BAILII [Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback]

Scottish Court of Session Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Style Menswear Ltd [2008] ScotCS CSOH_149 (09 October 2008)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/2008/CSOH_149.html
Cite as: 2008 GWD 36-538, [2008] ScotCS CSOH_149, [2008] CSOH 149, 2008 Hous LR 66

[New search] [Help]


 

OUTER HOUSE, COURT OF SESSION

 

[2008] CSOH 149

 

P1683/08

 

 

OPINION OF LADY SMITH

 

in the Petition of

 

STYLE MENSWEAR LIMITED

 

Petitioners;

 

For

 

Suspension of a charge for payment and for interdict and for suspension and interdict ad interim

 

ญญญญญญญญญญญญญญญญญ________________

 

 

Petitioners: McIlvride; Anderson Fyfe

Respondents: Bowen; McGrigors

9 October 2008

 

[1] The petitioners are tenants of Unit 25, St Enoch Centre, Glasgow. St Enoch Trustee Company Limited are their landlords, all under and in terms of a lease between the Church Commissioners for England and CS Property Glasgow Limited, and British Shoe Corporation Limited dated 4 and 18 September and 18 October 1990 and registered in the Books of Council and Session on 6 February 1991. Although the landlord company has not yet lodged answers I will, for convenience, refer to them as respondents.

[2] The petitioners and respondents are successors to the original parties to the lease. The petitioners are retailers who trade through retail outlets elsewhere in the UK in addition to Unit 25 of the St Enoch Centre. The respondents have sought to execute diligence against the petitioners in respect of two quarters unpaid rent. The current annual rent is ฃ169,141.24. A charge was served on 23 September 2008. On 7 October 2008 the petitioners sought and obtained an order suspending the charge ad interim. They now seek, in addition to that, an order for interim interdict to prevent the respondents and all others acting on their instructions from doing further diligence or raising any other legal proceedings on the basis of what is referred to as "the pretended certificate" of sums allegedly due by them.

 

Background

[3] St Enoch Centre ("the Centre") is a shopping centre in Glasgow constructed on the site of the old St Enoch Station. It can be accessed by entrances from St Enoch Square, Argyle Street, Dunlop Street and Howard Street and via three other entrances that lead directly into two large stores, which in turn have accesses into the common parts of the Centre. In January 2008 the respondents began works on the common parts of the Centre with a view to refurbishing and upgrading them. It is expected that the works will take another nine months or so to complete. At some unspecified point since January 2008, the Argyle Street and Dunlop Street accesses were closed and they remain closed. Also at some unspecified point since then, the St Enoch Square access was altered so as to reduce its width. Hoardings have been erected in its vicinity which bear large signs stating, under reference to the Centre, "You're getting warmer" and there are arrows pointing to the entrance. The alteration to the St Enoch Square access is shown on photographs which were produced at the hearing on the parties' motions. The alterations to that access remain in place. The petitioners' averments include,

"As a consequence of the works and of the restricted access to the Centre which shoppers are now able to obtain, there has been a material decrease in the number of shoppers visiting the Centre. The petitioners' turnover has been reduced by around 40%."

[4] The petitioners rely, in support of that averment, on 6/5 of process. It is a single sheet headed "Comparison of year on year turnover for the Envy St Enoch store". It shows the turnover figures for the 52 weeks of the year 2007, broken down into what is referred to as "Own buy" and "Concessions" and the turnover for weeks 1 to 35 of 2008 with, again, the turnover broken down into "Own buy" and "Concessions". Negative movements in turnover are calculated in percentage terms in two right-hand columns, both under reference to a downturn in total turnover and a downturn in "Own buy" turnover. The author of that document is not identified. The document is not authenticated. I was advised by Mr McIlvride, who appeared on behalf of the petitioners, that it had been printed-off by the manager of the Unit. It does not give any indication of profit levels over the periods covered, whilst a significant diminution in the turnover of what is referred to as "Concessions" is readily identifiable. The same cannot, in every case, be said of what is referred to as "Own buy". I was advised that the columns headed "Concessions" refer to sales of other brands, whereas "Own buy" refers to the petitioners' own brands. No document has been lodged to indicate what has been the performance during the same periods of comparable shops from which the petitioners trade which are situated in the locations where there are not ongoing building works. No document or averment indicates the date or dates at which the accesses referred to were closed and modified.

 


The Lease

[5] I turn to the lease. The particular parts of the lease that are relevant are as follows.

Clause 1

"1. The Property is:

ALL and WHOLE that part of the St. Enoch Centre, Glasgow, known as Unit 25 and Holding Area 4 and particularly described in Part I of the Schedule annexed and executed as relative hereto."

Clause 1.10

"1.10 "the Centre" means all and every part of the shopping and leisure development."

