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!
|
[Home]
[Databases]
[World Law]
[Multidatabase Search]
[Help]
[Feedback]
|
United Kingdom Journals
|
You are here:
BAILII >>
Databases >>
United Kingdom Journals >>
Ferris and Williams, A Fruitful Parent of Injustice: Unilateral Service of Notice to Quit by a Joint Tenant
URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/other/journals/WebJCLI/2004/issue3/ferris3.html
Cite as:
Ferris and Williams, A Fruitful Parent of Injustice: Unilateral Service of Notice to Quit by a Joint Tenant
|
[New search]
[Help]
A Fruitful Parent of
Injustice: Unilateral Service of Notice to Quit by a Joint Tenant
Graham
Ferris,
Lecturer, Department of Academic Legal Studies, Nottingham Law School
<[email protected]>
and
Cathy
Williams,
Senior Lecturer in Law, University of Sheffield
<[email protected]>
Copyright © Graham Ferris and Cathy Williams 2004
First published in Web Journal of Current Legal Issues
Summary
‘A fruitful parent of injustice is the tyranny of concepts’ (Cardozo
1928). This warning seems apposite when reviewing the impact of the decision
of the House of Lords in Hammersmith and Fulham London Borough Council
v Monk [1992] 1 AC 478, HL. Since Monk the law is well settled
that one joint tenant of a periodic lease can destroy the lease held by both
joint tenants. This destructive ability is justified by a conceptual analysis
that refuses to recognise the destructive effects of its utilisation. With
a reform of the law on the horizon the time is ripe for a review of this peculiar
area of law (see Law Com No 284).
If we are correct in our analysis, Monk has been productive of an unnecessary
amount of mischief in the law. This is partially due to the deployment of
inappropriate concepts in Monk itself, and partially due to an unfortunate
subsequent tendency to allow these concepts to act as tyrants in dictating
legal development. Monk has had an effect directly or indirectly across
many different areas of the legal landscape. This has necessitated both an
unwelcome length and a complex structure for this article. The article falls
into three sections. First, an introductory section deals with the legal and
factual background to Monk, and finishes with a brief account of the
case. The second section, the bulk of the article, is a review of the impact
of Monk. This review is sub-divided into sections on: family law; commercial
leases; trust law; Article 8 of the European Convention on Human Rights and
Article 1 of the First Protocol to the Convention; and secure tenancies. Finally,
there is a concluding section, which begins by outlining the statutory proposals
for housing law and follows that with a critical analysis of Monk,
which attempts to justify the criticisms made of the case and its subsequent
applications, and to identify the source of the mischief the decision spawned.
A general conclusion brings the article to an end.
Contents
An
Introduction to Monk
The
Legal Context of Monk
Periodic Leases
The periodic tenancy, or periodic lease as it is generally described in
this article, has always been an anomalous estate in land. Typically it has
required no writing to create (see Law of Property Act 1925, s 54(2), Law of
Property (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 1989, s 2(5)(a)), and before the
enactment of statutory protection for tenants had been terminable by notice, and
yet it is capable of lasting for many years. Recognition of the periodic lease
as a legal estate in land was a legal development of the eighteenth century (see
Holdsworth 1937, pp 243-245, Simpson 1986 pp 253-254). By that time the
requirement that a lease must be for a certain term had been established for at
least 250 years. The requirement for certainty of term has produced a
Janus-faced quality in the legal analysis of the periodic lease.
When
viewed prospectively the periodic lease is limited until the end of the present
period (week, month, quarter, year) plus the notice period. Thus, normally the
prospective term is never longer than the remaining part of the period plus one
more period (as notice must be servable, and notice will be the length of the
period or some shorter time at common law). Therefore, for example, a weekly
periodic tenancy is viewed as a tenancy for two weeks at its commencement, the
first week and the notice period of one week. The term certain is fixed by the
period plus notice, but this period is extended if neither party serves a notice
to quit. It is this artificial analysis - one which borders on fiction (see
Simpson 1986, p 253 n.6)- which allows a periodic lease to satisfy the common
law demand for certainty of term. This analysis of periodic leases, when viewed
prospectively, was confirmed by the House of Lords in
Prudential Assurance
Co. Ltd. v London Residuary Body [1992] 2 AC 386, HL. The two-faced nature
of the lease is displayed when it is viewed retrospectively, for then a periodic
lease has been analysed as one continuous term from its commencement until the
present, a term which grows from its commencement until it is brought to an end
(see Webb 1983,
Gandy v Jubber (1864) 5 B & S 485,
Gray v
Spyerr [1922] 2 Ch 22 at 38-39).
The law governing periodic leases
is, in effect, a compromise between the doctrinal demand for certainty of term,
and the later decision to recognise and protect the periodic lease terminable by
notice as a legal estate. The logical tension this produces was most recently
articulated by Lord Templeman in the
Prudential Assurance case, by his
use of the expression ‘as if’ in his description of the legal
analysis of a periodic lease viewed prospectively (at 394F, our italics):
A tenancy from year to year is saved from being uncertain because each
party has the power by notice to determine at the end of any year. The term
continues until determined
as if both parties made a new agreement at the
end of each year for a new term for the ensuing year.
The absence of any
actual new agreement is the reason for characterising the analysis as one that
borders on fiction; there is a deemed grant at the end of each period. The
analysis proceeds as if there were a fresh grant at the end of each period,
without needing to concern itself with the fact that this is not so.
The
doctrinal importance given to the requirement of certainty of term may be
appreciated by considering that it is one of the only two necessary conditions
for the existence of a lease, the other being the grant to the tenant of
exclusive possession (see
Prudential Assurance and
Street v
Mountford [1985] AC 809, HL). In
Prudential Assurance the common law
demand for certainty of term was upheld despite the strong reservations
expressed by Lord Browne-Wilkinson (at 396F-397B).
Shared Ownership
The joint tenancy makes several individuals into a single legal entity for
the purpose of co-ownership, a supra-being whose existence continues until all
the individuals except one cease to exist, the survivor becoming the sole owner
of the originally co-owned property (see Harpum 2000, Webb 1983). Since 1925
severance of a joint tenancy of a legal estate is impossible. Therefore, no
action by a single joint tenant can be effective to deal with any legal estate,
unless he acts on behalf of the other joint tenant. Consequently, it has been
established that a single joint tenant cannot unilaterally surrender a lease
(see
Leek and Moorlands B.S. v Clark [1952] 2 QB 788, CA) nor exercise a
break clause in a lease (see
Re Viola’s Indenture of Lease [1909] 1 Ch 244). This follows from the very nature of a joint tenancy. No one joint
tenant has any legal interest of which he can dispose (sell, transfer,
mortgage);, there is only one owner with powers of disposition (powers to deal
with the lease) in the eyes of the law, the joint tenants acting
together.
From 1925 onwards, the law has insisted that any legal estate
in land owned by more than one person, including a periodic lease, must be held
by the co-owners as joint tenants (see Law of Property Act 1925, s. 34). The Law
of Property Act 1925, ss. 34 and 36, and the Settled Land Act 1925, s 36(4)
provide that legal joint tenants must hold the legal estate upon a trust (see
Bull v Bull [1955] 1 QB 234, CA). The beneficial interests under the
trust may, or may not, reflect the joint tenancy of the legal estate.
To
this complex legal foundation must be added the various statutory schemes
governing periodic leases entered into for different purposes (e.g. residential,
agricultural, business).,Finally the whole situation can be subject to the
application of legal regimes that originate from the nature of the relationship
between the co-owners (e.g. family law, the law of partnership). The end result
is that the functionally straight-forward shared periodic lease is legally a
nightmarishly complex institution. This is significant because such shared
periodic leases are commonplace, and are economically and socially
important.
Secure Tenancies
The periodic lease at the centre of Monk was a ‘secure tenancy’
introduced by the Housing Act 1980 and largely re-enacted in the current legislation,
the Housing Act 1985 (see Housing Act 1980, s 28 and Housing Act 1985, ss
79-81). The legislative policy of the Housing Act 1980, in creating the secure
tenancy, seems tolerably clear. The secure tenancy was to be restricted to
public housing provided for residential use. Secure tenancies can arise only
if the landlord is a local authority, or other entity satisfying the ‘landlord
condition’ and only if the premises constitute ‘a dwelling house
let as a separate dwelling’. To become, or to remain, a ‘secure
tenant’ a lessee must satisfy the ‘tenant condition’, he
must occupy the dwelling ‘as his only or principal home’.(1)
A secure tenancy is not predicated upon the existence of a lease, as a licence
given by a landowner who satisfies the ‘landlord condition’ to
a residential occupier who satisfies the ‘tenant condition’ will
create a ‘secure tenancy’ (see Housing Act 1980, s 48 and Housing
Act 1985, s 79(3)). If, as is usual, the secure tenancy is founded upon a
periodic lease, the secure tenant does not have the ordinary powers of alienation
that the holding of a lease usually entails. The secure tenancy cannot be
assigned or sub-let, subject to restricted exceptions (see Housing Act 1980,
s 37 and Housing Act 1985, ss 91 and 93). The ‘secure tenant’
must continue to occupy the premises, or the secure tenancy ceases to exist.
Top | Contents | Bibliography
The
Factual Context For
Monk
The introduction by the Housing Act 1980 of the secure tenancy restricted
local authorities’ freedom in two ways: it restricted their freedom to
recover possession from tenants (see Housing Act 1980, ss 32-34, and Schedule
4), and it gave tenants a right to buy their homes (see Housing Act 1980, Part
I, Chapter 1). This interference with the freedom of local authority landlords
to manage their housing stock came on the heels of the imposition of statutory
duties on them to house the homeless (see Housing (Homeless Persons) Act 1977,
Housing Act 1996, Part VII), and financial restrictions upon them, which
effectively prevented the building of new houses for rent. In some areas there
was a critical shortage of available local authority housing.
There has
been an increase in the numbers of co-owned residential periodic leases over
recent years. We can identify some of the factors that have caused this increase
in co-ownership by couples of their homes. There has been a general acceptance
that the relationship between heterosexual couples should be one of equality of
status, which has encouraged co-ownership of assets. Women have become more
economically active as a group within society. Married couples increasingly take
joint responsibility in providing for the family financially. Children are often
raised by one or both of their natural parents out of wedlock, and therefore,
for many family units there is absolutely no room for any identification solely
with the man. One problem such co-ownership raises is how to accommodate the
breakdown of the relationship, the continuation of which formed the common
assumption of the joint tenants when they entered the periodic lease.
The obvious place to look for the legal solution for such problems is
family law. However, it was not in family law proceedings that the problems that
followed upon the breakdown of joint tenants’ relationship came before the
courts. The litigation in which the problem was raised was an action for
possession by a landlord against one of two joint tenants. The issue before the
court was whether one joint tenant of a periodic lease could unilaterally bring
the lease to an end by serving a notice to quit. If one joint tenant could
destroy the lease by service of a notice to quit then the landlord was entitled
to a possession order against the other joint tenant. The traditional answer of
the law had been that a single joint tenant could terminate a periodic lease by
serving a notice to quit (see Webb 1983, Leek and Moorlands Building Society
v Clark [1952] 2 QB 788, CA, Greenwich London Borough Council v
McGrady (1982) 46 P & C R 223, CA, Parsons v Parsons [1983] 1 WLR
1390). In 1991 the issue came up for consideration by the House of Lords.
Monk
In 1991 the House of Lords cut through the potentially debilitating
complexity of the law concerned with co-owned periodic leases by insisting that
one aspect of the periodic lease must be given analytical priority.
Hammersmith and Fulham London Borough Council v Monk [1992] 1 AC 478,
HL
(affirming (1990) 61 P & C R 414, CA) confirmed the orthodox
view that a single joint tenant of a periodic lease could terminate the lease by
the service of a notice to quit. However, the decision was expressly reached
without a consideration of its potential effect on statutory schemes regulating
periodic leases, and left the potential effects of the trust of the periodic
lease unexplored (see
[1992] 1 AC 478, HL
at 493). The potential
effects of the decision on family law or commercial leases were not broached.
The facts of
Monk were straightforward, and concerned a fact
situation that has since become almost stereotypical in subsequent litigation.
Mr Monk and his lover Mrs. Powell were secure tenants under the Housing Act
1985. The relationship broke down. Mrs. Powell left Mr. Monk and requested
alternative accommodation from the local authority. The local authority agreed
to rehouse her, but if, and only if, she first served a notice to quit the joint
tenancy that she held with Mr. Monk, which she duly did. Neither Mrs. Powell nor
the local authority made any attempt to contact Mr. Monk prior to the serving of
the notice to quit. The local authority then took possession proceedings against
Mr. Monk.
The quality of a periodic lease that was given absolute
priority in
Monk was the requirement that it must be terminable by either
party (i.e. landlord or tenant) serving notice to quit. This requirement is the
necessary consequence of the demand for certainty of term, and the very point
later affirmed by
Prudential Assurance. That the doctrinal demand for
certainty of term, rather than any contractual analysis, forms the true basis of
the decision needs emphasis. The language and reasoning of Lord Bridge, who gave
the leading speech in
Monk, has obscured the
point.
(2) It must be the basis of the
decision, because the artificial analysis forms the only solid foundation for
the House of Lords’ solution to the problem posed by the unilateral
termination of a periodic lease by a single joint tenant.
