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England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Well Barn Farming Ltd. v Backhouse & Anor [2005] EWHC 1520 (Ch) (14 July 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2005/1520.html Cite as: [2005] EWHC 1520 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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WELL BARN FARMING LIMITED |
Claimant |
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and |
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(1) PETER BRYNNE BACKHOUSE (2) JANET EILEEN BACKHOUSE |
Defendants |
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G.B. Purves (instructed by NC Brothers & Co) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 21st – 24th June 2005
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Crown Copyright ©
THE DEPUTY JUDGE
THE CLAIM
THE PRINCIPAL ISSUES
THE FACTS
"Until such time as a fully rabbit proof fence is erected around the entire boundary of the land comprised in this tenancy by the Landlord or the Tenants to the Tenants' full satisfaction the agreed rent per acre at any subsequent rent review shall be applied and the total rent calculated on an area of 42 acres only."
"The holding known as Unhill Bottom OS numbers 0004 and 0048 etc in all approximately 51 acres".
The reference to 51 acres shows that the landlord's agent knew that the acreage of the land let by the Tenancy Agreement, excluding Pump House Copse, was some 51 acres (and it was in fact 50.96 acres). The reference in the heading to "0048 etc" was slightly inaccurate and the reference should have been to 0048 without any "etc". The rent for the holding was agreed pursuant to this notice and the parties entered into a Memorandum of 2nd June 1983 revising the rent to £1,050 per annum. That rent is £25 per acre for 42 acres. The description of the holding in the Memorandum is the same as the description in the section 8 notice.
"7 The date of my arrival at the Estate, 1 February 1990, was the end of the 1989/1990 shooting season. By the end of the following season, 1990/1991, a problem was apparent with the exit of birds from woodland known as Fullers Firs. This land to the north of Unhill Bottom is owned by the Defendants. The birds would fly too low out of Fullers Firs, and then land in the cover provided by the bushes and scrub on the Pump House Copse site.
8 As a result of this, Mr Greenham arranged to meet Mr Backhouse to discuss what, if anything, could be done to rectify the situation. I was also present. We stood at the south east corner of Fullers Firs, on the road which runs alongside. Mr Greenham asked Mr Backhouse if he would be willing for some bushes and undergrowth behind the chalk pit in Fullers Firs to be removed. This was to ensure that the birds would fly higher out of the woodland. We walked in and inspected the area. At the same time Mr Greenham told Mr Backhouse that he intended to remove the scrub on Pump House Copse but keep the mature trees.
9 Mr Backhouse was told by Mr Greenham that once the scrub was gone he could farm the Pump House Copse area for no additional rent, but the agreement was only temporary as non-one was sure that this would work. If the arrangement was not satisfactory, then the Pump House Copse area would be replanted at the end of the next shooting season.
10 Peter Backhouse was in full agreement with the proposals and at the end of September 1991, undergrowth was removed from Fullers Firs and Pump House Copse area ready for the 1991/1992 season. A casual labourer known to me only as Sambo, who worked as one of Mr Greenham's machine drivers, took out the undergrowth in Pump House Copse. He was doing clearance work for the Estate generally at the time. On checking my diaries I have found one relevant entry for 30 September 1991 – "Sambo still flattening pit by Fullers Firs".
"Q Let us now go to your para.8 on p.139. I am just wondering if you could help me with this – in your para.7 you predicate your para.8 by saying that there was a problem with birds, extra birds from woodland known as "Fuller's Firs", what was that about? A. What was happening was that the birds were flying from Fuller's Firs, being driven by the beaters, and actually land into the Pump House Copse, which was not the object. We wanted them to fly right across, high up on to the bank beyond.
Q Right. And what Mr Greenham wanted to do was to achieve some resolution of that difficulty with Mr Backhouse. Is that correct? A. Correct.
Q Yes. And he required Mr Backhouse's consent to do something in Fuller's Firs to achieve that. Is that right? A. That's correct.
……
Q … So what happened in Fuller's Firs? A. Fuller's Firs: what we required in Fuller's Firs was just a small track cutting behind some bushes there and one of the estate workers at the time, called George Biggs, actually cut some of the bushes to about four foot high right the way across the front of Fuller's Firs some thirty feet inside of it.
Q And to achieve that you had to have Mr Backhouse's consent. A. Correct.
Q And did it work? A. No.
