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Scottish Court of Session Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> PS Properties(2) Ltd v Callaway Homes Ltd [2007] ScotCS CSOH_162 (25 September 2007)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/2007/CSOH_162.html
Cite as: [2007] CSOH 162, [2007] ScotCS CSOH_162

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OUTER HOUSE, COURT OF SESSION

 

[2007] CSOH 162

 

     

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

OPINION OF LADY DORRIAN

 

in the cause

 

PS PROPERTIES (2) LIMITED

 

Pursuer;

 

against

 

CALLAWAY HOMES LIMITED

 

Defender:

 

ญญญญญญญญญญญญญญญญญ________________

 

 

Pursuer: P. Davies; Harper Macleod

Defender: McLean; Campbell Smith

 

4 September 2007

 

[1] This case came before me on 4 September 2007 on a motion for recall of interim interdict. Interim interdict had been granted on 24 August 2006, interdicting the defenders or anyone on their behalf from proceeding to carry out certain structural work to the common stair of the tenement building 53 Murray Place, Stirling. The property in question is a tenement building comprising both commercial and domestic premises. The pursuers' properties are described on record as ". . . a shop at 49/51 Murray Place, Stirling ("the first shop"); and a shop at 55 Murray Place, Stirling ("the second shop")." The first shop is let to tenants (Poundstretcher), while the second shop is vacant. At the time of the interim interdict the defenders were proprietors of the top left flat and the top right flat in the tenement. The two second floor flats were, at the time, in private hands.

[2] This dispute arises from proposals to carry out structural work in the common stair of the property. A certain amount of temporary, remedial work was carried out during 2005 and a report prepared by structural engineers dated 13 September 2005. That report records that the temporary, remedial work was carried out to remove any doubt over the immediate stability and safety of the stair. They then made proposals for permanent repair to be carried out. A Notice seeking agreement to a Scheme Decision under the Tenements (Scotland) Act 2004 was served on 16 May 2006 by the defenders' agents on the pursuers and other proprietors within the tenement. It appears (7/2) that Poundstretcher were agreeable to the remedial work being carried out and to bearing the 2/6 share of costs which would fall on the pursuer. However, it was the consent of the pursuers, as proprietors, which was required. The pursuers refused to give this consent. Consent was given by the proprietor of the second floor right on 29 May 2006. On 24 May 2006 the pursuers wrote to the defenders (6/9) indicating that they were concerned about the deteriorating state of the common stair. They were proposing refurbishment of the retail units and, at the same time, made proposals which would involve the relocation of the entrance passageway so that the access to the tenement, presently through a common close entered from the front of the building, would be by way of a relocated common closed entered from the right hand side of the building. The defenders were unwilling to agree to this proposal. In or about June 2006 the pursuers were in negotiation with the proprietors of the second floor flat, with a view to purchasing those flats. Offers to purchase those flats were made and agreed in principle. On 4 August 2006 the defenders' agents wrote to the pursuers advising that they understood that if the work were not carried out, Stirling council would serve a Repairs Notice which would involve additional expense. They further advised that their clients ". . . had now come to the view that the work really has to be carried out under the powers available within the Tenements (Scotland) Act 2004 to carry out emergency works where these are in the interests of health and safety. They have now instructed Alexander Scott (Consulting Engineers) Ltd, who were involved in the initial propping up of the staircase, to commence the necessary work". Work was thereafter commenced in line with the proposals in the Scheme Decision. So things stood at the time when interim interdict was granted on 24 August 2006.

[3] When the matter came before me for recall of interim interdict matters were slightly different. The proprietor of the other second floor flat had accepted the Scheme Decision on 3rd September 2006. Morover, the pursuers' offers to purchase the second floor flats had come to nothing, apparently through difficulties of funding. The offers to purchase were withdrawn in January 2007 and the flats subsequently sold to the defenders, who now own all four residential properties. On 29 March 2007 the pursuers intimated that they no longer wished to proceed with the relocation of the entrance close. They were asked if they would now be willing to agree to the completion of the Scheme Decision works. By letter dated 19 April 2007 (7/18) their agents advised that they were carrying out further investigations relating to ". . . the structure and dilapidation of the building as a whole which impact greatly on the stairs." They suggested that ". . . repairs to the stairs would be pointless if the rest of the building remained in such a state of dilapidation. Clearly, all repairs to the building need to be carried out in a structured manner."

[4] It was in these circumstances that the motion for recall of interim interdict was enrolled. The pursuers marked opposition to that on the basis that "the works proposed by the defenders are insufficient to repair the tenement at 49 to 55 Murray Place to the standard that is required. The works proposed by the defenders are of a temporary nature and would ultimately still leave the tenement in an unsafe state."

