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Scottish Court of Session Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Trygort (Number 2) Ltd v UK Home Finance Ltd & Anor [2008] ScotCS CSIH_56 (29 October 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/2008/CSIH_56.html Cite as: 2009 SCLR 58, [2008] CSIH 56, 2009 SC 100, 2008 Hous LR 62, 2008 SLT 1065, 2008 GWD 35-529, [2008] ScotCS CSIH_56 |
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FIRST DIVISION, INNER HOUSE, COURT OF SESSION |
|
Lord PresidentLord KingarthLord Mackay of Drumadoon |
[2008] CSIH 56XA215/06 OPINION OF THE COURT delivered by LORD KINGARTH in Appeal from the Sheriffdom
of Glasgow and Strathkelvin at in the cause TRYGORT (NUMBER 2) LIMITED Pursuers and Appellants; against UK HOME FINANCE LIMITED
AND ANOTHER Defenders and Respondents: _______ |
Act: Dean of Faculty; Brodies
LLP
Alt: Crawford; Archibald Campbell & Harley, WS
29 October 2008
[1] By lease
dated 12 July and
[2] It is a
matter of agreement that the first respondents vacated the subjects on or about
[3] The relevant part
of Clause 2 of the lease, dealing with break options, is in the following
terms:
"Declaring however that (One) without
prejudice to the rights and remedies of the respective parties hereto in
respect of any antecedent breach of These Presents it shall be competent to
determine These Presents as follows, namely (i) at the sole option of the
Tenant on 31st March 2005 upon the Tenant providing not less than
3 months prior written notice to that effect to the Landlord time being of
the essence and (ii) at the option of either or both of the Landlord or the
Tenant at any date subsequent to 31st March 2005 on the party
so determining providing the other party with not less than six months prior
written notice to that effect to be issued on or any date subsequent to 1st October
2004 time being of the essence and (Two) the Tenant shall not be entitled to
issue any notice determining These Presents in terms of this Clause 2 if
the Tenant has been in breach of its obligations to the Landlord in terms of
These Presents."
[4] It was
expressly provided in clause 8 of the lease that it was to be interpreted
in accordance with the law of
"The first defender has been in
breach of its obligations to the Landlord pursuers in terms of the missives
concluded between the solicitors acting for the Landlord pursuers and the
solicitors acting for the defender dated 4th June 2004 and 28th May
2004 respectively and in terms of the lease in furtherance of the missives
during the currency of the lease. On 4th June
2004 the first defenders failed to meet the requirements of clause 5 of
the formal letter comprised in the missives dated 28th May 2004
... requiring it to settle the Landlords' expenses of £5000 plus VAT thereon and
stamp duty land tax on the lease together with the dues of registering the
Lease in the Books of Council and Session and obtaining three extracts thereof
within a contractually agreed period of five days. The said sum of £5000 plus VAT was finally
paid on
[6] It was
accepted in submission before the sheriff (and before this court) that as at
the date when the relevant break notice was issued, there were no subsisting
breaches of contract by the first respondents, any such earlier breaches having
been remedied. It was nevertheless the
appellants' position that it was enough for them to prove that the first
respondents had been in breach of contract at some stage. In such circumstances they were not entitled
to issue the notice. This was disputed
by the respondents, who maintained that the clause related to subsisting
breaches only. After debate (in which
both parties agreed that the matter could be resolved without the need for
proof) the sheriff dismissed the action, holding that there were no relevant
averments to indicate that the first respondents were not entitled to exercise
the option. In brief, the sheriff was of
the view that although the ordinary meaning of the language of the clause
favoured the contentions of the appellants (which, it seems, was not disputed
before him by the respondents) nevertheless, and following the language of Lord
Hope in Melanesian Mission Trust Board
v Australian Mutual Provident Society [1997] 2 EGLR 128 at page 129, this was a case where the ordinary meaning could
not be given to the words used.
[7] On behalf of
the appellants the learned Dean of Faculty submitted that the plain ordinary
meaning of the relevant part of Clause 2 applied to breaches occurring at
any time. The parties could have used
the present tense, (i.e. "... if the Tenant is in breach of the obligations ...)
but did not. It could not be said that
effect could not be given to that plain ordinary meaning. A high test required to be satisfied before that
could be said in any case. Reference was
made to the unreported decision of Lord Reed in Credential Bath Street Limited v Venture Investment Placement Limited [2007] CSOH 208, at
paragraph 36. It was plain from the
opinions delivered in the Court of Appeal in Bass Holdings Limited v Morton
Music Limited [1988] 1 Ch. 493 that it was accepted that a clause having
the meaning contended for by the appellants could feasibly be devised
(reference in particular being made to Kerr L.J. at page 534 and
Bingham L.J. at page 541). Nor
could it be said that such a clause made no commercial sense. The apparently contrary rule of law which
applied in England to conventional clauses relating to tenants' break or
renewal options (referred to, and followed, in Bass Holdings Limited v Morton
Music Limited) had no counterpart in Scotland.
