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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> A C Stoddart & Sons, Colstoun (1995) (A Firm) v Balfour Thomson CA & Ors [2007] ScotCS CSIH_38 (01 June 2007)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/2007/CSIH_38.html
Cite as: [2007] ScotCS CSIH_38, [2007] CSIH 38

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SECOND DIVISION, INNER HOUSE, COURT OF SESSION

 

Lord Justice Clerk

Lord Macfadyen

Lord Eassie

 

 

 

 

 

 

[2007] CSIH 38

XA97/06

 

OPINION OF THE

LORD JUSTICE CLERK

 

in the Appeal

 

by

 

THE FIRM OF A C STODDART & SONS, COLSTOUN (1995)

Tenant and Appellant;

 

against

 

BALFOUR THOMSON CA, Mrs HILARY FLORENCE BURN CALLANDER and DOUGLAS ANDREW CONNELL WS (The Trustees of the Colstoun Trust)

Landlords and Respondents:

______

 

For the tenant and appellant: Sir Crispin Agnew of Lochnaw, QC; Morton Fraser

For the landlord and respondent: Haddow QC; Turcan Connell

 

1 June 2007

Introduction

[1] This is an appeal from the Scottish Land Court relating to the tenancy of the holding of Colstoun Mains, Haddington. The tenant is a limited partnership. The landlords are the present trustees of the Colstoun Trust.

[2] The lease runs for fifteen years from Martinmas (28 November) 1995 to Martinmas 2010 and thereafter from year to year until it is terminated by either party on not less than one year's written notice. There are breaks at Martinmas in every third year of the contractual term; but these are available to the landlord only. The breaks are exercisable upon the landlord's giving to the tenant not less than one year's and not more than two years' written notice.

[3] The rent review clause is in the following terms:

"The Landlord and the Tenant may, by notice in writing served on the other party not less than one year but not more than two years prior to Martinmas in each of 1998, 2001, 2004 and 2007, demand a reference to arbitration of the question of what rent should be payable in respect of the farm as from Martinmas 1998, Martinmas 2001, Martinmas 2004 and Martinmas 2007, and failing agreement between the landlord and the tenant as to the said rent the question shall be referred accordingly."

 

[4] By notice dated 27 November 2003 the general partner of the appellant demanded a rent review in the following terms:

"I, Andrew Alexander Stoddart ... hereby demand a reference to the Scottish Land Court to determine the question of what rent shall be payable in respect of the above holding as from 28 November 2004, being the next day after the date of this notice on which the tenancy could have been terminated by Notice to Quit or Notice of Intention to Quit given at this date".

 

On 26 November 2004 the tenant applied to the Land Court for a determination of the rent. Its pleadings request the Land Court to revise the rent in accordance with section 13 of the Agricultural Holdings (Scotland) Act 1991 (the 1991 Act), as amended by the Agricultural Holdings (Scotland) Act 2003 (the 2003 Act).

[5] By Order dated 12 May 2006 a Divisional Court, consisting of the Chairman and one member, held that the tenant was entitled to have a rent review as at Martinmas 2004 carried out by the Land Court "on the basis of what is fair and reasonable as between the parties to a continuing lease." That is the Order appealed against.

 

Section 13 of the 1991 Act

[6] At the date of the lease, section 13(1) of the 1991 Act provided as follows.

"Subject to subsection (8) below, the landlord or the tenant of an agricultural holding may, whether the tenancy was created before or after the commencement of this Act, by notice in writing served on the other party, demand a reference to arbitration of the question what rent should be payable in respect of the holding as from the next day after the date of the notice on which the tenancy could have been terminated by notice to quit (or notice of intention to quit) given on that date, and the matter shall be referred accordingly."

 

[7] As part of the major reform of jurisdiction in agricultural holdings disputes effected by the 2003 Act, the jurisdiction of the arbiter under section 13 was superseded by that of the Land Court (2003 Act, s 63; Sched 1, para 15).

[8] Section 13(1), as amended by the 2003 Act, provides as follows:

"Subject to subsection (8) below, the landlord or the tenant of an agricultural holding may, whether the tenancy was created before or after the commencement of this Act have determined by the Land Court the question what rent should be payable in respect of the holding as from the next day after the date of the notice on which the tenancy could have been terminated by notice to quit (or notice of intention to quit) given on that date.

 

The remainder of section 13 sets out intricate provisions for the valuation exercise in a review carried out under that section. It provides for an open market basis of valuation and gives detailed directions to the Land Court as to the way in which it should deal with the sitting tenant factor, distortion of rent by reason of scarcity of lets, comparison evidence, current economic conditions in agriculture, improvements, dilapidations, non-agricultural uses of the holding, and so on.

 

The decision of the Land Court and its reasons

[9] The Land Court held that the tenant was entitled under the rent review clause to a review as at Martinmas 2004, and that, in light of the subsequent amendment of section 13, the tenant's notice dated 27 November 2003 should be treated as if it were a demand for a review by the Land Court. Its decision on these points is not challenged by the landlords.

[10] However, the Land Court held (1) that the tenant was not entitled to have such a review carried out under section 13; and (2) that, instead, the review should be carried out on the basis of what was fair and reasonable as between the parties to a continuing lease. These are the two questions raised in this appeal.

 

Applicability of section 13

[11] The Land Court considered that the tenant was not entitled to have the review carried out under section 13(1) because the break at Martinmas 2004 was open only to the landlord. It held that the plain intention of section 13 was that the right to have a rent review carried out under it was available only to a party who had the right to terminate the lease as at the review date. It expressed its conclusion on this point as follows.

"Where a break provision is explicitly in favour of the landlord only there is no reason to think that Parliament intended to confer an extra benefit on the tenant. We consider that the plain intention of the section [sc section 13] is that the giving of notice relates to notice given by the person invoking the provisions of the section" (Note, at p 8).

 

[12] The Land Court referred to two particular considerations. The first was that in the reference to the review date as being the next day after the date of the review notice on which the tenancy could have been terminated "by notice to quit (or notice of intention to quit)," the parentheses appeared to be significant and conveyed the same sense as words such as "as the case may be." If the real intention of that provision had been that the right to a review was to be open to either party, whether or not that party had the right to give notice terminating the tenancy at the review date, there would have been no need for the parentheses. The Land Court, however, came to accept the submission for the tenant that, in light of the legislative history of the section, little weight could be given to this point (Note, at pp 8-9).

[13] The second consideration, which the Land Court thought was important, was expressed as follows.

"However, in looking at the intention of Parliament, we think that an important factor is the need to look beyond the specifics of the instant case. The tenant's argument is, in effect, that the word 'could' is not restricted by reference to the person giving the notice. The argument is based on a contention that no limitation is to be implied. However, it seems clear to us that some limitation is necessary and a limitation based on the power of the person giving the notice is an obvious one which would work clearly and in accordance with commonsense expectation" (ibid, at p 9).

 

The court summarised its approach as follows.

"We are satisfied that the intention of the legislation must have been to allow a party to apply for review of rent only where the right to bring the lease to an end was within his control. It follows that the tenant was not entitled to invoke section 13 in the circumstances of the present case" (ibid, at p 10).

 

 

Basis of valuation

 

[14] The Land Court then had to consider on what other basis the review could be conducted. It was satisfied that there was no real basis for the implication that the parties intended from the outset to incorporate the statutory review mechanism. It found it difficult to imagine that the parties would freely have invoked section 13 as a method of settling their rent disputes. This was its conclusion.

"In the context of attempting to identify what parties must be assumed to have accepted at the time when they entered the lease, we have no reason to suppose an intention to adopt the whole provisions of [section 13] and there is no basis upon which an intention to adopt part of it could be identified."

 

[15] Relying on City of Aberdeen Council v Clark (1999 SLT 613), the Land Court then decided that "the basis of rent should be a fair and reasonable one as between parties." It said that

"We are satisfied that the only reasonable inference is that parties intended the arbiter to fix such rent as he thought fair and reasonable. Although there is, of course, much scope for dispute as to what is fair and reasonable in any particular case, the lease provides, as between the parties, a fixed method of having a rent determined. They will be bound, without further negotiation, by the independent decision of the third party ... we are satisfied that there is no real basis for an implication that parties intended from the outset to incorporate the statutory mechanisms" (Note, at p 12).

 

Its overall conclusions were as follows.

"For the reasons set out above, we conclude that the tenant is entitled to seek review of rent in terms of the lease but not under section 13; that the Court is able to act in place of the arbiter; and that the basis of rent should be a fair and reasonable one as between parties. For avoidance of doubt, we add that we consider that it would not be fair, as between parties to a continuing lease, for a tenant to be rented on his own improvements, although the question of what improvements are properly to be regarded as his own, may not be free from difficulty" (Note, at p 14).

