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Scottish Court of Session Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Little Cumbrae Estate Ltd v. Island Of Little Cumbrae Ltd [2007] ScotCS CSIH_35 (24 May 2007)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/2007/CSIH_35.html
Cite as: [2007] ScotCS CSIH_35, [2007] CSIH 35

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EXTRA DIVISION, INNER HOUSE, COURT OF SESSION

 

Lord Johnston

Lord Eassie

Lord Mackay of Drumadoon

 

 

 

 

 

 

[2007] CSIH 35

XA103/06

 

OPINION OF THE COURT

 

delivered by LORD EASSIE

 

in the cause

 

LITTLE CUMBRAE ESTATE LIMITED

 

Pursuers and Appellants;

 

against

 

ISLAND OF LITTLE CUMBRAE LIMITED

 

Defenders and Respondents:

 

_______

 

 

Act: Keen, Q.C., McBrearty; Simpson & Marwick, W.S. (Pursuers and Appellants)

Alt: Simpson; Mitchells Robertson, Glasgow (Defenders and Respondents)

 

24 May 2007

[1] The pursuers and appellants in this appeal from a decision of the Sheriff Principal of the Sheriffdom of Glasgow and Strathkelvin are the landlords in a lease - "the Lease" - dated 5 and 10 May 2002. The defenders and respondents are the tenants under the Lease. The Lease granted to the defenders the tenancy of the Island of Little Cumbrae for a period of five years from 12 January 2002. We were advised by counsel that the superficial extent of the land let to the defenders was approximately 793 acres and that the buildings on the island included a mansion house, five cottages, and a harbour and jetty. The subjects of the let also included a motor vessel and a dumb barge but their inclusion as corporeal moveables is not in any way material for the purposes of this action.

[2] In the Initial Writ the pursuers crave payment by the defenders of certain sums by way of rent and the re-imbursement, in terms of the Lease, of certain insurance premia expended by the pursuers as landlords. The defenders answer that claim by maintaining that they are entitled to retain the sums claimed in the Initial Writ by way of compensation, or set-off, against money which they maintain is payable to them by the pursuers in respect of certain expenditure which they - the tenants - have incurred in executing repairs to buildings and harbour structures on the island for which, they contend, the pursuers as landlords are liable to pay. The defenders also have a counterclaim for the costs of those repairs and of repairs yet to be executed, exceeding the amount of the pursuers' claim for rent and re-imbursement of the insurance premia. The counterclaim also raises an issue whether, in the past, the amounts of insurance premia reimbursed by the defenders were overstated by the pursuers and repetition is sought of the undue payments. However that matter was not the subject of any decision in the proceedings so far, the action having been processed as a commercial action in the sheriff court. The issue with which the proceedings have hitherto been, and are now, concerned is whether the pursuers, as landlords, are responsible for the costs of executing the repairs in question.

[3] The repairs are described only briefly in the pleadings. They involve repairs to the roofs of buildings, the jetty, a sewer outfall pipe, a storm wave break, a harbour marker post and mooring points. However, the detail does not matter. The significant point for present purposes is that it is accepted that the repairs (executed or intended) were consequent upon damage done by a storm in January 2005.

[4] The acceptance on both sides that one is concerned with storm damage repairs leads to the further joint acceptance that the damage in issue comes within the definition of "Insured Risks" in Clause 1.2 of the Lease, which includes in that category loss or damage from "... storm or tempest ...".

[5] Clause 5(1) of the Lease contains provisions relating to insurance against the Insured Risks. It is in these terms:

"The Landlord HEREBY UNDERTAKES to insure and keep insured the Premises in the name of the Landlord with the Tenant's interest endorsed thereon at all times during the Period of the Lease (unless such insurance shall be vitiated by any act, neglect default or omission of the Tenant) against the Insured Risks with the Insurers in the Reinstatement Value thereof and for the Loss or Rent ... and in case of damage by any of the Insured Risks with all reasonable speed to cause all moneys received in respect of such insurance (other than in respect of Loss of Rent) to be forthwith laid out in reinstating the Premises."

In terms of Clause 3(2) of the Lease the tenant is required to reimburse the premia.