As has been noted, joint tenants do not hold any individual interest in the
co-owned property and are treated as a single legal personality in respect of
their ownership. Therefore, a single joint tenant cannot deal with the jointly
owned property; joint action is required for any disposition of the lease. Obviously,
if this logic is
applied to the service of a notice to quit by a joint
tenant of a periodic lease then unilateral termination of a periodic lease would
be impossible. However, this conclusion can be avoided by leaning on an aspect
of the prospective analysis of a periodic lease. If a periodic lease is for
a term certain
, ending at the latest upon the expiry of a notice to quit
served at any time
, then there must be some event which prevents the
periodic tenancy terminating at the end of the term certain. That event, as
we have seen, is the deemed renewal of the periodic lease for a further period.
As the grant and acceptance of a lease are positive acts of the parties, the
failure to so grant and accept may be characterised as inaction. Thus, the law
can regard the service of a notice to quit as notice of unwillingness to enter
into a future lease, rather than the destruction of an existing lease. The lease
is not destroyed by the notice to quit, but comes to an end by the natural passage
of time. It is the deemed, or fictional, renewal of the periodic lease which
was relied upon to support the decision in
Monk.
Top | Contents | Bibliography
A
Review of the Impact of Monk
1.
Family Law
The implications of the ability of one joint tenant to terminate a periodic
lease by serving a notice to quit are of particular significance in the area of
family law. There are two linked functions of the family law jurisdiction, both
of which are undermined by Monk. First, the jurisdiction is intended to
secure the satisfaction of the urgent needs of the vulnerable, including any
children of the relationship, a function that is most important in dealing with
the short-term effects of relationship breakdown. Second, the jurisdiction is
intended to achieve an optimal distribution of former matrimonial assets in all
the relevant circumstances. However, the performance of these functions is
jeopardised, if one party to the relationship is able to destroy assets that
could otherwise be available to secure safe accommodation for the vulnerable in
the short term, and be available for distribution in the long term. The
statutory scheme that establishes the family law jurisdiction recognises this
jeopardy and grants power to the courts to prevent one party from disposing of
assets or to reverse the effects of such a disposal that has already occurred
(see Matrimonial Causes Act 1973, s.37).
The protective function of
family law operates within a context of structural imbalance of power in
heterosexual relationships and, for the purposes of this article it will be
assumed it is the woman who needs protection from this power imbalance.
Traditionally women have been the weaker party. Women are still largely the main
carers for any children of the family. They are generally at a financial
disadvantage to men. They are also physically weaker than men and thus more
vulnerable to acts of domestic violence. Family law has responded to this power
imbalance by developing systems to ensure that women, and the children they are
caring for, are protected. Part of this protection has involved preserving their
right to live in the family home, regardless of whether or not they have made
any financial contribution towards its acquisition. Thus, in order to appreciate
the deleterious impact of Monk it is first necessary to consider how
family law is meant to operate.
Protection of the Vulnerable
in the Short Term
The Family Law Act 1996, Part IV, is concerned with the issue of domestic
violence and lesser forms of molestation. As the Act contains provisions
regulating the occupation of the family home, in keeping with other areas of
family law it could, but does not, elevate the interests of children above those
of any other party
(3) But a party who
terminates a periodic lease by serving notice to quit has the power to disrupt
the normal mechanisms for deciding immediate occupation and to avoid a proper
investigation into who should be in occupation of the home if the parties cannot
live together under the same roof.
In their interpretation and application of the Act the family courts
have recognised the importance of the property rights of the adult parties. As a
crucial point of general application the courts look upon any order to exclude a
person from the home as an exceptional and grave step to take. This principle
was recently confirmed in
Chalmers v Johns [1999] 1 FLR 392 by Thorpe LJ
at p.397. Thus, the courts will not order a party to vacate the home in
contravention of their property rights unless the needs of, or the danger to,
the other party or the children are such that it is necessary. However, once a
personal relationship has broken down the issue of who is to live in the family
home may be crucial. Although the ultimate disposition of the property will be
resolved in other proceedings where the parties wish to end their relationship
altogether,
(4) in the meantime,
rights of occupation can be a matter of urgency. The Family Law Act 1996 has
responded to this urgency by developing a set of criteria to ensure that the
vulnerable party is protected and is not simply at the mercy of the stronger
party.
Where one of the parties to a marriage, usually the wife, does
not possess any legal estate or interest in the property, she still has the
right to occupy the matrimonial home. These occupation rights, called
‘matrimonial home rights’, are found in section 30, Family Law Act.
Section 33 gives the court the power to regulate occupation. The section
encompasses both married couples and unmarried
cohabitants
(5) and covers all those
cases where an applicant either has a proprietary right to live in the home, and
is therefore an entitled applicant, or has matrimonial home rights. The court
has very wide powers, as section 33(3) provides that orders can be made ranging
from enforcing entitlement to enter or remain in the property, to excluding a
party from the property altogether.
In practice, where there is serious
violence by the respondent then, subject to the balance of harm test found in
section 33(7), the court will have no hesitation in making an order requiring
the respondent to leave. However, where there is no serious violence but perhaps
other forms of molestation, the draconian nature of regulation of occupation is
a factor that the court will always bear in mind. In deciding whether or not to
make an occupation order the court will look to the criteria found in section
33(6), which requires it to consider the housing needs of the parties and any
children, their financial resources, the effect on both parties and any children
of either making or not making the requested order, and the parties’
conduct. Should the court make the order then, by virtue of section 33(10), the
court has complete discretion as to the length of the order.
Securing an optimal
distribution of assets in the long term
In the long term, the court has the power to make a property transfer order
to either a spouse or a cohabitee under section 53 and schedule 7. In the case
of a married couple the power to make a property transfer order arises after the
making of a divorce order. In the case of an unmarried woman the court can make
a property transfer order on her application for such an order. Whether the
applicant is a wife or a cohabitant the court has criteria to which it must have
regard in determining whether or not to exercise its powers to order a transfer.
It will consider the circumstances in which the lease was granted, the factors
in section 33(6) concerning housing, finance and the effect of making or not
making an order, and the suitability of the parties as tenants (see schedule 7
para 5).
As the effect of a property transfer order is that any
liability or obligation falling due to be discharged or performed on or after
the date of transfer shall not be enforceable against the transferor spouse or
cohabitant (see schedule 7, para. 7(2)). It may be that a landlord may wish to
raise objections to the transfer. The landlord has the opportunity to be heard
(see para. 14). There is little case law guidance as to how the court
will make its decision in the face of objections raised by a local authority
landlord. In the old case of Buckingham v Buckingham (1979) 129 NLJ 52 it
was held that the court should carry out a balancing exercise, weighing the
circumstances of the local authority against the position of the applicant. More
recently, in Vuong v Hoang 11 January 1999, Family Division, [1999]
C.L.Y. 3734, the housing duties of the local authority were in the forefront of
the court’s consideration.
It can thus be seen that, via the
provisions of the Family Law Act 1996, the court has considerable control
over occupation of the family home in both the short and long term. The
provisions in the Act were enacted to ensure that appropriate consideration is
given as to who should be in occupation of the property should parties be in
dispute. Furthermore, family courts have recognised that excluding a party from
the home is an extreme solution that should not be imposed unless circumstances
truly require it. But, service of a notice to quit defeats the statutory purpose
of the Act. It enables one party to avoid the mechanisms for ensuring that
proper consideration is given as to who should live in the property. More
seriously still, it enables one party to impose an even more draconian outcome
than the court would be prepared to contemplate, for the net result may be that
a woman will be permanently, rather than temporarily, excluded from the
home.
The Protection of
Matrimonial Assets
The central statutory provision conferring powers upon the family courts to
safeguard matrimonial assets is section 37(2) of the Matrimonial Causes Act
1973
(6) which operates when
proceedings for financial relief are brought, and some action is either
contemplated or carried out by a party to the proceedings with an intention of
defeating such claim. The sub-section is divided into two paragraphs. Paragraph
(a) is a preventive paragraph, and it grants a jurisdiction to restrain any
disposition, transfer out of the country, or other dealing with matrimonial
assets. Paragraph (b) is a ‘setting aside’ paragraph, and it grants
a jurisdiction to set aside a disposition where the court considers that:
‘if the disposition were set aside financial relief or different financial
relief would be granted to the applicant’.
An Expansive Application of
Monk in Family Proceedings
The House of Lords has overruled the Court of Appeal twice in cases
concerned with the protection in family law proceedings of a periodic lease,
which qualified as a secure tenancy, held by joint tenants as a matrimonial
asset. On both occasions the House has applied the decision in
Monk in an
expansive manner, stressing the artificial analysis of a periodic tenancy viewed
prospectively. On both occasions the House has laid weight upon the analytically
inactive nature of the service of a notice to quit. On both occasions the House
has upheld the validity of the service of a notice to quit by a single joint
tenant.
The first case was
Harrow LBC v Johnstone [1997] 1 All ER 929, HL.
Johnstone concerned the secure tenancy of the matrimonial home
of Mr. and Mrs. Johnstone, which they held as joint tenants. Mrs. Johnstone left
the home, taking the children of the marriage with her. Mr. Johnstone obtained
an
ex parte injunction against her, forbidding her ‘to exclude or
attempt to exclude the applicant from [the matrimonial home].’ Mrs.
Johnstone applied to Harrow LBC for a new tenancy. The authority, as a matter of
policy, would not provide accommodation to an existing tenant, and suggested
that she serve a notice to quit the joint tenancy. On receiving her notice to
quit the authority sent a copy to Mr. Johnstone, who responded by sending it a
copy of his injunction. Harrow LBC then brought possession proceedings against
Mr. Johnstone, which he defended on two grounds. First, he argued that the
authority had been complicit in a contempt of court committed by his wife when
she served her notice to quit in breach of the injunction he had obtained.
Second, he argued that the possession proceedings were an abuse of process as,
if successful, they would destroy the secure tenancy that he was likely to
request be transferred into his sole name in matrimonial
proceedings.
Lord Mustill, who delivered the leading speech, concluded
that the injunction granted against Mrs. Johnstone was concerned with the
exercise of rights under the tenancy, and not with the continued existence of
the rights themselves. Therefore, the destruction of the tenancy did not breach
the injunction not to exclude Mr. Johnstone from the premises. As there had been
no breach of the injunction Harrow LBC could not possibly have been complicit in
such a breach, and thereby in contempt of court. For the court to dispose of the
second ground of argument it was sufficient to note that there were no other
proceedings in progress which could have led to the transfer of the secure
tenancy to Mr. Johnstone.
Lord Hoffmann also gave a substantive speech in
Johnstone. He was concerned that resting the decision on the narrow
ground that Mr. Johnstone had obtained the wrong injunction might lead to
unnecessary litigation when somebody obtained the right injunction. Lord Mustill
expressly agreed with Lord Hoffmann’s reasoning on the
‘point’ explored below. Lord Hoffmann stated (at 940e):
In my view, the existence of an injunction could not in itself vitiate the
notice given by the wife. The principle laid down by this House in [
Monk]
is that the term created by the grant of a periodic joint tenancy is defined by
reference to the absence of a notice by the landlord or one or other of the
joint tenants signifying that he is not willing that it should continue. If this
negative condition is not satisfied, the term comes to an end.
This analysis
obscures the vital issues raised by the litigation. The key issues are personal
accountability on the part of the injuncted, and complicity in breaches of that
accountability on the part of third parties. In continuing, Lord Hoffmann
properly drew attention to the lack of notice of the injunction to Harrow LBC at
the time it requested the notice to quit, and to the fact that the authority was
not a party to the proceedings that gave rise to the injunction. These factors
clearly are of force when considering whether or not a local authority would be
actionably complicit in a breach of an injunction, which breach consisted of the
service of a notice to quit by a joint tenant of a periodic
lease.
However, the appropriate remedy if a local authority were
complicit in the breach of an injunction need not be: ‘... to deem the
negative condition to be satisfied’ (at 940f
per Lord Hoffmann), in
other words to hold the notice to quit null and void, a course of action Lord
Hoffmann considered inappropriate. Lord Hoffmann is correct to assert that a
landlord served with a notice to quit by a joint tenant would have to accept the
effectiveness of the notice. However, the question was whether a landlord that
procured the service of a notice to quit, in breach of a court order of which it
had notice, could escape from the consequences of its own complicity in the
contempt. Complicity in the contempt would be a personal offence by the
landlord. If the contempt were raised as a defence against possession
proceedings (as in
Johnstone) the obvious remedy would be to deny the
local authority possession, and to order the grant of a new periodic lease, and
to compensate any loss (for example to the right to buy discount acquired by the
tenant) suffered as a result of the breach.
Contempt of court is a wrong
that when committed should call forth an adequate remedy. Imprisoning the
contemptuous joint tenant is not efficacious, and the availability of a remedy
against the landlord is the crucial issue. Capacity of a joint tenant to act
must not be confounded with the rectitude of so
acting.
(7) In the course of his short
speech Lord Hoffmann also invited an appeal by the Newlon Housing Trust, the
next case we need to consider.
Newlon Housing Trust v Alsulaimen
[1999] 1 AC 313, HL again
concerned the service of a notice to quit
by one of two joint tenants of a periodic lease that was a secure tenancy of a
house. In
Alsulaimen the joint tenants were a married couple and the wife
served the notice to quit after leaving the matrimonial home. Newlon Housing
Trust brought possession proceedings against the husband, who resisted them on
the grounds that the service of a notice to quit by his wife was a reviewable
disposition under section 37(2)(b) of the Matrimonial Cause Act 1973 which
should be set aside because it was made with the intention of defeating the
claim he intended to make for a transfer of the lease into his sole name under
section 24 of the Act.