Clause 3.1

"3.1 To pay rent

To pay to the Landlords the rent made payable hereunder on the days and in manner aforesaid without any deduction, set-off or counterclaim (except as required by law)."

Clause 4.1

"4. ... The Landlords hereby bind and oblige themselves as follows:

4.1 Quiet Enjoyment

That the Tenants shall and may peaceably and quietly possess and enjoy the Property during the Period."

Clause 6

"6. Jurisdiction

The Lease shall be interpreted in accordance with the Law of Scotland and any dispute, difference or question of any kind that may arise between the parties or out of the terms here shall (unless otherwise provided herein) be determined in accordance with the Law of Scotland."

Schedule Part 1

"(The Property)

ALL and WHOLE that part of the Centre known as Unit Number 25 comprising a retail unit and Holding Area Number 4 comprising a storage area on the ground and basement levels respectively all as shown outlined in red and numbered accordingly on the plans numbers 3 and 2 respectively including..."

Schedule Part III

"Full right and liberty at any time and from time to time during the Period without obtaining any consent from or paying any compensation to the Tenants or to any subtenants, to erect or attach buildings, erections, signage, structures, plant or equipment in or upon or alter or rebuild any such buildings, erections, structures, plant or equipment from time to time erected or attached in or on or comprising of other parts of the Centre (including the common parts of the Centre) or any other adjoining, opposite or neighbouring land or premises belonging to the Landlords to any extent and in any manner notwithstanding that the access of light and air to the Property or any part thereof may be thereby obstructed, diminished or interfered with but so that the person carrying out such works shall cause as little damage and inconvenience as is reasonably practicable and shall make good all damage thereby caused to the Property."

 

The Petitioners' Case

[6] Turning to the petitioners' case in support of the motion for interim interdict, the petitioners' submission was that there is a prima facie case that the respondents were in breach of the lease and that that breach has caused and continues to cause them to suffer loss. It was submitted further that the balance of convenience favours the granting of interim interdict.

[7] Mr McIlvride submitted that the petitioners have a prima facie that they have suffered and continue to suffer loss. He relied solely on 6/5 of process in support of that submission. Mr McIlvride also submitted that there is a prima facie case that the respondents are in breach of their obligations. There were two aspects to that submission. Firstly, it was said they have gone beyond their rights as contained in Schedule Part III, paragraph 1. Secondly, it was said that they had gone beyond their rights because Clause 4.1 should be interpreted in accordance with English law and, when that is done, it can shown that the respondents are in breach of it. As regards the reference to English law, at Article 6 of the petition there are the following averments:

"6. That the Church Commissioners for England who, with Sears Property Glasgow Limited, entered into the contract of lease of the premises as landlords have their head office in London. At the time they entered into the contract of lease they had for many years let numerous properties in England. British Shoe Corporation Limited, who entered into the contract of lease as tenants, had their registered office in Leicester. At the material time they had numerous shops in England. It is believed and averred that many of those shops were leased. The phrase 'quiet enjoyment' in the context of a lease has a well known and judicially defined meaning in English law. It is believed and averred that meaning was well known to the original parties to the lease. Properly construed, clause 4.1 of the lease obliges the respondents to provide the petitioners with the right of quiet enjoyment of the premises as would be enjoyed by a tenant under English law, subject to the rights conferred on the respondents by Part III of the schedule to the lease. In having the works carried out in such a manner that they have obstructed to a material extent access to the premises the respondents have breached their obligation to allow the petitioners such quiet enjoyment of the premises. It would have been reasonably practicable for the respondents to arrange and phase the works so as not to restrict access to the premises to a material extent. The respondents are in material breach of the contract of lease between the parties."

[8] The averments do not actually contain any explanation of what the relevant English law, rule or principle is or as to the manner in which it differs from any relevant Scots law rule or principle.

[9] Mr McIlvride explained that the petitioners were concerned that the closure of two access points and the temporary modifications to the St Enoch Square access had brought about a reduction in passing trade. He said that the petitioners were offering to prove that that reduction had brought about at least a 40% diminution in turnover. Turning to the provisions of the lease, he submitted that they demonstrated that where the respondent landlords chose to carry out works in such a way as interferes to a material extent with the volume of business available to the petitioners, that amounted to a material breach of contract and entitled the tenant petitioners to retain rent, so long as the landlord remained in breach. In doing so they were, he said, carrying out a deduction which was envisaged by clause 3.1 of the lease. He submitted that clause 3.1 showed that the petitioners were required to pay the rent in full, unless by operation of law they were entitled to set it off or retain it.

[10] I note that, judging by the averments, what the tenants envisage is not a wholesale cessation of works by the landlords; that is not surprising given that they are liable to benefit in the longer term from an upgrading of the Centre, an upgrading which seems to be being carried out by the respondents at their expense without contribution from the tenants. Rather the petitioners seem to be looking for phasing of the works so as to allow what they refer to as "reasonable access" to the Centre whilst the works are being carried out. No specification is given though of what restrictions to access they would accept in that context. It does, however, seem to be indicated that they would accept that some restriction, short of the current restrictions, would not be objectionable.

