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IN
THE SUPREME COURT OF JUDICATURE
QBCOF 98/1247/4
COURT
OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION
)
ON
APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
(Mr.
Justice Carnwath
)
Royal
Courts of Justice
Strand
London
WC2
Thursday,
8th October 1998
B e f o r e :
LORD
JUSTICE PETER GIBSON
LORD
JUSTICE PILL
LORD
JUSTICE MUMMERY
- - - - - - - -
THE
QUEEN
- v -
THE
MAYOR AND BURGESSES OF THE LONDON BOROUGH
OF
TOWER HAMLETS
Ex
parte EMILY VON GOETZ
- - - - - - - -
(Computer Aided Transcript of the Stenograph Notes of Smith
Bernal Reporting Limited
180 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2HD
Telephone No: 0171-421 4040
Fax No: 0171-831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
- - - - - - - -
MR.
A. UNDERWOOD
(instructed by Messrs Russell Power, London, E14) appeared on behalf of the
Appellant/Respondent.
MISS
T. BLOOM
(instructed by Messrs McMillen Hamilton, London, E1) appeared on behalf of the
Respondent/Applicant.
- - - - - - - -
J
U D G M E N T
(
As
approved by the Court
)
- - - - - - - -
Crown Copyright
LORD
JUSTICE MUMMERY: On 11th December 1997 Carnwath J quashed the decision of the
London Borough of Tower Hamlets ("the Council") of 24th March 1997, that Miss
Emily Von Goetz, ("the applicant"), was not eligible for a grant under Part
V111 of the
Local Government and Housing Act 1989 ("the 1989 Act").
This
appeal, brought with the leave of this court, turns on a short point of
construction of
section 104(2)(b) of Part V111 of the 1989 Act, which has now
been repealed and re-enacted with modifications in the context of the
discretionary regime provided for in the
Housing Act 1996.
The
facts
On
5th July 1994 the applicant obtained a 10 year assured shorthold tenancy of a
three-storey Victorian house at 24, Shipton Road, Shoreditch, London E.2 ("the
property"). The tenancy was granted under an agreement for a term longer than
three years. There was no deed executed under seal and so the tenancy could
not take effect as a legal estate in the property (section 52(1) and section
54(2) of the Law of Property Act 1925). It is, however, accepted by the
Council that the applicant has a specifically enforceable contract for a term
of years exceeding three years, and that she has an equitable interest in the
property.
In
July 1996 the applicant sent to the Council an application for a renovation
grant under Part V111 of the 1989 Act. Part V111 governs grants towards the
cost of improvements and repairs. The application was rejected on 24th March
1997, as the Council concluded that the applicant did not have "an owner's
interest" in the property within the meaning of section 104(2), and that for
that reason she was not eligible for the grant applied for.
The
decision letter to the applicant contains the following passage:
"Under
the terms of the
Local Government and Housing Act 1989 grant can only be
awarded if a valid interest in the property exists. Your application was as
an owner and therefore subject to the conditions in
S.104 of Part V111 of the
1989 Act requiring an owners interest to be established without which grant
cannot be paid. In this instance, counsel's opinion states that as your lease
was not executed under deed this means that you have not established a valid
interest in the property and are therefore not in a position to be considered
for a grant.
You
are of course free to amend your lease to have it executed under deed and
re-apply for grant, however your application would need to be considered afresh
under the current legislation."
Provisions
of 1989 Act
Section
104, which has the side heading "The interest of the applicant in the
property", provides as follows. Subsection (1):
"Subject
to subsection (4) and 136 below, a local housing authority may not entertain an
application for a grant, other than a common parts grant, unless they are
satisfied that -
(a)
the applicant has, or proposes to acquire, an owner's interest in every parcel
of land on which the relevant works are to be carried out."
Subsection
(2) contains a definition:
"In
this Part 'owner's interest' means an interest which -
(a)
is held by the applicant alone or jointly with others and
(b)
is either an estate in fee simple absolute in possession or a term of years
absolute of which not less than five years remain unexpired at the date of the
application."
On
those provisions the question for decision is whether the applicant's interest
in the property is a "term of years absolute" within the meaning of
section
104(2)(b). It is common ground that if it is, not less than five years
remained unexpired at the date of the application.
Section 104(3) reads:
"Where
a local housing authority entertain an owner's application made by a person who
proposes to acquire the necessary interest, they shall not approve the
application until they are satisfied that he has done so."
To
put these provisions in context, we were also referred to other provisions of
Part V111, including in particular
section 109 and
section 122.
