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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Curran v Angus Estates Tealing Ltd [2013] ScotCS CSIH_92 (13 November 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/2013/2013CSIH92.html Cite as: [2013] ScotCS CSIH_92, 2013 GWD 38-727, [2013] CSIH 92, 2014 SLT 49 |
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FIRST DIVISION, INNER HOUSE, COURT OF SESSION
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Lord PresidentLady SmithLady Dorrian
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XA123/13 OPINION OF THE LORD PRESIDENT
in the appeal by
CAROLANN CURRAN Appellant;
against
ANGUS ESTATES TEALING LIMITED Respondent: _______________
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Alt: Ms Adams, sol-adv; Thorntons, Dundee
7 November 2013
Introduction
[1] By Order
dated 19 August 2013 the Scottish Land Court dismissed an application by the
appellant. On 10 October the appellant lodged an appeal. She has enrolled a
motion for leave to appeal late on the following ground "Litigant in person.
Wrong advices." She has now changed her position on that question, as I shall
relate.
The application to
the Land Court
[2] The
appellant applied to the Land Court for declarator that she was entitled to
purchase certain land at Muir of Pert Farm, Tealing that is owned by the
respondent. Her primary contention was that she had kept horses on the land
since 2006; that she was an agricultural tenant and that she therefore had the
right to buy the land under the Agricultural Holdings (Scotland) Act 2003 (the 2003
Act). Her alternative contention was that on 8 August 2012 a solicitor acting
on behalf of the respondent offered her the opportunity to buy the land and
that the respondent later reneged on the offer.
[3] In support
of her primary contention, the appellant asserted that by agreement with the
respondent she had occupied the land free of charge, but that she would have
paid rent if she had been asked to; and that because her horses had been on the
land for 365 days of the year, the agreement had been converted into a limited
duration tenancy or a short limited duration tenancy. She said that she had
repaired fences and weeded and topped the land; and, in short, had done all
that a tenant would be expected to do, other than to pay rent.
The decision of the
Land Court
[4] The
Land Court held that in the absence of a rent there was no lease and therefore
that the Agricultural Holdings (Scotland) Act 1991 (the 1991 Act) and the 2003
Act did not apply. It added that in any event even if the appellant was a
tenant under a limited duration tenancy or a short limited duration tenancy the
right to buy provisions of the 2003 Act would not apply. On the appellant's
fall-back position, the Land Court held that it raised a matter that was
outwith its jurisdiction.
The grounds of appeal
[5] The
appellant's lengthy grounds of appeal appear to be inconsistent with the case
that she presented to the Land Court. She contends that the Land Court erred
in law by not referring to McDonald v O'Donnell (2008 SC 189); and
that it wrongly assumed that her lease must be an agricultural lease. She
raises the questions whether the decision of the Court of Appeal in Rutherford
v Maurer ([1962] 1 QB 16) applied in her case; whether the Land Court "confused"
her application regarding the right to buy; and whether it erred in law by not
allowing a full proof nor allowing her to state a full case. She also contends
that the Land Court erred in neither referring to nor applying the provisions
of the Leases Act of 1449.
Section 88 of
the 2003 Act
[6] Section
88(1), so far as relevant to this case provides as follows:
"... Any party to a matter determined by the Land Court by virtue of the 1991 Act or this Act may appeal to the Court of Session against the determination on a question of law within 28 days of the determination ... ".
The section does not provide for there being any extension of the time limit.
The appellant's case
[7] At the
hearing of the motion, the appellant submitted that since the Land Court found
that the 1991 and 2003 Acts did not apply in this case, the 28 days time limit
under section 88 (supra) did not apply. Therefore the time limit was
the 42-days limit imposed by Rule of Court 41.26. It will be apparent that the
appellant missed that time limit too. The appellant informed us that the land
includes stable accommodation; and that she has kept the horses on the land for
the purpose of giving riding lessons.
Conclusions
The time limit
[8] Contrary
to her written motion, the appellant now contends that the appeal was not
lodged late, because it was lodged within 42 days of her learning of the Land
Court's Order. This whole argument is misconceived. Although the Land Court
held that 1991 Act and the 2003 Act did not apply, its determination to that
effect was nevertheless made in the exercise of its jurisdiction under section
60(2)(a) of the 1991 Act. Therefore any appeal against the determination is
governed by section 88 of the 2003 Act. Therefore the 28 days limit applies.
[9] Since the
28 days limit applies, and since section 88 does not provide for any extension
of it, the motion raises the important question whether it is competent for
this court to allow an appeal to be lodged after the statutory time limit has
expired; but I think that it is unnecessary for us to consider that question.
I am satisfied that the appellant's application to the Land Court and her
grounds of appeal are irrelevant.
Relevancy
[10] Since
the existence of the landlord-tenant relationship is denied by the respondent,
the appellant's primary crave should have been for declarator of the existence
of a tenancy and of the nature of it. It would have been open to the Land Court
to make a determination as to whether a 1991 Act tenancy (1991 Act,
s 60(2)(a)) or either of the limited duration tenancies (2003 Act,
s 77(2)(a)) existed. A claim to any form of agricultural tenancy would
have been bound to fail in this case because, as the appellant herself avers,
there was no agreement on rent and none was ever charged (Gray v University
of Edinburgh 1962 SC 157). That alone is fatal to her case.
[11] In any
event, since the appellant's only use of the land was for the accommodation of
horses that were kept there for a non-agricultural purpose, she could not have
enjoyed an agricultural tenancy of any form (McDonald v O'Donnell,
supra, in which Rutherford v Maurer, supra, was
discussed). Moreover, since the appellant's use of the land began in 2006
(Land Court Note, para [1]), it would not have been possible to create a 1991
Act tenancy without a written lease containing an express declaration that the
1991 Act was to apply to it (2003 Act, s 1(2)).
[12] Even if the
appellant had established such a tenancy, she would have been bound to fail
because the right to buy is available only if the tenant has registered an
interest under section 25 of the 2003 Act and only if one of the events
specified in section 28 has triggered the exercise of it under
section 29.
[13] The
appellant's claim is also irrelevant in respect of her claim to have one or
other of the limited duration tenancies under the 2003 Act. Neither form of
tenancy carries with it the right to buy (2003 Act, s 25(1)).
[14] I conclude
therefore that on the appellant's primary contention, this application could
not under any circumstances succeed.
[15] The
appellant's alternative plea is also irrelevant. Since she does not have a
tenancy of the land of any kind, a claim based on an agreement for the sale of
it would be justiciable only in the ordinary courts.
Disposal
[16] I
propose to your Ladyships that we should refuse the motion.
FIRST DIVISION, INNER HOUSE, COURT OF SESSION
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Lord PresidentLady SmithLady Dorrian
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XA123/13 OPINION OF LADY SMITH
in the appeal by
CAROLANN CURRAN Appellant;
against
ANGUS ESTATES TEALING LIMITED Respondent: _______________
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Alt: Ms Adams, sol-adv; Thorntons, Dundee
7 November 2013
[17] I agree
entirely with the views expressed by your Lordship in the chair and I have
nothing to add.
FIRST DIVISION, INNER HOUSE, COURT OF SESSION
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Lord PresidentLady SmithLady Dorrian
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XA123/13 OPINION OF LADY DORRIAN
in the appeal by
CAROLANN CURRAN Appellant;
against
ANGUS ESTATES TEALING LIMITED Respondent: _______________
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Alt: Ms Adams, sol-adv; Thorntons, Dundee
7 November 2013
[18] I agree
entirely with your Lordship in the chair and I have nothing to add.