[11] Mr McIlvride referred to and relied on two of the clauses in the lease. Firstly he relied on Schedule Part III, paragraph 1. Under reference to it, Mr McIlvride said that the petitioners accepted that the works currently being carried out by the landlords fell within the category of works described in that paragraph. He sought to make it clear however that the petitioners were not saying that the respondents couldn't carry out any works. The problem was that in this case they had not kept to causing only such damage and inconvenience as could not, in terms of reasonable practicability, be avoided, as was demonstrated by the diminution in turnover figures. The respondents were accordingly in breach.

[12] The second clause on which Mr McIlvride particularly relied was clause 4.1. He acknowledged that the lease was governed by the law of Scotland. He submitted, however, that the petitioners were seeking to persuade that it was appropriate to construe clause 4.1 against a matrix of fact which formed the background against which the original parties to the lease contracted. They must, given their English connections, have intended to confer on the tenant the right to quiet possession and enjoyment of the subjects of let, which would have been conferred on the tenant entitled to quiet enjoyment under the law of England. He founded, in particular, on the fact that the original tenant was an English company, that, as he put it, the landlords were English - in fact only one of them was English, as is to be observed from the instance in the original lease - and that, according to his submission, the specific words used are common in English commercial leases. He was not, however, seeking to suggest that such wording was not used in Scottish leases. Mr McIlvride developed that submission. Although not reflected in any averment in the petition, it seemed that the petitioners' submission was that under English law, the works being carried on at the Centre would, on account of the access closure at Argyle Street and the modifications to the St Enoch Square entrance, amount to a breach of the provisions of clause 4.1. For that submission he relied not on any reference to any English authority but on an old Scottish case, Huber v Ross 1912 S.C. 898. It refers to an English decision of 1894, the case of Aldin v Latimer Clark Muirhead & Company [1894] 2 Ch 437 where Mr Justice Buckley observed that a landlord in England was bound to refrain from doing anything on property retained by him which would render the lease premises unfit for carrying on business in the way in which it has ordinarily carried on. That is, the obligation would exist even if the landlord's works had no physical effect on the premises leased.

[13] I would, at this point, observe that it is not suggested by the petitioners in this case that Unit 25 (or its storage facilities) has been rendered unfit for carrying on business as retailers. Their complaint is a different one, namely that the retail trading that they have carried on and are carrying on has suffered a loss of turnover since the beginning of 2008. Under reference to the case of Bank of East Asia v Scottish Enterprise 1997 S.L.T. 1213, Mr McIlvride also submitted that rent was the counterpart of the landlord's obligation to provide quiet enjoyment and the petitioners were accordingly entitled to retain it in the meantime. He also referred to the case of The Highland Council, Petitioners, unreported dated 23 January 2004. The rent withheld thus far has not, I note, been consigned nor was any offer made to consign it or to place the money on, for instance, joint deposit receipt.

[14] Mr McIlvride submitted that the balance of convenience favoured the grant of interim interdict.

 

The Respondents' Case

[15] Turning to the respondents' case, for the respondents Mr Bowen submitted that the petitioners had not made out a prima facie case. He moved that the order of 7 October suspending the charge should be recalled. He questioned whether the demonstration of loss of turnover in 6/5 of process was indicative of the loss of profit. He submitted it could not be assumed the loss of turnover was attributable to the building works when regard was had to the economic circumstances of 2008 thus far. No explanation was given on the difference between the down-turn in "Own buy" as opposed to "Concessions". Further, the respondents had made efforts to keep the St Enoch Square entrance obvious through the use of the signs shown in the photographs. The petitioners were not entitled to withhold rent and there was no basis in terms of the lease for their doing so.

[16] Turning to balance of convenience, Mr Bowen submitted that consideration required to be given not only to the effect on the respondents if the petitioners were able to retain rent, but the risk of other tenants doing likewise.

Decision

[17] The petitioners seek interim interdict and to maintain in place the suspension of the current charge. It is accordingly for the petitioners to show that they have a prima facie case and that the balance of convenience favours the grant of these interim orders. I have given careful consideration to the averments in the petition, the productions, the authorities referred to and the submissions made but I am not persuaded that the petitioners have shown that have a prima facie case. That being so, it is not necessary to consider balance of convenience but if it were necessary to do so I would be satisfied that the balance of convenience in the circumstances here favours the respondents.

