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Scottish Court of Session Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Dean (t/a Abbey Mill Business Centre) v Freeman [2006] ScotCS CSOH_91 (13 June 2006)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/2006/CSOH_91.html
Cite as: [2006] ScotCS CSOH_91, [2006] CSOH 91

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OUTER HOUSE, COURT OF SESSION

 

[2006] CSOH 91

 

CA111/03

 

OPINION OF LORD EASSIE (No. 3)

 

in the cause

 

MARCUS DEAN, t/a ABBEY MILL BUSINESS CENTRE

 

Pursuer;

 

against

 

TONY RUSSELL FREEMAN

 

Defender:

 

 

­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­________________

 

 

Pursuer: J. Thomson; Heggie Alexander

Defender: Cowan, Solicitor Advocate; Simpson & Marwick, W.S.

 

13 June 2006

 

Introductory

[1] In this action the pursuer, who is the owner of commercial premises in Paisley known as the Abbey Mill Business Centre, seeks certain payments by the cautioner of a former tenant, Solutions Recruitment and Management Consultants Ltd - "SRMC" - which had leases of various parts of the Business Centre. The background to the litigation is described in the two earlier opinions which I have delivered in the course of these proceedings - [2005] CSOH 3 and [2005] CSOH 75.

[2] As more fully narrated in those opinions, on 5 June 2003, a petition for the winding up of SRMC was presented and a provisional liquidator was appointed. (The provisional liquidator was subsequently appointed as the official liquidator). The pursuer reacted to notification, on 9 June 2003, of the appointment of the provisional liquidator by immediately serving a notice of irritancy in terms of clause 9 of the leases (all of which are on a printed standard form). At the earlier stages of this litigation the pursuer contended that his notice was invalid and that, in any event, the liquidator had agreed that the leases should continue notwithstanding the service of that notice of irritancy. Those issues have been decided adversely to the pursuer. And so the position is that it has been held that all of the leases terminated, by reason of their being irritated by the pursuer, on 9 June 2003.

[3] The present stage of this litigation is concerned with the claims advanced by the pursuer for payment of various sums of money respecting (a) the redecoration of the units; (b) the replacement of the carpets or other floor coverings; and (c) removal of what is described as "débris" but is in fact articles such as files, pin-boards, stationery, items of office furniture and the like which were left behind by the liquidator's staff, presumably since the items were not regarded as having any realisable value. There is also a relatively small claim in respect of the replacement of cracked window panes in the window of two of the units let to SRMC.

[4] Among the practical reasons for which the pursuer was anxious to undo his decision to irritate the leases may be the fact that the leases contained repairing and re-decorating obligations which were only prestable at the tenant's outgo on the occurrence of the ish. By unilaterally irritating the leases on 9 June 2003 the pursuer disabled the tenant from performing those obligations and hence disabled himself from founding on their non-performance ‑ vide the discussion and decision in paragraphs [17] ff of the opinion [2005] CSOH 3.

[5] Thus in the proof before answer allowed respecting the outstanding claims, counsel for the pursuer accepted that the claims for re-decorating and re-carpeting required to be brought within the first branch or limb of clause 6(f) of the leases which is in these terms:

"6. Throughout the duration of this Lease the Occupant shall:-

...

(f) keep, maintain and repair the Premises, together with any pipes or other conduits exclusively serving the same, in good and substantial repair and condition and good decorative internal repair (excluding responsibility for the exterior and structure of the Premises) and the Owners (sic) fittings, fixtures and furnishings (if any) therein (including without prejudice to that generality any suspended ceilings or floor coverings) and all glass in and upon the same all to the reasonable satisfaction of the Owner; in addition the Occupant shall promptly renew or replace any of the Owners (sic) said fittings, fixtures or furnishings as may be in the Owners (sic) reasonable opinion from time to time require renewal or replacement; the Owner being entitled to carry out all works necessary to make good any failure of the Occupant to comply with his obligations in terms of this Lease, and to recover the full costs thereof from the Occupant."

The second branch of clause 6(f) provides for redecoration obligations ... "Before the tenant vacates the property ..." It was accepted by counsel for the pursuer that the obligation so set out could not be invoked in view of the pursuer having irritated the leases. Accordingly, whatever the initial formulation of the claim, one is thus concerned with a claim based upon breach of continuing obligation during the currency of the leases, not an obligation to be performed immediately before the outgo.