Lord Hoffmann made the sole substantive speech in
the House of Lords. He expressly disavowed any reliance upon any distinction
between the destruction of an asset and the disposition of an asset. He analysed
the periodic lease in
Alsulaimen in the same way that he had analysed the
periodic lease in
Johnstone, although his articulation of the analysis
differed. Lord Hoffmann relied upon the reasoning of Lord Bridge in
Monk,
(8) holding that the
service of a notice to quit was not a disposition as that word was used in
section 37(2)(b) of the Matrimonial Causes Act 1973, because it was not an act
of any type. The service of a notice to quit by Mrs. Alsulaimen was merely
inaction, which allowed the periodic lease to expire by effluxion of
time.
It is submitted that this extension of the analysis of
Monk
into questions of the courts’ powers to restrain the actions of parties to
family law litigation, and to reverse the wrongful actions of such parties,
generates confusion and can thereby easily lead to injustice. Even if we accept,
for the purposes of argument, that it was necessary to distinguish between the
service of a notice to quit by a joint tenant and other actions which affected
the jointly owned property (such as the surrender of the lease) for the purpose
of upholding the doctrine of certainty of term in
Monk, it does not
follow that we must extend this analysis into the field of personal
responsibility for destroying the lease (
Johnstone), or the powers of the
court to restore assets by setting aside dispositions (
Alsulaimen). The
House of Lords in extending the decision in
Monk on the grounds of
conceptual consistency has allowed the appropriate grounds for the decisions to
be obscured. These grounds are not to be found in the arcane fictions of the old
common law, but in the living purposes of the family law jurisdiction. The vital
issue in
Alsulaimen was whether the courts can act against the interests
of landlords by reinstating periodic tenancies that have been terminated by the
service of a notice to quit, in order to protect the interests of one party to
family law proceedings. The decision in
Monk was that such a notice to
quit was effective. It did not entail the decision that such service was
irreversible. That decision was justified upon grounds that obscured the legal
problem, by the extension of an artificial analysis without considering whether
the artificiality was serving a useful purpose in its extended role.
Reaction to the Expansive
Application of Monk
In Wandsworth L.B.C. v Osei-Bonsu [1999] 1 FLR. 276, CA Simon Brown
LJ, who gave the sole substantive judgment of the court, said, in rejecting an
argument raised for Mr. Osei-Bonsu, that (at 288 B-C):
He suggested that the respondent could have obtained an injunction
precluding his wife from serving a notice to quit ... pursuant to an application
under s. 37 of the Matrimonial Causes Act 1973. It now seems plain ...neither
course would have been available to him ... the House of Lords’ decision
in
Newlon Housing Trust v Alsulaimen ... defeats the latter.
This
dictum illustrates both the force of the concepts deployed in
Alsulaimen
and the tendency for them to continue to expand beyond the bounds of the
decisions that enunciated them. Simon Brown LJ was assuming that the decision
covered both paragraphs of section 37(2), although the reasoning of Lord
Hoffmann was explicitly limited to the setting aside power contained in
paragraph (b), which was expressly contrasted with the more liberal wording of
the restraining power contained in paragraph
(a).
(9) The difficulties posed
to the family court’s jurisdiction were explored at far greater length in
Bater v Greenwich LBC [1999] 4 All E.R. 944, CA. The facts of
Bater
follow a by now familiar pattern. Mr. and Mrs. Bater were a married couple
holding a joint tenancy of a periodic lease that constituted a secure tenancy.
Mrs. Bater left the matrimonial home, and served a notice to quit on the local
authority landlord in order to obtain re-housing. Mr. Bater argued that his
statutory right to buy the former matrimonial home could be resurrected under
section 37(2)(b) of the Matrimonial Causes Act 1973. The Court of Appeal held
that the right to buy was dependent on, and could not be severed from, the
secure tenancy, following
London Borough of Sutton v Swann (1985) 18 HLR
140, CA;
Jennings & Jennings v Epping Forest DC (1992) 25 HLR 241,
CA; and
Bradford City Metropolitan Council v McMahon [1993] 4 All ER 237,
CA. The tenancy had been destroyed on the wife serving her notice to quit. Also,
following
Alsulaimen there had been no disposition for the purposes of
section 37, and therefore the court could not revive the tenancy.
As
Thorpe LJ explained, this pattern of facts created a risk for joint tenants of
periodic leases (at 952f):
The consequence of these two conclusions is to create what may be a
substantial period of vulnerability for the joint tenant spouse who wishes to
become sole tenant following separation. That period stretches from the date of
separation to the court’s determination of the application to transfer the
tenancy to the spouse in occupation under the jurisdiction conferred upon the
court by s 24 of the Matrimonial Causes Act 1973.
Given the undesirability of
this situation Thorpe LJ considered whether a court would have jurisdiction
under section 37(2)(a) of the Matrimonial Causes Act 1973 to restrain a spouse
from giving notice to quit. Thorpe LJ prefaced his dicta with the comment (at
952g): ‘As a family lawyer’. Presumably this reference was intended
to emphasise the particular importance for the family law jurisdiction of the
problems posed by unilateral service of notice to quit by a joint tenant. Thorpe
LJ clearly thought section 37(2)(a) did grant jurisdiction to restrain a spouse
from serving a unilateral notice to quit. The language of the section was
sufficiently wide. Further, Thorpe LJ gave his opinion that the court could use
its inherent powers to control the acts or omissions of a party to family law
proceedings after, or immediately before, the issue of a petition of divorce.
This inherent jurisdiction, arising whenever an act or omission would have the
effect of harassing or molesting the wife or adversely affecting the child,
empowers the court to prevent such an act if it would have the consequence of
curtailing the court’s powers on distribution. In relation to unmarried
couples, Thorpe LJ commented that where the couple have children, the court has
powers both under the Children Act 1989 schedule 1 and under its inherent powers
in wardship to restrain the service of a notice to quit where an applicant is
applying for an order of transfer of a periodic tenancy under schedule
1.
(10) In conclusion, Thorpe
LJ considered that practitioners could and should protect the position of their
client by seeking an undertaking, which could be served on the landlord, or
apply to the court for an injunction, in order to prevent the other party from
serving notice to quit. However, he also pointed out that this could only be
achieved prior to the service of a notice to quit. Once notice has been given it
would be too late. However, how this device could protect from the wrongful but
effective service of notice to quit is far from clear. As we explained above,
Lord Hoffmann has already drawn attention to the fact that a notice to quit is
effective despite it being in breach of an injunction not to serve such a
notice;
a fortiori a notice to quit served in breach of an undertaking is
also effective.
If the use of undertakings or injunctions is to be
effective in family court proceedings concerned with periodic tenancies then the
courts must develop principles under which the landlord can be held liable if
the undertaking or injunction is breached. Given the approach of the House of
Lords in
Johnstone it may be necessary to make local authority landlords
parties to the proceedings. Even then it is difficult to see why they would be
responsible for the service of a notice to quit by a single joint tenant which
they had not procured. There is no reason to suppose that a landlord can refuse
to accept a notice to quit served by a single joint tenant. If the common policy
of refusing to rehouse applicants who already have a tenancy as a joint tenant
followed by local authorities is valid, then local authorities must be under a
duty to inform joint tenants seeking rehousing of the policy. If explaining the
policy amounts to procuring the service of a notice to quit, and therefore
contempt of court, the council would be in an impasse.
The possibility of
such an impasse is created by the extension of the analysis in
Monk. It
is possible to overcome this impasse judicially in three ways, none of which are
appealing. First, a further extension of the reasoning in
Alsulaimen
could be made by refusing to recognise the service of a notice to quit as
any form of ‘other dealing’ with matrimonial property, and therefore
outside section 37(2)(a) of the Matrimonial Causes Act 1973. This would accord
with the initial view taken by the Court of Appeal on the effect of the
decision, and vitally undermine the family law jurisdiction in cases concerned
with periodic leases. Second, the question of effectiveness of remedy could be
ignored and the law could refuse to make local authority landlords liable for
procuring a breach of an injunction. This would leave vulnerable women between a
rock and a hard place. If they serve a notice to quit they could suffer
penalties for contempt of court, but if they refuse to serve such a notice they
will not be eligible for rehousing by the local authority. Third, the policy of
local authorities of denying applicants rehousing whenever they are joint
tenants of another periodic lease could be challenged. Such policy would need to
be subject to a caveat whenever an undertaking or injunction not to serve a
notice to quit existed. The difficulty with this approach is that the issue
would arise in family law proceedings, although it is essentially a public law
question. We deal below with proposed legislative changes, which if implemented
will avoid the impasse altogether (see ‘Statutory Reform of the
Law’).
By giving notice, the non-occupying joint tenant is evading
the usual mechanisms under which the disposition of property is considered. A
joint tenant of a periodic lease may give notice to quit at any time once
parties have separated. Therefore, a woman may have no warning that her husband
(or former cohabitant) is intending to terminate the lease. Thus, although an
application for legal proceedings may have been initiated by the woman, and she
may reasonably consider that all matters will be resolved in those proceedings,
this may not then happen. It remains to be seen how much difference such
short-circuiting of family law proceedings makes to eventual outcomes.
Reliance Upon
Serendipity
Substantial injustice is not necessarily entailed when one joint tenant
serves notice to quit. The benefits of security of tenure and the right to buy
are lost by the service of a notice to quit by a joint tenant and, in the
context of the economic resources of the families concerned, this is a serious
diminution of matrimonial assets. (See further below). However, if we ignore,
for present purposes, the loss of the right-to-buy discount and security of
tenure, then in terms of practical application the law often approximates to a
resolution that would have followed from the exercise of a court’s powers
under the family law jurisdiction.
The litigation arising from the
decision in
Monk has overwhelmingly been concerned with secure tenancies
granted by local authority landlords. The identity of the landlords as local
authorities is important for an appreciation of how the dynamic of the cases
operates. Local authorities have duties under the Housing Act 1996 Part VII to
secure that accommodation is made available to those homeless people who are not
intentionally homeless and who have priority needs for housing. In the context
of marriage or relationship breakdown this usually means the woman and children,
as most men do not have a priority need for housing. A woman fleeing a violent
partner is not considered to be intentionally homeless (see Housing Act 1996 ss.
175(3) and 177(1)). Local authorities have no power to obtain possession from a
lessee with a secure tenancy merely because the house is under-occupied due to
relationship breakdown.
(11)
When applying for rehousing a woman fleeing a violent partner will be
met with the demand that she serve a notice to quit her existing lease before
she can be rehoused. This enables the local authority to repossess the house
formerly let to the family, which would otherwise be under-occupied by the
deserted man. The woman and children can be rehoused and the man has to shift
for himself. If the abused woman applied to a family law court then the court
would probably protect her occupation in the short term, by excluding the man,
and in the long term by ordering a transfer of the joint tenancy into her sole
name. The advantages of the first scenario are: the woman can flee the presence
of her violent partner, and the address of her new accommodation can be withheld
from him to protect her from further violence; there is no need for the costs or
delays that are involved in court proceedings; the local authority is able to
secure suitable new accommodation for the now smaller family unit of the woman
and children, and regain possession of scarce family housing to serve the needs
of the local community. On the face of the matter the result appears to be a
serendipitous resolution.
However, there are difficulties with such a
sanguine view of the operation of the law. The law laid down in
Monk
makes no distinction between a blameless or a blameworthy joint tenant. Each has
the power to serve a notice to quit. The factor that tends towards serendipity
is the care of the children, which brings with it a priority need for housing.
Men rarely seek to destroy the tenancy because they accept that their partner
will keep the children, and if the man serves a notice to quit, the local
authority will simply accept the notice and refuse to rehouse the man. This
factor is not linked to blameworthy conduct. If the woman is violent but has
control of the children, then she will have the priority need for rehousing and
the blameless man will be left homeless, as appears to have been the case in
Johnstone. If the man plans to seek joint residence of the children, then
the serving of the notice to quit by the woman will leave him without
appropriate accommodation to support his claim, which appears to have been the
case in
Bater. Furthermore, the local authority will rehouse the woman
and children in accordance with its resources and policies, and there is a high
chance that the social and educational environment of both the woman and
children will be disrupted by relocation to what may be a less desirable house.
Further, if the local authority supplies her with accommodation then it will
grant her a less desirable form of tenure in fulfilling its duties under the
Housing Act 1996.
(12) Where there is
no fear of uncontrollable violence by the man, this feature is wholly harmful to
the family. Finally, the act of serving a notice to quit can be felt as an act
of betrayal by the man, and can embitter the process of relationship
breakdown.
A more worrisome scenario is the use of a notice to quit as a weapon of spite.
If a woman successfully excludes her violent partner from their home the man
can destroy the lease by serving a notice to quit. If the couple have no children
then the woman will have no priority need for housing. Her recourse to the courts
for justice would be futile. It is this prospect, no doubt, that excited the
concern of Thorpe LJ in
Bater and led him to identify the possibility
of seeking undertakings or injunctions to safeguard leases during the vulnerable
period pending a final resolution of judicial proceedings. As we have seen,
the problem has not been convincingly settled in a satisfactory manner.
Top | Contents | Bibliography
2.