 

 

The submissions for the parties
[16
] Counsel for the tenant contended that on a proper construction of section 13(1) either party could require a rent review under section 13(1) at any break point in the lease, even if the break was open only to the other. The wording of section 13(1) pointed unambiguously to that conclusion. In any event, the Land Court erred in its construction of the rent review clause, the proper construction being that a review demanded in terms of it should be carried out in accordance with section 13(1). If the intention of the legislature could be invoked as an aid to construction, it was more likely that that intention was to protect the tenant against unfairness in relation to reviews during the contractual term (Johnson v Moreton, [1980] AC 37, Lord Salmon at p 52G; MacFarlane v Falfield Investments, 1998 SC 14, Lord President Rodger at p 28).

[17] Counsel for the landlord adopted the reasoning of the Land Court on both questions. He submitted that the point as to the parentheses in the amended section 13 had greater significance than the Land Court had given to it. Section 13(1) should be read to mean, in a case where the tenant sought a rent review, that the tenant could require it only at the date at which he could have terminated the lease by notice of intention to quit. Because the 1991 Act gave the tenant the benefit of security of tenure, that did not mean that it gave the tenant in this case the additional benefit of the right to a section 13 review at a date at which it could not terminate the lease. The arbitration contemplated by the rent review clause, when required by the tenant at a break, would have been conducted under the general arbitration provisions of the 1991 Act that then applied (1991 Act, s 60, now amended by the 2003 Act).

 

Conclusions

The section 13 point

[18] In my opinion, the Land Court has erred on this point. The parties agree that, in general, a rent review is competent at a break date (Strachan v Hunter, 1916 SC 901; Edell v Dulieu, [1924] AC 38). The question is whether in this case the review that the tenant has required can be conducted under section 13 although the tenant cannot terminate the tenancy at the review date.

[19] The Land Court has reached its conclusion on this question by considering what Parliament must have intended in enacting section 13(1). In my opinion, that approach to the problem is both unnecessary and inappropriate if section 13(1) yields a clear and unambiguous meaning (Stair Memorial Encyclopaedia, vol 12, paras 1102-3; 1105, 1107, 1109). In my opinion, it does. On the plain wording of section 13(1), the right to a review is open to either party at any date at which the tenancy could have been terminated by notice to quit or by notice of intention to quit. The section does not limit that right by providing, as it could readily have done, that the right should apply only at any date at which the lease could have been terminated by the party seeking the review.

[20] In the legislation before the 1991 consolidation, notice of termination of tenancy, whether given by landlord or tenant, was referred to as a notice to quit (Agricultural Holdings (Scotland) Act 1949, s 24). In the 1991 Act such a notice, when given by the tenant, was referred to by the new nomenclature of "notice of intention to quit" (s 21(2)). This required the consequential amendment of section 13(1) by the insertion of the words "or of notice of intention to quit." The fact that those words were inserted in parentheses is, in my opinion, a matter of style only. It cannot bear the interpretation to which the Land Court referred and for which counsel for the landlords contended.

[21] Since I consider that the question turns on the construction of section 13(1), I consider that the case law on trigger clauses in commercial leases to which counsel for the landlord referred has no bearing on the point.

[22] I would not have accepted the submission of counsel for the tenant that if the intention of Parliament in section 13 could legitimately be considered, the likely intention was that of protecting the tenant against unfairness in relation to rent reviews during the term of the lease. The valuation method set out in section 13 favours the tenant in certain respects; for example, by providing that he shall not be rented on his improvements and by requiring that scarcity should be valued out; but it favours the landlord in other important respects, not least in requiring that the valuation should be made on an open market basis and that the sitting tenant factor should be disregarded. From section 13 as a whole, I cannot discern any legislative intention of the kind suggested by counsel for the tenant.

[23] I conclude that on a straightforward construction of section 13(1), the tenant is entitled to have a review as at Martinmas 2004 carried out by the Land Court under that section, and therefore that the appeal succeeds.

 

The basis of valuation

[24] On the view that I have taken on the first point, this question does not arise. I should add however that even if I had been of the view that the rent review demanded under the lease was not to be formally conducted as a section 13 review, I would have nevertheless have considered that such a review would have had to be carried out on the basis of valuation set out in section 13.

[25] In an agricultural lease, if the parties do not stipulate that a specific valuation method should apply at any rent review during its currency (eg Dunbar and Anderson, 1985 SLCR 1), the proper inference is, in my opinion, that the well-known and well-understood provisions of section 13 should apply.