[6] Since one is thus concerned with alleged breaches of an obligation of maintenance or repair during the continuance of the tenancies rather an obligation directed to the making good of dilapidations at outgo, it is of some assistance to note the duration for which SRMC (or their predecessor) were in occupation of the various units. The summons is concerned with some 15 leases to SRMC (the business centre having, according to the evidence of the pursuer, between 200 and 300 units contained in three buildings which formerly were a cotton factory). From the terms of the leases, it is apparent that the first unit taken up was Studio 31, on the first floor of one of those buildings, the date of entry to that Studio being 7 July 1997. The company's predecessor had that single office unit 8 October 1999, when it took possession of another office, along the corridor, namely Studio 28. A few months later in February 2000 it acquired the tenancy of another office on the first floor, viz Studio 21 and in September 2000 SRMC acquired Studio 30. In November 2000 it acquired Studio 22, which adjoined on either side Units 21 and 28. During the first six months of 2001 the company acquired the tenancy of further studios either adjoining existing tenancies or in close vicinity, namely Studios 26, 29, 33 and 36. Studio 26 was, in reality, a large storage cupboard. Further storage facility was acquired in November 2001 with the tenancy of "the Attic". At the same time, occupation was taken of Studio 65 on the third floor of the relevant building. In the Spring of 2002 SRMC acquired two units at ground level, which until that time had been occupied as a garage and allied premises by a courier or transport company, namely Units 4 and 5. The former was adapted as a reception office for SRMC. The latter was used by SRMC as its mail room. Finally, in May 2002 occupation was taken of a further office on the first floor viz Studio 20.

[7] It is also to be noted that, SRMC having acquired tenancies of adjoining units, agreement, collateral to the leases, was reached between SRMC and the pursuer that the partition walls might be removed to create larger spaces. Thus by reference to the plan number 6/85 of process, it appears that the partition walls between Studios 28-32 inclusive were removed to make a large open-plan office space. A similar, but more limited, conjoining exercise took place as respects Studios 21 and 22. The cost of reinstating the partition walls are no longer sought from the defender, possibly on the view inter alia that the obligation to reinstate arose collaterally to the lease and hence is not the defender's cautionary responsibility.

 

Redecoration

[8] With that introduction, I turn first to consider the branch of the pursuer's claim which relates to redecoration of the units occupied by SRMC. (As was done during the proof, I treat the terms "unit" and "studio" as interchangeable).

[9] In his evidence the pursuer deponed in general terms that it was necessary to redecorate nearly all of the office before re-letting since the surfaces of the walls were marked at various places where notices, pin-boards, or the like, had been affixed. The wooden skirtings he described as being in fair, rather than good condition, since they had sustained some knocks and scrapes. He had employed his customary painter and decorator, Mr Thomas Fraser, who conducted business as T F (Decorators) Ltd, to redecorate, but the costs had now been adjusted to encompass only one coat of emulsion on the walls since it had been pointed out that only one coat would have been necessary to retain the existing colour scheme.

[10] Mr Thomas Fraser gave evidence, also in general terms, that when tenants moved out of the Business Centre his company would be asked to go in and redecorate. Mr Fraser was taken to a number of invoices, of various dates subsequent to 9 June 2003 (the date of irritancy), relating to the redecoration of units previously occupied by SRMC. The variety of dates was explained as being the result of the pursuer's practice of delaying refurbishment until a new tenant had been found. Mr Fraser observed that in many instances two coats had been required since the colour was to be changed from blue (a colour selected by SRMC as part of its "corporate colours" - see infra) to magnolia, the pursuer's preferred colour. Had the colour change not been made, only one coat would have sufficed. Mr Fraser did not suggest that decoration of the units in question had been neglected to any material extent during the tenant's occupation. He described the need to redecorate for the new tenant as arising generally, because when a tenant moves out there will be marks resulting from pictures, pin-boards etc. having been fixed to the walls and those are unlikely to be acceptable to a new tenant..