Commercial Leases
There are no reported English cases of one joint tenant lessee of a
periodic lease occupied for commercial purposes serving a unilateral notice to
quit on the landlord.
(13) Prior to
the decision in
Monk the validity of a notice to quit served by one joint
tenant landlord was upheld in
Parsons v Parsons [1983] 1 W.L.R. 1390.
However, it appears that in the context of commercial leases, lessees are seldom
tempted unilaterally to destroy the security of tenure over premises used for
joint business enterprises. The most likely explanations are two linked factors.
It is obviously wrong to destroy jointly owned property without consultation
with the other owner, and there is a realistic threat of legal action for so
doing in the commercial field.
The issue that has been litigated,
however, has been the refusal of one joint tenant to serve a counter-notice upon
the receipt of a notice to quit served by the landlord on the joint tenants. The
response of the joint tenant who wishes to renew the lease has been to seek a
mandatory order against the abstaining joint tenant, to force the serving of a
counter-notice, and thus to protect the right to try and preserve the lease.
Although the operative legislation governing the service of a landlord’s
notice to quit and the service of a lessee’s counter-notice vary, the
basic issues are the same (see
Harris v Black (1983) 46 P & CR 366 at
374), whether the lease be a protected business tenancy that has expired through
passage of time (
Harris v Black), or an agricultural lease, fixed term
(
Sykes v Land (1984) 271 EG 1244, CA) or periodic (
Featherstone v
Staples [1986] 1 WLR 861, CA;
Cork v Cork [1997] 1 EGLR 5).
Analytically, the situation raises exactly the same issues as the service of a
unilateral notice to quit by one joint tenant of a periodic lease, as was
explicitly recognised by Slade LJ in
Featherstone v Staples (at
876C-D):
at common law, if there is to be renewal of a periodic tenancy held by
joint tenants at the end of one of its periods, then all tenants must concur.
The substantial effect of a valid counter notice under the Act of 1977 (...) is
to renew the tenancy.
Therefore, although the mechanism of landlord’s
notice and lessee’s counter notice differs, the issue of whether a joint
tenant has an unrestrained liberty to bring the tenancy to an end, is the
same.
Prior to the decision in Monk the courts had accepted that
they had the power to order an abstaining joint tenant to resist the termination
of a lease which the joint tenant did not want to continue. However, this
jurisdiction was not to be used unless the circumstances of the case called for
its exercise. Thus, in Harris v Black, the court declined to order the
abstaining joint tenant to join in serving a counter notice where the joint
tenants’ partnership had been dissolved, leaving a history of enmity
between the ex-partners, and the majority of the beneficial interest in the
lease belonged to the abstaining joint tenant. However, in Sykes v
Land, when one partner was attempting to exercise a right to buy
out the interest of the abstaining joint tenant in the business the court
ordered the service of the counter-notice to preserve the lease and the
business.
The single case decided since Monk in which the court
was asked to order a reluctant joint tenant to serve a counter notice to a
landlord’s notice to quit is Cork v Cork [1997] 1 E.G.L.R. 5.
Cork concerned a periodic lease of agricultural land. Knox J. considered
whether the decision in Monk was inconsistent with the earlier
authorities and held that it was not (at 7K). He then proceeded to order the
abstaining joint tenant to serve a counter-notice. In making this order he bore
in mind the probable terms of a ‘family arrangement’ to which the
abstaining joint tenant had been a party, the fact that the abstaining joint
tenant had been out of occupation and had paid no rent for many years, and the
fact that the occupying joint tenant undertook to indemnify the abstaining joint
tenant from any liability that followed from the service of the counter-notice
(at 7M-8F).
The crucial practical difference between the litigation over
commercial leases and the litigation over residential leases has been the
mechanisms for the termination of the leases that have been involved. In the
commercial cases the service of notice and counter-notice has alerted the joint
tenant who desires renewal to the threat and has allowed for an application to
court as per Slade LJ in Featherstone v Staples [1986] 1 W.L.R. 861, at
875-876. Within the context of the litigation over residential leases there has
been no opportunity, however short, to object to the service of a notice to
quit, and the occupying tenant has been left without redress.
3.
Trust Law
The decision in
Monk left open the possibility that a vulnerable
joint tenant might be able to seek recourse for the unilateral service of a
notice to quit against the serving joint tenant for breach of trust (see (1990)
46 P & C R 414, CA at 427 and
[1992] 1 AC 478, HL at 493). Indeed, if this
option proved workable the way might have been opened to establishing liability
against a landlord who procured the service of the notice, for dishonest
assistance in a breach of trust
(see
Royal Brunei Airlines Sdn. Bhd. v
Tan [1995] 2 AC 378, HL). Given the predilection of local authority
landlords for refusing to rehouse a non-occupying joint tenant without first
securing the service of a notice to quit the only impediment to such liability
would have been the establishment of the necessary dishonesty (see
Twinsectra
Ltd. v Yardley [2002] 2 AC 164, HL). However, the possibility that one
joint tenant owed a duty to his co-owner to consult before destroying the trust
property was rejected by the Court of Appeal.
In
Crawley Borough
Council v Ure [1996] Q.B. 13, CA the Court of Appeal was faced with an
argument based upon the Law of Property Act 1925, section 26(3). The section
imposed a requirement upon trustees to consult with beneficiaries before
exercising their powers as trustees. Mr. and Mrs. Ure were joint tenants of a
periodic lease granted by Crawley Borough Council. Mrs. Ure left the matrimonial
home, and applied for rehousing, but was advised that the Council would not
provide her with housing unless she served a notice to quit in respect of her
joint tenancy with Mr. Ure. Mrs. Ure complied, and the Council rehoused her and
took possession proceedings against Mr. Ure. It was not argued in
Ure
that the notice to quit served by Mrs. Ure amounted to a substantive breach of
trust, only that she had been under a duty to consult with Mr. Ure before
serving the notice, this duty being imposed by section 26(3).
The Court
of Appeal stressed three factors in rejecting the argument that the service of
the notice to quit without consultation was a breach of section 26(3). First,
the similarity between the facts in
Ure and the facts in
Monk
([1996] QB 13, CA at 19). Second, the classification of a notice to quit as in
substance negative or inaction, a refusal to consent to the continuation of the
periodic lease, rather than a positive action destructive of the periodic lease
(Ibid at 25 and 26). Third, the applicable law was of general application and
not affected by the circumstance that the actual periodic lease involved was a
secure tenancy. It was the second factor that was determinative, as the court
considered that inaction could not be characterised as the exercise of any power
by a trustee (Ibid at 25). It has since been held, in
Notting Hill Housing
Trust v Brackley [2002] HLR 10, CA, that the replacement of section 26(3) by
the Trusts of Land and Appointment of Trustees Act 1996, section 11(1), does not
affect this reasoning and conclusion.
There are three substantive issues
that are implicitly raised by the service of a unilateral notice to quit by a
joint tenant who is a trustee. The first issue concerns the capacity of a single
joint tenant to serve an effective notice, the very issue in
Monk. The
distinction between ‘could she’ and ‘should she’ was
expressly made by Lord Browne-Wilkinson (
[1992] 1 AC 478, HL at 493):
But even if, contrary to my view, the giving of the notice to quit by Mrs.
Powell was a breach of trust by her, the notice to quit was not a nullity. It
was effective as between the lessor and the lessees to terminate the tenancy.
The fact that a trustee acts in breach of trust does not mean that he has no
capacity to do the act he wrongly did.
However, this question of capacity
does not touch upon the second substantive issue raised by the trustee who
serves a unilateral notice to quit, which is how should trustees view the
renewal of the lease. As for the law, for equity, the periodic lease has a two
faced nature. However, this Janus aspect of the lease is a product of the lease
as valuable but onerous property, and is not intrinsically linked to questions
of certainty of term. From the point of view of trustees, the lease is property,
and as such they are under a duty to preserve it. But, also, from the point of
view of trustees the lease is the source of onerous obligations, and as such
they are under a duty to protect the trust fund from depletion, by quitting the
lease.
The problem of burdensome property for trustees is an investment
issue. The value of the lease, and the value of the chance of renewal, must be
safeguarded if the lease is valuable. However, the value of the lease is
uncertain, and its valuation must be a matter of weighing the continued cost of
the lease against the benefits it brings the trust beneficiaries. This is not
necessarily a simple matter even where both costs and benefits are monetary.
Where, as is universally the case for residential leases when one or more
beneficiary is in occupation, the costs and benefits are incommensurable, then
the valuation must be a matter of art rather than science. The timing of the
trustees’ decision making is determined by the nature of the periodic
lease, as disinvestment opportunities are regulated by the period of the lease
and the requirements for notice to the landlord. Thus, there is no universal
rule that trustees must always renew leases. Whether it is appropriate to renew
a periodic lease, by not serving a notice to quit, depends upon the
circumstances, which include the purposes of the trust and the potential
liabilities upon renewal.
There is ample support for this analysis in the
case law. In the context of the service of a notice to quit by a joint tenant
landlord, Donald Rattee Q.C. in Parsons v Parsons [1983] 1 WLR 1390
identified the nature of the decision to renew a periodic lease by inaction as a
positive decision to be made (at 1399D):
...to say that one joint trustee cannot bind his co-trustees by serving
notice to quit in respect of a periodic tenancy is equivalent to saying that one
of several trustees cannot by refusing to consent to an investment of trust
moneys proposed by his co-trustees prevent his co-trustees from making such an
investment.
However, this is no unrestrained liberty in a trustee to
disinvest (Ibid at 1400C):
It may be that in a particular case the service of a notice to quit by one
joint tenant of the reversion to a periodic tenancy involved the joint tenants
or some of them in a liability greater than the resultant increase in value of
the reversion, those injured would have a claim in breach of trust against the
joint tenant serving the notice ...
Judicial recognition of the potential for
non-renewal of a lease to be a breach of trust is present in all of those cases
concerning commercial leases and the service of a counter notice (see
Harris
v Black (1983) 46 P & C R 366, CA at 373 and 374;
Sykes v Land
(1984) 271 EG 1264, CA at 1266). The issue the courts have concerned themselves
with has been whether in the circumstances it is likely to be a breach of trust
to refuse to renew the lease (see
Harris v Black at 373;
Sykes v
Land at 1266;
Cork v Cork [1997] 1 EGLR 5 at 7M-8F). In a similar
manner those dicta that have doubted that the service of a notice to quit by one
joint tenant constitutes,
ipso facto, a breach of trust have recognised
that in certain circumstances such an action may be an actionable breach of
trust (see
Monk (1990) 61 P & C R 414, CA at 427,
[1992] 1 AC 478, HL
at 493;
Ure [1996] QB 13, CA at 27). The trustees of a periodic lease are
under a duty to consider whether to renew or not, and this duty is not avoided
by being unaware of its existence (see
Turner v Turner [1984] Ch 100). It
is because of this positive duty to consider whether to disinvest or not that
trustee inaction can constitute a breach of trust. There is no doubt that
trustee inaction in the face of a positive duty can constitute a breach of trust
(see
Ward v Ward (1843) 2 HLC 777n;
Tempest v Lord Camoys (1865)
21 Ch D 571;
In re Brogden; Billing v Brogden (1886) 38 Ch D 546;
Re
Greenwood; Greenwood v Firth (1911) 105 LT 509;
Turner v Turner Ibid)
There is no doubt that trustees can be under a duty to seek the renewal of a
lease (
Keech v Sandford (1726) Sel. Cas. Ch. 61). The essential nature of
the duty is not affected by the characterisation of the service of a notice to
quit as in substance a negative action. This characterisation is a colourful way
of describing an effect of the common law demand for certainty of term in
leases, the practical effect described is the capacity of a single trustee to
disinvest by terminating the lease. The question of whether any particular use
of this capacity is lawful is untouched.
It was stated in
Ure that
the power of a single joint tenant to serve a notice to quit did not arise from
‘the Settled Land Act 1925 and the Law of Property Acts, and the
additional or larger powers conferred by the settlement upon the trustees or
otherwise’ (
In re Jones; Jones v Cusack-Smith [1931] 1 Ch 375 at
378, adopted by the Court of Appeal in
Ure and
Notting Hill Housing
Trust v Brackley ). Rather, as found in
Monk, the power to serve a
notice to quit is a question of capacity at law (see
[1992] 1 AC 478, HL at
493). It was not argued, and there was no finding, on the issue of whether the
actual notice to quit served in
Ure was in breach of trust, although the
possibility was doubted on the facts of the case (at 27). Therefore, it remains
open to argue, in an appropriate case, that the service of a notice to quit by
one joint tenant did constitute a breach of trust.
The third substantive issue raised by the trustee who serves notice to quit
is what effect is entailed, if any, by the fact that a notice to quit was served
in breach of trust. The possibility of a personal action against the joint tenant
is unlikely to be worth considering within the context of a residential lease.
Therefore, the key issue will be any potential effect upon the landlord. It
is inconceivable that the courts will make findings of dishonesty against local
authority landlords on anything but the most exceptional facts.
(14)
Top | Contents | Bibliography
4.
Article 8 of the European Convention on Human Rights and Article 1 of the First
Protocol
Article 8 of the European Convention on Human Rights provides that
‘Everyone has the right to respect for ...his home ...’. Article 1
of the First Protocol to the Convention provides that ‘Every ... person is
entitled to the peaceful enjoyment of his possessions. No one shall be deprived
of his possessions ...’. Section 6(1) of the Human Rights Act 1998
provides that ‘It is unlawful for a public authority to act in a way which
is incompatible with a Convention right’. The case law we have been
reviewing has overwhelmingly comprised court actions taken by public authorities
for the possession of the home of one joint tenant. The basis for possession has
been the destruction of the property interests of the occupying joint tenant in
his home, caused by the service of a notice to quit by the other joint tenant.