[26] Moreover, in the rent review clause in this case the review dates correspond with the dates of the contractual breaks at which the lease may be terminated by the landlord, and the timetable for the serving of a demand for a review corresponds with the timetable for service by the landlord of the notice to quit by which the tenancy could be terminated as at those dates. In turn, the duration clause reflects the provisions of section 21 of the 1991 Act relating to the service of notices to quit and notices of intention to quit. The review procedure and the review intervals set out in the rent review clause exactly reflect the provisions of section 13 as they stood at the date of the lease. In my opinion, these provisions imply that the parties intended that any rent review that should be carried out at a break should be conducted under section 13.

[27] This interpretation of the rent review clause avoids an eccentric consequence of the Land Court's decision; namely, that if the landlord, as the party in right of the break provision, had required the review at Martinmas 2004, the review would have been conducted on the open market basis provided by section 13; whereas if the tenant had required it, it would have been conducted on the fair and reasonable basis ordered by the Land Court.

[28] In City of Aberdeen Council v Clark (supra), on which the Land Court relied, a formal commercial lease that appears to have been drafted in detail, failed to specify the valuation criterion by which an arbiter was to conduct a rent review (at p 614). An Extra Division held that it was reasonable to suppose, in the absence of any contrary provision, that the parties intended that the arbiter would fix the rent on the basis of what was fair and reasonable between the parties to the lease. The Court considered it plain that, in the absence of any contrary provision or indication, the implication would be that the rent should be determined on the basis of the provisions of the existing lease as they subsisted at the review date (at p 619).

[29] I doubt whether a rent review of an agricultural holding can be meaningfully carried out in terms of such a vague formula. A rent review under section 13 is a complex process in which numerous factors must expressly be taken into account or disregarded. If a review is to be conducted on the fair and reasonable basis envisaged by the Land Court, it is impossible for the parties to know whether or not the starting point will be open market value; or, whatever the starting point is to be, which of the valuation factors in section 13 are to apply and which are not. Other than by saying that the tenant should not be rented on his own improvements, the Land Court has left us in the dark as to what the fair and reasonable formula means in this context. That confirms me in the view that it never occurred to the parties to provide for rent review on any basis other than that specified in the 1991 Act.

 

Disposal

[30] I propose to your Lordships that we should allow the appeal and return the case to the Land Court to carry out a rent review of the holding as at Martinmas 2004 in accordance with section 13 of the 1991 Act, as amended.


SECOND DIVISION, INNER HOUSE, COURT OF SESSION

 

Lord Justice Clerk

Lord Macfadyen

Lord Eassie

 

 

 

 

 

 

[2007] CSIH 38

XA97/06

 

OPINION OF LORD MACFADYEN

 

in the Appeal

 

by

 

THE FIRM OF A C STODDART & SONS, COLSTOUN (1995)

Tenant and Appellant;

 

against

 

BALFOUR THOMSON CA, Mrs HILARY FLORENCE BURN CALLANDER and DOUGLAS ANDREW CONNELL WS (The Trustees of the Colstoun Trust)

Landlords and Respondents:

______

 

 

For the tenant and appellant: Sir Crispin Agnew of Lochnaw, QC; Morton Fraser

For the landlord and respondent: Haddow QC; Turcan Connell

 

 

1 June 2007

[31] I agree that, for the reasons given by your Lordship in the chair, the appeal should be disposed of in the manner proposed by your Lordship.


SECOND DIVISION, INNER HOUSE, COURT OF SESSION

 

Lord Justice Clerk

Lord Macfadyen

Lord Eassie

 

 

 

 

 

 

[2007] CSIH 38

XA97/06

 

OPINION OF LORD EASSIE

 

in the Appeal

 

by

 

THE FIRM OF A C STODDART & SONS, COLSTOUN (1995)

Tenant and Appellant;

 

against

 

BALFOUR THOMSON CA, Mrs HILARY FLORENCE BURN CALLANDER and DOUGLAS ANDREW CONNELL WS (The Trustees of the Colstoun Trust)

Landlords and Respondents:

______

 

 

For the tenant and appellant: Sir Crispin Agnew of Lochnaw, QC; Morton Fraser

For the landlord and respondent: Haddow QC; Turcan Connell

 

 

1 June 2007

[32] I agree that, for the reasons given by your Lordship in the chair, this appeal should be allowed and the case returned to the Scottish Land Court to carry out the rent review in accordance with section 13 of the 1991 Act, as amended.

 


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