications which turned out to
be an oesophageal leak, a serious condition which required hospitalisation,
firstly in Belfast City Hospital and then at Antrim Hospital. She was released
from hospital in December 1998 on the basis that she would require 24 hour a
day care and attention. Again the whole burden of that care fell on Florence.
William and Florence moved into the house to be on hand to care for the
plaintiff. However, on 16 December 1998 Florence’s health broke down.
She suffered a nervous breakdown and she could no longer look after the
plaintiff.
9. The
family entered into discussions as to the best way of dealing with the crisis.
On 16 December 1998 there was a meeting at which the plaintiff and her children
discussed the future. Everyone agreed that the plaintiff would have to go into
a nursing home for a short period of time for respite care. She went into
Shushma Nursing Home in Antrim which the plaintiff initially greatly resented,
describing the Home as a prison. It appears however that she began to settle
in, though she always wanted to get home to the house. As a result of the care
she received in the nursing home her health improved, though she continued to
require much care and attention. William considered that the Home was the best
place for her. Neither he nor any other member of the family was prepared to
provide the 24 hour care required and William frankly considered that his first
priority was his wife’s health.
10. The
plaintiff’s care was reviewed in January 1999 by the social workers. It
was considered that the plaintiff still required considerable care which the
family could not provide and social services were unable to provide the level
of care required. In February 1999 the social workers contacted William about
arranging a home assessment at the house itself. According to the social
worker’s notes William phoned the social worker on 12 February 1999
saying that the home assessment could go ahead at the house so long as they
were not in the house too long. He felt that home assessment was not
appropriate as the plaintiff was not going to return home on the conditions
that William was proposing to lay down. He was not prepared to allow his
brothers Andrew or Archie to stay in the house overnight. When the social
worked pressed him, he said that the Trust would be responsible if the
plaintiff insisted on staying on in the house. The Trust considered that it
could not take the risk and decided against a home assessment. In the result
the plaintiff remained in the home although clearly wanting to return to the
house.
11. There
was dispute between the parties as to whether William withheld the key of the
premises from the plaintiff. The plaintiff gave her set of keys to her son
when she went into the home. She said on her evidence that when the home
assessment arrangement fell through the social worker told her that she could
not get the key. At a later stage the plaintiff went back to the house one day
in April to collect some belongings. On that occasion she said that William
followed her around the house and made her feel uncomfortable. She said that
she asked for the key but William refused saying that she would never be back
in the house. She said that after she put the matter in the hands of her
solicitors William turned up one day at the home and threw the keys at her but
the plaintiff refused to take them saying it was a matter for the solicitors to
sort out.
12. Andrew
Jones, a brother of William, gave evidence that at the meeting the family held
William said that he would hold the key and that if she wanted into the house
it would be a matter for him to let her in.
13. William
for his part said that whenever the plaintiff left the house she left the key
with him. When she went into the nursing home she gave him the key. He told
her that the key would be there anytime she wanted it. William did not want
anyone else to gain access to the house without his permission. He referred in
particular to an incident in 1994 when he found his brother Archie
“rummaging” in the premises. He said that when the proceedings
started he took the key down to the plaintiff but she refused the key and said
it was a matter for the solicitors. It was his case that this direct offer of
the key was in November 1999 before proceedings were actually issued.
