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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 >> Faiz & Ors v Burnley Borough Council (Rev 1) [2021] EWCA Civ 55 (22 January 2021) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2021/55.html Cite as: [2021] 2 WLR 1115, [2021] 1 P & CR DG20, [2021] WLR(D) 53, [2021] EWCA Civ 55, [2021] Ch 303 |
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THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE, BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS
IN MANCHESTER PROPERTY TRUSTS AND PROBATE LIST
HIS HONOUR JUDGE HALLIWELL
PT-2019-MAN-000119
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LADY JUSTICE ASPLIN
and
LORD JUSTICE ARNOLD
____________________
(1) MOHAMMED MAJEED FAIZ (2) SHAKEELA FAIZ (3) SASSF LIMITED |
Appellants |
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- and - |
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BURNLEY BOROUGH COUNCIL |
Respondent |
____________________
MR DAVID BERKLEY QC (instructed by Legal Department, Burnley Borough Council) for the Respondent
Hearing date : 14th January 2021
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Lewison:
i) the rent in question had accrued due and been demanded before the landlord had knowledge of the breach; but
ii) the rent had accrued due and was demanded after the breach itself; and
iii) the landlord accepted the rent after becoming aware of the breach?
"A receipt of rent, to operate as a waiver of a forfeiture, must be a receipt of rent due on a day after the forfeiture was incurred. The mere receipt of the money, the rent having become due previously, is of no consequence, and for the very plain reason that the entry for a condition broken does not at all affect the right to receive payment of a pre-existing debt." (Emphasis added)
"Now, on the 23rd December, the day before the action was brought, the plaintiff obtained from the undertenants payment of the rent due from them to their landlord, the present defendant, up to the preceding Michaelmas. Without entering into the question whether that is to place the plaintiff in a worse situation than if he had received it from his tenant; in other words, whether it is only evidence of a waiver of the forfeiture before the Michaelmas up to which rent was paid, or whether it brings the waiver down to the 23rd December; still, if I and the rest of the Court are right in our conclusion, there was evidence of a continuing breach between the 23rd, when the payment was made, and the time when the action was brought on the 24th."
"There is no substantial dispute about the relevant law. Forfeiture may be waived by the receipt of rent. The rent must have accrued due since the landlord had notice of the cause for forfeiture and it must have been tendered and accepted by the landlord as rent. In those circumstances the landlord has elected not to take advantage of the forfeiture." (Emphasis added)
"[31] My only purpose in writing a separate judgment is to say that I am not sure that a landlord cannot waive the right to forfeit by accepting rent with knowledge of the breach where that rent had accrued due before knowledge of the breach: provided of course that the rent had accrued due after the breach. Thus I am concerned that acceptance of rent which accrues due after the breach on which forfeiture is based may always be a waiver of the right to forfeit for that breach provided of course that at the time of acceptance the landlord has the requisite knowledge of the breach. It is true that in Oak Property Co Ltd v Chapman [1947] 1 KB 886 at 898 Somervell LJ said (in a judgment of the court of appeal prepared by Evershed LJ) that "acceptance of any rent accrued due after the landlord's knowledge of the tenant's breach was regarded necessarily as inconsistent with an election to avoid the lease". However, at 899 Somervell LJ restated the principle more broadly as follows:
"From long usage the acceptance of rent by a landlord after knowledge of circumstances giving rise to a claim for possession has come to be regarded by landlords and tenants alike as evidence of an intention to affirm the tenancy."
[32] The former statement is true, even if it is not necessary for the rent to accrue due after knowledge of the breach. On principle, I would be inclined to think that knowledge is what is necessary to found the waiver, since one cannot waive without knowledge, but that once there is the necessary knowledge it should not matter whether the rent which is accepted has accrued due before or after the date of knowledge."
i) The existence of the lease and the terms of the relevant covenant;
ii) The existence and terms of the forfeiture clause; and
iii) The fact of the breach.
iv) It is good practice, though not essential, to plead service of notice under section 146 of the Law of Property Act 1925 (where applicable) and the tenant's failure to remedy the breach (if remediable) or the fact that the breach is irremediable.
"… a demand for or acceptance of rent accrued due after a breach of covenant by the tenant is inconsistent with, and therefore waives, the landlord's right to forfeit the lease for that breach because such demand or acceptance is a recognition that the lease has continued after the breach…. However, in my judgment, the same reasoning cannot apply to a demand for or acceptance of rent accrued due on or before the relevant breach. As is recognised by the terms of the right of re-entry itself in this case, there is nothing inconsistent between forfeiting the lease and demanding or accepting rent accrued due before the right to forfeiture arose."
"It is well established by authorities, ancient and modern, that receipt of rent accrued due after a breach of covenant known to the lessor at the time of such receipt of rent is a waiver of such forfeiture; for this reason, that the landlord affirms the continuance of the lease, and thereby determines the option of taking advantage of the forfeiture for condition broken." (Emphasis added)
"I think the receipt of the rent was a waiver of all breaches of condition which had happened before the rent became due, and which were known to the Plaintiff, but was not in respect of any breach of condition not known to him." (Emphasis added)
"In my opinion this is the true principle; and if a landlord receives rent which falls due after a condition broken, of which he had notice, the right of entry is waived or barred, and his intention or desire not to waive it is immaterial." (Emphasis added)
"Acceptance by a landlord of rent accruing due from a tenant, after knowledge by the landlord of a breach of covenant by the tenant, which gives the landlord a right of re-entry on the ground of a condition broken, amounts to a waiver of the right to re-enter, as it is in effect an admission that the tenant held rightfully as such at the time the rent accrued." (Emphasis added)
"One typical act of waiver, illustrated by a number of reported cases, is the acceptance of rent. It is well settled that this will constitute a waiver of a landlord's right to forfeit on account of any breaches of the tenant's covenants of which he is aware at the date of the acceptance."
"Waiver of a right of re-entry can only occur where the lessor, with knowledge of the facts upon which his right to re-enter arises, does some unequivocal act recognizing the continued existence of the lease. It is not enough that he should do the act which recognizes, or appears to recognize, the continued existence of the lease, unless, at the time when the act is done, he has knowledge of the facts under which, or from which, his right of entry arose. Therefore we get the principle that, though an act of waiver operates with regard to all known breaches, it does not operate with regard to breaches which were unknown to the lessor at the time when the act took place."
Lady Justice Asplin:
Lord Justice Arnold: