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Supreme Court of Ireland Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Supreme Court of Ireland Decisions >> Meagher & anor -v- Luke J. Healy Pharmacy Limited [2010] IESC 40 (16 June 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ie/cases/IESC/2010/S40.html Cite as: [2010] 3 IR 743, [2010] IESC 40 |
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Judgment Title: Meagher & anor -v- Luke J. Healy Pharmacy Limited Composition of Court: Fennelly J., Finnegan J., O'Donnell J. Judgment by: Finnegan J. Status of Judgment: Approved
Outcome: Allow And Set Aside | ||||||||||||||
THE SUPREME COURT No. 173/2005 Fennelly J. BETWEEN: DENIS MEAGHER AND MIRIAM MEAGHER PLAINTIFFS/APPELLANTS and LUKE J. HEALY PHARMACY LIMITED DEFENDANT/RESPONDENT Judgment of Mr Justice Finnegan delivered on the 16th day of June 2010
By Indenture of Lease dated the 14th May 1971 made between Marianne Neumann of the one part and Luke J. Healy Limited of the other part (hereinafter “the Lease”) premises at 1 West Street, Drogheda (hereinafter “the premises”) were demised to Luke J Healy Limited for the term of thirty five years from the 1st June 1971 subject to the yearly rent thereby reserved and the covenants on the part of the Lessee therein contained. The appellants (hereinafter “the Lessors”) are entitled to the Lessors interest and the respondent (hereinafter “the Lessee”) to the Lessee’s interest in the Lease. The Lease contained the following covenants on the part of the Lessee:-
2. Not to assign the said premises or any part thereof without the previous consent in writing of the Lessor first had and obtained. 3. To use and occupy the premises solely for the purpose of the Lessee’s trade or business as a pharmaceutical chemist to include cosmetics, chiropody and photographic goods and services and not to use any part thereof for residential purposes or for any other trade or business whatsoever without the previous consent in writing of the Lessor first had and obtained.” The Lease contained a provision for re-entry and forfeiture in the event of a breach, non-observance or non-performance by the Lessee of the covenants and conditions contained in the Lease. At all material times the Lessee was in breach of the repairing covenant. Three schedules of dilapidations were served, the first in 1993, the second in 1995 and the third in 1999. The repairs were not carried out and the present proceedings were instituted by the Lessor on the 17th October 1997, the relief sought being an injunction requiring the Lessee to comply with the repairing covenant. The Lessee delivered a defence and counterclaim on the 23rd October 1998. On the 9th December 1997 the Lessee sought consent to assign the Lease to Aidan Fitzpatrick on the basis that Aidan Fitzpatrick would undertake and contract to carry out the agreed schedule of dilapidations within the period of one year of closing the purchase of the Lease. By letter of the 17th December 1977 the Lessor responded as follows:-
On the 20th April 1998 the Lessee sought consent to assign the Lease to Cyril Bellew and consent to change of user: this correspondence was not responded to. By letter dated 30th June 1998 the Lessee sought consent to assign the Lease to Cellular World Limited. Protracted correspondence followed but the Lessors neither granted nor refused consent to assign. The counterclaim delivered on the 23rd October 1998 sought a declaration that the Lessee is entitled to assign the Lease to Cellular World Limited without the consent of the Lessors and damages for breach of contract, breach of covenant and breach of statute. By letter dated 3rd December 1998 the Lessee sought consent to assign the Lease to Newgrange Crystals Limited. By letter dated 6th January 1999 the Lessee informed the Lessors that it was proposed to carry out the works required by the up-to-date schedule of dilapidations and the works were carried out and completed by September 1999. On the 1st September 1999 the Lessee sought consent to assign the Lease to Sean and Louise O’Sheehan. By letter dated 3rd November 1999 consent to assign to Esat Digifone Limited was sought. By letter dated 18th November 1999 the Lessors consented in principle to an assignment to both Sean and Louise O’Sheehan and to Esat Digifone Limited. Consent to assign to Esat Digifone Limited was ultimately furnished on the 28th July 2000. The action came on for hearing on the 5th, 6th and 7th April 2005 and judgment was delivered on the 15th April 2005. The learned trial judge found that the Lessors had acted unreasonably in refusing consent to assign the Lease to Cellular World Limited and made a declaration to that effect. In addition he awarded the Lessee damages from the 20th October 1998, the date of expiration of a completion notice served on the Lessee by Cellular World Limited, the learned trial judge finding that Cellular World Limited were ready, willing and able to complete the purchase of the Lease on that date. He measured damages at the rent and rates paid by the Lessee from the 20th October 1998 to the assumption by Esat Digifone Limited of responsibility for the same together with the selling agent’s fees in respect of the sale of the Lease to Esat Digifone Limited. From the learned trial judge’s judgment and order the Lessors appeal. In summary it is contended that the learned trial judge was in error in holding that consent to assign had been unreasonably withheld and in awarding damages to the Lessee on that basis. In advance of the hearing in the High Court the Lessor furnished consent to the assignment of the Lease to Esat Digifone Limited and the assignment had taken place. In these circumstances if, as a matter of law, damages cannot be recovered for the unreasonable withholding of consent to assign to Cellular World Limited the declaration sought by the Lessee would be of no practical benefit. Only if the court decides that the Lessee is entitled to damages upon consent to assign to Cellular World Limited being unreasonably withheld will it be necessary to consider whether the Lessors’ failure or refusal to grant consent to assign in respect of an assignment to Cellular World Limited was unreasonable.
