BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?

No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!



BAILII [Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback]

United Kingdom Upper Tribunal (Lands Chamber)


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Upper Tribunal (Lands Chamber) >> Thomas re: 18 The Brake [2012] UKUT 128 (LC) (04 May 2012)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKUT/LC/2012/LP_21_2011.html
Cite as: [2012] UKUT 128 (LC)

[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]


UPPER TRIBUNAL (LANDS CHAMBER)

 

 

UT Neutral citation number: [2011] UKUT 128 (LC)

UTLC Case Number: LP/21/2011

 

 

TRIBUNALS, COURTS AND ENFORCEMENT ACT 2007

 

RESTRICTIVE COVENANT – modification – application to permit construction of single storey extension – reasonableness – practical benefits – effects upon visual amenity – injury – Law of Property Act 1925 section 84, grounds (aa) and (c) - application granted and modification ordered

 

 

IN THE MATTER OF AN APPLICATION UNDER

SECTION 84 OF THE LAW OF PROPERTY ACT 1925

 

 

BY

 

 

 

GERALD BERNARD THOMAS

 

 

re: 18 The Brake, Brake Lane, Hagley,

Stourbridge, West Midlands DY8 2XJ

 

 

 

Determination on written representations

 

 

By: P R Francis FRICS

Member, Upper Tribunal (Lands Chamber)

 


DECISION

Introduction

1.           The applicant in this case, Mr Gerald Bernard Thomas, is the freehold owner of 18 The Brake, Hagley, Stourbridge, West Midlands DY8 2XJ (the application land). He seeks the modification of a restrictive covenant burdening the land so as to allow for the construction of a single-storey side extension to his house in accordance with a planning permission granted by Bromsgrove District Council (ref: 09/0975) on 11 March 2010. The application is made under grounds (aa) and (c) of section 84 of the Law of Property Act 1925 (the Act).

2.           An objection has been received from the directors of the Brake (Hagley) Management Company Limited (represented by Mrs Diane Chambers, Company Secretary).  They are all admitted.

3.           In determining this application I have considered the papers submitted to the Tribunal, including the application and notice of objection, the statements of case of each side and a brief agreed statement of issues.  I also inspected the application land and the immediately surrounding area on 25 April 2012.

The Restrictive Covenant

4.           The land to which the application relates is the freehold of 18 The Brake, Hagley, Stourbridge, West Midlands DY8 2XJ, registered at HM Land Registry under title number WR73797 in a transfer dated 6 January 2003 between The Brake (Hagley) Management Company Limited and Gerald Bernard Thomas. Section 13 of the transfer relating to additional provisions states:

“The Transferee so as to bind the Property into whosoever hands it may come covenants with the Transferee for the benefit of the other parts of The Brake to observe with the restrictive covenants set out in Schedule 3.”

Schedule 3 contains the following restriction:

“Not at any time without the prior consent in writing of the Transferor to erect or place any additional building or other permanent erection or shed on any part of the Property or to make any external additions or alterations to the Property such consent not to be unreasonably withheld or delayed.”   

The application land and surrounding area

5.           18 The Brake comprises a modern, two-storey end terrace house of brick cross-wall construction with weatherboard clad and glazed front and rear elevations under pitched concrete tile covered roofs.  It is located at the entrance of a small L shaped cul-de-sac development of 18 houses built in about 1963 on the corner of Brake Lane and Sweetpool Lane on the western edge of Hagley.  Each of the properties on the development has the benefit of a garage in a separate block.

6.           The area in which the application land is situated is a predominantly residential suburb on the outskirts of Hagley, and the development of which 18 The Brake forms part is adjacent to Hagley Catholic High School, and opposite Haybridge High School. The local railway station is nearby.

Applicant’s case

7.           Mr Thomas said that he purchased the residue of a 99 year leasehold interest in 18 The Brake in 1993. In 2001/2 the residents of the development appointed solicitors and an agent to advise them in respect of acquiring the freehold of their properties.  The agent advised the setting up of a management company into which the freehold of the whole development would be transferred, following which individual freeholds could be sold to the existing occupiers, but the former common areas would be retained by the company with individual property owners contributing to the usual maintenance obligations. 