Law
of Property Act 1925
The
1989 Act does not further define the expressions "estate in fee simple
absolute in possession" and "term of years absolute" contained in section
104(2)(b). The obvious place to find definitions of those expressions is in
the Law of Property Act 1925. A definition of "term of years absolute" is
contained in the interpretation section of the 1925 Act. Section 205(1)
provides:
"In
this Act unless the context otherwise requires, the following expressions have
the meanings hereby assigned to them respectively, that is to say
(xxvii):
'Term of years absolute' means a term of years (taking effect either in
possession or in reversion whether or not at a rent) with or without
impeachment for waste, subject or not to another legal estate, and either
certain or liable to determination by notice, re-entry, operation of law, or by
a provision for cesser on redemption, or in any other event (other than the
dropping of a life, or the determination of a determinable life interest); but
does not include any term of years determinable with life or lives or with the
cesser of a determinable life interest, nor, if created after the commencement
of this Act, a term of years which is not expressed to take effect in
possession within twenty-one years after the creation thereof where required by
this Act to take effect within that period; and in this definition the
expression 'term of years' includes a term for less than a year, or for a year
or years and a fraction of a year or from year to year."
That
definition does not require that a "term of years absolute" should be a legal
estate. As Carnwath J noted, the editorial comments on this provision in
Woestenholme & Cherry (13th Edition) state as follows:
"There
can be an equitable term of years absolute [and refers to sections 1(4) and
section 149(2)]. The words 'subject or not to another legal estate' do not
restrict the definition to legal terms but apply when the term is a legal term,
subject to a prior legal estate'."
The
possibility of an equitable estate in a term of years absolute is contemplated
by section 149(2) which deals with the abolition of interesse termini and
contains provisions as to reversionary leases and leases for lives. Subsection
(2) provides:
"As
from the commencement of this Act all terms of years absolute shall, whether
the interest is created before or after such commencement, be capable of taking
effect at law or in equity, according to the estate interest or powers of the
grantor, from the date fixed for commencement of the term, without actual
entry."
Finally,
I turn to the provisions of section 1 on which the Council has placed
particular reliance for the construction of section 104(2)(b). Section 1 of
the Law of Property Act provides:
"(1)
The only estates in land which are capable of subsisting or of being conveyed
or created at law are -
(a)
An estate in fee simple absolute in possession;
(b)
A term of years absolute."
Subsection
(3) provides:
"All other estates, interests, and charges in or over land take effect as
equitable interests."
Subsection
(2) refers to other interests or charges in or over land which are capable of
subsisting or as being conveyed or created at law. Subsection (4) reads:
"The
estates, interests, and charges which under this section are authorised to
subsist or to be conveyed or created at law are (when subsisting or conveyed or
created at law) in this Act referred to as 'legal estates', and have the same
incidents as legal estates subsisting at the commencement of this Act; and the
owner of a legal estate is referred to as 'an estate owner' and his legal
estate is referred to as his estate."
Subsection
(8) reads:
"Estates,
interests, and charges in or over land which are not legal estates are in this
Act referred to as 'equitable interests', and powers which by this Act are to
operate in equity only are in this Act referred to as 'equitable powers'."
The
judgment
The
judge granted the application for judicial review of the Council's decision on
the ground that the Council had misconstrued the provisions of section
104(2)(b). He held that the reference in section 104(2)(b) to a "term of years
absolute" was apt to apply to an equitable interest as well as to a legal
interest. He added that the purpose of the 1989 Act favoured the construction
proposed by the applicant. She had, for all practical purposes, an interest as
good as a legal interest and there was no very good reason to exclude her from
grant on the ground that her interest was equitable only.
Conclusion
In
my judgment, Carnwath J came to the correct conclusion. The Council's primary
argument, which he rejected, is that the reference in section 104 to "owner's
interest" requires an applicant to have a legal estate in land. It is
contended that the word "owner" in section 104, used in conjunction with
"estate in fee simple absolute in possession" and "term of years absolute",
imports the concept of a legal estate, as those are the only two estates
capable since 1925 of existing at law.
Mr.
Underwood, on behalf of the Council, emphasised, by reference to the word
"owner", that Parliament had in mind a legal estate in a term of years
absolute. The word "owner" was most appropriate to a legal estate. He
contended that this was consistent with a purposive approach to the
construction of the 1989 Act. He submitted that an equitable interest is a
"risky" interest, which can be overreached. He added that it was unknown in
legislation affecting local authorities to require the local authority to be
satisfied on such a matter as whether a person had a legal estate or an
equitable interest in property. He described, in particular, the problems that
might arise for local authorities where equitable interests were claimed, not
under a specifically enforceable agreement, as admitted in this case, but by
virtue of matrimonial relations affecting the matrimonial home, or by
cohabitation of or contribution to the acquisition of the property.
