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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Supreme Court >> Daejan Investments Ltd v Benson & Ors (includes Costs Judgment) [2013] UKSC 14 (6 March 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKSC/2013/14.html Cite as: [2013] 2 P &CR 2, [2013] UKSC 14, [2013] HLR 21, [2013] L &TR 17, [2013] UKSC 54, [2013] RVR 164, [2013] 2 All ER 375, [2013] 1 WLR 854, [2013] 11 EG 80, [2013] 2 EGLR 45, [2013] WLR(D) 94 |
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Hilary Term
[2013] UKSC 14
See also Costs Judgment: [2013] UKSC 54
On appeal from: [2011] EWCA Civ 38
JUDGMENT
Daejan Investments Limited (Appellant) v Benson and others (Respondents)
before
Lord Neuberger, President
Lord Hope, Deputy President
Lord Clarke
Lord Wilson
Lord Sumption
JUDGMENT GIVEN ON
6 March 2013
Heard on 4 December 2012
Appellant Nicholas Dowding QC Stephen Jourdan QC (Instructed by GSC Solicitors LLP) |
Respondent Philip Rainey QC Jonathan Upton (Instructed by Excello Law Limited) |
|
Responden James Fieldsend (Instructed by Jaffe Porter Crossick LLP) |
LORD NEUBERGER (with whom Lord Clarke and Lord Sumption agree)
The statutory provisions
"… [T]he relevant contributions of the tenants are limited in accordance with subsection (6) … unless the consultation requirements have been either –
a) complied with in relation to the works …, or
b) dispensed with in relation to the works … by (or on appeal from) a [LVT]."
"Where an application is made to [an LVT] for a determination to dispense with all or any of the consultation requirements in relation to any qualifying works …, the tribunal may make the determination if satisfied that it is reasonable to dispense with the requirements."
Stage 1: Notice of intention to do the works
Notice must be given to each tenant and any tenants' association, describing the works, or saying where and when a description may be inspected, stating the reasons for the works, specifying where and when observations and nominations for possible contractors should be sent, allowing at least 30 days. The landlord must have regard to those observations.
Stage 2: Estimates
The landlord must seek estimates for the works, including from any nominee identified by any tenants or the association.
Stage 3: Notices about Estimates
The landlord must issue a statement to tenants and the association, with two or more estimates, a summary of the observations, and its responses. Any nominee's estimate must be included. The statement must say where and when estimates may be inspected, and where and by when observations can be sent, allowing at least 30 days. The landlord must have regard to such observations.
Stage 4: Notification of reasons
Unless the chosen contractor is a nominee or submitted the lowest estimate, the landlord must, within 21 days of contracting, give a statement to each tenant and the association of its reasons, or specifying where and when such a statement may be inspected.
The factual background
The procedural history
"the cutting short of the consultation period, by indicating … that the decision had been made to award the contract to Mitre … removed from the leaseholders the opportunity to make observations on the estimates to which landlord was obliged to have regard. This opportunity to make informed comment on these matters was central to the consultation process. It had been stressed in correspondence how important this was to the leaseholders."
"Although this was not a case where the landlord made no attempt to comply with the … Regulations, and some extra-statutory consultation was carried out … this did not make good the landlord's omission in failing to provide the estimates and an opportunity to make observations. … The Tribunal considers that the fact that they did not have this opportunity amounts to significant prejudice."
The issues on this appeal
(i) The proper approach to be adopted on an application under section 20ZA(1) to dispense with compliance with the Requirements;
(ii) Whether the decision on such an application must be binary, or whether the LVT can grant a section 20(1)(b) dispensation on terms;
(iii) The approach to be adopted when prejudice is alleged by tenants owing to the landlord's failure to comply with the Requirements.
The proper approach to dispensing under section 20ZA(1)
Is the LVT faced with a binary choice on a section 20ZA(1) application?
The correct approach to prejudice to the tenants
Overview of the analysis so far
The resolution of this appeal
LORD HOPE (dissenting)
LORD WILSON (dissenting)
(a) In August 2005, in response to Daejan's stage 1 notice, four of the five respondents nominated Rosewood as their preferred contractor.