Submissions of the Parties
Discussion
Most covenants to be found in leases are however in qualified form, the restriction normally being followed by a clause “such consent not to be unreasonably withheld”. The Landlord and Tenant Act 1931 section 56 provided as follows:-
The Landlord and Tenant Act 1931 was repealed by the Landlord and Tenant (Amendment) Act 1980. The 1980 Act in section 66 thereof provides as follows:-
(2) In every lease (whether made before or after the commencement of this Act) in which there is contained or in which there is implied by virtue of the British Statute passed on the 5th day of May 1826 and entitled ‘An Act to amend the Law of Ireland respecting the Assignment and Sub-letting of Lands and Tenements’ or by virtue of subsection (1) a covenant prohibiting or restricting the alienation, either generally or in any particular manner, of the tenement without the licence or consent of the lessor, the covenant shall notwithstanding any express provision to the contrary be subject – (a) to a proviso that the licence or consent shall not be unreasonably withheld, but this proviso shall not preclude the lessor from requiring payment of a reasonable sum in respect of legal or other expenses incurred by him in connection with the licence or consent.” Kelly v Cussen & Cussen concerned a statutory tenancy under the Rent Restrictions Act 1946. That Act provides in section 40(4)(b) as follows:-
(b) that the tenant will not assign the premises or any part thereof without the consent in writing of the landlord, which consent may be withheld only if greater hardship would, owing to the special circumstances of the case, be Consent to assign was withheld. The learned Circuit Court judge held that the greater hardship resulted from the withholding of the consent than the granting of consent would have caused and so declared. However the statutory tenant also sought damages for the unreasonable and wrongful withholding of consent and the learned Circuit Court judge dealt with the issue of damages as follows:-
No damages were, however, awarded as the statutory tenant failed to establish loss. It will be immediately clear that Kelly v Cussen & Cussen is not directly in point, it being concerned with the Rent Restrictions Acts and being concerned with a covenant implied and which in its terms differs significantly from the covenant in issue in the present proceedings as affected by the Landlord and Tenant (Amendment) Act 1980 section 66. Nevertheless the learned Circuit Court judge there held that where the landlord withheld consent to assignment of a statutory tenancy in breach of the deemed condition the statutory tenant had an entitlement to damages. Apart from damages a Lessee has the following remedies where a Lessor unreasonably refuses consent to assign. An application can be made to the court for a declaration that consent has been unreasonably withheld in which case the Lessee will be entitled to assign without consent: Treloar v Bigge [1874] L.R. 9 Exch. 151. Alternatively, following the repeal of Deasy’s Act section 10 by the Landlord and Tenant (Ground Rents) Act 1967 section 35 (1) the lessee can assign and the lessee and any assignee of the lease can raise as a defence to any proceedings taken by the lessor for breach of the covenant against alienation the unreasonable refusal of consent. Finally an assignee of a lease without consent, consent having been refused, may seek a declaration that consent was unreasonably refused and in proceedings taken by the lessor can raise the unreasonable withholding of consent by way of defence. In assigning without consent there is the risk that ultimately the withholding of consent may be held not to have been unreasonable: however in such an event, since the repeal of Deasy’s Act section 10 and the amendment of the Conveyancing Act 1881 section 14 by the Landlord and Tenant (Ground Rents) Act 1967 section 35(1) relief against forfeiture may be obtained. The entitlement of a Lessee to damages for the unreasonable refusal of consent is dealt with in The Law of Landlord and Tenant, Deale at page 184 as follows:-
In Rendell v Roberts and Stacey Limited the Lease contained the following covenant by the Lessee:-