8.           The agent’s initial letter of advice to one of the residents dated 25 May 2001 included the following paragraph:

“You are probably aware that we have been approached by Mr G B Thomas of No.18 who wishes to buy the strip of land between his west wall and Sweetpool Lane and put it as part of his garden. This is the only house that has this additional land which is not technically a common part and I see no objection thereto and nor do the solicitors provided a reasonable contribution is made by Mr Thomas for that property which could enhance the value of his own house. This is something the rest of you may need to consider as well but you are being properly advised thereof.”

9.     Following the setting up of the management company, and the purchase of the freehold of the whole development, Mr Thomas said in his initial statement of case that in 2002 he purchased the strip of land from the management company and later, in January 2003, he purchased the freehold of the original house and garden forming 18 The Brake.  All the other residents of The Brake also purchased their freeholds, apart from No. 1 where the freehold remains with the management company.  However, in a note to the Tribunal dated 15 December 2011 issued in response to the objectors’ statement of case, Mr Thomas corrected his statement regarding the purchase of the strip of land. He said that

 “[t]he land was not purchased but simply confirmed as being part of No.18. This had always been my view of the ground and when the freehold opportunity arose it was an obvious step to take to confirm it as such.  This I did in 2001. The status of the ground was confirmed in writing to the management company by the professional advisers engaged to negotiate terms for the freehold transfer of The Brake…The token £100 was offered and accepted simply to acknowledge others’ interest in the ground as a part of The Brake.”

At the site inspection, at which Ms Chambers was also present, he said that the nominal contribution to the management company of £100 was to “acknowledge and confirm” that the additional strip of land had been transferred to him.

10.        Mr Thomas said that subsequently, in 2005, he obtained planning consent for a single-storey side extension which would be located upon the strip of land he had acquired. In accordance with the provisions of the restrictive covenant, he said he sought the management company’s consent in 2007, but this was not forthcoming.  In 2010, the planning permission was renewed and further attempts were made to obtain the management company’s consent, including an offer of £300 and the offer of the use of the new room for management meetings “if it was required.”  Following a secret ballot which voted 10 to 6 against the proposal, an application under section 84 of the Law of Property Act 1925 for modification of the restriction was made to this Tribunal on 13 October 2011.

11.        It is Mr Thomas’s view that the management company’s consent is being unreasonably withheld.  He gave, in his additional note, examples of where the management company had permitted alterations to existing structures such as allowing the replacement of flat roofs to the front outriggers with single pitch tiled roofs. He said the existence of the restriction inhibits reasonable use of the land.  The proposed extension would not be within line of sight from any of the other properties on The Brake, and there would therefore be no affect upon anyone’s privacy.  Its construction and use would not injure any of the beneficiaries and any noise or disturbance during construction works would be minimal, the extension being shielded from the rest of the development by the west wall of his house. Mr Thomas said that, in his opinion, the restriction does not secure any practical benefit of substantial value or advantage to any person.

Objectors’ case

12.        The objectors said that the modification should not be granted as the proposed extension constituted an unreasonable use of the land. The Brake was designed by an architect of some merit, and local estate agents’ particulars had described The Brake as an award winning development. The concept of it was as a development of 18 three bedroom houses all of more or less identical in size, and the extension sought would create a fundamental change to the appearance of The Brake. Furthermore, No.18 adjoins the highway, and so the extension will be highly visible and prominent.  The land, it was said, was intended to be used as garden ground, and should remain that way. Further development on The Brake could also have an impact upon parking, which was already in short supply.

13.        The covenant, it was said, had been imposed to protect The Brake against unwanted change, and granting this application could “open the floodgates” for further applications and with the result that the management company’s control over what could and could not happen would be lost forever.

14.        Ms Chambers said that the management company had permitted conservatory extensions elsewhere on the development, and acknowledged that permission had also been granted where it had been sought, for residents to replace the flat roofs of their entrance porch/cloakroom areas with sloping tiled roofs.  These were considered to be minor alterations, whereas what the applicant was proposing was of much more significance. The company’s reticence in the matter of this application was, she said, also a matter of principle because of the way Mr Thomas came by the land, and the fact that he would be benefiting from the increased development, which had not been the intention when the land was transferred. She thought that the land had been transferred at a nominal figure on the understanding that it would be used only as garden ground, and that it would never have been sold for development purposes.  The offer by Mr Thomas of £300 was derisory. However, it the Tribunal was minded to grant the application, a more appropriate payment, reflecting a proportion of the development value, should be made to the company. 

15.        In all the circumstances, the objectors said that that it was reasonable to refuse consent to the proposed development.