The service of the notice to quit has deprived the occupying tenant of his
‘possessions’ by bringing the periodic lease to an end (see Allen
2003, and
Wilson v Secretary of State for Trade and Industry [2003] UKHL 40 at paras. 39, 106, 137, 168). The public authority has procured the service
of the notice to quit, by requiring such a notice before taking steps to rehouse
the non-occupying joint tenant. Therefore, there is a
prima facie
argument for the cases to be examined with a focus on the possibility of a
violation of either Article 8 of the Convention, or Article 1 of the First
Protocol.
Ure v United Kingdom Application No. 28027/95, 27
November 1996, was an application to the European Commission of Human Rights by
Mr Ure, following the decision of the Court of Appeal in
Ure. Mr. Ure
complained of breaches of both Article 8 of the Convention and Article 1 of the
First Protocol. The Commission dismissed both complaints on two grounds. The
first ground must be considered to rest on the assumption that the nature of Mr.
Ure’s ‘possessions’ was determined by the incidents of the
periodic lease.
(15) One incident of
the periodic lease is that when held by joint tenants the lease can be brought
to an end by one joint tenant serving a notice to quit, as confirmed by the
House of Lords in
Monk. The second ground was that the repossession of
the flat properly (or at least not in an arbitrary or unreasonable manner)
balanced the interests of Mr. Ure, Mrs. Ure, and people on the waiting list for
housing, bearing in mind that alternative accommodation had been obtained for
Mr. Ure. One might add to this list of interests to be balanced the interest of
the landlord as property owner (see
Harrow L.B.C. v Qazi [2003] UKHL 43
at paras. 78 and 83, 101 and 108). The application was rejected as manifestly
ill-founded.
In
Harrow L.B.C. v Qazi [2003] UKHL 43 the House of
Lords considered the possible application of Article 8 on possession hearings
against Mr. Qazi, an occupying joint tenant, that followed the service of a
notice to quit by Mrs. Qazi. There was no consideration of whether the decision
in
Monk was in compliance with Article 8, on the basis that a court is a
public authority (see s. 6(3)(a) Human Rights Act 1998, and
Qazi at
paras. 94 and 103). The House was unanimous that the house was Mr. Qazi’s
home for the purposes of Article 8 (see
Qazi at paras 11, 29, 68, 99, and
147). Four of their Lordships agreed that Article 8 was ‘engaged’ by
the possession hearings (see
Qazi at paras. 23, 32, 70-71, and 100-103).
The disagreement between the majority of three and the minority in the House was
whether a county court hearing an application for possession needed to consider
whether an order for possession would, in all the circumstances, constitute a
breach of Article 8. The majority concluded that the essential issues in such
possession proceedings were clear, and unrelated to the protection of the
interests protected by Article 8. The landlord had a clear private law right to
possession, and the courts must award possession on this basis. There was no
arguable case for the balancing of interests to be considered by the county
court, issues of proportionality did not arise in the enforcement of the legal
right of the landlord to possession (see
Qazi at paras 83-84, 109-110,
149-152).
Both the terms of the rejection by the Commission of Mr.
Ure’s application and the reasoning of all of their Lordships in
Qazi, suggest that neither Article 8 nor Article 1 of the first Protocol
operate at a level that will lead to a re-examination of the decision in
Monk, and the subsequent judicial development of that decision. This is
hardly surprising. There are two factors that militate against an enthusiastic
revision of property law in the new legal context heralded by the Human Rights
Act 1998.
First, the development of property law has involved, and always
will involve, the balancing of conflicting legitimate interests. Therefore, any
extension of the rights of one person will involve the diminution of the rights
of another person, or group of people. This factor was articulated by Lord
Millett, in the context of the granting of a possession order in
Qazi
[2003] UKHL 43, as follows (at para 108). ‘The order is necessary to
protect the right of the landlord; and making or enforcing it does not show a
want of appropriate respect for the applicant’s home.’ The assertion
of one party’s legitimate interest is not even
prima facie an
attack upon the other party’s human rights. The balancing of the interests
of the parties is woven into the fabric of property law. There is no room for a
subsequent tailoring of the cloth of property law to meet human rights
requirements. Any changes to the law of property required to enhance human
rights need to be made at a more fundamental level, by the explicit
consideration of such rights in the process of legal growth. It is at this level
that the courts will have to decide whether their newly imposed loyalty to the
European Convention of Human Rights requires a change in their approach to the
balancing of private interests.
It was asserted by Lord Hobhouse in
Wilson v Secretary of State for Trade and Industry [2003] UKHL 40 that
when considering legislation (at para 142): ‘The questions of
justification and proportionality involve a sociological assessment- an
assessment of what are the needs of society.’ The question of whether such
a widening of the scope of legitimate argument in the context of the common law
development of private law is called for has not yet been judicially considered.
As has been noted above, the issue was not raised in
Qazi.
Second,
property law has an important facilitative function. Property law exists, in
part, to allow people to manipulate their property in a legitimate manner in
order to achieve their purposes. This is usually articulated in terms of the
need for certainty of title, the social and economic need for predictability in
dealings with property. This factor expresses itself at the workaday level as an
emphasis on the importance of the doctrine of precedent in property law.
Certainty is at a premium because people can be expected to act in reliance upon
the declared law. This factor militates against any radical re-assessment of the
established authorities in property law. Radical action by the courts creates a
risk of undermining the very interests protected by Article 1 of the First
Protocol (see Allen 2003 at p 73). What is protected by Article 1 as a
person’s possessions are the property rights as defined, as they must be,
by property law (see
Parochial Church Council of Aston Cantlow and Wilmcote
with Billesley, Warwickshire v Wallbank [2003] UKHL 37 at paras 69-72, and
124, 133-134).
5.
Secure Tenancies
Although
Monk did not alter the law, it did bring to the attention
of landlords, and local authority providers of housing in particular, the
possibility of sidestepping the restrictions originally placed upon them by the
Housing Act 1980. The legislative policy was to regulate by a statutory
institution - the secure tenancy - the relationship between owners and occupiers
of public housing. The relationship was to be characterised by the grant of new
and valuable private rights to occupiers; these rights were not dependent on the
ownership of any common law estate. The inclusion of occupation licences within
the category ‘secure tenancies’ was a clear signal of legislative
intention not to rest the secure tenancy upon common law notions of the periodic
lease and its character as a legal estate. The Housing Act 1980 provided a
statutory scheme for the recovery of possession by landlords of houses subject
to secure tenancies, and the grounds for recovery of possession have been
subsequently enlarged.
(16) The
secure tenancy restricts both secure tenants and their landlords. A secure
tenant cannot assign, or sublet, or even allow a licensee to occupy whilst she
is living elsewhere, without the loss of her statutory rights. A public landlord
can regain possession of the premises subject to a secure tenancy only if it can
show statutory grounds for repossession, and must accede to the exercise of the
right to buy by a secure tenant. Several of the grounds for repossession also
reflect the social welfare role of the providers of public housing. So, for
example, under Housing Act 1980 Grounds 10, 11 and 12 repossession is allowed if
the premises are adapted to cater for the special needs of an occupier, and no
occupier with those special needs remains in occupation. The statutory scheme
balances the interests of secure tenants and providers of public housing. The
statutory safeguards of secure tenants' security of tenure were drafted on the
assumption that tenants would need protection from landlords, not from their
co-tenants.
Although it is now far too late for the purposes of practical
legal argument, in the light of legal developments, this review of the secure
tenancy allows us to raise explicitly an implicit feature of the decision in
Monk. The arguments and decision in
Monk rested upon an assumption
that the secure tenancy was not
sui generis, but was a type of periodic
lease. However, given that a secure tenancy need not take the form of a periodic
lease - it can be created upon the grant of a fixed lease or even a licence - it
is clearly more logically coherent to view a periodic lease as a possible form
of secure tenancy. Indeed, if one attempted to create a common law periodic
lease with the same restrictions on the landlord as are imposed by the secure
tenancy it would be void for uncertainty of term, as the ability of the landlord
to serve a notice to quit is an essential characteristic of a periodic
lease.
(17) The nature of the
secure tenancy would become paramount if the secure tenancy was viewed as a
free-standing institution. No question of any impact upon other residential
agreements, or leases for agricultural or commercial use, would arise. The
Housing Act 1980 s. 28(3) and Housing Act 1985 s. 81 expressly provided for the
continuing existence of a secure tenancy where one joint tenant is not in
occupation of the premises. The only sensible interpretation of these provisions
must be that the statute was providing for the continuation of a secure tenancy
upon the breakdown of the relationship between the two joint tenants. In
addition an exception to the prohibition of assignments, in Housing Act 1985 s.
91(2)(b), is the transfer of a joint tenancy in pursuance of a court order
following a divorce. The assumption was that the ‘secure tenancy’ is
a tenancy (a word that usually means ‘periodic lease’), which the
statutes made secure, that is, a type of lease with special features.
Unconsidered was the possibility that the ‘secure tenancy’ might not
be a common law tenancy at all, ‘tenancy’ misleadingly indicating
‘right to occupy a dwelling house’ and not periodic lease.
Thus, the policy of the Housing Acts of 1980 and 1985 was to regulate
the rights of owners and occupiers of public housing via a statutory scheme, the
central institutional feature of which was the secure tenancy. In
Monk
the courts, taking their lead from the arguments of counsel, assumed that the
existence of a secure tenancy was predicated upon a tenancy, meaning a type of
periodic lease. Therefore, any decision made would govern common law periodic
leases, and those periodic leases that are subject to other statutory regimes.
This assumption explains why
Monk, the leading case on the effect on a
secure tenancy of a single joint tenant’s notice to quit, ignored the
statutory provisions governing the secure tenancy entirely. These provisions
were ignored because it was accepted that the general law of periodic leases
could not be distorted by considerations that were only relevant to secure
tenancies (see
Monk [1992] 1 AC 478, HL at 482-483, and (1990) 61
C.&P.R. 414 at 435).
The Requirements for a
Valid Tenant’s Notice to Quit
In Hounslow L.B.C. v Pilling [1994] 1 All E.R. 432, CA the
Court of Appeal had to determine the effect of a purported notice to quit
which the landlord had accepted as effective to bring the lease to an end.
The Court of Appeal held that the form of a notice to quit served by a single
joint tenant must comply with any common law and statutory requirements. The
only important requirements for a notice to quit served by a tenant are concerned
with the length of the period of notice. At common law, a weekly or monthly
tenancy will require a week or month’s notice respectively, unless some
other period has been laid down in the lease. The Protection from Eviction
Act 1977, section 5(1), requires a written notice giving a minimum period
of four weeks’ notice to terminate a periodic lease of a dwelling. Therefore,
even though a single joint tenant can terminate a lease by serving notice
on the landlord, the notice served must give at least four weeks’ notice,
allowing the occupying joint tenant four weeks’ grace, although not
four weeks’ notice. There is no requirement in the Act for one joint
tenant to give notice to the other. It was held in Pilling that a deficient
notice, expressed to take effect immediately and which the landlord accepted
as terminating the lease three days after it was served, did not terminate
the lease.
The Court of Appeal also held that the landlord could not, by agreement with
the single joint tenant serving the notice to quit, waive the statutory right
to four weeks notice. Whilst it is submitted that this holding was welcome
in the light of the purpose of the Act, which is concerned with the protection
of tenants from oppressive behaviour by landlords, the reasoning in support
of the holding was not articulated. Nourse LJ gave the reasoning of the Court
as follows ([1994] 1 All E.R. 432 at 439c):
Here the council are asking us to hold that the protection afforded by
s. 5(1) can be brought to an end by an agreement made between them and only
one of two joint tenants. It is obvious that such an agreement cannot deprive
the other joint tenant of the protection to which he is entitled under the
Act. That is not a point which can be further elaborated.
The problem with this reasoning is that it assumes, without argument or comment,
that the period of notice required by the Act from tenants is intended to
provide protection for the rights of tenants. This is contrary to any natural
construction of statutory intention. It is probably a unique feature of this
area of law that the requirement from one party of a minimum period of notice
to be given to another party has been construed as a provision for the protection
of the party upon whom the demand for notice is made. Notice is generally
required to protect the interests of the receiver of the notice. This incongruity
has importance beyond the decision in Pilling, because it highlights
the practical effect of the law as established in Monk. Failure to
protect tenants from each other was the statutory lacuna in the Housing Act
1980 that enabled the courts to ignore any statutory intention when considering
the effects of the service by one joint tenant of a notice to quit. ‘The
Act of 1980 [Housing Act 1980] operates to give security where landlords give
notice to quit; it does not give security where tenants give notice to quit’
(see Greenwich LBC v McGrady (1982) 46 P & C R 223, CA at 224,
and Monk [1992] 1 AC 478, HL at 483).
