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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 >> Erimus Housing Ltd v Barclays Wealth Trustees (Jersey) Ltd & Ors [2014] EWCA Civ 303 (18 March 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2014/303.html Cite as: [2014] EWCA Civ 303 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT
CHANCERY DIVISION
John Jarvis QC
HC12D04636
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE PATTEN
and
LORD JUSTICE CHRISTOPHER CLARKE
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ERIMUS HOUSING LIMITED |
Appellant/ Defendant |
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- and - |
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(1) BARCLAYS WEALTH TRUSTEES (JERSEY) LTD (2) WALLBROOK PROPERTIES LTD (AS TRUSTEES OF THE CENTRE UNIT TRUST) |
Respondents/ Claimants |
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Emily Betts (instructed by Reed Smith LLP) for the Respondent
Hearing date : 4 March 2014
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Patten :
"On the matter of our occupation, we are holding over under the terms of the original lease and continue to make rent, service charge and insurance payments on the due dates. When we met at John Irwin's offices some time ago we discussed the background to our occupation but that was just before legal completion of the building sale. We haven't received any specific proposals from you in terms of lease documentation and I was therefore wondering whether this is something that you will be progressing in the near future? In the meantime we assume that both sides are content for matters to continue as they currently exist."
"Unfortunately this means we are unable to progress with the two year minimum commitment as originally expected in good faith. We are anticipating vacating Centre North East around March of 2012 and are therefore suggesting that we continue to hold over paying as we have to date, such payments being comparable with what was intended in terms of the sums involved."
"26. I have set out in some detail at the outset of this judgment the chronology of the negotiations. I said during the course of argument that I considered the negotiation to be at the very least desultory. Bearing in mind that the lease expired on 31 October 2009, the period up to August 2011 was getting close to two years alone. There was certainly no great impetus in the negotiations. It seems to me that any fair reading of these discussions must lead to the conclusion that the parties were not in the throes of a negotiation. It was a very half-hearted exercise that seems to have gone on.
…
29. So, at that date in August 2010, it was absolutely plain that a different arrangement would have to be made from that which had been originally discussed, because the tenant was going to move into new offices and that it would want to leave the present premises at some point. Things then appeared to have moved very little forward by 16 November 2010, because that is when Mr Arkle wrote again to Mr Richardson, and the main concern was about parking. There were no proposals for any new terms of a lease and the suggestion was: "Both sides are content for matters to continue as they currently exist."
30. So, far from there being active negotiations, the position, it seems to me, was quite the reverse. There were no negotiations and there was no push on either side for there to be negotiations. They were happy for the tenant to remain in occupation. It was not then until 15 June 2011 that new heads of terms were agreed, as I have set out earlier in this judgment, for a three year lease, with break terms which would have enabled the tenant to vacate on three months notice. As it turned out, that never came into being. In due course, notice was given to vacate."
"It seems to me that this was a relationship which developed in which it was accepted on both sides that the landlord would not, at its whim, simply take proceedings to evict the tenant without notice. There was plainly, it seems to me, an acceptance on both sides that notice was going to be relevant and the occupation was on that basis."
"35. It seems to me, therefore, that there was a very clear indication in the 26 August 2011 email that the tenant wanted to have the right to stay in the premises until March 2012. It could not be achieved at law by a tenancy on that basis other than a periodic tenancy. Against that, Mr Rosenthal submits that the landlord simply could have at any stage told the tenant that it had to vacate, without notice. He submits that was a risk that the tenant took.
36. I do not consider that to be a realistic reading of what was happening between these parties over this very substantial period of time. It seems to me that the tenant expected to have some protection. In other words, that it would not be turned out on its ear. These premises were its principal offices, with substantial equipment and were essential for the way in which its business was operated. It could not have taken the risk that it could have been evicted at a moment's notice.
37. I do, on the other hand, have to ask the question, would the landlord in these circumstances have committed itself to a position where it would have given a protective tenancy under the Landlord and Tenant Act, because the procedure for contracting out had not been carried out? It seems to me, this case falls very much into the same vein as the Walji case. It seems to me that this is a case where the landlord was simply not concerned with that issue. It allowed the situation to develop as it did. It may not itself have taken sufficient notice of that, but that is irrelevant. It seems to me, whether it did or not, the fact of this relationship developing in the way it had, was such that it did in fact create protection."
"As with other consensually based arrangements, parties frequently proceed with an arrangement whereby one person takes possession of another's land for payment without having agreed or directed their minds to one or more fundamental aspects of their transaction. In such cases the law, where appropriate, has to step in and fill the gaps in a way which is sensible and reasonable. The law will imply, from what was agreed and all the surrounding circumstances, the terms the parties are to be taken to have intended to apply. Thus if one party permits another to go into possession of his land on payment of a rent of so much per week or month, failing more the inference sensibly and reasonably to be drawn is that the parties intended that there should be a weekly or monthly tenancy. Likewise, if one party permits another to remain in possession after the expiration of his tenancy. But I emphasise the qualification 'failing more'. Frequently there will be more. Indeed, nowadays there normally will be other material surrounding circumstances. The simple situation is unlikely to arise often, not least because of the extent to which statute has intervened in landlord-tenant relationships. Where there is more than the simple situation, the inference sensibly and reasonably to be drawn will depend upon a fair consideration of all the circumstances, of which the payment of rent on a periodical basis is only one, albeit a very important one. This is so however large or small may be the amount of the payment.
To this I add one observation, having in mind the facts of the present case. Where parties are negotiating the terms of a proposed lease, and the prospective tenant is let into possession or permitted to remain in possession in advance of, and in anticipation of, terms being agreed, the fact that the parties have not yet agreed terms will be a factor to be taken into account in ascertaining their intention. It will often be a weighty factor. Frequently in such cases a sum called 'rent' is paid at once in accordance with the terms of the proposed lease: for example, quarterly in advance. But, depending on all the circumstances, parties are not to be supposed thereby to have agreed that the prospective tenant shall be a quarterly tenant. They cannot sensibly be taken to have agreed that he shall have a periodic tenancy, with all the consequences flowing from that, at a time when they are still not agreed about the terms on which the prospective tenant shall have possession under the proposed lease and when he has been permitted to go into possession or remain in possession merely as an interim measure in the expectation that all will be regulated and regularised in due course when terms are agreed and a formal lease granted.
Of course, when one party permits another to enter or remain upon his land on payment of a sum of money, and that other has no statutory entitlement to be there, almost inevitably there will be some consensual relationship between them. It may be no more than a licence determinable at any time or a tenancy at will. But when and so long as such parties are in the throes of negotiating larger terms, caution must be exercised before inferring or imputing to the parties an intention to give to the occupant more than a very limited interest, be it licence or tenancy. Otherwise the court would be in danger of inferring or imputing from conduct, such as payment of rent and the carrying out of repairs, whose explanation lies in the parties' expectation that they will be able to reach agreement on the larger terms, an intention to grant a lesser interest, such as a periodic tenancy, which the parties never had in contemplation at all."
Lord Justice Christopher Clarke :
Lord Justice Longmore :