14. The
correspondence between the parties must be considered in this context. In a
letter of 2 April 1999 the plaintiff’s solicitors stated that the
plaintiff now wished to return to the premises to exercise her right of
residence without obstruction. William’s solicitors in their letter of
14 April 1999 accepted that she had a right of residence but said it was
exclusive to herself and that William would not agree to anyone else residing
in the dwelling house. Given all the circumstances it was his view that it was
more appropriate that the plaintiff should be provided with care in a
residential or nursing home on a 24 hour a day basis. In a letter of 6 May
1999 the plaintiff’s solicitors stated that she wanted to take up
residence in the house as soon as possible and asked for the key to be
forwarded immediately. It was not intended that anyone else should reside in
the property although because of her health it may be necessary for someone to
stay with her on an overnight basis on some occasions. On 24 May 1999 the
defendants’ solicitors replied stating that the defendant had spoken to
the plaintiff direct and received no indication that she intended to return
home. On 8 June 1999 the solicitors replied stating that they had direct
specific instructions that the plaintiff indeed wished to return home and asked
for the key to be sent within seven days. They said that failure to do so
would be taken as confirmation that the plaintiff was unwilling to send the key
and the plaintiff would take such necessary steps as were required to enforce
her right. There appears to have been no further correspondence until 5
November 1999 when the plaintiff’s solicitor demanded the key and in
default possession would be issued without further notice. The keys were not
sent and the action was issued on 15 November 1999. On 22 November 1999 the
first defendant’s solicitors stated that the key was ready for collection
and that the plaintiff did not dispute in anyway whatsoever the plaintiff had a
right of residence.
15. Although
proceedings had been issued and were ongoing William agreed to transfer the
premises to his son William Jones (the second defendant) and his new wife whom
he had married in September 1999 (the third defendant). The second and third
defendants moved into the premises on 20 December 1999 and have continued to
reside there since. They have carried out considerable internal changes in the
premises, improving the kitchen and bathroom facilities. They have left intact
the chairlift which had been installed for the benefit of the plaintiff.
16. The
plaintiff in her original statement of claim asserted that although William had
acknowledged in correspondence that the plaintiff had a right of residence in
the premises William had thwarted her attempts to return to the premises and
had refused to supply her with a key. She sought the declaratory relief that
she was entitled to a right of residence during her lifetime and that the
defendant had obstructed her right of residence and she sought an order that he
deliver up the key of the premises and that he should be restrained from
obstructing or thwarting her access to the premises. The defendant admitted
that the plaintiff had a right of residence and he admitted the averment that
she had gone into the nursing home for two weeks respite care. He denied that
he had obstructed the right of residence or denied her access or refused her
the key. In her subsequently amended statement of claim, following the
plaintiff’s discovery that the premises had been agreed to be transferred
to the second and third defendants and that they were residing in the premises,
the plaintiff asserted that the possession of the premises by the second and
third defendants was inconsistent with and contrary to her right of residence.
It was also asserted that by reason of the wrongful acts and admissions of the
defendants, the plaintiff had suffered and would suffer financial loss for
which she sought reimbursement. During her stay at the nursing home the
plaintiff sustained a weekly cost of £131.90 and a loss of £131.90
compared to her position if she were a resident in the premises was claimed
though this takes no account of the fact that she was receiving her full keep
in the home and was saved the expense of running the house. In the amended
claim for relief the plaintiff sought an account or enquiry as to the sum due
from the defendants and each of them but did not claim other general damages.
17. William
in his amended defence denied that he had given possession of the premises to
the second and third defendants without the knowledge and consent of the
plaintiff and asserted that their occupation of the premises was not
inconsistent with the plaintiff’s right of residence. It is to be noted
that William had thus changed his position as compared to his earlier claim
that the plaintiff was entitled only to occupy the premises on her own. He
denied the claim for financial relief and reimbursement. The statement of
claim by the plaintiff was further amended with the plaintiff claiming that she
had an exclusive right of residence or alternatively that her right of
residence was such that she was entitled to exclusivity in the occupation of
the premises. She averred that the possession of the premises by the second
and third defendants was inconsistent with and contrary to her right to reside
in the premises. She claimed the declaratory relief but withdrew the claim for
accounts and enquiries.
18. The
second and third defendants in their amended defence likewise deny that the
plaintiff is entitled to an exclusive right of residence and assert that their
occupation of the premises is not inconsistent with the plaintiff’s
rights. They aver that they are prepared to provide the plaintiff with a set
of keys on the basis that the plaintiff is entitled to the property but not to
an exclusive right of residence. They say that they are prepared to occupy the
premises with the plaintiff. They also alleged that they incurred expenditure
on the premises following representations and promises made by William at the
time when they married, though they make no averment that the plaintiff had
made any representations giving rise to estoppel.