The result of this is that upon the service of a notice to quit by a single
joint tenant, only statutory provisions designed to protect the interests
of landlords can be relied upon by the other occupying joint tenant. On the
face of it this proposition suggests an undesirable distortion in the development
of the law in the courts of the legislative intention to provide security
of tenure to lessees. Given that in the reported cases it is almost invariably
the landlord who insists upon the service of a notice to quit by the non-occupying
joint tenant, it is clear that the practical result of the decision in Monk
is the evasion by local authority landlords of the statutory protection given
to secure tenants. This is, of course, apparent to the courts. Yet the development
of this area of law has been driven by the evasion of the statutory rights
of occupying joint tenants of secure tenancies achieved through the refusal
by local authorities to rehouse the non-occupying joint tenant (whether they
are under a statutory duty to do so or not(18))
without the service of a notice to quit.
The result of the decision in Pilling will usually be that an occupying
joint tenant will have a four-week period of grace between the service of
a notice to quit and the termination of the lease. However, in the case of
Wandsworth LBC v Osei-Bonsu [1999] 1 All ER 265, CA the effects
of the local authority acting upon an ineffective short notice to quit was
the award of substantial damages to the occupying joint tenant under the Housing
Act 1988, sections 27 and 28.
Section 27 of the Act provides for a cause of action when a lessee is unlawfully
evicted, and section 28 provides for the calculation of damages upon proof
of a breach of section 27. The actual facts of Osei-Bonsu are unlikely
to recur as Wandsworth LBC had accepted short notice to quit from Mrs. Osei-Bonsu,
and had relied upon this notice to deny Mr. Osei-Bonsu entry to the house
in respect of which he and his wife had enjoyed a secure tenancy as joint
tenants. Upon the reporting of the judgment in Pilling, the authority
realised its error, and obtained an effective notice to quit from Mrs. Osei-Bonsu.
Mr. Osei-Bonsu successfully claimed damages for his deprivation of his premises
caused by Wandsworth LBC refusing him entry. However, the discussion in Osei-Bonsu
over the appropriate approach to the estimation of damages to be awarded under
section 28 are of wider interest, as they indicate the Court of Appeal’s
estimate of the potential devaluing effects of the law confirmed by Monk
upon a secure joint tenant’s lease. Section 28 provides that the damages
to be awarded for a breach of section 27 are calculated by comparing the difference
in value of the landlord’s interest in the premises with and without
the lease which the landlord has violated. Thus, the Act makes the measure
of damages the defaulting landlord’s profit. The damages are not for
the loss of value to the lessee (compensation) but the wrongful gain to the
landlord (disgorgement). Therefore, the discussion was not directly concerned
with the value of the lessee’s interest. If Mr. Osei-Bonsu had held
a lease as sole secure tenant of the property the court felt £30,000
would have been an appropriate valuation of the landlord’s gain by wrongfully
evicting him from his home. However, because he was a joint tenant and the
other joint tenant, his wife, was willing to serve a notice to quit if asked
to do so by the landlord, the landlord’s gain should have been valued
at around £2,000.(19) Thus,
the availability to the local authority of the decision in Monk, combined
with its ability to bring sufficient pressure to bear upon a non-occupying
joint tenant of a secure tenancy, reduced the value of the lease by 93 per
cent.
The Effect of a Notice to
Quit on the Right to Buy
The value of the landlord’s gain from the termination of a periodic
lease cannot be realised by a secure tenant. However, the Housing Act 1980
introduced the practically valuable right to buy enjoyed by secure tenants.
Originally under the Housing Act 1980 s.8, now under the Housing Act 1985
s.155A, a secure tenant accrues a discount on the price of the house she leases
which can be realised by exercising the right to buy and then either
re-mortgaging, or, after three years, selling the house. If the security of
joint tenants of periodic leases is undermined by the possibility of one joint
tenant serving a notice to quit then the right to buy, possibly the only capital
asset held by the joint tenants, is also vulnerable.
In Bater v
Greenwich LBC [1999] 4 All ER 944, CA the Court of Appeal was faced with one
joint tenant serving a valid notice to quit upon the advice of a local authority
landlord against whom the joint tenants were in the process of exercising their
right to buy. The right to buy had a capital value of £24,640 (the
statutory discount). The Local Authority had been informed by Mr. Bater’s
solicitor both that the parties had commenced divorce proceedings and that Mr.
Bater intended seeking a transfer of the lease into his sole name. In these
circumstances Mr. Bater sought an order under section 37 of the Matrimonial
Causes Act 1973 avoiding the effects of the notice to quit. However, the right
to buy is ‘parasitic’ upon the existence of a secure tenancy and not
an independent right in the property. Therefore, the Court of Appeal concluded,
following Monk, that the service of the notice to quit by Mrs. Bater left
Mr. Bater with no valid claim against the local authority landlord. Although it
seems clear from the facts that Greenwich L.B.C. did not procure the notice to
quit from Mrs. Bater in order to destroy the right to buy there is an inherent
conflict of interests between a person in Mr. Bater’s position and his
landlord. The vulnerability of Mr. Bater was a foreseeable result of the
decision in Monk to disregard the statutory scheme of security of tenure
that applied on the facts, and to substitute an analysis based upon the common
law characteristics of the periodic lease.
Release as an Alternative
to Notice to Quit
The speeches in the House of Lords in
Monk laid stress on the need
to allow a single joint tenant to escape the obligations she had undertaken by
destroying the periodic lease (at 483, and 492; see also (1990) 61 P & C R
414, CA at 435). The suggestion in the academic literature that a unilateral
notice to quit should be treated as a release by a joint tenant of any interest
in the periodic lease was not explored (see Webb 1983, Dewar 1992, at 378-379
and Tee 1992, at 219-220). A release of an interest is the giving up of any
claim derived from the interest. It has always been a recognised option in
property law for a joint tenant to give up her rights under the joint tenancy to
her fellow joint tenants. The effect is the same as the death of a joint tenant,
the joint tenancy continues with one less member, unless only one joint tenant
remains, in which case the joint tenancy comes to an end.
The
issue of a single joint tenant releasing her interest in the co-owned lease was
raised in
Burton v Camden London Borough Council [2000] 2 AC 399 which
concerned the effect of an express deed of release of her interest in a periodic
lease by one of two joint tenants. The House of Lords decided by a majority
(Lord Millett dissenting) that a joint tenant of a periodic lease that created a
secure tenancy could not release her interest in the lease to her joint tenant.
This was because the effect of such a release would be like an assignment of the
periodic lease, and the assignment of a secure tenancy was prohibited by section
91(1) of the Housing Act 1985. Lord Nicholls did not find the distinction
between an assignment and a release relevant to the issue, characterising it as
‘an ancient distinction’ (
Burton Ibid at 404H). An approach
based on the nature of the interest of one of a number of joint tenants was even
less worthy of serious consideration being an: ‘esoteric concept ...
remote from the realities of life’. This decision was almost the mirror of
the decision in
Monk.
(20) In
Monk the statutory regime that applied to the lease was deemed irrelevant
to the question of law, which was resolved by the application of old common law
authorities. In
Burton the common law was deemed irrelevant to the lease,
which was to be dealt with solely under the statutory regime that governed such
leases.
For the majority in
Burton, the statutory provisions were
primary. Indeed a strong purposive approach to their construction was necessary,
in order to prevent joint tenants of a periodic lease, which subsisted as a
secure tenancy, from eluding the statutory intention to protect local authority
landlords from any dealings with the lease, other than those to which the
landlord consented, or those which fell squarely within express statutory
exceptions.
The peculiar result of the two cases,
Monk and
Burton, is that
a single joint tenant can unilaterally destroy a periodic lease regardless of
any statutory scheme of security of tenure, but is unable to release her interest
if the periodic lease creates a secure tenancy. Thus, a joint tenant of a periodic
lease which constitutes a secure tenancy is faced by a constant uncertainty
over the continuation of the lease, but cannot obtain the release of her co-owner’s
interest, as that would interfere with the control of the landlord. The
landlord
may well use its position as provider of social housing to force a non-occupying
joint tenant of a periodic lease to destroy the interests of an occupying joint
tenant. In destroying the periodic lease the landlord will free itself from
its obligations under the right to buy legislation.
Top | Contents | Bibliography
Statutory
Reform of the Law
The Law Commission has published Renting Homes, (Law Commission 2003),
which sets out its recommendations for reform of housing law. The recommendations
follow the publication of two consultation documents (Law Commission 2002a
and 2002b) and an extensive consultation process (see Law Commission 2003
at 2.13-2.16). The report emphasises a contractual approach to occupation
agreements between landowners and occupiers which provide for residential
occupation (Ibid at 2.5, 2.38, 3.21, 3.70, 5.12, 6.31, 6.45(1), 7.29, 7.3,
7.4). The Commission attempts, through its proposed scheme, to jettison structural
assumptions of the common law that have bedevilled housing law. Thus, for
example, the report recommends that occupation agreements are to be of equal
validity regardless of whether the common law would classify them as leases
or licences.(21) The emphasis
on the agreement between the landowner and the residential occupier allows
for the development of clarity in the law, and thereby both transparency of
right and duty, and a consumer law approach to occupation agreements.(22)
The recommendations aim for a radical simplification of the law, with two
basic types of residential occupancy agreement. One type of agreement is designed
for landowners whose involvement in the provision of housing is brought about
by their interest in meeting social need, and this type is referred to here
as the social housing agreement. The other type of agreement is designed for
landowners whose principal motivation is the economic gain available from
providing housing, and this type is referred to here as the private housing
agreement. The two types are intended to cover ‘all contractual agreements
granting the right to occupy premises as a home’ (Ibid at 6.17), subject
to exceptions (Ibid at 6.27-6.29).
The social housing agreement, which is modelled on the secure tenancy, will
be the predominant form for residential accommodation in the future, and its
‘underlying feature is security for the occupier’ (Ibid at 5.13).
It will be for an indefinite term (Ibid 5.13(1)), allowing repossession only
for a restricted number of reasons following a court order, and repossession
will always be subject to the court deciding it is reasonable in all of the
circumstances (Ibid at 9.17-9.37). Where appropriate the occupier will have
the ‘right to buy’ (Ibid at 2.32 and 5.20), and the agreement
will give limited rights to succession, but not testamentary disposition,
in appropriate circumstances (Ibid at Part 14).
Under the standard terms of a social housing agreement landlords will be able
to obtain possession for breaches of the occupation agreement by the occupier,
and for ‘property management’ reasons (Ibid at 9.15-9.37). The
existing particularised grounds for possession for property management reasons
in secure tenancies will be retained, but a general power to seek possession
for reasons of property management in exceptional cases will be introduced
(Ibid at 9.30-9.35), and there will be a new ground that will apply when one
of several joint tenant occupiers to an agreement quits the agreement (Ibid
at 11.33-11.34).
A private housing agreement will be either for an indefinite period or for
a fixed term (Ibid at 5.14(1)). The security of the occupier under an indefinite
private housing agreement will be far less than under a social housing agreement.
Unless the model agreement is altered, which will be possible,(23)
the landowner will be able to obtain possession by the service of a notice
to quit, which gives a right to a ‘mandatory’ order for possession,
an order that the court must make automatically if the necessary facts are
proved. Although a court order will still be required, there will be no power
in the court to refuse an order for possession on the grounds that it is unreasonable
to make such an order in all the circumstances (Ibid at 3.33, 3.41, 3.46,
5.14, 9.39-9.41). The notice to quit will have to give two months notice to
the occupier (Ibid at 9.57). In addition a court will have to order possession
when there are serious rent arrears, by which is meant rent is two months
in arrears. This further mandatory ground for possession will operate for
both indefinite and fixed term agreements (Ibid at 3.41, 9.42-9.43, 9.60).
Finally, for both indefinite and fixed term agreements, the landowner will
be able to obtain an order for possession for other breaches of the agreement,
if the court finds it reasonable in all the circumstances to make the order
(Ibid at 9.23-9.28).
In the context of this contract based scheme the report recommends that a
single joint tenant of an indefinite occupation agreement of either type (for
private or social housing) cannot destroy an occupation agreement by serving
a unilateral notice to quit (Ibid at 3.52, 3.63, 11.25-11.30). The service
of a notice to quit by one joint tenant of an occupation agreement will operate
to end that person’s future rights and obligations under the agreement
(Ibid at 11.28-11.29). Further, for fixed term private housing agreements
it is recommended that the model agreement should provide that the operation
of a break clause by a single joint tenant of an occupation agreement should
have a similar effect, subject to any contrary express term (Ibid at 9.115-9.116,
11.28(3)).
The service of a notice to quit will free a former joint tenant from any future
obligations under the housing agreement. The remaining joint tenant (or tenants)
will become solely responsible for the obligations under the agreement. The
remaining joint tenant can either continue as a sole tenant, or serve notice
to quit on the landowner. A tenant must give at least one months notice (Ibid
at 3.50, 9.109-9.112). However, as the landowner will be required to notify
a remaining joint tenant of its receipt of a notice to quit served by the
other joint tenant (Ibid at 11.28), the remaining joint tenant can act swiftly
to minimise any exposure to sole responsibility for obligations under the
agreement.
The landowner will be able to accept the variation of the occupation agreement
(from two occupiers to a single occupier), or re-let the property if the remaining
occupier serves a notice to quit. If the variation of the agreement to a sole
tenancy is unacceptable to the landowner then the type of agreement involved
becomes important. A landowner under a private housing agreement for an indefinite
period will be able to serve notice to quit. A landowner under a fixed term
private housing agreement on the terms of the model agreement will have to
accept the new situation until the end of the term.(24)
A landowner under a social housing agreement will be able to seek possession
under a new discretionary ground for possession. Possession will be available
on the grounds that:
-
the landowner feels that the remaining occupier does not have housing
needs that justify her continued occupation of the property; or,
-
the departure of the joint tenant serving notice to quit has left the
property under-occupied; oror,
-
the property is adapted to meet the special needs of an occupier, and
an occupier with those special needs no longer resides at the property.
