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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 >> Boss Holdings Ltd & Anor v Grosvenor West End Properties & Anor [2006] EWCA Civ 594 (21 March 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2006/594.html Cite as: [2006] WLR 2848, [2006] 13 EG 140, [2006] EWCA Civ 594, [2006] 1 WLR 2848, [2006] 26 EG 156, [2006] 2 EGLR 43, [2006] L & TR 16 |
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IN THE COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM CENTRAL COUNTY COURT
HIS HONOUR JUDGE COWELL
Strand London, WC2 |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE LAWS
LORD JUSTICE CARNWATH
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BOSS HOLDINGS LIMITED | ||
MALLET & SONS (ANTIQUES) LIMITED | CLAIMANTS/APPELLANTS | |
v - | ||
GROSVENOR WEST END PROPERTIES | ||
GROSVENOR (MAYFAIR) ESTATE | DEFENDANTS/RESPONDENTS |
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Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited
190 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7404 1400 Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
MR A RADEVSKY (instructed by Messrs Boodle Hatfield, London W1S 1DA) appeared on behalf of the Respondents
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Crown Copyright ©
"This Part of the Act shall have effect to confer on a tenant of a leasehold house … a right to acquire on fair terms the freehold …"
"For purposes of this Part of this Act, "house" includes any building designed or adapted for living in and reasonably so called, not withstanding that the building is not structurally detached, or was or is not solely designed or adapted for living in, or is divided horizontally into flats or maisonettes …"
"29. … It seems to me that some design or adaptation for living in must be demonstrated by the premises themselves. What precisely has to be shown is of course a matter of degree depending upon many factors such as the size of the property occupied, but ordinarily what is involved is somewhere to sleep, to cook, to wash and simply to be when not out at work or out otherwise, and depending on the size of the place that is commonly provided by a bedroom, a kitchen, a bathroom and w.c. and maybe a living room of some kind.
"31. The heart of my conclusion or conclusions is rather along these lines, that the words "designed or adapted for living in" must refer to the physical state of the building and, secondly, the words relate to the then present state of the property at the time that the notice is given; that is they must relate to the building being at that time designed or adapted for living in, and it does seem to me that the building's earlier, perhaps original or later, design, or earlier adaptation, is of very little or no consequence when dealing with this part of section 2(1), though I can fully understand that they are of some relevance, as Lord Roskill pointed out, to the question that arises out of the words "reasonably so called". They are relevant to that aspect of the section."
"The notion of the house or building affording residence, that is being designed or adapted for living in, remains, and it seems to me that it is not the policy or purpose of the Act to permit the leaseholder to enfranchise a building that does not afford residence and which might never afford it in the event, even if that event is more unlikely than not, of obtaining the necessary permissions for the office user."
Lastly at paragraph 38:
"… what matters is the presence or absence of design or adaptation affording, perhaps after repair, the attributes of a property in which an occupier may sleep, eat and live, and it seems to me that design and adaptation for living in is just the character that has to be established in order to exercise the right. It is of course an important question to look and see how the premises are laid out but as I say, physically they are not laid out necessarily or unequivocally for living in. It is true that the test is not fitness or readiness for immediate residential occupation but it seems to me that it must be clear that when fit and ready for use the premises will in some part be lived in, and that must be evident by looking at the premises."
"20. What seemed to me to be a compelling point is that the whole of the premises, including the part actually lived in (that is the caretaker's flat), are used for business purposes. The occupation by the caretaker himself is required for the purposes of the business and that appears from the agreements habitually made with the caretakers when they move in, which are in evidence. The next point that I find compelling is that the caretaker's occupation is not in a significant proportion of the premises. It is in roughly 5 per cent of the total room area in the building. The third point is that the use and occupation for business purposes brought about the physical changes that I have just mentioned.
"21. So it seems to me that the question that has to be asked in this case is, was the house as a whole on 7 May 2004 still as it had been in 1957 designed for living in? The answer I give to that question is 'No'. I stress the words 'as a whole'. It is of course true that a person or a couple, possibly with another person like a son or a daughter, could live in the caretaker's flat without any structural adaptation, and a person or a couple could live on the second floor as the Harveys did without any structural alterations. All that would be needed would be the removal of the many things that are there now, but I do not think that that means that the house as a whole is designed for living in. As Mr Radevsky put it, the bath – and there was only one apart from the one in the caretaker's flat – between the second and third floors cannot be considered as a bath for the whole house. It was there for the very occasional use of such, if any, of the staff who were aware of its existence and availability to them.
"22. It seems to me, overall, that the use as business premises since 1957 has resulted in a design or layout for the carrying on of a business rather than for living in. The test is which of the two designs is the more readily demonstrated, for it seems to me that the words of section 2(1) – that is 'designed or adapted for living in' – are words that have to be compared with words indicating business user."
So again the judge found in Grosvenor's favour.
"In my judgment the proper test in cases of this kind was whether the house as such could be said substantially to have ceased to exist whilst here a contract whereby the premises were let to the tenant, undoubtedly on the evidence when the letting was effected, they were left to him as a dwelling house within the meaning of the Act. It was argued for the landlord that after the bomb damage when the notice to quit expired it followed because the premises were uninhabitable and now uninhabited in fact for living purposes that they were not then let as a dwelling house to the tenant. "
"Notwithstanding that the building is not structurally detached or was or is not solely designed or adapted for living in."
It is not entirely clear to me why the past and the present are used alternately in that way. However it seems to me if one considers any given building at the time of the tenant's notice, any distinction between present and past relating to the design or adaptation in question cannot possess any significance; in every case the house must at that moment already have been designed or adapted.
"Although the 1967 Act has been significantly amended since the original enactment, section 2(1) has not been touched and is to be construed therefore by reference to what Parliament intended in 1967."
"If the building is designed or adapted for living in, by which as is plain from section 1(1) of the Act from 1967 is meant designed or adapted for occupation as a residence, only exceptional circumstances, which I find hard to envisage, would justify a judge in holding that it could not reasonably be called a house."
Order: Appeals dismissed.