[11] Mrs Janet Griffiths, an employee of the pursuer at the Business Centre, who was principally concerned with marketing and recruitment of new business for the Business Centre, also stated that the practice followed was to redecorate only when a new tenant had been found. So far as the state of decoration when SRMC ceased to occupy was concerned, Mrs Griffiths' observation in evidence was essentially that the walls were marked by reason of things which had been fixed to the wall and that there might have been some "grubbiness" .

[12] For his part the defender, the former managing director of SRMC, stated in his evidence that as the company developed it required more space and Mrs Griffiths would tell him whenever a unit became vacant. Generally the unit on offer would not have been newly decorated or fitted with a new carpet following the departure of the previous tenant. Since he was usually in a hurry to obtain occupation, he often agreed with the pursuer that SRMC would bring the units up to standard, they being given entry in advance in order to do that. Specifically as respects redecoration of the units, Mr Freeman said that he would redecorate at the start of the lease (I inferred in agreement with the pursuer); if it were in poor condition; and after effecting alterations, such as the removal of partitions. The company in due course developed a corporate colour scheme of blue and pale lemon and as the managing director he was anxious to have the accommodation redecorated in accordance with that corporate colour scheme.

[13] Much of what Mr Freeman said respecting painting and redecoration receives support from the documents and the evidence of Mr Alan Keith Dixon, the painter and decorator employed by SRMC. Mr Dixon confirmed having done work for that company on several occasions and a number of his quotations and invoices are to be found in the documents numbers 7/27-7/38 or process. Without descending into great detail, those documents show a number of instances of SRMC commissioning painting and decoration works, including the introduction of the "corporate colours". Simply by way of example, Units 4 and 5 were decorated by Mr Dixon on the instruction of SRMC at the time of entry (February 2002) - see 7/29. By way of a further example the document number 7/35 (13 May 2002) relates to the redecoration in the corporate colours carried out in the amalgamated studio 28, 29, 30, 31 and 32. It was clear to me that, for the defender, image, and the working environment was important and the redecoration in the corporate colours was correspondingly important to him. There is nothing in any of the photographs which have been produced to indicate that the premises were not maintained in a good state of decoration during the currency of the tenancies and in so far as there may be a conflict between the evidence given on behalf of the pursuer and the evidence of the defender and Mr Dixon, I prefer the latter.

[14] However, in relation to the state of decoration. I do not believe that there is truly a conflict of fact between the evidence given on the respective sides of this case. For the purposes of re-letting, decoration might well be required since pin-boards, notices, pictures and the like would inevitably would leave marks from their fixings or differential shading as a result of exposure to sunlight. And a new tenant might prefer his own or the pursuer's preferred colour (magnolia) to the SRMC corporate colours. It may be noted that Mr Fraser couched the need for redecoration along those lines. Mrs Griffiths also saw matters from that perspective. Such considerations are reflected in the obligations in the second branch of clause 6(f) to redecorate at the conventional ish.

[15] However, it was accepted by counsel for the pursuer that reliance could not be placed on that second branch. Counsel instead submitted that there was a breach of the first branch of the clause since, he said, the walls automatically ceased to be in good decorative order whenever the tenant affixed something to them because there might then arise a need to redecorate when the affixed article was eventually removed. In my opinion, this submission is plainly unsound. It implies a prohibition on hanging any picture, mirror, pin-board, poster or notice on any wall. If it had been the landlord's intention to impose such a highly unusual restriction on the tenant's enjoyment of the subjects, one would have expected it to be expressly imposed. In the absence of express prohibition, the tenant could rightly assume he was at liberty to make normal use of the interior walls for hanging pictures etc. Mr Dean, the pursuer, did not suggest such a prohibition. Moreover, the interpretation claimed by counsel for the pursuer as respects the first branch of clause 6(f) would render the second branch otiose. I reject the attempt by counsel for the pursuer, rather like Procrustes, to fit this claim into the confines of the first branch of clause 6(f).