[5] The defenders' primary argument was based on their understanding of the Tenements (Scotland) Act 2004. That act (section 4 and schedule 1) provides for a Tenement Management Scheme. Rule 1.4 of schedule 1 provides that a decision is a "Scheme Decision" if made in accordance with rule 2. Rule 2.5 provides for a Scheme Decision to be made by a majority of all the votes allocated. Rule 2.2 provides that for the purpose of voting on any proposed Scheme Decision one vote is allocated as respects each flat. Section 29(1) provides that "flat" includes "any premises, whether or not -

(a) used or intended to be used for residential purposes; or

(b) on the one floor;"

The defenders submitted that the majority of votes having been cast in favour of the Scheme Decision, they had a strong prima faci case for recall of the interim interdict. Turning to the balance of convenience, their argument is largely that which is averred on pages 23 and 24 of the reclaiming print. They drew attention in particular to the fact that the work carried out in 2005 had always been anticipated to be temporary. Reference was made to the local council's position as disclosed in an e-mail of 30 August 2006 in which it was indicated that the reason a dangerous building notice had not been served was that the temporary work had been undertaken. That solution had been permitted by the council on the understanding that permanent repair would follow and that if no progress were made towards that the council would consider an enforcement notice. However, it has to be noted that no such notice has, in fact, been served. Council also relied on reports 7/19 and 7/21 from consulting civil and structural engineers in relation to the state of the building. 7/19, a report of May 2007, noted that the remedial works were, in fact, eighty per cent completed and suggested that the interdict was ". . . potentially harmful by delaying unduly the repair works . . .". 7/21 is a further letter from them dated 2 August 2007 which referred to recent forced entry and subsequent vandalism at the property resulting in ". . . significant damage to the interior of the second floor flats, including structural damage, this intrusion further highlights the continued risk to the structural fabric of the property as a whole, specifically through fire, vandalism, or further significant structural damage arising from any deliberate interference with, or acts of vandalism undertaken against, the existing temporary propping system to the main stairway, such attempts having already taken place following the recent break in." The report 7/19 of process also observed that there was no structural reason why any works which were planned for the ground and first floor levels could not be initiated and undertaken independently of the works on the upper stairway.

[6] In response, counsel for the pursuers did not primarily reply on the opposition as noted in the motion sheet. Rather his position was that, in the first place, there was no Scheme Decision and, in the second place, the works anticipated were not urgent.

[7] In relation to the first of these points, his argument was that rather than consisting of six units, as claimed by the defenders - four domestic properties and two shops - the property consisted of eight units. These units were effectively six domestic flats, two on each floor and the two shops at ground floor level. In spite of the fact that "the first shop" consists of the ground floor and the whole of the first floor and is described in the title sheet as "the shop on the ground and first floor and the toilets on the landing", this property in fact had to be looked at as three flats for the purposes of section 29 of the Tenements (Scotland) Act 2004. Counsel submitted that one had to look at the original purpose for which the building was designed, not the way in which it was now divided up. The property was designed as a traditional tenement of eight units which meant that five votes were required to form a majority. He relied on section 26 of the Tenements (Scotland) Act 2004 which sets out the meaning of "tenement" in subsection 1 as meaning ". . . a building or a part of the building which comprises two related flats which, or more than two such flats at least two of which -

(a) are, or are designed to be, in separate ownership; and

(b) are divided from each other horizontally,

and, except where the context otherwise requires, includes the solum and any other land pertaining to that building, or, as the case may be, part of the building and the expression "tenement building" shall be construed accordingly." Counsel submitted that under reference to section 26(1)(a) the tenement required to be viewed as a building of eight units.

[8] As to the remainder of his submission, counsel argued that the works which were proposed by the defenders were neither useful nor urgent. The emergency work which was in place was sufficient for present purposes. The pursuers did propose that other work be carried out to the tenement and there was no pressing urgency for the work which the defenders wished to have carried out. He submitted that the pursuers were seeking to maintain the status quo until any dispute over the extent of remedial work was resolved. Recall of the interim interdict would, in effect, bring an end to the dispute as to how the work proposed by the defenders would be carried out.

[9] I did not accept the pursuers' submission that the building required to be looked at as a building of eight units. I did not accept that one had to look at the historical design of the building for the purpose of determining how many votes were to be allocated in terms of rule 4 of schedule 1. In my view, the building was properly to be considered, having regard to the titles and section 29, as a building of six units. It follows that the defenders have a majority in favour of the Scheme Decision. The work is eighty per cent completed and does not appear clash in any way with remedial work of a different kind proposed by the pursuers. The longer the work is left uncompleted the greater the risk to the building, not only from the passage of time, but from the incursion of vandals, as has recently been the case. Accordingly, I recalled the interim interdict.


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URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/2007/CSOH_162.html