(b) In its report to Daejan dated 30 November 2005, REA, the contract administrator,
(i) analysed the four tenders which Daejan had received and appended a comparative schedule of the individual costings of three of them, including Rosewood;
(ii) noted that Rosewood had offered to reduce its quotation from £454,000 to £432,000, which therefore became only £11,000 higher than that of the contractor, namely Mitre, for which Daejan had at all times indicated a provisional preference;
(iii) observed that the contract period proposed by Rosewood was 24 weeks, whereas that proposed by Mitre was 32 weeks;
(iv) indicated that the choice was between Rosewood and Mitre;
(v) suggested that Rosewood's tender was the most complete and possibly the more realistic;
(vi) said that it could vouch for Rosewood as a quality contractor but that Daejan could presumably vouch analogously for Mitre; and
(vii) concluded that, were it to reduce its contract period to 24 weeks (which indeed it subsequently did), Mitre should be awarded the contract.
(c) In February 2006 Daejan forwarded to the respondents copies of Mitre's tender and of REA's report on the tenders.
(d) But the respondents also wanted to see a copy of Rosewood's tender. Apart from reference to it in the schedule of individual costings, REA's report had made only "general observations" upon its tender over one page.
(e) On five separate occasions between January and July 2006 the respondents in vain asked Daejan for a copy of Rosewood's tender.
(f) Daejan admits that its first stage 3 notice, dated 14 June 2006, did not comply with some of the Requirements. Its main defect was to fail to refer to Rosewood's tender in breach of para 4(8) of Part 2 of Schedule 4.
(g) So Daejan served a second stage 3 notice dated 28 July 2006. In the notice Daejan said (as required by para 4(5)(c)) that Rosewood's tender was available for inspection. Moreover, in accordance with para 4(10)(c)(iii) and regulation 2(1), which require that a tenant be allowed 30 days in which to make observations, it also stated that, subject to any observations made by the respondents, it proposed to award the contract to Mitre but that it would not do so prior to 31 August 2006.
(h) Meanwhile, on 17 July 2006, four of the respondents had applied to the LVT for a determination of their liability to pay service charges to Daejan for each year since 1994. For the then current year, namely 2006, the respondents explained in their application that the issue related to major works costing £600,000 and that one of the questions for determination by the tribunal would be "was the consultation process properly carried out?"
(i) At the LVT's pre-trial review, held on 8 August 2006, there was a remarkable development: for Daejan's solicitor announced that the contract had already been awarded to Mitre. By letter to Daejan, written later that day, the respondents referred to the solicitor's announcement and protested about it.
(j) Daejan wrote two letters to the respondents dated 10 August 2006. It did not deny that its solicitor had made the announcement. On the contrary, in one letter it appeared to confirm that Mitre had been awarded the contract. In the other letter, however, it said only that Mitre would be awarded the contract.
(k) It transpires that Daejan awarded the contract to Mitre only on 11 September 2006. But it had made clear to the respondents on 8 and 10 August that it had made its decision to do so. Thereafter, and although on 11 August they finally received a copy of Rosewood's 50-page tender, the respondents reasonably concluded (as the LVT found) that it would be futile for them to accede to Daejan's previous invitation to make observations prior to 31 August. Indeed Daejan never suggested otherwise.
"[T] here are two separate strands to the policy underlying the regulation of service charges. Parliament gave two types of protection to tenants. First, they are protected by section 19 from having to pay excessive and unreasonable service charges or charges for work and services that are not carried out to a reasonable standard. Second, even if service charges are reasonable in amount, reasonably incurred and are for work and services that are provided to a reasonable standard, they will not be recoverable above the statutory maximum if they relate to qualifying works or a qualifying long term agreement and the consultation process has not been complied with or dispensed with. It follows that the consultation provisions are imposed for an additional reason; namely, to ensure a degree of transparency and accountability when a landlord decides to undertake qualifying works or enter into a qualifying long term agreement. As Robert Walker LJ observed in Martin & Seale v Maryland Estates Ltd (2000) 32 HLR 116, 125 in relation to a previous version of the consultation requirements: 'Parliament has recognised that it is of great concern to tenants, and a potential cause of great friction between landlord and tenants, that tenants may not know what is going on, what is being done, ultimately at their expense.'"
