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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> White & Anor v Riverside Housing Association Ltd [2005] EWCA Civ 1385 (06 December 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2005/1385.html Cite as: [2005] EWCA Civ 1385 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM LIVERPOOL COUNTY COURT
H H JUDGE STEWART QC
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LADY JUSTICE HALLETT
and
SIR PETER GIBSON
____________________
(1) GARY WHITE (2) ELLEN WHITE |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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RIVERSIDE HOUSING ASSOCIATION LTD |
Respondent |
____________________
Mr Andrew Arden QC and Mr Iain Colville (instructed by Bremners, Liverpool) for the Respondent
Hearing dates : 18/19 October, 2005
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
SIR PETER GIBSON :
The Facts
"Some rent lawfully due from the tenants –
(a) is unpaid on the date on which the proceedings are begun; and
(b) ….. was in arrears at the date of the service of the notice under [section 8 requiring the giving of notice of proceedings for possession] relating to those proceedings."
(Ground 10, Part II, Sch. 2 to the Housing Act 1988)
"(6) Net Rent
Riverside may increase the rent by giving the tenant four (4) weeks notice in writing as set out in accordance with the provisions of this Agreement.
The notice will specify the net rent payable and any additional payment for the service charges, both of which may be varied each year in accordance with the provisions of this Agreement.
(7) Rent Variation Date
The rent payable will be increased annually with effect from the first Monday of June each year.
(This is known as the 'Rent Variation Date')
(8) Rent Formula
Riverside will calculate the annual increase in weekly rent by reference to the publication of 'The General Index of Retail Prices' and "The Index of Average Earnings' for the twelve (12) month period to the 31st December immediately prior to the next rent variation date.
The increase in weekly rent will be whichever of the following two methods of calculation gives the highest weekly net rent. (This is known as the 'Rent Formula')
i) 2% increase above 'The General Index of Retail Prices'.
ii) 2% increase above 'The Index of Average Earnings'.
In this Agreement the indices i) and ii) above shall mean 'The General Index of Retail Prices' and 'The Index of Average Earnings' as published by Her Majesty's Stationery Office.
If either of the said indices in this Agreement are not published or the methods used to compile the said indices change after the date of this Agreement or if for any other reason whatsoever it is not possible to calculate the annual increase in rent by reference to either or both indices (the decision of Riverside shall be conclusive)) Riverside will stop using either or both indices to calculate the annual increase in rent under the terms of this rent formula.
Where Riverside stops using either or both indices the next rent payable from the next rent variation date (and successive rent variation dates until further notice by Riverside) will be Ten Percent (10%) above the previous weekly net rent.
(12) Changing this Agreement
i) With the exception of any changes in Rent or service charges, or as a result of Government Legislation, this Agreement may only be altered by the consent in writing of both the Tenant and Riverside, or under the procedure set out below.
a) Riverside will consult with an approved tenant consultation body (at present the Tenant Participation Forum) about the proposed variation.
b) Riverside will give that body notice in writing of the proposed change and its effect, and invite the Tenant Participation Forum to comment on it within a reasonable specified time.
c) Riverside will consider any comments made by the approved tenant consultation body before making its decision.
d) Riverside will then give individual tenants at least 4 weeks notice before the change takes place, together with information explaining the new terms and their effects."
"(2) Rent Variation Date
In this Agreement the term 'Rent Variation Date' refers to the annual increase in rent which will occur each year on the first Monday in June with four (4) weeks prior notice."
Para. (6), headed "Variable Service Charge", provides that the service charge may be altered every 12 months to reflect the costs incurred or to be incurred in the provision of services each year to the homes which share them, but that Riverside will give four weeks' notice in writing before there is any change in the service charge.
"We have looked at the possibilities of what we can do, and one idea was to look at moving the rent increase date to 1st April each year. This would give us around £180,000 extra income each year compared to the rents going up in June. We have not yet decided what to do about that and would like to hear tenants views."
"4. I should explain that when consulting TPF, I believed, on legal advice, that we did not need to vary the terms of the tenancy agreement in order to defer the rent increase from June 2000 to April 2001. I was therefore consulting on the deferral."
"Since we did not increase the assured rents in June 2000, the increase in April 2001 would effectively be the 2000 rent increase delayed by ten months."
"1.2 The report recommends that we should increase the assured rent for 2001 by 5% in April 2001, assuming an increase of 10% in fair rents. This should deliver an increase which falls within the Housing Corporation guidelines of 4.3% for the financial year 2001/2002."
"3. Constraints on the assured rent increase.
3.1 There are obviously constraints on the level of our overall increase in rents because of the Housing Corporation guideline of RP1+1%. For 2002/2003 this may well be RP1+0.5%, which is our latest understanding of the Government's initial Green Paper proposals for RP1+0%. We are also constrained by the specific terms of increase on assured rents set out in the tenancy agreement.