The defendant lessor refused consent to assignment and it was accepted at the hearing that the refusal of consent was unreasonable. The issue on the hearing was whether the defendant’s refusal of consent amounted to a breach of covenant on their part which would make them liable for damages. The plaintiff lessee contended that the covenant was a covenant by the lessee not to assign without consent, but that it amounted also to a positive covenant by the lessor that he would not withhold consent unreasonably: the lessor being in breach of that covenant the lessee claimed an entitlement to damages. The lessor contended that the covenant was a covenant by the lessee not to assign without consent with the qualification that the consent should not be unreasonably withheld: the effect of the covenant, it was submitted, was that if the consent should be withheld unreasonably the lessee would be entitled to assign without consent but that the covenant did not entitle the lessee to damages. The learned trial judge in that case referred to Ideal Film Renting Company Limited v Nielsen [1921] 1 Ch. 575 where the covenant read as follows:-
He noted that in that case there was an express covenant by the Lessor not unreasonably to withhold consent in the case of a respectable and responsible assignee. In giving judgment in that case Eve J. said:-
In giving judgment in Rendall v Roberts Stacey Limited, Salmon J., having quoted as above, went on to say:-
Later in the judgment Salmon J. continued:-
Finally Salmon J. dealt with the clause which he was required to construe as follows:-
Treloar v Bigge L.R. 9 Ex. Ch. 151 was decided on the 24th April 1974. The covenant in issue there was as follows:-
Kelly C.B. gave judgment as follows:-
Between 1874 and the passing of the Landlord and Tenant Act 1988 in England and Wales, Treloar v Bigge was cited with approval and followed in many cases. This was so notwithstanding the provisions of the Landlord and Tenant Act 1927 section 19(1)(a) which provided that a covenant, condition or agreement against assigning, under-letting, charging or parting with possession of demised premises or any part thereof without licence or consent contained in any Lease is deemed to be subject to a proviso to the effect that such licence or consent is not to be unreasonably withheld. In those cases I have found only one dissenting voice. In Rose & Another v Gossman 201 E.G. 767, [1966] E.G.D. 103 in the Court of Appeal where the covenant against assignment was qualified with the words “such consent not to be unreasonably withheld” Denning J. said:-
That judgment concerned an application to strike out that part of the statement of claim in which the plaintiff claimed damages for his lessor’s failure to consent to an assignment: the court refused to strike out that claim on the grounds that the application was taken far too late. I am satisfied that Treloar and Bigge represents the law in Ireland unless the law has been changed by the provisions of the Landlord and Tenant (Amendment) Act 1980 section 66(1). I am not satisfied that the section has that effect. In its terms it provides that a covenant prohibiting assignment generally or in a particular manner shall have effect as if it were a covenant prohibiting or restricting such alienation without the licence or consent of the lessor. The effect is not to impose a statutory duty but rather to regulate the construction of covenants freely entered into between a lessor and a lessee. What is required by the Act of 1980 is that the covenant should be construed as affected by the statutory provision. So construed the covenant is clear as to its effect in law. Statutory Interpretation, Benion, 2nd edition at section 269 provides as follows:-
Had the Oireachas intended to alter the law as it has been understood for over one hundred and thirty years it is to be expected that clear wording would have been used. No such words were used and I am satisfied that the Act of 1980 did not alter the common law by providing an action for damages where none previously existed. In so holding I am mindful that the Landlord and Tenant Act 1931 and statutes relating to the law of landlord and tenant thereafter are statutes ameliorating the tenant’s position and this is relevant in construing their provisions. Notwithstanding this I am satisfied that had the Oireachtas intended to confer upon a lessee a cause of action where none had previously existed it would have done so in clear and unambiguous terms.
Conclusion
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