"3. The dispensation procedure is intended to cover situations where consultation was not practicable (eg for emergency works) and to avoid penalising landlords for minor breaches of procedure which do not adversely effect service charge payers' interests." [Emphasis supplied]
The paragraph tends to confirm my view that substantial non-compliance with the Requirements is, without more, intended to entitle the LVT, in the exercise of its discretion, to refuse to dispense with them in order, in Lord Hope's phrase at para 91, to preserve the integrity of the legislation. Lord Neuberger points out at para 46 that the Requirements leave untouched the fact that it is the landlord who decides what works should be done and what amount should be paid for them. What, however, the Requirements recognise is surely the more significant fact that most if not all of that amount is likely to be recoverable from the tenant.
"The extent to which, had [the tenants] been told of the estimates, [they] would have wished to examine them and make observations upon them can only be a matter of speculation. The fact is that they did not have the opportunity and this amounted to significant prejudice."
Hilary Term
[2013] UKSC 54
On appeal from: [2011] EWCA Civ 38
COSTS JUDGMENT
Daejan Investments Limited (Appellant) v Benson and others (Respondents)
before
Lord Neuberger, President
Lord Hope, Deputy President
Lord Clarke
Lord Wilson
Lord Sumption
JUDGMENT GIVEN ON
24 July 2013
Heard on 4 December 2012
Appellant Nicholas Dowding QC Stephen Jourdan QC (Instructed by GSC Solicitors LLP) |
Respondent Philip Rainey QC Jonathan Upton (Instructed by Excello Law Limited) |
|
Responden James Fieldsend (Instructed by Jaffe Porter Crossick LLP) |
After receiving the parties' submissions as to the form of order and costs, Lord Neuberger gave the following judgment with which Lord Hope, Lord Clarke, Lord Wilson and Lord Sumption agreed.
LORD NEUBERGER (with whom Lord Hope, Lord Clarke, Lord Wilson and Lord Sumption agree)
i. A statement that Daejan's appeal is allowed;
ii. A statement that the decisions of the LVT, the UT and the Court of Appeal are set aside;
iii. A direction that, as a condition of the dispensation, Daejan is to pay "the reasonable costs" of the respondents:
(a) already incurred in the proceedings in the LVT, albeit that the scope of this direction is in dispute;
(b) which may be incurred in their being determined by the LVT "if and to the extent that the [LVT] determines that the costs of that application were reasonably incurred";
iv. A direction (subject to the wording) that, as a condition of the dispensation, Daejan's costs of applying for a dispensation (or of any appeal in that connection) cannot be claimed back through service charges;
v. A direction that, subject to an argument in relation to part of those costs, there be no order for costs in this Court and in the Court of Appeal (save that Daejan does not seek to recover £3,000 it was ordered to pay to the Access to Justice Foundation);
vi. A direction that, if the dispensation is effective and Daejan is able to recover the cost of the works, the liability of each respondent to pay by way of service charge is reduced by an agreed sum, to reflect the
£50,000 deduction;
vii. A direction that the proceedings be restored before the LVT for the costs issues under sub-para (iii) to be determined.
(i) Daejan contends that the respondents are only entitled to their costs in the LVT "insofar as those costs were incurred in reasonably testing [Daejan's] claim for dispensation or in reasonably canvassing any prejudice which [the respondents] might suffer", whereas the respondents contend that their costs should be recoverable from Daejan insofar as they were incurred "in reasonably investigating and establishing non- compliance with the Regulations, investigating or seeking to establish prejudice, and investigating and challenging [Daejan's] application for dispensation."
(ii) The respondents also contend that the Order should provide that these costs are not limited to those incurred after the issue of Daejan's application for a dispensation.
(iii) The respondents further contend that the Order should state that these costs can include costs incurred in connection with the hearing which resulted in the earlier determination referred to in para 24 of the main judgment.