19. The
parties’ contentions followed closely the cases as pleaded in the finally
amended form. Mr Maxwell on behalf of the plaintiff contended the plaintiff
was entitled to an exclusive right of residence or alternatively was entitled
to exclusivity of residence in the circumstances. When the right of residence
had been reserved in the original agreement the plaintiff and the deceased were
living in the premises and using all its contents and facilities on their own.
To require the plaintiff to occupy the premises with others to whom she
objected would be inconsistent with what was intended to be the reserved right.
The plaintiff’s objection to being required to reside in the house with
the second and third defendants was wholly understandable he contended, given
the history of William’s thwarting of her return to the house and his
decision to put the second and third defendants into the house behind her back
and without her consent.
20. Mr
Henry on behalf of William argued that the term “right of
residence” was an established legal term with a legal meaning to which
effect must be given. The parties intention must be found in the wording
agreed and where the parties use a legal term of art effect must be given to
it. In the absence of words of exclusivity this right was to be interpreted as
a general rather than as an exclusive right. Since the plaintiff was only
entitled to a general right of residence it was open to the first defendant and
his successes entitled the second and third defendants to reside in the house
and that would not be inconsistent with the exercise by the plaintiff of her
right to reside there.
21. Mr
McBrien on behalf of the second and third defendants followed the same line of
argument. The plaintiff could not rely on the previous negotiations of the
parties or their declaration of subjective interest to determine the legal
effect of the right of residence. Mr McBrien also relied on the Property
(Northern Ireland) Order 1978 arguing that the right of residence was an
impediment to the enjoyment of the dwelling house, being a restriction falling
within article 3(1)(a)(i). The court has a power to modify or extinguish the
impediment or refuse to grant the plaintiff release relief because her interest
is not materially affected by the alleged breach of her rights or because it
would be unjust to make an order. In regard to the factors set out in article
5(5) Mr McBrien argued that this would be a proper case to refuse the plaintiff
the relief sought if, contrary to the defendants’ primary contention, she
was entitled to an exclusive right of residence in the premises.
22. As
pointed out in a number of Irish authorities rights of residence whether on
their own or combined with a right of maintenance are common in both parts of
Ireland. (See for example the discussion by Johnston J in
National
Bank v Keegan
[1931] IR 344 at 347, the Lowry Report and Registration of Title to Land in
Northern Ireland (1967 Cmd 517 paragraph 97 and the helpful discussion on
“Irish Rights of Residence – the Anatomy of an Hermaphrodite”
(1970) NILQ 389). These rights are often created by testators leaving
agricultural land, the testator wishing to give the widow or children the right
to remain in residence during their lifetime or “during their day”.
They are also reserved by donors following retirement from farming where the
retiring farmer wishes to pass the land on to, for example, his son but
retaining a right of residence for himself and his wife in the house
“during their day”. Common though such rights are the precise
legal nature and incidence of the interest thus created or reserved remains
somewhat unclear and ill defined. In view of the commonness of such
arrangements this is somewhat surprising. The very imprecision of the legal
consequences of such rights and the consequences of perceived breaches of the
rights will often result in families resolving their differences by means other
than litigation where the outcome may be unclear. On occasions however
amicable resolution of such disputes will not be possible and it then becomes
necessary to determine the precise the legal rights of the parties, a task not
rendered any easier by the unsatisfactory way in which the law in this field
has been analysed and developed heretofore.
23. On
appeal in the Supreme Court Kennedy CJ agreeing with Johnston J in his part on
this point said:
24. In
the majority decision in the Supreme Court the court held that the residential
right was in this case in the nature of an exclusive variety and conferred an
estate for life. Muraghan J dissented and concluded that notwithstanding the
reference to an inclusive right the informality of the agreement was intended
to confer a personal right and the agreement created a equitable charge on the
premises both for residence and support.