The landowner will have to offer suitable alternative accommodation to the
remaining occupier in order to obtain possession of the property on these
grounds (Ibid at 11.33-11.35
Thus, the proposed reform will meet many of the difficulties posed by the
decision in Monk, as the interests of all three parties (landowner,
and each joint tenant) can be recognised, and the shared asset of the joint
tenants can be preserved. However, on its own this framework does not allow
for discrimination against wrongdoers, in this context the violent partner.
The victim of an abusive joint tenant might serve a notice to quit, and seek
emergency housing, leaving the abusive joint tenant with the more valuable
and convenient occupation agreement for himself. The landowner may, or may
not, be able to seek repossession on the new grounds for possession described
above. However, even if possession on one of these grounds is possible it
would not be available unless suitable alternative occupation was offered
to the abuser. The family law jurisdiction may allow a more satisfactory resolution,
by excluding the abuser and transferring the occupation agreement to the victim
(Ibid at 3.72, 13.25). However, an action under this jurisdiction cannot be
initiated by the landowner, who may be left with an unwanted sole occupier
of its property.
The report has specific proposals which meet this problem, by the use of a
special term dealing with anti-social behaviour in occupation agreements,
whether private or social housing agreements.(25)
By the special term the occupier will agree, inter alia, not
to ‘engage in conduct that ... involves the use, or threatened use,
of violence or causes a risk of significant harm to a person within the home’
(at 3.86, 15.22(1)). Upon breach of this term the landowner will be able either
to seek possession, or to obtain an injunction against any further breach
(at 15.20-15.23). In an action for possession for breach of the special term,
or for possession following breach of an injunction obtained to prevent further
breaches, the landowner will be able to obtain possession of the property,
without making any offer of alternative accommodation to the person who breached
the term or the injunction (at 3.81, 9.25, 15.20-15.21, 15.44). The court
will be able to refuse to make a possession order if it would be reasonable
in all the circumstances to do so, and the provision of accommodation to the
victim of abuse will be a factor to weigh in deciding this issue. The victim
could be either offered a new occupation agreement over the property, or suitable
alternative accommodation (at 3.86, 15.47-15.48). Providers of social housing
will also have freestanding powers to seek an injunction against anyone engaging
in anti-social behaviour. If the anti-social behaviour involves violence,
or threats of violence, or risk of significant harm, the injunction may have
an attached power of arrest, or be combined with an exclusion order (at 3.82-3.83,
3.87, 15.25-15.31, 15.46).
Top | Contents | Bibliography
A
Critical Analysis of the Decision in Monk
In deciding
Monk,[1992] 1 AC 478, HL
the House of Lords
accepted that it was faced with a dilemma. This dilemma was posed in terms of
the rights and obligations of the joint tenants of a periodic lease. On one horn
of this dilemma was the need of a non-occupying joint tenant to free herself
from onerous obligations. On the other horn was the protection of the rights of
the occupying joint tenant in his home. In accepting this as a true dilemma that
had to be resolved by a choice between the two horns, the House committed itself
to two highly questionable assumptions.
First, it was assumed that the
real interests involved were those of the two joint tenants. This was palpably
false. The dispute was between the landlord and the occupying joint tenant. The
dispute had arisen after the local authority landlord had advised one joint
tenant cohabitant that in order to be re-housed she should terminate her
tenancy. The landlord was taking possession proceedings against the remaining
occupying cohabitant. By accepting the dilemma the House was accepting for the
purposes of the argument that the landlord was acting altruistically in
litigating the case, to free the non-occupying joint tenant from her liability.
Second, it was assumed that the solution to the problem had to be sought in the
law of property, that the key issues were the nature of the periodic lease and
the nature of the joint tenancy. However, most joint tenancies are founded upon
a relationship
inter se. Where there is no pre-existing relationship
inter se then any legal joint tenancy would be held upon trust by
operation of law. Therefore, there would always be an alternative source of law
to regulate any disagreement between the joint tenants, and no necessity to view
the problem as primarily a question of property law. The imperative in the
litigation for framing the issue as one of property law was, in reality, the
interests of the landlord.
This framing of the issue as a dispute between
the joint tenants distorted the reasoning of the House. In his leading speech
Lord Bridge discounted any reliance upon the real relationships between the
joint tenants, or between the landlord and the joint tenants. He then focussed
upon an abstract hypothetical relationship between the joint tenants, which was
regulated by a hypothetical contract. From this analysis he justified the choice
between the two horns of the dilemma ‘in principle’. The rest of
Lord Bridge’s speech was devoted to a review of the authorities, which
confirmed that they were compatible with the conclusion already identified from
‘first principles’.
It is submitted that his derivation of
‘principle’ was a rhetorical device which distorted the issues
involved in the litigation, and which should have been considered as misleading
obiter dicta in the subsequent development of the law. The dicta have the
potential to distort legal development for two reasons. First, they appear to
provide an ethical basis for the law, a principle of justice in regulating the
relationship between joint tenants. This appearance is false. If conflict arises
after a notice to quit it is invariably between the occupying joint tenant and
the landlord. There are far more adequate and appropriate mechanisms for the
resolution of conflicts between joint tenants inter se in the law governing
their particular relationship. Second, the dicta obscure the true basis for the
decision. The decision is based upon a necessary but unmeritorious doctrinal
fiction, imposed three hundred years ago in order to protect tenants from the
uncertainties and inadequacies of the tenancy at will. It is generally accepted
that one should not extend a fiction beyond its necessary operation. Thus, the
need for caution in applying
Monk beyond its facts is apparent if its
true foundation is appreciated. However, it is also generally accepted that
‘principles’ should be extended in their operation, particularly
principles that effect justice. Therefore, if the dicta of Lord Bridge are
accepted as a valid analysis of the situation then the law will develop upon a
false principle, until the results of this development become so objectionable
that reform becomes necessary.
It is submitted, the ratio of
Monk
should be articulated in a form that reflects the true nature of the decision.
The case decided that a landlord could rely upon the service of a notice to quit
a periodic lease given by one of two joint tenants. This was because a landlord
could not force a new grant upon both joint tenants, when only one was willing
to continue the periodic lease. The corollary of the landlord being able to rely
upon the notice to quit is that the legal periodic lease is brought to an end by
the notice to quit. It will be noticed that such a formulation of the ratio of
the decision does not touch upon the lawfulness of the unilateral service of
notice to quit by a single joint tenant. This is because the question was not in
issue, and the House expressly decided the case without a full consideration of
the question.
Such a formulation avoids another difficulty presented by the speech of Lord
Bridge. His Lordship characterised the serving of a notice to quit as a substantially
negative act, an omission. He derived support for this classification from two
essentially disparate sources, the English authorities on the nature of a periodic
lease and a principle, which seems to be the contractual ‘principle’,
that he had propounded at the beginning of his judgment. Lord Bridge contrasted
the ‘substance’ of a notice to quit with its ‘form’.
English law is constrained by the doctrinal demand for certainty of term, it
cannot recognise any contract for an indeterminate term as a lease. Therefore,
as a matter of law the serving of a notice to quit is, and must be, an essentially
negative act. However, as a matter of social reality, as a matter of the actual
intentions of the parties to a periodic lease, the contract is intended to be
for an indefinite term until brought to an end by the actions of one of the
parties. Therefore, in substance, as well as form, the service of a notice to
quit is also positive, not as a matter of law, but as a matter of fact. The
principle, which regards the service of a notice to quit as, in substance, an
omission (a lack of consent), is a distortion of the true issues. The real issue
before the House was whether a landlord could act in reliance upon a notice
to quit from a single joint tenant: in form and substance the notice to quit
brought to an end the periodic lease if the landlord could rely upon it. As
a matter of legal doctrine, the notice is of an unwillingness to continue the
lease beyond its present prospective term and as such can be characterised as
a negative act, notice of a lack of consent, rather than a positive act, notice
of the exercise of an ability to bring the periodic lease to an end. This legal
technicality is derived from the doctrinal fiction that a periodic lease is
for a fixed term, and has the same fictional quality. To describe the classification
of a notice to quit as an omission as a principled classification which reflects
the substance (reality) of the action is to invite confusion of a justifiable
use of a legal fiction with a belief that the law is in alignment with justice
and social reality.
Top | Contents | Bibliography
Conclusion
The impact of Monk has been uneven across those areas of law and life
it has touched. The attempt to frame the issue in the case in a contractual
perspective, criticised above as both incoherent and productive of illusion,
has been fruitful in encouraging a fresh judicial approach to the lease elsewhere
(see Hussein v Mehlman [1992] 2 EGLR 87 and Chartered Trust plc
v Davies [1997] 49 EG 135,CA). The statutory mechanisms for the protection
of commercial leases have lent themselves to a defence of the position of
an occupying joint tenant, and allowed the bringing of disputes to a judicial
forum before irreparable damage could occur (see Cork v Cork [1997]
1 EGLR 5).
The impact upon the law of trusts has been barren, and may yet lead to damage.
The difficulty, in part, is the old one caused by the introduction of the
statutory trusts over legal estates in 1925. The extent to which legal co-owners
acting as trustees for themselves should be treated in the same manner as
other trustees remains unresolved, and the case law following Monk
has not been productive of principles for the development of the law in this
area. The apparent immunity of local authority landlords from any liability
for procuring the service of notices to quit is disquieting, and suggests
a lacuna in the law.
As Monk, and most of the cases that we have reviewed here, pre-dates
the implementation of the Human Rights Act 1998, we are concerned with the
impact of human rights on Monk, rather than the impact of Monk
on human rights law. The impact of human rights upon this area of law has
been negligible. This has been because the private law we have been considering
has provided the unquestioned foundation for the arguments of all the parties
to litigation that has invoked the Convention rights following the service
of a notice to quit by one of two joint tenants of a periodic lease. The importance
of certainty in this field of law will preclude any re-opening of the decision
in Monk on human rights grounds. Of theoretical interest is the hypothetical
question of whether Monk might have been argued, and decided, differently
had the Human Rights Act been in force at the time of the decision. Lord Browne-Wilkinson
(at 493) indicated that he chose to affirm the law because, ‘no sufficient
reason has been shown for changing the basic law’. Given the emphasis
on certainty and stability in property law this approach was justifiable.
However, this decision was not reached easily because (at 491), ‘the
flat in question was the joint home of the appellant and Mrs. Powell: it therefore
cannot be right that one of them unilaterally can join the landlords to put
an end to the other’s rights in the home.’ It may be that explicit
consideration of the effects of the established law on the rights protected
by Article 8, and Article 1 of the First Protocol, would have added sufficient
weight to the arguments for changing the law so as to tip the balance; or
more productively, led to a rejection of the analysis of the law as a true
dilemma. However, the needs for certainty rule out any such argument post
Monk. Landlords, and joint tenants, are entitled to act in reliance
of the continued validity of the declaration of law contained in the House
of Lords’ decision. The presumption of their reliance, a presumption
which may well reflect reality in the case of landlords, precludes re-opening
the issue for re-consideration in the light of the subsequent passage of the
Human Rights Act.
It is in the area of family law that the impact of Monk has been most
disquieting. Although lawyers may be able to comfort themselves with an analysis
of a unilateral notice to quit as inaction on the part of a joint tenant,
to the other joint tenant it is a clear act of betrayal. It seems some women
have been subjected to violent retribution for serving a notice to quit (see
Malos and Hague 1993, at p 73). It can hardly be doubted that the present
practice of local authorities breeds rancour and resentment. There is no room
under the present ‘system’ for a consideration of the merits of
the parties, nor the needs of the family members. The family courts are left
helpless spectators to actions that increase ill feeling, jeopardise the few
assets owned by the couple, and disregard the welfare of the children caught
up in the breakdown of the relationship. The family courts are impotent to
act to preserve the jointly owned periodic lease in the face of a development
in the House of Lords of a strictly conceptual approach to periodic leases.
Inaction, which prevents property from ever coming into being, is not a disposition
of property subject to section 37(2) orders (Alsulaimen). The destruction
of the right to occupy is not an interference with any right to occupy (Johnstone).
Landlords are not affected by injunctions issued against the joint tenants
(Johnstone). The existence of a power to prevent the service of a notice
to quit is doubted (Osei-Bonsu), and has to be proclaimed obiter in
the hope that practitioners can through their advice prevent the collapse
of the foundations of the jurisdiction given to the courts to distribute matrimonial
assets in the light of the policies contained in the Family Law Act 1996 (Bater).
It seems peculiarly hard to subject families to the tyranny of concepts, not
merely unknown, but barely comprehensible to them. If, as we submit, these
concepts are actually the out-workings of an underlying fiction required 300
years ago then the injustice is offensive to both the parties and the law.
Fictions are not meant to deceive anyone (Baker 2002, at p 202 n 49). However,
it would appear they have deceived many in this area. This, we submit, is
the baleful result of a decision in Monk that was both was too persuasive
and which gave too little attention to the appropriate limitations required.
If, as we accept, without legislative intervention the courts must uphold
the common law as confirmed by Monk, then this should be done with
a far more careful attention to the inherent limits of this law.