Q And you say that at the same meeting you were present when Mr Greenham and Mr Backhouse walked in, inspected the area that was going to be cut, that is the area in Fuller's Firs. A. That's correct.
Q And you say Mr Greenham said that he was intending to remove the scrub on Pump House Copse but keep the mature trees. That was all for the shooting, was it. A. It was, yes.
Q And then you say that Mr Backhouse was told by Mr Greenham that once the scrub was gone he could farm Pump House Copse area for no additional rent. Now, who volunteered the information about Pump House Copse? Tell us how the meeting went. How did the subject of Pump House Copse arise? A. We would have brought it up at the same time as we were talking about the cutting of the track in Fuller's Firs. And it was obvious to deal with it all the same day whilst we were all there together.
Q Yes. The picture I am trying to get from you is this: there is a problem with the birds. A. Yes.
Q And you need to do some cutting in Fuller's Firs, right. So Mr Backhouse agrees to the cutting, you say. A. He did, yes.
Q Well, how does Pump House Copse come into the equation at all? A. Because the two went side by side. To get the exit from Fuller's Firs we also needed them to go over the bank beyond, and to do one was pointless without doing the other.
Q But why would it require Mr Backhouse to have anything to do with Pump House Copse? A. It wouldn't have had anything to do with Mr Backhouse, it was Mr Greenham's choice to take out the cover on Pump House Copse.
Q But why allow Mr Backhouse in to farm Pump House Copse? A. Mr Backhouse said that at the time when we told him that we were going to remove the scrub from Fuller's Firs, could he have permission to use the bit of ground that was left because it would make his life easier for turning his tractors and vehicles at the top, rather than go all the way round as it was Pump House Copse which was then going to be removed.
Q So there was a quid pro quo, was there, for the cutting of Fuller's Firs Mr Backhouse was going to get in return the access to Pump House Copse? A. Well, we would have done it regardless, so it would have been done regardless. I don't know about a quid pro quo, but it was a two-way …
Q It was a two-way street. A. Yes.
Q And a deal was struck. A. Yes.
Q So Mr Backhouse got something in return for his agreement to cut back Fuller's Firs. A. Yes.
Q Thank you. Now, as regards the additional rent, there must have been a bit more conversation than simply "You can have it for no additional rent". What was the … A. I think Mr Backhouse prompted … Mr Greenham was a demolition contractor and a scaffolder and he actually gave nothing away, so he would not have said "You can have if for nothing". I think probably Mr Backhouse said to him at the time, you know, "We'll tidy it up and farm it out, there'll be no rent to change hands".
Q You see, is it not more likely to be the case if Mr Greenham was the sort of fellow that you describe, that there was an agreement that the rent would not increase, i.e. there might not be any practical rent in respect of Pump House Copse, but it would be taken as being part of the tenancy of Unhill Bottom. A. No, because we explained to Mr Backhouse at the time that should it not work, that the track that we'd cut in Fuller's Firs – we didn't actually grub them out, we only cut them off at four foot high, so they would re-grow within a couple of years and if the Pump House Copse, that area that was taken down didn't work, then we would re-plant it again as and when was necessary.
Q You see you use this word "we". It was not you who was making the agreement, it was Mr Greenham that was making the agreement, was it not? You were simply present. A. Mr Greenham and I had and did have quite a good association together and some of the things that he didn't understand in the shooting world, he relied entirely upon me to give him the advice that I thought necessary and so he would have come back to me with the examples of what he wanted to do there.
Q Yes, but the deal that was being made was a deal between Greenham and Backhouse, not between Greenham, Cull and Backhouse, was it? A. Well, you can word it like that if you wish, but I am sure that is how it was seen on the day.
Q What I am putting to you is that any arrangement that was made between Mr Greenham and Mr Backhouse was an arrangement whereby the land at Pump House Copse would be treated as included in the farming arrangements for Underhill Bottom. A. No, most …
Q … i.e. as part of the tenancy. A. Most definitely not, because if it didn't work we would have immediately planted it straight back up again the following year.
Q And notwithstanding that it, according to you, did not work – it was allowed to continue on your evidence from 1991 onwards, was it not? A. The Pump House Copse area did work. It was success, they didn't land in there, there was nothing for the birds to land in there. But the track inside of Fuller's Firs wasn't a success and we never used it again after the first shoot day."