25. The
decision in that case is open to criticism on a number of grounds. The court
seems to have ignored the consequence of the agreement being a voluntary one
under hand. It seems to disregard the principle that equity will not assist a
volunteer and that an informal right of land will not be construed as a
declaration of trust. Furthermore, as I pointed out in
Re
Walker’s Application
[1999] NI84 at 91:
26. Even
if a person is given an exclusive right to reside in specified premises as
opposed to a general right to reside in circumstances where others may also
reside in the premises this in my view falls short of creating a life interest
for the purposes of the Settled Land Acts 1882-1890 since the beneficiary of
the right has a limited right to be on the premises and the right has none of
the other incidents of a life interest capable of creating a life interest for
the purposes of the Settled Land Acts.
27. In
the Republic the Oireachtas in the Registration of Title Act 1964 sought to
insulate registered land from the anomalous effects of the decision in
National
Bank v Keegan
.
Section 81 provides:
28. In
Northern Ireland the Lowry Committee on Land Registration considered the
changes in the Republic under the 1964 Act stating:
29. “We
are in some doubt as to the exact effect of this provision and in particular as
to whether it gives the owner of the land the right “to buy out”
the owner of the right of residence without the latter’s consent. In our
view the owner of the land should not be able buy out the owner of the right of
residence unless he can obtain the agreement of the person being bought out and
we think that any amendment of the law should make this point clear. We do not
think that a farmer testator would normally intend to give his son the right to
put the testator’s widow out of the farmhouse on payment to her of a sum
of money even if fixed by a court of law as fair and reasonable. At the same
time we recommend that a right of residence in or on registered land whether it
be a general right of residence on the land or an exclusive right of residence
in or on part of land should be made personal to the person beneficially
entitled to the right and should take effect as a registerable burden on the
land not as a life estate in it or in part of it. Lest there should be any
doubt on the point we wish to make it clear however that we are not referring
to a case in which there is an exclusive of right of residence in or on the
whole of the land in any given holding. In such a case the intention of the
testator or settler presumably is that the person beneficially entitled to the
right of residence is in effect to have a life estate in the holding.”
30. For
the reasons set out in
Re
Walker
I respectfully consider that the last sentence in that passage is open to
question.
31. A
consideration of the Irish authority shows a somewhat incoherent and confused
analysis of the rights of residence with statements of principle arrived at by
a flawed generalised interpretation of specific cases turning on their own
terms and clauses in particular instruments. In particular the analysis that a
general right of residence is in the nature of a lien which is the accepted
thesis of section 42 of the Statute of Limitations (Northern Ireland) 1958 (now
article 40 of the Limitation (Northern Ireland) Order 1989) flows from giving a
general application to the specific decision in
Kelaghan
v Daly
.
Nowhere in his judgment does Boyd J say that a right of residence of any
variety is a right in the nature of a lien for money’s worth. Nor is
there anything in the nature of a right to reside
per
se
in a particular house or room that equates to the ordinary understanding of a
lien.
32. Professor
Harvey in his article concluded with some hesitation that the proper analysis
of a right of residence is that it is a kind of licence. The development of
the law in the field of licences since that article has vindicated this
approach. Licences may assume various forms and perform a multiplicity of
purposes. The overlapping categories of licences recognised by the law include
bare licences, contractual licences, equitable or irrevocable licences,
licences based on preparatory estoppel and licences coupled with the grant of
an interest. The precise proprietary context of each licence varies with the
category concerned.
33. A
contractual licence which derives its force from some contract express or
implied differs from a bare licence in that it is not granted voluntarily but
is founded on valuable consideration moving from the licensee. As pointed out
in Gray’s Elements of Land Law 3
rd
edition at 171:
34. It
is now clear that in appropriate cases the court will protect the contractual
licence by injunction or specific performance. Thus as Roskill LJ stated in
Verrall
v Great Yarmouth Borough Council
[1980] 1 AER 839 at 847:
35. The
modern willingness of the court to protect contractual licences by equitable
relief in effect confers on the licensee a quasi-proprietary interest in the
land beyond a mere personal interest to use the land in common with others (see
the Australian Federal Court in
Federal
Airports Corporation v Makucha Developments Property Ltd
[1993] 115 ALR 697 at 700).
