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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Swainland Builders Ltd v Freehold Properties Ltd [2002] EWCA Civ 560 (12 April 2002) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2002/560.html Cite as: [2002] 23 EG 123, [2002] 17 EG 154, [2002] EWCA Civ 560, [2002] 2 EGLR 71 |
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IN THE COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE CHANCERY DIVISION
(Mr Justice Neuberger)
Strand London WC2 |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE JONATHAN PARKER
____________________
SWAINLAND BUILDERS LIMITED | ||
Claimant/Respondent | ||
- v - | ||
FREEHOLD PROPERTIES LIMITED | ||
Defendant/Appellant |
____________________
Smith Bernal Reporting Limited, 190 Fleet Street,
London EC4A 2AG
Tel: 0171 421 4040
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Friday, 12th April 2002
"The notice must contain particulars of the principal terms of the disposal proposed by the landlord, including in particular-
(a) the property to which it relates and the estate or interest in that property proposed to be disposed of, and
(b)the consideration required by the landlord for making the disposal."
"...where, in any case to which section 5 applies, the consideration required by the landlord for making the disposal does not consist, or does not wholly consist, of money."
"Where a landlord has served an offer notice on the qualifying tenants ... and
(a)no acceptance notice is ... served on the landlord
...
the landlord may, during the period of 12 months ... dispose of the protected interest to such person as he thinks fit, but subject to the following restrictions".
"... the restrictions are-
(a)that the deposit and consideration required are not less than those specified in the offer notice, and
(b)that the other terms correspond to those specified in the offer notice."
"A landlord commits an offence if, without reasonable excuse, he makes a relevant disposal affecting premises to which this Part applies-
(a)without having first complied with the requirements of section 5 as regards the service of notices on the qualifying tenants of flats contained in the premises, or
(b)in contravention of any prohibition or restriction imposed by sections 6 to 10."
"Nothing in this section affects the validity of the disposal."
"With regard to flats 11 and 18 which remain in the ownership of your clients please can you advise whether or not these are being sold or whether or not it is your clients intention to retain possession of these."
"We confirm that we do not intend to sell flats 11 and 18 in the short term. We will dispose of the properties in due course."
"[does] not intend to sell in the short term but will dispose of the properties in due course. Accordingly, in the interim they are to be treated as any other tenant of the block."
"It appears from the subsequent silence in the correspondence, from the parties then proceeding to the transfer, and the oral evidence, that this was accepted by the defendant."
"The Claimant contends that by reason of the matters aforesaid it was the common intention of the parties that the Claimant was not disposing of the right to vacant possession of, nor the right which it had enjoyed to receive the rack rents in respect of flats 11 and 18. ... It was the common intention of the parties that Property would be acquired by the Defendant with all 39 flats therein, including flats 11 and 18, being subject to leases for terms of 99 years. This intention is ... to be given effect ... by the defendant, upon the acquisition of the Property granting long leasehold interests of flats 11 and 18 back to the Claimant for terms equivalent to those to which the flats in the Property were subject, ... either with or without the provision for the payment of a ground rent."
"By mistake, common to the parties, and contrary to the parties' common intention as pleaded as aforesaid, the transfer failed to preserve the Claimant's rights to flats 11 and 18 as had been intended ... . That intention should be given effect to by providing for the grant of ... leases thereof of 99 years from 1.1.89 with or without the reservation of a ground rent. It is contended that the question of whether the leases are subject to the reservation of a ground rent is not a matter affecting the substance of the common intention of the parties, that is to say the result intended, which was for the two flats to be retained by the Claimant as if it were lessees thereof. The Claimant is prepared for the leases to be subject to ground rents of £125 per annum per flat."
"The intention of both parties seems quite clear from the evidence of all the witnesses, from the documents to which I have referred, from the conduct of the parties, from the price paid for the property, and the way in which that price was calculated. The parties envisaged that the claimant would retain the right to grant short term tenancies and enjoy the proceeds of Flat 11 and of Flat 18 and, when it saw fit, to grant long leases for premiums (which it would retain) of Flats 11 and 18.
The intention and expectation was that what the defendant would receive would be the same rights and benefits and no more (and no less) in respect of Flat 11 and Flat 18 as it was to receive in respect of the other 37 flats, namely a right to possession at the end of a 99 year term, subject to whatever statutory rights the tenants might then have, the right to receive the rent of £125 per anum (subject to increase), the right to recover service charges, and the right to enforce the tenant's covenants which were effectively identical in all the leases."
"The exchange of correspondence in June and September 1999 makes it clear that neither party, nor their respective solicitors, intended or believed that the payment of £60,000 was intended to purchase the right to vacant possession of the two flats. By the end of that correspondence, it was clear what the claimant wanted (albeit it was not very happily expressed). The only sensible way of reading the letter of 14 September 1999 from the claimant's solicitors to the defendant's solicitors is that in the interim (until the claimant `disposed of the properties [i.e. flats 11 and 18] in due course') the claimant was to be treated as any other tenant of the block - ie as if it had a 99 year lease at £125 per annum, subject to the terms of the other 37 leases. This accords with common sense; it accords with the actual price and the method of calculation of the price; it accords with the natural meaning of the words that the parties used in correspondence; it accords with all the oral evidence that I have heard; it accords with the subsequent actions of the parties. I am also clear that that intention continued on the part of both parties (and their respective solicitors) up to the date of the transfer - indeed thereafter."