THE LEGAL CONSEQUENCES OF THE ARRANGEMENT
"Restriction on letting agricultural land for less than from year to year
2.(1) An agreement to which this section applies shall take effect, with the necessary modifications, as if it were an agreement for the letting of land for a tenancy from year to year unless the agreement was approved by the Minister before it was entered into.
(2) Subject to subsection (3) below, this section applies to an agreement under which –
(a) any land is let to a person for use as agricultural land for an interest less than a tenancy from year to year, or
(b) a person is granted a licence to occupy land for use as agricultural land,
if the circumstances are such that if his interest were a tenancy from year to year he would in respect of that land be the tenant of an agricultural holding.
(3) This section does not apply to an agreement for the letting of land, or the granting of a licence to occupy land –
(a) made (whether or not it expressly so provides) in contemplation of the use of the land only for grazing or mowing (or both) during some specified period of the year, or
(b) by a person whose interest in the land is less than a tenancy from year to year and has not taken effect as such a tenancy by virtue of this section.
(4) Any dispute arising as to the operation of this section in relation to any agreement shall be determined by arbitration under this Act."
"The reference to "an agreement" is not to an agreement in the loose and popular sense but to a contract enforceable at law. In particular, there must be an intention to create legal relations and there must be consideration moving from the grantee to the grantor. However, the section has been applied to informal agreements, to agreements between members of the same family, to agreements where the consideration was not in the form of rent or a licence fee, or, indeed, in monetary form, and to an arrangement under which a tenant allowed a family company to farm the land. An attornment clause in a mortgage whereby the mortgagor attorns tenant at will to the mortgagee is not a true contract and so is not "an agreement" for present purposes. A tenancy on sufferance is not a true tenancy and there is no agreement which would come within the section."
"Consideration may also be said to be illusory where it is clear that the promisee would have accomplished the act of forbearance anyway, even if the promise had not been made. This would be the position if A promised B, who had religious objections to smoking, £10 if B did not smoke for a week. Since "it is not consideration to refrain from a course of conduct which it was never intended to pursue", B's forbearance from smoking would not constitute consideration for A's promise. But where the promise provided an inducement for the act or forbearance, the requirement of consideration is satisfied even though there were also other inducements operating on the promisee's mind."
The passage in quotation marks in paragraph 3.024 is taken from the Judgment of Geoffrey Lane LJ in Arrale v Costain [1976] 1 Lloyds LR 98 at 106. The facts of that case are not of particular assistance in applying the principle in the present case. Chitty also refers to Colchester Borough Council v Smith [1991] Ch 448 489, affirmed without reference to this point at [1992] Ch 421. However, I did not find the reference to this case as particularly relevant. The passage in the Judgment of Ferris J actually involves a discussion of another paragraph in Chitty which is paragraph 3.009 in the 29th Edition rather than paragraph 3.024. The footnote in Chitty adds:
"Semble the burden of proof on this issue is on the promissor."
"The necessary modifications have to be distinguished from a transformation of the agreement into something radically different".
THE RENT REVIEW MEMORANDUM
THE DEFENDANTS' ALTERNATIVE CASE
THE AGRICULTURAL TENANCIES ACT 1995
"… any tenancy of an agricultural holding which –
(f) is granted to a person who, immediately before the grant of the tenancy, was the tenant of the holding, or of any agricultural holding which comprised the whole or a substantial part of the land comprised in the holding, under a tenancy in relation to which the 1986 Act applied ("the previous tenancy") and is so granted merely because a purported variation of the previous tenancy (not being an agreement expressed to take effect as a new tenancy between the parties) has effect as an implied surrender followed by the grant of the tenancy."
OTHER MATTERS
"It is not uncommon for a version of the facts to emerge as a possible deduction from the evidence which has so far been neither side's pleaded case but which one side wants now to plead as an alternative basis, either of liability or of defence. In my experience it is normal and proper practice in the County Courts, and in the High Court too, to allow an amendment to such effect that the conclusion of the evidence if, on any terms which are appropriate as to costs or recall of witnesses, this can be done without injustice to the other party or parties."
In the Kelly case, the Court of Appeal reversed the trial Judge who had refused permission to amend at the end of the evidence. I found the passage quoted above from Sedley LJ's judgment somewhat more liberal than I had expected. Quite what it means in practice will depend on how one interprets the phrase "… if … this can be done without injustice to the other party or parties".