36. The
right of residence in favour of the deceased and the plaintiff reserved by the
agreement can fairly be viewed as a form of contractual licence reserved by and
granted back to the plaintiff and her husband. In reality it was an integral
part of the agreement for the transfer of land to William by the deceased.
During the lifetime of the deceased and the plaintiff it was an irrevocable
contractual licence to reside in the premises which the court would protect by
injunction or specific performance if appropriate. No issue arises in this
case as to whether the right was binding on successors in title. Being a
registered burden the second and third defendants took with notice of it and do
not challenge that they are bound by it.
37. Being
in the nature of a contractual licence it is a matter of construction of the
agreement set in its proper context as to what contractual rights it conferred
on the plaintiff and the deceased. Although the plaintiff was not a party to
the contract it was clearly intended to benefit her and she can rely upon it in
reliance on the Law Reform (Husband and Wife) Act (Northern Ireland) 1964.
38. The
defendants relied strongly on the proposition that the term “right of
residence” is a legal term of art with a known and defined meaning. In
the absence of the words of exclusivity it is argued that the words fall to be
construed as a general right to reside in the premises. In fact the term
“right of residence” is not a legal term with a clear and precise
meaning (as is demonstrable from an analysis of the authorities). An analysis
of the Irish case law shows a considerable variation in the way in which the
parties express a right of residence which is being conferred or reserved. I
do not read
National
Bank v Keegan
as authority for the proposition that in the absence of words of exclusivity a
right of residence falls to be construed as a general right. The nature and
extent of the right must depend on and be interpreted in the light of the
factual context and in the light of the whole agreement.
39. In
the present case clauses 2 and 4 are relevant. Clause 2 necessarily recognises
that the deceased was not giving up vacant possession of the dwelling house
itself since it was not an outhouse or a building necessary for the proper
running of the farm. Clause 4 recognised that the deceased was going to retain
all the contents in the house and that he would be heating the house and using
the telephone exclusively. This points in the direction of the parties’
understanding that the plaintiff and the deceased would be the persons living
on their own in the house. The fact that the deceased and the plaintiff were
retaining their own chattels and fittings and fixtures in the house is a strong
indication that the house was intended for their own personal use. Third
parties including the landowner himself would have no right or permission to
use the furnishings and fittings in the house in the absence of the agreement
of the persons entitled thereto.
40. A
contractual licence may in appropriate circumstances attract implied terms.
Terms can be read into a contract by implication from the parties’
conduct and expectations and courts are generally willing to imply such terms
as are required to make the contract workable or to give it business efficacy.
Some kinds of contractual licence contain an implied undertaking by the
licensor to afford quiet enjoyment to the licensee (see for example
Smith
v Nottinghamshire County Council
(1981) Times 13 November. See Gray (op cit) at 173). It would thus be
obvious, for example, in the present case that William would not be entitled to
frustrate the right of residence by insisting on the storage of noxious
materials in the house nor could he lock the licensees out of the house and
thereby prevent them from enjoying the right to reside in the house.
41. In
this instance it was argued that on its true construction the right of
residence would not preclude William or his successors in title from residing
in the house alongside the licensees and by doing so he or they would not
infringe the plaintiff’s right to reside in the house. On the
construction of this agreement set in its context I hold that the defendants
are not entitled to reside in the house alongside the plaintiff in the absence
of her consent. Firstly, having regard to the express contents of the
agreement to which I have referred I hold that the agreement envisaged that the
plaintiff and her husband would occupy and reside in the house on their own.