[6] Clause 5(2) deals with abatement of rent in the event of damage or destruction. It states:

"If the Premises shall at any time during the Period of Lease be so damaged or destroyed as to render the Premises unfit for occupation and use in whole or in part in accordance with the terms and provisions of the Lease, then the rents herein provided for or a fair proportion thereof according to the nature and extent of the damage sustained shall be suspended (but if such destruction or damage is attributable to an Insured Risk to the extent only that the Insurers meet the Landlord's claim under the policy for the Loss of Rent) until the premises shall again be rendered fit for occupation and use, or if such destruction or damage is attributable to an Insured Risk until the Loss of Rent insurance effected by the Landlord shall be exhausted, if earlier. For the avoidance of doubt the Lease shall continue regardless of the nature or extent of any damage or destruction and the principle of rei interitus shall not apply."

[7] As respects express obligations of repair, maintenance or renewal, the obligations of the tenant (set out in Part II of the Schedule to the Lease) include Clause 3, in these terms:

"At all times throughout the Period of the Lease at the Tenant's expense well and substantially to repair and maintain or renew the Premises except where the damage necessitating such repair, maintenance or renewal is caused by any of the Insured Risks and the insurance monies have not nor shall become irrecoverable through any act or default of the Tenant."

Clause 5 of Part II of the Schedule makes provision whereby, in the event of the tenant failing to carry out repairs which the tenant is liable under the Lease, the landlord may execute the repairs and recover the costs from the tenant.

[8] Counsel for the pursuers and appellants also brought to our notice that the tenant's obligations in Part II of the Schedule are subject to and with the benefit of the Redevelopment Proviso which is defined in Clause 1 of the Lease as meaning

"the right hereby granted to the Tenant, regardless of any other provisions hereof, conditional upon first obtaining all necessary statutory consents, to carry out such operations, construction, improvement, redevelopment, refurbishment to or on the Premises as the Tenant sees fit without the requirement to seek the approval or consent of the Landlord, declaring that such right shall not include the carrying out of any demolition works of whatever nature without the prior written consent of the Landlord which consent shall not be unreasonably withheld."

[9] It should also be noted that it is not suggested by the defenders that the pursuers failed to insure, or adequately insure the Premises; nor that they have failed to pass to the defenders all sums paid out by the insurers in respect of claims for the storm damage presented to them. One is concerned with a shortfall, for whatever reason, between the repair costs averred by the defenders to have been incurred by them, or to be contemplated by them, in repairing the storm damage and the sums passed by the insurers' loss adjusters.

[10] The action came before the sheriff for debate. Put very shortly, the first contention of counsel then appearing for the defenders was that Clause 3 of Part II of the Schedule to the Lease was to be construed as expressly imposing an obligation on the landlord to repair damage caused by an Insured Risk. The sheriff rejected that contention and it was not further advanced either before the Sheriff Principal or before us. The alternative submission for the defenders advanced to the sheriff was that there was to be implied into the Lease a provision that repairs to damage arising from the occurrence of one of the Insured Risks required to be carried out by the landlord. That contention was advanced on the basis, again put shortly, that such repairs were excepted from the tenant's repairing obligations in Clause 3 of Part II of the Schedule; someone would need to carry out the repairs, ergo the landlord must be that someone; that view was consistent with the requirement that the landlord was to lay out the insurance money on repairs; and such an implication was required by "business efficacy". That contention found favour with the sheriff.

[11] The pursuers appealed to the Sheriff Principal, who refused the appeal. His ultimate endorsation of the sheriff's reasoning on implication from the terms of the Lease of a term obliging the pursuers to execute the repairs in question was however preceded by the following passage in the Note appended to his interlocutor:

"In my opinion Clause 3 of Part II imposes an obligation upon the tenant to repair, maintain and renew the premises. This obligation however is subject to an exception. That exception occurs when there is damage caused by an insured risk and the tenants have done nothing to cause the sum claimed from the insurers to be irrecoverable. It was admitted that there had been damage caused by an insured risk. It was also admitted that there was a shortfall in the sum recovered from the insurance company. There was no offer by the landlord to prove that the shortfall was in any way attributable to the act or the fault of the tenant. Thus in my opinion the exception to the general obligation upon the tenant to repair, maintain and renew applies. The tenant is therefore in my opinion relieved of its obligation to effect repairs by virtue of the exception in Clause 3 of Part II of the lease.

It may be thought that one did not require to go much further to decide the case. If the obligation to repair is not the tenant's obligation then it must be the landlord's obligation. At common law the obligation to repair would fall upon the landlord. Thus in order to avoid that obligation the landlord needs to make provision in the lease to transfer the obligation to the tenant. I have held that the lease does not achieve that."

[12] In his submission in support of the appeal counsel for the pursuers submitted to us that this passage, particularly the second paragraph thereof, disclosed important errors on the part of the Sheriff Principal.

[13] Among the errors was the statement by the Sheriff Principal that at common law the obligation to repair would fall upon the landlord. The law distinguished between urban and rural leases, the rule being that in the former class the landlord was liable for repairs whereas in the latter class the tenant bore that liability. Buildings erected on a rural tenement were not treated as being urban. The Lease being a lease of an island or some 793 acres was plainly a rural lease; and accordingly the obligation to maintain and repair lay, at common law, with the tenant. Reference was made to Bell's Principles (10th ed.) para.1272; Rankine on Leases (3rd ed.) p.174; Paton & Cameron on Landlord and Tenant, p.70; McAllister, The Scots Law of Leases, paras.1.12, 3.25 and 3.35.

[14] However, it was also submitted by counsel that, more importantly, the Sheriff Principal had failed to appreciate that the common law rules on the attribution of responsibility for repairs, whether ascribing that responsibility to the tenant in rural tenancies or to the landlord in urban lets, were in each case subject to an exception in the case of repairs necessitated by damnum fatale. Counsel referred to the definition of damnum fatale to be found in Bell's Law Dictionary (7the ed.) -

"A loss arising from inevitable accident, such as no human prudence can prevent; - such, for example, as the losses occasioned by storms or tempests, lightning, floods, over-blowing with sand, or, in general, by any calamity falling within the legal description of an act of God."

The repairs in issue in these proceedings were accepted as being storm damage repairs and were thus damnum fatale for the purposes of the common law rules on repairing obligations in contracts of lease. As respects damnum fatale, neither party was under any obligation, owed to the other, to repair; though either might find it in his interests to repair. The tenant's obligation to repair in a rural tenement was subject to exclusion of damnum fatale. Likewise the landlord's obligation in urban lets. In support of these propositions counsel for the pursuers referred to Paton & Cameron, pp.131-2, 142; Rankine, pp.242, 251; Bell's Principles para.1253; and, in particular the decision of the House of Lords in Bayne v Walker (1815) 3 Dow 233. Accordingly, submitted counsel, the Sheriff Principal was wrong to hold, or to assume, that if the tenant were excepted from his express contractual repairing obligation by virtue of the Insured Risks exception in Clause 3 of Part II of the Schedule to the Lease, liability for the storm damage repairs must, ex lege, fall on the landlord.

[15] For his part counsel for the defenders did not quarrel his opponent's exposition of the authorities on the common law rules on repairing obligations, including the rules relating to damnum fatale. He also did not dispute that the damage in issue was damage caused by storm or tempest and that, as such, it constituted damnum fatale. That notwithstanding, he submitted, in what appeared to be an overarching premise, that it could not be right that neither party to the present Lease could be under an obligation to repair the storm damage. If that were so, the subjects would deteriorate. It was evident from Clause 3 of Part II of the Schedule and the landlord's powers under Clause 5 of the Lease that the parties intended that the premises should be kept maintained and repaired; and since the tenant's obligation under Clause 3 of Part II of the Schedule was subject to an exception as respects the Insured Risks it must, said counsel, follow that the landlord was obliged to carry out those repairs. Business efficacy required the implication of such a term. The tests for implying terms necessary to give business efficacy were set out in what was quoted in McBride on Contract (2nd ed.) at para.9-67 and they did not include any requirement that the term sought to be implied should not conflict with or contradict common law rules.

[16] In our opinion the position adopted by the defenders is misconceived. As already mentioned, it is accepted that the repairs with which this action is concerned are repairs resulting from storm damage and hence are damnum fatale. The decision of the House of Lords in Bayne v Walker settled that in the case of accidental destruction or damage for which no-one was at fault neither landlord nor tenant was under any obligation to re-build or repair, though each might have an interest to do so. The civilian law rule expressed in the maxim res suo perit domino meant that the subject perished to each of the parties according to his interest in it. The speeches of Lord Redesdale and the Lord Chancellor (Lord Eldon) discuss the practical and commercial considerations justifying a rule (in a modern parlance, a default rule) that the loss should rest where it fell, each according to his own interests in the case of property subject to a tenancy. Thus, to take the example of the destruction of a farmhouse occurring shortly before the ish, it would be unreasonable to impose on the tenant the obligation to rebuild or repair when his occupation was about to cease; and equally the landlord might prefer to have a different farmhouse in a different location with a view to the future letting of the holding. The later authorities to which we were referred by counsel for the pursuers make clear that, at least since Bayne, the common law position in both urban and rural tenancies has been that in the event of damage or destruction constituting damnum fatale neither party is under any obligation, owed to the other, to repair or re-build. Each may have an interest to do so; the tenant to resume enjoyment; the landlord to recover his rental income, since otherwise the rent is subject to whole or partial abatement.