Carpets

[16] The evidence on behalf of the pursuer respecting the state of the carpets was also adduced as a matter of generality. Thus, in chief, Mr Dean, stated that in general terms the carpets were very worn. He ascribed this more specifically to the movement of office chairs and patching in those instances in which the partitions had been removed and the carpet had been patched. Consequently, he said, the carpets were not in a condition for re-letting. The way in which the fitting of the new carpets was gone about was that his employees would remove, or assist in the moving of, the existing carpet. Thereafter new carpets, purchased by the pursuer and held in store by him, would be fitted by an outside contractor, Mr Thomas Weir. In the course of his cross-examination, Mr Dean confirmed his position of universality, expressly stating that each and every carpet in every unit occupied by SRMC was very worn and defective and required to be replaced.

[17] A similar, universal, approach to the state of the carpets was invited of Mrs Griffiths in her examination in chief. In response to that invitation, she said that after the liquidator left she "went round" and, as I have her noted - "the carpets were pretty awful, they were badly worn". However, when cross-examined by Mr Cowan, who appeared for the defender, and having been adverted to the fact that in taking occupation of Unit 4, SRMC wished, and installed, a polished wooden floor (which Mrs Griffiths conceded immediately as being very nice and a matter of her admiration) and installed other carpeting, Mrs Griffiths conceded that the carpeting in position at the date of irritancy was worn to varying degrees. But it would not be adequate for marketing the units for new tenants, who, she said, expect everything to be new.

[18] Counsel for the pursuer also adduced as a witness the self-employed carpet fitter - Mr Thomas Weir - to whom the pursuer had referred in his evidence. In chief, Mr Weir gave evidence that he had fitted new carpets to offices which he understood might previously have been occupied by SRMC. He stated as a generality that the carpets were well worn, to which he added the explanation that office workers sitting on chairs with wheels could be very sore on carpets. He was then taken to the invoices submitted by him to the pursuer which included - among other units - some of the units previously occupied by SRMC. Mr Weir was not invited to fit new carpets to all of the units immediately after the avoidance of the leases in June 2003. As he explained in cross-examination, his understanding was that it was only as a new company wished to go into a unit that the pursuer would wish to re-vamp that unit or office.

[19] In view of that explanation of Mr Weir's instruction, it is perhaps useful to set out chronologically the invoices relating to the carpet fitting works carried out by him

which have been lodged in process:

19 August 2003

Unit 4

(6/66)

17 March 2004

Unit 5

(6/67)

2 August 2004

Unit 28

(6/64)

21 September 2004

Unit 33

(6/62)

23 March 2005

Unit 4 (Carpet Tiles)

Unit 30 (Carpet Tiles)

 

(6/61)

26 April 2005

Unit 29

(6/65)

It may be noted that some of the invoices also relate to carpet-fitting in parts of the Business Centre which were never occupied by SRMC; and also that they do not cover many of the units in fact occupied by SRMC, including Units 20, 21, 22, 27, 31, 36 and 65.

[20] As already indicated, in the course of his evidence the defender stated that, apart from the first three or four units taken on by SRMC, he would generally agree with the pursuer that the company should have a rent-free period of occupation in advance of the commencing date of the lease in which to redecorate and re-carpet if necessary. As I understood him, in some instances the carpets initially in place were replaced as part of the desire to have a corporate colour scheme. So, when the partitions between Units 20, 21 and 22 were removed to form a larger space, the resulting larger space was redecorated and re-carpeted. Moreover, the defender explained that not every unit had a carpet when entry was taken. Unit 20 had a wooden floor. Unit 5 had been a garage, with a concrete floor. As respects Unit 4, SRMC also had occupation in advance and spent considerable sums in putting in the polished wooden flooring, to which Mrs Griffiths made reference, and some carpeting as part of the creation of a reception area for visitors to the company which would have an image or appearance which Mr Freeman thought appropriate to the company.

[21] The defender went on in evidence to explain that in June 2004 he had visited some of the units. The photographs to be found in number 7/39 of process were taken on that occasion. The first page of the photographs shows Unit 4, and the parquet floor installed by SRMC (and the corporate décor). Studio 20-22 is photographed on the second page and shows, said the defender, the same carpet as had been put in by SRMC, and the same decoration scheme. Likewise for Studio 27, depicted on the third page of 7/39. However, the defender readily stated that offices 28 and 32 had old carpet which had been patched to meet the new carpet installed in the middle of this large unit, which had been the call centre.