"I believe it is clear that the claimant and defendant intended and envisaged that the claimant would transfer the freehold of the property to the defendant on the basis that each of the 39 flats was subject to 99 year leases at £125 per annum rent (subject to increase), the benefit of the two leases being vested in the claimant. How this was to be achieved was not discussed, and it should have been. The claimant and the defendant left the machinery to their respective solicitors, each of whom overlooked the need to deal with the matter. This may have been because they decided to go straight to transfer rather than to have the more normal procedure, of contract followed by completion of the transfer.
To my mind, the clear common continuing intention was that flat 11 and flat 18 was each to be subject to a 99 year lease at £125 per anum. That was clear from the beginning: there were 39 flats each subject to a lease at a rent of £125 per year. It is plain from the correspondence in June and September 1999: the claimant is to be treated in respect of flat 11 and flat 18 in the same way as other tenants in the block -- ie as holding a 99 year lease of each flat at £125 per annum. I do not see any ground for refusing rectification simply because the mechanism for achieving this common intended result was not agreed or even discussed. So to decide would seem to fall into the same over-technical approach rejected in the more recent cases I have cited. By granting the rectification sought (subject to the other points I have to consider) the only binding document entered into between the parties, namely the transfer, would give effect to the common intention of the parties as was agreed between them in the June/September 1990 correspondence, and as they each had in mind from the inception of the negotiations up to the completion of the transfer. I do not believe that I am extending the law of rectification in principle; I am applying established principle to unusual facts.
If I am extending the principle, then I do so without qualms. Where parties have concluded their negotiations on a clear, common, communicated and continuing assumption and/or with a clear, common, communicated and continuing intention and, through an oversight on the part of their respective solicitors the ultimate contract does not reflect that assumption and/or intention to the manifest unfair disadvantage of one party and to the manifest unfair advantage of the other, then, unless there is some good reason to the contrary, a court of equity must be able to remedy the situation at the suit of the former party. The obvious remedy, again in the absence of good reason to the contrary, is to refashion, or rectify, the contract so it reflects the assumptions and/or intention. Nothing in the more modern cases on reflection to which I have been referred suggests that there is too flabby or wide a formulation of the power of the Court to rectify."
"(i) the [Transferee] do within 28 days after the completion of this Transfer grant to the [Transferor] leases of flats 11 and 18 within the Property each for a term of 99 years from the 1st January 1989 at a ground rent of £125 per annum (rising in accordance with the terms of provision for review on the anniversary of every period of 30 years of the term as contained within the lease annexed (`the Lease')) and otherwise on the same terms and conditions in the form of the Lease;
(ii) all the costs incurred ... in the preparation and grant of the leases of the flats 11 and 18, including stamp duty and solicitor's costs and disbursements, be paid by the [Transferor] to the [Transferee] on an indemnity basis."
(1)the parties had a common continuing intention, whether or not amounting to an agreement, in respect of a particular matter in the instrument to be rectified;
(2)there was an outward expression of accord;
(3) the intention continued at the time of the execution of the instrument sought to be rectified;
(4) by mistake the instrument did not reflect that common intention.
(1)The standard of proof required if the court is to order rectification is the ordinary standard of the balance of probabilities.
"But as the alleged common intention ex hypothesi contradicts the written instrument, convincing proof is required in order to counteract the cogent evidence of the parties' intention displayed by the instrument itself": Thomas Bates and Sons Ltd v Wyndham's (Lingerie) Ltd [1981] 1 WLR 505 at page 521 per Brightman LJ.
(2)Whilst it must be shown what was the common intention, the exact form of words in which the common intention is to be expressed is immaterial if in substance and in detail the common intention can be ascertained: Cooperative Insurance Society Ltd v Centremoor Ltd [1983] 2 EGLR 52 at page 54, per Dillon LJ, with whom Kerr and Eveleigh LJJ agreed.
(3)The fact that a party intends a particular form of words in the mistaken belief that it is achieving his intention does not prevent the court giving effect to the true common intention: see Centremoor at page 55 A-B and Re Butlin's Settlement Trusts [1976] Ch 251 at page 260 per Brightman J.
"... it was the common intention of the parties that the Claimant was not disposing of the right which it had enjoyed to receive the rack rents in respect of Flats 11 and 18 and this intention was to be given effect either by the Claimant retaining the freehold interest in Flats 11 and 18 or, alternatively, by the Defendant, on the acquisition of the property, granting leasehold interests of Flats 11 and 18 back to the Claimant for terms equivalent to those to which the flats in the property were subject, but without the provision for the payment of ground rent."
"A landlord commits an offence if, without reasonable excuse, he makes a relevant disposal ...
(a)without having first complied with ... section 5".