[17] As was recognised by the Lord Chancellor in his speech, it is, of course, open to the parties to a lease to modify, or depart from, the common law rule by clear express provision. Since the rule applies in respect of loss or damage which is now more readily capable of being covered by insurance, its consequences in modern practice are usually addressed through that means. That is indeed what has been done in the present case, there being agreement on insurance; the ultimate responsibility for the meeting of the premia; and an obligation on the landlord to lay out the insurance monies on repairs. But in so far as the insurance arranged against damnum fatale should prove lacking, the common law rule will apply to the uninsured damnum fatale. In that respect we note in particular the passage in the practitioners' handbook by Ross & McKiechan "Drafting & Negotiating Commercial Leases in Scotland" at para.10.6 where, having discussed insurance by the landlord, the authors then address the type of question arising in the present case in these terms:

"The question then arises as to the position if the insurance monies proved insufficient to meet the cost of rebuilding or reinstatement. Where the obligation is to 'lay out all monies received in received in respect of such insurance' in reinstatement (as opposed simply to 'reinstate') it would seem that the landlord would not have to complete the work at his own expense - he would have complied with his obligation by laying out all the insurance monies received. Thus the tenant should call for a specific obligation from the landlord to make up any shortfall. Clearly the tenant needs this protection to prevent a situation in which the landlord refused to complete the work of rebuilding. This would be of particular concern if the underlying common-law rule in Scotland (providing for termination of the lease in the event of total destruction and abatement of rent in the event of partial destruction) had been displaced and if the abatement of rent proviso which had been substituted was expressed to operate for a limited period, because on the expiry of such period the tenant would become liable for rent. The tenant should argue most strongly for the inclusion of an obligation compelling the landlord to re-instate".

We would add that, in our view, the Lease appears to have been drafted against a proper understanding of the common law on damnum fatale in leases. Thus the provisions in Clause 5 of Part II of the Schedule exhibit awareness of the common law rule on termination and abatement of rent in the event of damnum fatale and seek to restrict it to a limited extent. But the further provision in favour of the tenant suggested by the authors of this handbook is not to be found.

[18] The argument advanced by counsel for the defenders appeared to us be an argument on implied terms isolated from the existence of rules or terms implied at common law in nominate contracts such as contracts of lease. Counsel for the defenders founded upon the passage in McBryde at para.9-67 to advance that insulated argument on the view that the passage quoted by the author in that paragraph made no reference to conflict or contradiction with common law rules. However, that paragraph has to be read in context. In particular it has to be read in the context that in the previous parts of the chapter (Chapter 9) Professor McBryde has discussed implication of terms as a matter of general law and has explained that in the case of nominate contracts, subject to implied common law rules, exclusion of the liabilities resulting from the application of the common law rules requires to be effected by clear express provision. We refer inter alia to what is said in para.9-09 (cf. Mars Pension Trustees Ltd v County Properties and Developments Ltd 1999 S.C. 267).

[19] In so far as the express terms of a lease do not cover, or replace, the provisions implied at common law in such contracts, those provisions will apply. Contracts of lease must be drafted against the existence of common law default rules. In our view it is clear that the common law default rule relating to liability - or perhaps more accurately the absence of liability - for damnum fatale, while partially displaced in Clause 5(2) of the Lease, as respects abatement of rent and rei interitus is not displaced by any express obligation on the landlord to carry out storm damage repairs. Where an hiatus in the express terms of a nominate contact is filled by a term implied ex lege, one never really enters the territory of implying terms justified on the basis of a need to give basic "business efficacy", since that need has indeed been addressed by the term implied at common law. To suggest that the common law solution might be improved is not to the point.

[20] In these circumstances we consider that the pursuers are correct in their submission that the decisions of the sheriff and the Sheriff Principal are unsound. In our view the defenders are mistaken in contending that the pursuers as landlords were under any legal obligation to execute the storm damage repairs beyond their obligation to apply the insurance monies thereto (which it is not disputed has been done).

[21] We shall therefore allow the appeal; recall the interlocutors of the Sheriff Principal and the sheriff; and remit to the sheriff to proceed as accords in the light of this Opinion (there being the other issues, not previously addressed in these proceedings, indicated in para.2 supra).

 


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