[22] In approaching the claim for costs of new carpets it is of course necessary to bear in mind that one is concerned with the continuing obligation to maintain and if need be renew the moveable property of the landlord, namely his carpets. Two principal points arise. First, if the carpet were not provided by the landlord as part of the subjects leased, he can have no claim to its replacement, however worn the tenant's carpet might be. Second, as respects those carpets which are the property of the landlord - either originally, or as a replacement for the original carpet - what has to be shown is not just that some wear and tear had occurred, but the degree of wear and tear was to such an extent as to dictate renewal from the standpoint, I think, of a reasonable person in occupation of the premises.

[23] As respects the first of those points, it appears to me that, on the evidence, the pursuer's claim respecting Units 4 and 5 must fail. It was eventually not disputed by the pursuer that such floor coverings as were provided in Unit 5 (the mail room) were provided by SRMC and that all of the polished wooden parquet flooring in Unit 4 (the reception area) plus incidental carpeting was provided and installed by SRMC. In any event, on this particular matter, I have no difficulty in preferring the evidence of Mr Freeman, which received support from Mrs Griffiths. Similarly, the evidence of the defender, Mr Freeman, that Unit 20 had no carpet when occupation was taken by SRMC was the not the subject of any challenge.

[24] Unit 20 is, I believe, a convenient starting point for evaluating the more disputed aspects of the evidence regarding carpets. Entry to that unit was taken in May 2002. The adjoining units, 21 and 22 had some of their internal partitions removed at some stage after November 2000 and would thus require re-carpeting. The photograph on the second sheet of number 7/39 of process, taken on 3 June 2004, showed, said the defender, Units 20-22 and the same carpet as had been laid by SRMC as part of its corporate colour scheme when the units had been made into the larger space. None of this was challenged in cross-examination and I accept Mr Freeman's evidence on this matter. Consistent with Mr Freeman's evidence, none of Mr Weir's invoices relate to Studios 20-22. The photographs do not show any defect in the carpet, which is in the SRMC corporate colour and the units have evidently been re-let (cf the photographs of Units 20-22 in the photographs in number 6/79). So the subsidiary contention, inherently flowing from the pursuer's primary contention of fact that the carpets were universally worn and required replacement, that during its occupation of Studios 20-22, SRMC breached its obligation under the first branch of clause 6(f) of the leases is in my view not made out.

[25] Given the foregoing conflict with the universality of the claim advanced by the pursuer, both in evidence, and in what is described in No. 21 of process as a "Schedule of Invoices" (perhaps somewhat misleadingly, since the "invoices" have no bearing to any contractual sale), I do not consider that I can place reliance on the pursuer's evidence, delivered in such general terms as it was adduced. Similarly in so far as Mrs Griffiths gave evidence in chief of a universality of worn carpets in the units occupied by SRMC, I am unable to accept that part of her evidence . However, in fairness to Mrs Griffiths, I would record that I do not question her endeavour to give evidence to the best of her ability. The questions were presented to her by counsel in universal terms. In cross-examination by Mr Cowan, she readily agreed that there were variations in the extent of any wear to the carpets, but she was not taken to any detail. It was also apparent that she approached matters solely from the point of view of what was necessary, or might be necessary, in commercial terms to attract a new tenant. She was not asked questions directed to whether from the standpoint of a continuing occupier SRMC had neglected to maintain or renew the carpet during the ongoing currency of the lease.

[26] The same may - to an extent - be said of the evidence of Mr Weir. He was asked to describe the condition of the carpets which he was asked to replace in terms of their general condition. Given that Mr Weir was, it seems, generally employed to replace carpets to meet the needs of an incoming tenant in the Business Centre (at least where the in-coming tenant did not do his own fitting out works), I have reservations in accepting the reliability of his evidence on the condition of the carpets as being always directed to units which had been occupied by SRMC. As is evident from the dates of Mr Weir's invoices, the process of laying new floor coverings in the units formerly occupied by SRMC did not take place as single operation but rather, on an intermittent basis; and in some instances his invoices also include for carpeting of units which SRMC had never occupied.