[18] Turning to the question of whether or not the petitioners have made out a prima facie case, I look firstly at the matter of loss. I do not see that a prima facie case has been made out of the petitioners suffering loss caused by the building works. Firstly, I note that the turnover figures show the first 35 weeks of 2008 but no indication is given of when it was that the two accesses were closed and the St Enoch Square entrance was modified. Secondly, I note that the figures are turnover figures only and no indication is given of the way in which profits have altered, if at all. Thirdly, I note that 6/5 is an informal document, its author is unidentified, and it is not authenticated or verified in any way. No other documents in support of this key part of the petitioners' case are lodged. Fourthly, I note that the petitioners do not advance, for instance, any information regarding their trading results from shops in other locations where building works are not being carried on. Fifthly, it is within judicial knowledge that 2008 has been a difficult year for the retail sector, with many high street stores experiencing a down-turn in sales. Mr McIlvride did not demur from Mr Bowen's submission that that was the case. Sixthly, whilst two accesses have been closed, others remain open and, so far as the St Enoch Square access is concerned, much seems to have been done to keep the access not only open but obvious.

[19] Turning then to the petitioners' case that they have demonstrated a prima facie case of breach by the landlord of the landlord's obligations under this lease, I am not satisfied that a prima facie breach of Schedule Part III, paragraph 1 has been shown. The obligation incumbent upon the landlord to restrict a carrying out of works so as to cause as little damage as is reasonably practicable relates only to physical damage to the subjects as let. The clause clearly refers to "the property" and "the property" is defined in terms of the lease (clause 1) as being the physical property tenanted by the tenant. There is no question of the property tenanted by the petitioners having been or being likely to be subject to physical damage.

[20] Turning to the petitioners' case that there is a prima facie case of breach of clause 4.1, I note firstly that it is plain in terms of the lease itself that it is to be governed according to Scots law. Secondly, there are no averments as to how English law would in fact produce a different conclusion than the conclusion one would reach by interpreting clause 4.1 according to Scots law. Even if the relevant English law is as indicated by the Aldin case referred to in Huber, it does not in fact seem to support the proposition that a tenant in the petitioners' position would have a good claim for loss of profits. As I have already indicated, the petitioners are not saying here that Unit 25 has become unfit for use as a retail shop. They can use it. Their complaint is one of a diminution in returns from trading. That is a different matter. As against that, the terms of the lease are clear. Irrespective of the provenance of some of the original parties, they agreed it should be governed by Scots law. That means that there is no room for implication of any terms such as would be implied by English law. Further, it is clear from Huber that, under Scots law, where a landlord carries out works to neighbouring property retained by him, he is only liable to the tenant at common law in respect of the consequences of physical damage to the subjects let. Further, turning to the precise terms of clause 4.1 in this lease, I note that it relates to "quiet enjoyment" and possession of "the property". Again, that is a reference to the physical property tenanted by the petitioners in this case and there is no question of the peaceable and quiet possession of that property having been interfered with in any way on account of the works being carried out by the landlords. There is no question of them not being able to quietly possess and enjoy the property let.

[21] I turn then to the matter of right of retention. I accept that it is a right that exists at common law and, as in the Highland Council case, if it exists then at interim stage the equities may well be in favour of sanctioning retention in the meantime. However, the petitioners' problem here is, again, the terms of the contract on which they rely as the source of their right to retain. I have already referred to Mr McIlvride's submission regarding the meaning of clause 3.1. He says that entitles the tenant to retain the rent under the common law right of retention if the landlord is in breach. However, that submission ignores the actual wording of clause 3.1. In terms of that clause the tenant obliges himself to pay the rent without any deduction except as "required" by law. Even if Mr McIlvride was right that the present circumstances entitled the tenant, as a matter of principle, to retain rent as the counterpart of the landlord's obligation to afford quiet enjoyment, it cannot be said that the law requires that to happen. His problem then is that the tenant here has in fact contracted out of the common law entitlement to retain. In all these circumstances, whilst recognising that this is an interim stage and the test is one of whether the petitioners have made out a prima facie or arguable case, I cannot be satisfied that they have.

[22] Dealing then very briefly with the matter of balance of convenience, were I to have granted the orders sought by the petitioners, they would be able to retain the rent which had been outstanding for many months and refrain from making further payments until the works are completed in the circumstances where no indication was given of any preparedness to secure that rent in the meantime whether by consignation or putting the money on deposit receipt or otherwise. The loss of income stream to the respondents from their investment vehicle in the meantime would have been substantial. Other tenants might have followed suit. If the orders are not granted, the tenant will still have available to them all and any claims for breach of contract by the respondents which they consider they are properly in a position to advance. They would not accordingly be prejudiced by my refusing to grant the orders sought. In these circumstances I refuse the motion made by the petitioners to grant interim interdict and I grant the motion made by the respondents which is to recall the suspension of the charge that was issued on 7 October.

 


BAILII:
Copyright Policy | Disclaimers | Privacy Policy | Feedback | Donate to BAILII
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/2008/CSOH_149.html