In
my judgment, these submissions rest on a misunderstanding of the effect of the
provisions in the Law of Property Act, read in relation to section 104(2). The
legal position in this case is as follows:
1.
The agreement for a lease did not vest a legal estate in the property for a
term of years in the applicant. There was no deed as required by the Law of
Property Act.
2.
It is accepted that the agreement for the grant of term of years to the
applicant was specifically enforceable. Under the doctrine of
Walsh
v Lonsdale
(1882) 21 CHD 9, the applicant has an equitable interest in the property for a term of
years. She is the equitable owner of the lease. The doctrine of
Walsh
v Lonsdale
,
which is based on the equitable maxim that "equity looks on that as done which
ought to be done", is that a specifically enforceable lease is as good as a
lease. There may be circumstances in which an equitable interest is
overreached, but in most cases a person with an equitable lease is in the same
position as a person who has had a legal estate vested in him by a deed.
3.
Although the Law of Property Act 1925, section 1(1), provides that only the
fee simple absolute in possession and the term of years absolute are
capable
of subsisting as legal estate, there is nothing in the Law of Property Act, in
judicial precedent or in legal principle, which precludes equitable interests
from subsisting in these estates. On the contrary, the provisions referred to
and the doctrine of
Walsh
v Lonsdale
allow for the creation of equitable interests, whether for a fee simple
absolute in possession or a term of years. This is supported by passages in
the textbooks. In Megarry and Wade on The Law of Real Property (5th Edition)
at page 125, after discussion of the reduction by the 1925 legislation of
legal estates to the two already mentioned, the authors state this:
"It
should first be noted that the section [section 1] does not provide that the
estates and interests mentioned in subsections (1) and (2) are
necessarily
legal,
but merely that they alone
can
be legal. For example, a life interest or an entail cannot be legal estates
after 1925, for they are not included in section 1; on the other land, a lease
for a term of years is included in section 1 and so may exist either as a legal
estate, as it normally does, or as an equitable interest under a trust."
There
is a short passage in another well-known textbook by Professor Kevin Gray,
Elements of Land Law, 2nd Edition, 1993, page 71. Under the heading "Formal
creation of estates", he writes:
"With
certain exceptions [they are not material] no conveyance of land is effective
to confer a legal estate on the grantee unless the conveyance is made by deed.
Failure to use a deed in the grant of a fee simple absolute or a term of years
generally results in the creation of only an equitable interest for the
grantee."
He
explains in footnote 1:
"This
demonstrates, incidentally, that it is quite possible to hold an
equitable
fee simple absolute in possession or an
equitable
term of years absolute. Section 1(1) of the Law of Property Act 1925 merely
provides that it is these estates alone which have even the potentiality of
legal
existence."
I
agree with those opinions. I do not see how section 1(1) reinforces Mr.
Underwoods' proposed construction of "owner's interest" in section 104(2)(b).
4.
The purposive argument is also unconvincing. Mr. Underwood argued that
Parliament intended that the recipient of a renovation grant should have some
kind of enduring interest in the property and that an equitable interest is not
good against all the world, and may be more difficult to ascertain than a legal
interest, so it falls outside the definition of "owner's interest". On the
facts of this case, it is accepted that there is a specifically enforceable
contract. There would be no defence to a claim by the applicant against the
grantors of the tenancy for a decree of specific performance. If she asked the
grantors for a deed to perfect the legal title, there is no ground on which
that could be refused. So far as the Council is concerned in this case, the
applicant's interest in the property is as enduring and ascertained as if there
had been a deed vesting the legal estate in her for a term of years. As for
the examples put by Mr. Underwood of matrimonial disputes or disputes between
co-habitees concerning equitable interest, the answer is in the opening words
of section 104, which provides:
"A
local housing authority may not entertain an application for a grant other than
a common parts grant unless they are satisfied that
(a)
the applicant has or proposes to acquire an interest in every parcel of the
land on which the relevant works are to be carried out."
If
a Council is faced with a dispute between husband and wife or co-habiting
people as to whether or not there exists an equitable interest, the Council
would normally be entitled to say that it is not satisfied about the existence
of an equitable interest unless and until the disputed equitable interest is
either resolved by agreement or, failing agreement, by an order of the court.
It would not be
Wednesbury
unreasonable for the local authority to require to be satisfied in that way
before making a grant. This, however, is a different case, since it is
conceded that the applicant has an equitable interest. Carnwath J was right to
hold that, in refusing the application, the Council misconstrued section
104(2)(b). He was right to quash the decision of 24th March 1997. For these
reasons, I would dismiss the appeal.