[27] As already indicated, the invoices from Mr Weir which have been produced in process do not include a number of units occupied by SRMC. When asked about the absence of invoices relating to those other units, the pursuer simply offered the explanation that "it must be that the invoices have not been looked out". While it is no doubt conceivable that an odd invoice may go missing, I have difficulty with the pursuer's riposte that the invoices relating to the re-carpeting of seven units should simply not have been looked out. Such extensive omissions must have been apparent to those engaged in preparing the claim and it was never suggested that for some reason or other, they had been lost or destroyed. Counsel for the pursuer did not adduce from Mr Weir that he had done work additional to the invoices in process, for which other, supposedly mislaid, invoices existed.

[28] The foregoing gives me reason for preferring generally the evidence of the defender on this matter. As already recorded, he struck me as a man to whom image was important. He would not readily tolerate shabby office premises, whether in terms of mural decoration or floor coverings. However, the defender readily stated that in two units SRMC had not replaced the landlord's carpeting prior to the incurring of the irritancy and that in those units the carpeting was indeed worn. The units in question were, said the defender, Units 28 and 32 being - as I understood his evidence - the units at each end of the call centre created from the amalgamation of Units 28-32 inclusive. It is indicated on the plan, no. 6/85 of process, that the call centre extended from Units 28-32, entirely consistent with the defender's evidence. However, having made avizandum I find on closer examination of the summons, and the subsequent "Schedule of Leases", that no mention is made in either of any lease of Studio/Unit 32.

[29] This inconsistency was not noticed, or at least was not raised, by any of those participant in the proof. No point was made in evidence or in submission respecting the defender's identification of the end unit of the call centre as being Unit 32. It was thus not suggested that he was mistaken in ascribing the number 32 to one of the parts of the call centre. The inconsistency might be explained by such a simple error, or a lapsus linguae. But, as already mentioned, the plan indicates the "call centre" as embracing Studio 32. Moreover, the quotation from Mr Dixon (SRMC's decorator) refers to the decoration of "Studios 28, 29, 30, 31 and 32" [my emphasis]. It therefore appears to me as a matter of probability that the defender, who generally in the course of his testimony had a good grasp of the enumeration of the various units occupied by SRMC, is probably correct in identifying one of the areas with worn carpet as being Studio or Unit 32; but for some reason the drafter of the summons has omitted the tenancy of that studio or unit. The fact that the pleadings omit reference to Unit 32 may, possibly, also explain the absence from the invoices from Mr Weir which have been lodged in process of any document relating to Unit 32 if, as is likely, the selection proceeded on the basis of the tenancies mentioned in the pleadings.

[30] In these circumstances, given the defender's ready acceptance that the carpeting in Units 28 and 32 was the original landlord's carpeting, which had not been replaced, but which was indeed worn, I am prepared to uphold the pursuer's claim that at the date of the irritancy SRMC were in breach of the first branch of clause 6(f) as respects Unit 28. I would have made a like finding as respects Unit 32, assuming it to have been held under the pursuer's standard form of lease and to have been subject to a claim in the Summons. For the rest, the evidence tendered does not, for the reasons indicated, persuade me that the pursuer has established that SRMC neglected to maintain or replace carpets in a manner in breach of the first branch of clause 6(f) of the leases.

 

Removal of Debris

[31] It is clear that the liquidator's staff did not, by any means, remove all of the property of SRMC. The liquidator apparently took what could be realised for the benefit of the general creditors; but he left behind considerable amounts of files, stocks of stationery, some office equipment and various other miscellaneous items, the task of removing that abandoned property being left - some, indeed many people, might think very inconsiderately - to the landlord. The pursuer gave evidence to the effect that his employees spent much (but not recorded) time in removing the abandoned items to skips, which he said had been hired solely for that purpose - although the hire of skips for the removal of rubbish from the Business Centre was apparently a matter of regular course.

[32] However, the only basis upon which counsel for the pursuer submitted that liability arose in respect of the removal of the "débris" was entirely ancillary to the claim for re-carpeting. It was, said counsel, necessary to remove articles left on top of the carpets before the carpets could be lifted, removed and then replaced with new. Counsel made plain that he did not rely on the obligation in clause 6(c). Nor was clause 6(r) of the leases invoked. It was not submitted that any obligation to leave the premises void and redd arose ex lege on irritancy of a lease. I would also record that the Summons does not invoke any such common law obligation nor either of the provisions of clause 6(c) or clause 6 (r).