Secondly, in construing such an agreement it is appropriate to take into
account the full facts of the situation as it was at the time when the
agreement was entered into. The quality of the licensees’ actual
residence at the time of such an agreement must be a relevant factor. Had
William been residing in the house at the time with his parents a reservation
by the deceased of a right of residence in the house would fall to be construed
in the light of that factor. As it was the deceased and the plaintiff were
living in the house on their own. The first defendant frankly stated that he
did not consider that he had any right to impose a lodger on the plaintiffs or
reside in the premises himself without the consent of the plaintiff or deceased
during his lifetime. Although the house is quite large it is one domestic
unit. To require the plaintiff against her will to reside in the house with
other parties who have entered the house without her knowledge and approval
would be to subject the plaintiff to tensions and inconveniences inconsistent
with the right to reside in the premises as contemplated at the time when the
agreement was entered into.
42. I
do not consider that there is anything in the Property (Northern Ireland) Order
1978 which in the circumstances would justify the court in rewriting the terms
of the agreement freely entered into between William and his parents in 1983.
If the right of residence is viewed, as I think it should be in the
circumstances, as a licence granted by William to his parents to occupy the
house as their dwelling I do not consider that it qualifies as a restriction
for the purposes of article 3 of the 1978 Order. Even if it did none of the
factors in article 5(5) in the circumstances point in favour of a radical
redrawing of a licence to reside freely and contractually agreed by the parties.
43. The
plaintiff in the circumstances accordingly has a right to reside in the
premises during her lifetime on her own and the second and third defendants are
not entitled to reside therein without her consent. The second and third
defendants can set up no proprietary estoppel or other right to occupy the
premises since the plaintiff did not by any conduct or representations on her
part represent that the second and third defendants would acquire an interest
by virtue of expenditure on the premises.
44. When
in residence the plaintiff would be entitled to permit third parties to come
unto the premises to stay overnight to provide care and assistance if that is
necessary for her to enjoy the benefits of the right of residence conferred by
the agreement.
45. I
further hold that the first defendant in effect did deny the plaintiff her
right to reside in the premises by retaining the key. I am satisfied that the
first defendant was convinced that it was not in the interests of the plaintiff
or the rest of the family for the plaintiff to return to live in the house
since she was being well looked after in the nursing home. However, his
interference with the plaintiff’s right of residence by failing to hand
over the key until late in the day did not in my view lead the plaintiff to
sustain any demonstrable financial loss since she was receiving the benefit of
full care and keep in the nursing home and she would have had to pay for her
keep and care while living at the house. The plaintiff did not in these
proceedings claim any general or other damages apart from the claim for
reimbursement which I have rejected. In any event the plaintiff made clear
that she was not in reality interested in pursuing a money claim.
46. In
the result the plaintiff is entitled to the declaratory relief that I have
indicated. I will not at this stage grant injunctive relief since the parties
may be able to resolve future difficulties by agreement in the light of the
declaratory relief which I am granting. I shall, however, give the parties
liberty to apply in case it becomes necessary for the court to grant further
relief.
47. This
decision is based on a legal analysis of the agreement. The best interests of
the plaintiff may not be served by her returning to the house in the manner
that she envisages. The real problems raised by this case are not legal
problems. The court’s determination of the plaintiff’s contractual
rights in no way deals with the very real practical problems which may arise if
and when she returns to live in the house to exercise the rights which I have
declared. The conduct and outcome of this litigation will not in themselves
assist in dealing with these problems and in fact may exacerbate the situation.
I acquit the defendants of any base motive in their actions. I am sure that
after reflection the plaintiff will recognise this and bear in mind all that
William and his wife did for her during the years in the difficult
circumstances which arose out of the plaintiff’s ill health. The fact
that the plaintiff is now in better health and somewhat fitter than she was is
in no small measure due to William and his wife and+ due to the level of care
provided in the Home where she currently resides.
48. Finally,
I would reiterate the comments which I made in
Re
Walker’s Application
[1999] NI 84 at 92 where I pointed that those concerned in the drafting of
instruments creating rights of residence should fully address their minds to
the precise nature of the interests that they wish to create. Confusion and
difficulty would be avoided if those drafting such agreements or documents
thought through the question as to the precise interest they wish to create.