3.2 The assured tenancy rent agreement says that the assured rent increase should be within RP1+2% or the Index of Average Earning (AEI)+2%, both measured in December before the rent increase date, which is set as the first Monday in June each year.
3.3 We may choose to make the rent increase date in 2001 the first Monday in June to the first Monday in April – 2nd April 2001, which would give us an extra 9 weeks of higher income within the financial year. This is only possible because we did not set an assured rent increase in 2000, since our rents would not rise more than once in 12 months. If we do make the rent increase date April, then the earliest subsequent increase would be April 2002.
4. Implications of bringing forward the rent increase date in 2001.4.1 If we increase the assured rent on 2nd April we will receive around £180,000 additional income in the financial year, depending on the level at which we set our assured rents. If the rent increase date moves to April forever then this will be additional income every year.
4.2 We have had discussion with the tenant members of the Tenants Participation Forum (TPF) about making April the rent increase date in 2001, instead of June. On the basis that the rent will not increase again until April 2002, they are not unhappy with this, even though the tenancy agreement says that the rent increase is fixed at the first Monday in June.
4.3 TPF feel that the rent increase letter should simply say that the rent increase will be whatever the amount is and that it will take effect on the first Monday in April, and not rise again before April the following year. They feel that explaining that the rent increase is the 2000 rent increase deferred for 10 months will simply be begging the question about why we are doing it. Our alternative to simply deferring the 2000 rent increase for 10 months would be to go out to consultation again with all 12,000 tenants on assured tenancy agreements to change the tenancy agreement again. We have checked with solicitors whose view is that, since the delay is in the tenants' favour, we are able to defer the rent increase date from the date fixed in the tenancy agreement.
4.4 Other implications of deferring the rent increase date to April 2001 are that the increase must be bound by the tenancy agreement terms for 2000/2001, which means using RPI and AEI at December 1999 as the limits, not those indices as at December 2000."
"840 Rent Increase on Assured Properties
Caroline Field explained that the Rent Increase on Assured Properties paper was presented to the Board meeting on 7 December 2000 and explained the background to the report. Caroline explained that assured rents would increase by an average of 5% or £2.05 on the first Monday in April 2001 and that rent caps would be increased by an average of 5% or between £2 and £3. There will be no further rent increase until April 2002. New Tenancy Agreements after January 2001 will be amended to read that rent increases will occur on or after the first Monday in April. Tenants will receive notification at least four weeks in advance regarding the rent increase via a letter in February."
"RENT INCREASE NOTICE
As Landlord of the premises, we are writing to tell you that your total rent will change from 2nd April 2001.
Your new charge will be £60.08 a week. This is made up as follows:
Basic Rent 58.69
Services 1.39
Total £60.08 PER WEEK
Your tenancy agreement with Riverside allows us to increase the basic rent for your home on an annual basis, on the first Monday in June each year. Your basic rent was not increased in June 2000.
If you pay service charges in with your rent these may have changed during this period. There will be no rent increase in June 2001, and no further rent increase until April 2002."
"If your tenancy agreement shows a June rent increase, you will have noticed that we did not increase your rent in June 2003. Instead the increase we are making now has been deferred from June 2003 to April 2004, using the same rules that would have applied then."
The Proceedings
"(1) Definition of 'Rent Lawfully Due'Generally:(a) For the purposes of Part 2 of Schedule 2 Housing Act 1988 (Grounds on which a Court May Order Possession) does the phrase 'rent lawfully due' referred to in Ground 10 prohibit a landlord, when seeking to establish that ground, from relying upon non-payment of amounts higher than the rent actually stated in the agreement (or stated in the last valid notice of increase of rent) which have been demanded under notices of rent increase given other than in compliance with the terms of the tenancy agreement with the tenant?Specifically:(b) What (having regard to the resolution of the further preliminary issues below) is the 'rent lawfully due' from the Defendants to the Claimant in the instant case for the purposes of Ground 10.(2) Rent Increases(a) on a true construction of the tenancy agreement made between the present parties and dated 8 February 1999, and on a true construction of notices given by the Claimant to the Defendants, were any or all of the following notices effective to increase the amounts payable by the Defendants under that agreement and (if so) from what dates did such increases take effect:Date of notice 12 February 2001Date of notice 1 February 2002Date of notice 31 January 2003Date of notice 11 February 2004(b) on a true construction of the tenancy agreement made between the present parties and dated 8 February 1999, and most particularly having regard to the definition of 'Rent Variation Date' in clause 6(2) thereof, is it open to the Claimant to give notice of increase of rent to take effect on any date other than the first Monday in June. If the tenancy agreement permits a notice of increase of rent to take effect on some other date or dates, what date(s).(c) what amounts were payable by the Defendants per week for the following periods:April 2, 2001 - March 31, 2002April 1, 2002 - April 6, 2003April 7, 2003 - April 4, 2004April 5, 2004 -"
(1) Riverside complied with cl. 2(12) of the tenancy agreement by consulting with TPF about changing the rent variation date from the first Monday in June to the first Monday in April in the subsequent year.(2) On their proper construction, references in the tenancy agreement to the first Monday in June as being the rent variation date mean no earlier than that date.