Conclusions

16.        I deal firstly, and shortly, with the question of how the applicant came by the freehold ownership of the strip of land upon which he now wishes to build an extension. It appears that there is some dispute as to whether or not that land was formerly a part of the common areas which the leasehold owners of the properties on The Brake used to maintain under informal arrangements, and whether it was acquired separately or had always been within the defined boundaries of No.18. This is not a matter which concerns me in the determination of this application, but I note that (a) the freehold of the whole of 18 The Brake and the strip of land to the side was transferred to Mr Thomas in a single transfer (Land Registry title No. WR 73797) on 8 January 2003 and (b) as is apparent from the plan dated 1 July 2002 forming part of Title No. HW 108656 which shows the whole of The Brake, the land in question was shown as forming a part of No.18 and was not shown as part of the common areas (which are shaded green thereon). For the purposes of this determination, the application land clearly includes the strip of land to the west of the main structure, and is burdened by the restriction.

17.        The grounds upon which the application was made are set out in section 84(1)(aa) and (c) of the Law of Property Act 1925 which provide:

“84-(1) The Lands Tribunal shall (without prejudice to any concurrent jurisdiction of the court) have power from time to time, on the application of any person interested in any freehold land affected by any restriction arising under covenant or otherwise as to the user thereof or the building thereon, by order wholly or partially to discharge or modify any such restriction on being satisfied -

(aa) that (in a case falling within subsection (1A) below) the continued existence [of the covenant] would impede some reasonable user of the land for public or private purposes or, as the case may be, would unless modified impede such user;

(c) that the proposed discharge or modification will not injure the persons entitled to the benefit of the restriction.”

Subsection (1A) provides:

“(1A)  Subsection (1)(aa) above authorises the discharge or modification of a restriction by reference to its impeding some reasonable user of the land in any case in which the Lands Tribunal is satisfied that the restriction, in impeding that user, either-

(a)   does not secure to persons entitled to the benefit of it any practical benefits of substantial value or advantage to them; or

(b)   is contrary to the public interest

and that money will be an adequate compensation for the loss or disadvantage (if any) which any such person will suffer from the discharge or modification”.

18.        Firstly, in connection with ground (aa), there is no doubt in my mind that the proposed extension constitutes a reasonable use of the application land, being a simple and straightforward single-storey extension to a residential dwelling, and no evidence was adduced which, in my view, supports the argument that such a use would be unreasonable.  That the continued existence of the restriction impedes such use is not in question.  The Brake is a small modern development of traditionally designed and constructed houses with garages in separate blocks which was described by the objectors as of particular architectural merit.  Whilst I acknowledge and appreciate the objectors’ opinions, The Brake does not seem to me to offer such significant qualities of uniqueness or individuality as provide a reasonable ground for the management company’s refusal of consent. 

19.        I accept the applicant’s statement that the proposed extension will not be directly visible from any of the other properties on The Brake, and the fact that it will be seen from Sweetpool Lane is, in my view of little if any consequence. The layout of the development, it appears to me, is such that none of the other properties have land to the side of sufficient size to allow for a similar extension, and I do not therefore accept the suggestion that granting this application would be the thin end of the wedge, and open the floodgates to many more applications of a similar nature. I am satisfied for these reasons that the restriction does not secure to the objectors’ benefits of substantial value or advantage, and the application under ground (aa) is thus made out.

20.        That being the case, the question of injury under ground (c) does not need to be considered, although I would state here that whatever my conclusions had been under ground (aa), I can see no way in which the proposed modification could cause injury to the objectors.

21.        The application therefore succeeds, and adopting the discretion afforded to me under the Act I determine that the restrictive covenant be modified so as to permit the proposed development upon the application land in accordance with the planning permission granted by Bromsgrove District Council on 11 March 2010 under reference 09/0975. 

22.        No evidence was produced in support of the objectors’ suggestion that, if the modification were granted, the management company should receive a proportion of the additional development value, and I make no finding, therefore, in that regard. It was not suggested, apart from this, that compensation should be paid to those with the benefit of the covenant, and I do not consider that they will suffer any loss or disadvantage by reason of the modification that would make the payment of compensation appropriate.

 

DATED 4 May 2012

 

 

P R Francis FRICS


BAILII:
Copyright Policy | Disclaimers | Privacy Policy | Feedback | Donate to BAILII
URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKUT/LC/2012/LP_21_2011.html