[8] For the
respondents Miss Crawford referred, in relation to the proper approach to
the construction of commercial contracts, to Bank of Credit and Commerce International SA v Ali and Others [2002] 1 AC 251, Investors Compensation Scheme v West
Bromwich Building Society [1998] 1 WLR 896, Melanesian Mission Trust Board v Australian Mutual Provident Society and Charter Reinsurance Company Limited v Fagan [1997] AC 313. She
contended that the plain ordinary meaning of the language favoured the
respondents' construction. Stress was
placed on the use of the present perfect tense.
By contrast the relevant part of the clause did not say, as it could
have, "... if the Tenant had been in breach of its obligations at any time
...". If that was not accepted, the
language was at least ambiguous. In that
event, having regard to the detailed and numerous obligations undertaken by the
first respondents under the lease and to the line of authority summarised and
followed in Bass Holdings Limited v Morton Music Limited, the respondents'
construction was the one which made commercial sense, and should be
preferred. If, contrary to these
submissions, the court was to hold that the ordinary meaning of the words used
favoured the appellants' construction, this was a case where that ordinary
meaning could not be given to them. That
could be said to lead to commercial absurdity or to the attribution to the
parties of an intention which they plainly could not have had.
[10] That being so
we have little doubt that the commercially sensible construction which falls to
be preferred is that contended for by the respondents. In that connection we consider that much
assistance can be gained from consideration of the long-standing line of authority
in
[11] It is true
that Bingham L.J. referred to the line established in the cases as a rule of
law (see page 541) and that no such rule of law may be said to have been
established in
[12] In particular,
Kerr L.J., under reference to numerous cases dating back to 1854, said (at
page 518):
"The upshot of these authorities is
that spent breaches will not destroy the tenant's right to exercise the option,
but subsisting breaches will. As shown
by the passages to which I refer below, the reasoning is in effect as
follows. First, it must be accepted that
absolute and precise compliance by the tenant with every single covenant
throughout the period of the lease prior to the operative date is virtually
impossible of attainment. If this were
required as a condition precedent then the option would in practice be
worthless or merely at the mercy of the landlord. Therefore the parties cannot have intended
that the absence of spent breaches should be a condition precedent. Secondly, however, it is natural and sensible
that the landlord should require the tenant not to be in breach of any covenant
on the operative date and that all outstanding claims for breach of covenant
should have been previously satisfied, so that the lease is then effectively
clear. The proviso is therefore to be
construed as intended to apply to subsisting breaches, with the result that the
relevant condition precedent is the absence of any subsisting breach."
He emphasised later (at page 519) that the reasoning was
"of course particularly cogent in relation to 'break options'. In such cases it will obviously be of great
importance to the landlord that the demised land or premises should be
surrendered to him free from any subsisting breaches of covenant".
[13] To a similar
effect Bingham L.J. noted, at page 538:
"Where a tenant wished to take
advantage of a break clause, the landlord was not greatly concerned with the
history of the tenant's performance before the break. The worse the tenant's performance, the
readier the landlord might reasonably be to get rid of him. But whatever the tenant's defaults in the
past, the landlord will be very much concerned that at the time of the break
the rent should be fully paid ... and the covenants fully observed (so that the
property could be re-let or sold without delay or additional expenditure)."
"The two alternative constructions
have only to be stated for it to be apparent that the 'never any breach'
construction would mean that in practice the condition would be impossible of
fulfilment in almost all cases of leases of buildings containing a full range
of repairing and other covenants by a tenant.
However diligent or even punctilious a tenant may be in carrying out his
obligations under his lease, in such cases there will in practice inevitably be
occasions when there will be outstanding some dilapidations which would,
strictly, constitute breaches of the repairing or redecorating covenants. Thus the practical consequence of the 'never
any breach' construction in such cases would be that the break or renewal
option would seldom, if ever, be exercisable by a tenant".
He went on to say in addition (of the "never any breach"
construction):
"Even in the case of other leases,
where the tenant's covenants might be less far reaching, this construction
would lead to much uncertainty for tenants and their assigns. Break options and renewal options may be
valuable but, on this construction, after a few years and particularly if there
have been assignments or sub-lettings, the current tenant or a would-be
assignee of a lease would be unable in many cases to discover whether or not a
break option or a renewal option had already lapsed by reason of a breach of
covenant. Indeed, short of a positive
answer from a co-operative landlord, it is difficult to see how in this type of
situation a tenant or would-be assignee could ever be sure that there had not
been a breach, maybe trifling, of one covenant or another in the history of the
lease".
"While it would of course be possible
to formulate a proviso which is sufficiently explicit to cause spent breaches
to preclude the exercise of the option, there appears to be no reported case in
which this was so."
Equally, while Scott J., at first instance, accepted that "It
would be possible to formulate a condition precedent which did require that
there should not at any time have been any breach of a tenant's covenant" (as
recorded at page 540), it is perhaps not without significance that he used
words (i.e. "at any time") which do not appear in the clause under
consideration in this case.