[33] Mr Cowan, for the defender, naturally did not question that in order to replace a carpet with a new floor-covering it is necessary to move out any furniture or other articles resting on the carpet. But, he observed, the need to move furniture or other articles to lay a carpet was not to be equiparated with removing them to a specially hired skip. As I understood him, Mr Cowan was thus proceeding on the hypothesis of a breach of the first branch of clause 6(f) of the lease, which the landlord remedied at his own hand. That would simply involve the temporary displacement of the tenant's moveable property to the corridor or other adjacent location. For the rest, the defender's solicitor stressed and underscored the ancillary or dependent nature of the claim presented as respects the removal of débris.

[34] I think it must follow ineluctably from the ancillary or dependent basis upon which the removal of débris claim is presented and from the findings which I make in paragraph [30] supra that the claim for removal of debris must be restricted to Unit 28.

 

Quantification

[35] On the basis that SRMC were in breach of the first branch of clause 6(f) respecting the carpet in Unit 28, one may conveniently turn to the report by Mr Alan Muat, number 6/80 of process. Mr Muat is a chartered quantity surveyor, having qualified in 1964, and a partner in John Duguid & Partners, Dundee. He had, in broad terms, been asked to review the claimed remedial costs. He visited the premises along with the decorator, Mr Fraser, and my impression was that the greater focus was on redecoration, particularly whether one or two coats of emulsion paint were appropriate. His contribution to the quantification of the re-carpeting costs was limited. He was unable to contribute any objective assessment of the figures claimed by Mr Dean in his "invoices" of costs for removal of debris. With those observations or reservations, the figure attributed by Mr Muat to re-carpeting and the removal of debris from Unit 28 is £1,486. Although certain criticisms were canvassed in evidence and submission respecting the costs claimed for re-carpeting and debris, in light of what follows respecting the deposits paid by SMRC to the pursuer, I do not think it useful to explore those criticisms and their possible impact on the figure for Unit 28. They are, essentially matters of relatively minor detail.

 

The Deposits

[36] Clause 3(ii) of the leases provides for the Occupant making a deposit

"... which shall be retained by the Owner until the termination hereof howsoever and whensoever terminated, and the Owner shall be entitled to deduct therefrom all sums due or becoming due to the Owner by the Occupant in terms of or arising from this Lease or from any breach thereof before remitting the balance of the deposit to the Occupant without any interest".

It is not in dispute that SRMC paid such deposits and the pursuer accepted in evidence that SRMC had paid deposits to him in accordance with the leases, and that he still held those deposits. The pursuer accepted that the deposits from SRMC, which he still held, amounted in round terms to some £16,000. The existence of these deposits and their effect as extinguishing pro tanto any liability of SRMC, and hence the cautioner, is raised, in inter alia, the revised note of issues for the defender, No. 45 of process, lodged on 31 August 2005.

[37] In addressing this issue, counsel for the pursuer briefly contended that the deposits were funds owed to the liquidator and that the defender, as cautioner, was liable to the pursuer for the totality of the claim due by SRMC without any regard to the existence of the deposits. No authority was advanced by counsel for this proposition. For his part Mr Cowan submitted that the defender, as cautioner, was entitled to any defence, including in particular any right of compensation of debt or set-off, available to the tenant; and that a cautionary obligation is accessory and cannot be greater than the obligation of the principal obligant. He referred in support of that submission to the article in the Stair Memorial Encyclopaedia Vol. 3, para. 843 and the passage in Gloag & Irvine on The Law of Rights in Security pp. 846ff.

[38] In my opinion, Mr Cowan's submission is sound and thus prevails over Mr Thomson's contention. It is clear that the deposits were required as a limited security for the performance of the tenant's obligations and indeed the pursuer has, quite understandably, held on to them for that very reason. In advancing any claim in the liquidation, the pursuer would of course require to deduct the amount of the deposits. It follows, in my opinion, that in advancing his claim against the defender, qua cautioner, the pursuer is bound to make a similar deduction or offset. The amount of the deposits - though not precisely vouched or ascertained - was readily accepted by Mr Dean as being approximately £16,000 (made up of some £10,000 as the ordinary deposit calculated in accordance with clause 3(ii) plus a further additional deposit of £6,000 made as part of the collateral agreement respecting the removal of partitions). Since even the first of those constituent sums considerably exceeds the amount which I regard as recoverable by the pursuer, accepting the validity of Mr Muat's figures as respects Unit 28, it follows that no liability can attach to the cautioner for the amount placed by Mr Muat on Unit 28. Given its broadly similar size, the same practical result would also ensue even if the lease of Unit 32 had been included in the pleadings.