LORD
JUSTICE PILL: I agree. Mr. Underwood relies upon the difficulties which will
face local housing authorities if his submission that equitable interests are
ineligible under
section 104 of the
Local Government and Housing Act 1989 is
rejected. They may have difficulties in deciding whether they are "satisfied"
for the purposes of that section. The difficulties are such, Mr. Underwood
submits, that Parliament cannot have intended to have created them, and
Parliament intended
section 104(2) to apply only to legal interests. Further,
he submits that an equitable owner's interests may be defeated by a third party
and Parliament cannot have intended public money to be put at risk by
permitting grants where the interest is only equitable.
I
agree that there may be cases, though this is not one of them, where a decision
under
section 104 is a difficult decision. I cannot, however, agree that those
considerations are decisive upon the point of construction which arises in this
case. I agree with Mummery L.J., for the reasons he gives, that an owner's
interest in
section 104(2) is not confined to a legal interest. Upon that
construction no difficulty arises in the present case for the reasons given by
Mummery LJ. Where the position is more complicated, the applicant must of
course be given a reasonable opportunity to satisfy the local housing authority
that he has an owner's interest as that term is defined. It is then for the
local authority to make a judgment upon the evidence before it as to whether it
is "satisfied" for the purposes of
section 104.
LORD JUSTICE PETER GIBSON: This appeal has been argued by Mr. Underwood for
the appellant Council with sensible economy. The short point raised by the
appeal is whether the respondent has an owner's interest as defined in section
104(2) of the Local Government Housing Act 1989 ("the 1989 Act"), so as to
qualify her for a housing grant, by virtue of the fact that her interest as
tenant of a 10-year assured shorthold tenancy was equitable rather than legal.
More specifically, the point turns on whether the words of paragraph (b) of
that subsection, "an estate fee simple absolute in possession or a term of
years absolute", are to be construed as referring only to a legal interest so
as to leave an equitable interest outside the ambit of those words.
Mr.
Underwood takes three points on the statutory language. The first is that
Parliament has chosen to use the word "owner" in the definition of "owner's
interest". This, coupled with the reference to an "estate in fee simple
absolute in possession or a term of years absolute", suggests, he submits, (and
this is his second point) that the owner in the 1989 Act has the same meaning
as "estate owner" in the Law of Property Act 1925 ("the 1925 Act"), which
refers to the estate in fee simple absolute in possession and a term of years
absolute as being the only estates capable of subsisting or being conveyed or
created at law.
I
am not able to accept his submissions on these points. The definition of
"estate owner" to be found in section 1(4) of the 1925 Act makes it clear that
it refers only to the owner of a legal estate. That definition is not imported
into the 1989 Act. Further, section 1(1) of the 1925 Act is only referring to
estates capable of existing at law. It does not exclude the existence of
equitable estates corresponding to those legal estates. Any of the estates and
interests which can exist at law may exist in equity, for example, when the due
formalities have not been complied with. Mr. Underwood accepted that that was
so. His first two points, therefore, are far from conclusive in his favour.
Indeed, the absence of anything specifically limiting the language of the 1989
Act to legal estates and to the owner of a legal estate is, to my mind,
significant.
The
third point which Mr. Underwood takes on the language is based on section
104(3) of the 1989 Act. He submits that thereby Parliament made provision for
applicants who had agreements to acquire estates. This suggests, he says, that
it discriminated between leases in law and agreements for leases. To the
extent that Mr. Underwood is there equating the word "proposes to acquire" with
"agrees to acquire", I am not able to accept his submission. To my mind, it is
plain that "proposes" differs from and is a much looser term than "agrees".
The person who agrees to acquire an interest in land attains an equitable
interest in land at that point. Section 104(3) does not assist to determine
whether that interest is an owner's interest. It seems to me that the language
used to define "owner's interest" is capable of applying to an equitable
interest. I cannot see that Parliament has indicated otherwise.
The
more general proposition which Mr. Underwood advanced related to what, he said,
Parliament must have intended. He suggested difficulties in the way of local
councils having to cope with claimants claiming that they had equitable
interests. For the reasons given by Mummery L.J. I am satisfied that that
point is not a good point. To an equity lawyer, it appears surprising that
Parliament would have wanted in this context to distinguish between, for
example, a legal lease and an equitable lease. I cannot accept that
Parliament, by using the words which it did, intended to discriminate between
the owner of an equitable estate and the owner of a legal estate for the
purposes of a grant.
For
these, as well as the reasons given by my Lords, I, too, would dismiss this
appeal.
Order:
Appeal dismissed with costs; legal aid taxation.
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