(3) Time is not of the essence in relation to clause 2(7) of the tenancy agreement.
(4) The rent variation date was varied from June to April by agreement, for which the Whites have received valuable consideration.
(5) The Whites have in the years 2001 to 2004 waived any requirement that the increase take effect from June, alternatively any defect in the rent increase notices and/or any breach of the agreement.
(6) The Whites are estopped from contending that the rent increase notices were not valid and/or that the rent variation date had not been varied from June to April and/or that the rents had not been as stated in the respective notices for the respective periods. Two types of estoppel are relied on by Riverside: estoppel by convention and estoppel by acquiescence.
Time of the essence
" My Lords, I see no relevant difference between the obligation undertaken by a tenant under a rent review clause in a lease and any other obligation in a synallagmatic contract that is expressed to arise upon the occurrence of a described event, where a postponement of that event beyond the time stipulated in the contract is not so prolonged as to deprive the obligor of substantially the whole benefit that it was intended he should obtain by accepting the obligation.
So upon the question of principle which these two appeals were brought to settle, I would hold that in the absence of any contraindications in the express words of the lease or in the interrelation of the rent review clause itself and other clauses or in the surrounded circumstances the presumption is that the time-table specified in a rent review clause for completion of the various steps for determining the rent payable in respect of the period following the review date is not of the essence of the contract."
Consultation
Construction
A new agreement
Estoppel
"I quite accept that it may well be the case that if the landlord is sued by the tenant for the recovery of sums which the tenant has overpaid, there may well be cases where the tenant's conduct is such that the court might say that he is estopped from demanding back that which he has paid. Whether that is so or not is a matter which will require to be determined when the question arises. But here, in order to succeed, the landlord has not only to ignore the substantive terms of the statute, but he has, in fact, to make an estoppel (because this, as it seems to me, is an estoppel or nothing) the foundation of the positive case for the recovery of rent which he seeks to make."
" [88] How far an estoppel may assist in bringing about a cause of action, without standing alone as 'a cause of action in itself', has remained a matter of dispute over subsequent years. It may enlarge the effect of an agreement, by binding parties to an interpretation which would not otherwise be correct, see eg De Tchihatchef v Salerni Coupling Ltd [1932] 1 Ch 330, [1931] All ER Rep 233; Partenreederei MS Karen Oltmann v Scarsdale Shipping Co Ltd, The Karen Oltmann [1976] 2 Lloyd's Rep 708; and per Robert Goff J in the Amalgamated Investment case [1981] 1 All ER 923 at 937, [1982] QB 84 at 106. In the Amalgamated Investment case itself, Lord Denning MR and, on the view I would prefer, Brandon LJ held that both the company and the bank were bound by their conventional treatment of the company's guarantee of its subsidiary's indebtedness to the bank as extending to such subsidiary's indebtedness to the bank's (Portsoken), thus entitling the bank to set up sums due under the guarantee, read in this extended sense, against the obligation that it otherwise had to account to the company for realisations which it had made."
But save in somewhat special circumstances, such as were those discussed in the Amalgamated case, an estoppel by convention cannot be used as a sword, as Mance LJ accepted by agreeing with the other members of this court.
"In this way the bank, while still in form using the estoppel as a shield, would in substance be founding a cause of action on it. This illustrates what I would regard as the true proposition of law, that, while a party cannot in terms found a cause of action on an estoppel, he may, as a result of being able to rely on an estoppel, succeed on a cause of action on which, without being able to rely on that estoppel, he would necessarily have failed. That, in my view, is, in substance, the situation of the bank in the present case."
Waiver
Conclusion
Lady Justice Hallett. I agree. I do so with very considerable reluctance and would like to associate myself with the unease expressed by Sir Peter Gibson as to the result.
Lord Justice Auld. For the reasons given by Sir Peter Gibson, I also agree that the appeal should be allowed. I add only that I share his unease, expressed in paragraph 70 of his judgment, at this result. I would have preferred to reach a contrary decision through the route of estoppel by convention. But, on the authorities as they stand at present, that route does not appear to be open to this Court.