The assumption that the secure tenancy should be treated as a form of periodic
lease, rather than as sui generis, led to the imposition of the common
law fiction, that allowed the periodic lease to satisfy the doctrine of certainty
of term, on the statutory institution. The recommendations of the Law Commission,
if implemented, will mark a resounding re-assertion of the primacy of the
statutory institution over the common law. Monk caused a profound erosion
of the security of tenure of the secure tenant and seriously undermined the
legislative scheme of 1980 and 1985. The statutory reforms proposed by the
Law Commission to regulate the effects of a unilateral service of a notice
to quit by a joint tenant of an occupation agreement for an indefinite term
should determine unequivocally the position for the future. By denying to
a sole joint tenant the ability to destroy the jointly held property the reform
will also alleviate the problems Monk and the subsequent case law have
posed to the family law courts.
We started the article with a quotation from aone famous American judge and
jurist, Justice Cardozo. It seems appropriate to give the last word to an
even more famous American judge and jurist, Justice Holmes. Our contention
is that Monk is an aspect of the old common law doctrine that demands
that a lease has certainty of term at its commencement. This may be a necessary
feature of the law, however, we fear it reflects a vice in the law that such
a doctrinal consideration should be allowed a determinative role in legal
development. In the words of Justice Holmes (Holmes 1897):
‘It is revolting to have no better reason for a rule of law than
that it was laid down in the time of Henry IV. It is still more revolting
if the grounds upon which it was laid down have vanished long since, and the
rule simply persists from blind imitation of the past.’
Bibliography
Allen, Tom (2003) ‘The Autonomous Meaning of
‘Possessions’ under the European Convention on Human Rights’,
in Cooke, Elizabeth (ed) Modern Studies in Property Law, Vol. 2 (Oxford:
Hart Publishing)
Baker, J H (2002) An Introduction to English legal
History 4th ed (London: Butterworths)
Cardozo, Benjamin
Nathan (1928) ‘The Paradoxes of Legal Science’, reprinted in Hall,
Margaret E (ed) (1947) Selected Writings of Benjamin Nathan Cardozo (New
York: Mathew Bender) p 287.
Dewar, John (1992) ‘When Joint
Tenants Part’ 108 Law Quarterly Review 375.
Goulding, Simon
(1992) ‘Service of a Notice to Quit by One Joint Tenant’ 56
Conveyancer and Property Lawyer 279.
Harpum, Charles (2000)
Megarry & Wade The Law of Real Property, 6th
ed (London: Sweet & Maxwell).
Holdsworth, Sir W (1937) A History
of English Law 2nd ed vol 7 (Methuen)
Holmes, Oliver
Wendell (1897) ‘The Path of the Law’ 10 Harvard Law Review
457.
Law Commission (2002a) Consultation Paper No 162 , Renting Homes
1: Status and Security (London: HMSO).
Law Commission (2002b)
Consultation Paper No 168, Renting Homes 2: Co-occupation, Transfer and
Succession (London HMSO).
Law Commission (2003) Report 284 ,
Renting Homes (London: HMSO)
Malos and Hague (1993) Domestic
Violence and Housing: Local Authority Responses to Women and Children Escaping
Violence in the Home Women’s Aid Federation and School of Applied
Social Studies (University of Bristol).
Megarry, Sir R and Wade, H W R
(1984) The Law of Real Property, 5th ed (London: Stevens &
Sons).
Simpson, A W B (1986) A History of the Land Law,
2nd ed (Oxford: Clarendon Press).
Tee, Louise (1992)
‘The Negative Nature of a Notice to Quit’ 51 Cambridge Law
Journal 218.
Webb, Frank (1983) ‘Notice to Quit by One Joint
Tenant’ 47 Conveyancer and Property Lawyer 194.
(1)
Housing Act 1980 s. 28; Housing Act 1985 s. 79-81. Both Acts clearly contemplate
the continuing occupation by one joint tenant of the premises, and specifically
enact that the occupation of one of two or more joint tenants suffices to
satisfy the tenant condition, Housing Act 1980 s. 28(3), Housing Act 1985 s.
81.
(2)
We return to the reasoning of Lord Bridge below, at ‘A Critical Analysis
of the Decision in
Monk’. Several commentators on the decision in
Monk seem to have been misled by the emphasis on ‘will’ and
‘contract’ in the speech of Lord Bridge into overlooking the
doctrinal source of the law on the point. See Goulding 1992 at 281 –282,
Tee 1992 at 219, Dewar 1992 at 378. The centrality of certainty of term is
express in the argument of counsel for Hammersmith and Fulham: ‘The notice
to quit is the means whereby the wish not to continue is communicated. Were that
not so, the letting would risk being void for indeterminacy.’
[1992] 1 AC 478 at 481
per Stephen Sedley Q.C. and Beverly-Ann Rogers.
(3)
See e.g. the Children Act 1989, s.1 and the Matrimonial Causes Act 1973,
s.25(1).
(4)
In the case of divorcing parties in ancillary relief proceedings under Part II
of the Matrimonial Causes Act 1973. and in the case of unmarried couples by an
application for a transfer of tenancy under the Family Law Act 1976, s.53 and
sched.7. See further
below.
(5)
For the purposes of the article we will be confining ourselves to considering
the position of ‘cohabitants’ and ‘former cohabitants’,
who are defined in s.62(1) as a man and a woman who although not married to each
other are living together as husband and wife, and former cohabitants is to be
read accordingly. The Domestic Violence, Crime and Victims Bill will amend the
definition of cohabitants to include same sex couples if
enacted.
(6)
There are also the statutory powers granted by the Children Act 1989 where
applicable. There are also inherent powers of the court, to prevent a breach of
trust and derived from its wardship jurisdiction. See below, paragraph
commencing ‘The difficulties posed to the family courts jurisdiction were
explored’, and the review of the impact of
Monk on commercial
leases and trust
law.
(7)
This tendency to run together efficacy and rectitude is visible in the argument
of Arden Q.C. as reported, and on this point apparently accepted, by Simon Brown
LJ in
Wandsworth L.B.C. v Osei-Bonsu [1999] 1 FLR 276 at 283H:
‘That decision [
Monk], therefore, retrospectively sanctioned the
practice which Wandsworth were following in the instant case of seeking such a
notice from a joint tenant who required to be housed elsewhere.’
(8)
Reasoning considered below at ‘A Critical Analysis of the Decision in
Monk’.
(9)
No view was expressed by Lord Hoffmann on whether the giving of notice would be
a ‘dealing’ with the tenancy which could be restrained:
[1999] 1 AC 313 at 318-319. It was noted by Simon Brown LJ that the decision in
Alsulaimen was given the day before the hearing of
Osei-Bonsu by
the Court of Appeal: Ibid at
288C.
(10)
On the inherent jurisdiction of the court to protect one spouse from the
unscrupulous dealings by the other spouse by injunctive relief see:
Khreino v
Khreino (No. 2) [2000] 1 F.C.R. 80.
(11)
Unless the under occupation has been brought about as a result of the occupying
tenant’s violence. The Housing Act 1966 introduced a new ground for
possession against a tenant who uses violence against other occupiers of the
premises: see Housing Act 1985, Schedule 2, ground
2A.
(12)
The local authority cannot offer her a secure tenancy in carrying out its duty
under Part VII Housing Act 1996. S. 207 of the Act prohibits it from doing so.
See also Housing Act 1985, Schedule 1, para. 4, as amended by Housing Act 1996,
Schedule 17, para. 3. The woman can obtain a new secure tenancy by application
under Part VI Housing Act 1996 only. The legislation was drafted to avoid the
mischief of those housed under the homelessness legislation ‘jumping the
queue’ for public
housing.
(13)
In the Scottish case of
Smith v Grayton Estates Ltd 1961 S.L.T. 38 one
joint tenant of a statutorily extended lease served notice to quit on the
landlord in a commercial context (an agricultural lease).
(14)
The decision of the House of Lords in
Twinsectra v Yardley [2002] 2 AC 164, HL to demand, in effect, the same quality of dishonesty in dishonest
assistance in a breach of trust as is demanded by the criminal law for theft
makes any attempt to seek redress from local authority landlords through
dishonest assistance
fanciful.
(15)
The only alternative interpretation of the decision would involve assuming the
Commission misunderstood the relevant English law. The relevant paragraph
follows. ‘... the Commission notes that the applicant and his wife were
joint tenants and that, therefore, the right to use the apartment was to be
exercised by them jointly [taken literally this does not reflect either the
common law or the statutory scheme of the secure tenancy]. The applicant was not
entitled, under the tenancy agreement , to use the flat as sole tenant [ditto].
It was therefore clear at the outset that in case one of the joint tenants
decided to leave, the other could not claim a right to become a sole tenant
[true, but there is no doubt that if Mrs. Ure had simply left the flat then Mr.
Ure could have continued as joint tenant].’ It seems the Commission was
conflating use of the flat with the rights under the lease; a secure tenancy
does terminate if both joint tenants stop occupying the premises. However, the
periodic lease is not inherently linked to occupation by the lessee, and the
Housing Acts 1980 and 1985 do not insist that both joint tenants remain in
occupation for a secure tenancy to endure.
(16)
Housing Act 1980 ss. 32 to 34, Schedule 4; Housing Act 1985 s84, Schedule 2. A
new ground 10A for possession was introduced by the Housing and Planning Act
1986 s.9(1) (and amended by the Housing Act 1988 Schedule 17) to facilitate
re-development. Ground 2 was amended, and a new ground 2A was introduced, by the
Housing Act 1996 ss. 144-146. Ground 2A provides for eviction of a violent man
who forces his wife (or cohabitant) to leave the home. However, this ground is
not used very often, because local authorities prefer the fleeing woman to serve
a notice to quit: see Law Com. 284 at
15.40-15.42.
(17)
Prudential Assurance [1992] 2 AC 386. In the context of a secure
tenants' powers of disposition the House of Lords has
de facto endorsed
this approach (of treating the secure tenancy as a
sui generis
institution) in
Burton v Camden L.B.C. [2000] 2 AC 399, by deeming the
well known common law distinction between an assignment and a release as
inoperative when applied to dispositions by secure
tenants.
(18)
Although in some circumstances the destruction of the non-occupying
partner’s interest would be necessary for them to qualify as homeless this
would not be so if it were unreasonable for them to live with their joint tenant
partner, for example in cases of domestic violence. See Housing Act 1996 ss. 175
and
177.
(19)
The Court of Appeal refused to reduce the damages awarded to Mr Osei-Bonsu from
£30,000 to £2,000 due to the fact that the local authority had made a
specific agreement as to quantum. However, it did reduce his award to
£10,000 by virtue of the provisions in s.27(7)(a) for the mitigation of
damages. It was Mr Osei-Bonsu’s violent conduct towards his wife that had
led to his
eviction.
(20)
The unintentional irony of counsel’s argument in
Burton is so
compelling it deserves note. The local authority argued: ‘that there is no
contractual principle which entitles one party to the contract to free itself of
its obligations without notice to the other party’ (contra
Monk,
where a joint tenant must be allowed to serve notice without notice to the other
joint tenant); ‘It would be repugnant to the law of contract if one party
could unilaterally deprive the other party of its rights’ (contra
Monk where this result was demanded by contractual principles). The
authority for the applicability of these contractual principles is
Monk!
Finally: ‘A secure tenancy is a creature of statute’ (contra
Monk where it is just a type of lease and must be subject to the general
law and all statutory provisions were irrelevant).
(21)
Law Com No 284 at 3.12, 3.73, 4.8-4.11, 6.18, 6.19-6.20. The report provides for
an alternative approach to the common law in several other particulars. As noted
in the text below, it treats accommodation agreements as indefinite in term. It
will be possible to have any number of joint tenants; it is recommended that the
old restriction to four imposed by the s. 34(2) Law of Property Act 1925 should
be abrogated: Ibid at 11.12.. It rejects the application of the formality
requirements for the creation and transfer of legal and equitable interests in
land to occupation agreements: Ibid at 7.4, 13.26-13.32. It detaches the giving
of notice from the nominal periods of the periodic lease: Ibid at 9.52, 9.57,
9.112. The approach reaches its limits when questions of third party rights are
in issue: Ibid at 3.102, 6.20, 13.29.
(22)
Ibid at 2.4, 2.10, 3.4(3), 4.3(1), 7.1(2) & (3), and at 2.11(3), 3.2-3.6,
3.28, Part 4, and Part 7. Particular emphasis is placed upon the application of
the Unfair Contract Terms in Consumer Contract Regulations 1999 to occupation
agreements.
(23)
Ibid at 3.11, 5.8, 5.53. The alteration must be in favour of the occupier as the
requirement of two months notice is a compulsory minimum term, i.e. a term that
sets out the minimum rights of the occupier, Ibid at 3.29, 8.21-8.25, 8.94,
9.16, 9.41,
9.57.
(24)
It should be remembered that the landowner would be free to change the statutory
default term if this was considered
unacceptable.
(25)
Ibid at 3.80-3.81, 15.20-15.22, 15.44. The approach to anti-social behaviour to
include violence and harassment in the home is recommended at 15.11. A
‘special term’ is one imposed for social policy reasons by the
government, and the parties to the agreement will not be able to alter it or
contract out: Ibid at 3.29(3), 8.70-8.73.
BAILII:
Copyright Policy |
Disclaimers |
Privacy Policy |
Feedback |
Donate to BAILII
URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/other/journals/WebJCLI/2004/issue3/ferris3.html