 

Windows

[39] The existence of the deposits means that in any event the same fate also befalls the claim for the cracked window panes. The claim is advanced respecting Unit 27 and Unit 64 and the amounts sought, in Mr Muat's report, are £280 and £400 respectively. These amounts are clearly well within the remaining total of the deposits held by the pursuer.

[40] Mr Cowan also challenged this head of claim on other grounds, principally that the claim was not vouched in any way. In giving evidence regarding Unit 27, the pursuer explained that the windows were original "Crittal" windows dating from the early part of the 20th Century. The cracked panes were replaced using a "cherry picker" hoist as part of a general repair of glazing and other works in the Business Centre. The pursuer estimated that the cost of the glass itself might be around £98 and the remainder of his claim was "something for the cherry picker". The pursuer was not asked in evidence about the replacement of window panes in Unit 64. I have to say that I regard the evidence tendered in support of this head of claim is unsatisfactory. It amounts in effect to the ipse dixit of the pursuer unsupported by any documentary evidence as to the cost of, for example, the glass, or the hire of the cherry picker and the extent to which it was used for other windows, or other maintenance operations elsewhere in the Centre. Prima facie a claim for sum £680 for the replacement of a limited number of cracked window panes in two windows appears high. I would therefore have been inclined to uphold this branch of Mr Cowan's submission, but in light of earlier findings the practical materiality of the claim is displaced by the existence of the deposits.

 

Other Matters

[41] While the foregoing is sufficient for the disposal of the action, it is appropriate that I record certain additional matters canvassed in submission.

[42] First, the defender's solicitor-advocate submitted that while the claim was now presented as being the recovery of the landlord's "costs" of carrying out works to remedy breach of an ongoing tenant's liability (as clause 6(f) would require), reality was that the steps taken by the landlord were not in fact to remedy the tenant's breach but to equip the premises for other extraneous reasons. Thus, as respects a number of the units - for example 28-32 - erection of new partitions was carried out for the landlord's future purposes and not with a view to remedying any breach by SRMC of the first branch of clause 6(f).

[43] I think there is force in this point. If, as appears, the pursuer decided to re-configure the call centre to discrete office units, which would involve among other things the re-decoration and individual re-carpeting of the various re-created units, he cannot simply claim a financial contribution on the basis that carpets which would inevitably be replaced by different floor coverings in different configurations were originally worn. (I am conscious that in agreeing to the removal of the partitions, the pursuer may have entered into agreements with SRMC for their reinstatement on outgo on the conventional ish but those obligations may not be enforceable against the cautioner either on the view that they are agreements outwith the lease, or, possibly, that being "prior to outgo" obligations, performance is prevented by the pursuer's decision to irritate the lease).

[44] Secondly, Mr Cowan, no doubt with a view to increasing the sum of £16,000 held as deposits and thus available for compensation of debt, maintained additionally that SRMC were entitled to recover a proportion of the pre-paid rents for the month of June, namely the period between 9 June and 30 June 2003. The basis of this was the condictio causa data causa non secuta and in that connection he referred me to the well known decision in Cantieri San Rocco v The Clyde Shipbuilding and Engineering Co Ltd 1923 SC(HL) 105. The submissions of Mr Cowan, and Mr Thomson's response on this, in my view rather difficult matter, were limited and since it is not necessary for my decision I think it better that I express no view upon the matter.

[45] The final matter to be mentioned is that Mr Cowan submitted that interest should only run from the dates upon which the "costs" were incurred. He pointed to the fact that the evidence demonstrated that some of the "costs" incurred by the pursuer were incurred only after the date of citation and that this should be borne in mind. In the event I do not have to consider the question of interest but in principle I would regard that submission as being sound.

 

Disposal

[45] For the reasons given, I conclude that I must grant decree of absolvitor in favour of the defender.

 


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