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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 >> Crisp v Eastaugh [2007] EWCA Civ 638 (20 April 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2007/638.html Cite as: [2007] EWCA Civ 638 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
CHANCERY DIVISION
(MR J RANDALL QC sitting as a Deputy High Court Judge)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LADY JUSTICE ARDEN
and
LORD JUSTICE SCOTT BAKER
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CRISP |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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EASTAUGH |
Respondent |
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Mr M Brett (instructed by Honniball & Co) appeared on behalf of the Respondent.
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Lady Justice Arden:
"Insofar as the subject of [Mr Eastaugh's] evidence was events in the 1970s, it is self-evident that there is every room for mistaken or inaccurate recollection. People become convinced that things were done properly in the past, when in truth they were not, over periods far, far shorter than 30 years. That difficulty can only be exacerbated by Mr Eastaugh's age."
"In what circumstances is relief given? The right to forfeit the lease is regarded in equity merely as security for the covenant to pay rent. Accordingly, the courts of equity commonly granted relief where judgement for possession was obtained, but the tenant subsequently paid the rent and other expenses of the landlord, and it was just and equitable to grant relief: see Howard v Fanshawe [1895] 2 Ch 581. The tenant had to pay other expenses of the landlord in order to put the landlord in the same position as he would have been if there had been no forfeiture of the lease: see, eg, Egerton v Jones [1939] 2 KB 702. Thus, here Master Moncaster has ordered Mrs Langton to pay interest on the arrears.
It can thus be seen that the discretion to grant relief is based on solid principle and not simply to be exercised in a manner that the court considers fair on the particular facts before it. Apart from history, there are, no doubt, sound reasons of policy why the discretion should be circumscribed and consistently exercised. If the courts do nor uphold the terms of the lease except in limited situations, there will be a strong disincentive to landlords to invest in property and let it out on lease. By enforcing rights of property, the law promotes the use and availability of this resource within society, and property can be used, as in this case, for commercial purposes, which can serve to increase society's prosperity. Not all landlords are large corporations. The principles have been established by the higher courts and over centuries. They cannot be swept aside by this court.
…
The courts have granted relief where the tenant had nor paid off the arrears. I accept as a correct statement of the law the passage from Pennycuick J in Barton Thompson & Co Ltd v Stapling Machines Co Ltd. above, which I have already set out."
I will set out that passage from the earlier part of my judgment as it is important:
"It is an invariable condition of relief from forfeiture for non-payment of rent that the arrears, if not already available to the lessor, shall be paid within a time specified by the court. The precise length of time is a matter of discretion and again the time may be extended on subsequent application, but the imposition of the condition is not a matter of discretion: it is a requirement of law rooted in the principle upon which relief is granted. It follows that readiness to pay arrears within such time as the court shall think fit is a necessary condition of the tenant's claim for relief.
As I have already said, there is no fixed period that the courts may specify. However, in my judgment, the courts exercise their discretion to permit the tenant relief against forfeiture on terms that rent due is paid in the future on a basis that is consistent with the principles already identified, namely that the landlord should be able to recover the property in accordance with his legal right unless he can be put in the same position as if no forfeiture had occurred. The future is uncertain: the more distant future yet more uncertain. So the period fixed for the payment of arrears must be one within the immediately foreseeable future, so that the court can say with a sufficient degree of certainty that the rent outstanding will be paid. Even then, the tenant has no right to relief. The court may decline to grant relief if, for example, the landlord has changed his position before the tenant makes an application for relief (see Gill v Lewis [1956] 3 QB 1) because there has been excessive delay in making the application for relief.
Because the relief from forfeiture is discretionary, the court must, in my judgment, have regard to the individual circumstances of this case."
I then turned to consider the individual circumstances of Mrs Langton's case and I continued:
"Mrs Langton's case on this application does not contemplate failure: her evidence does not explain how she could pay the arrears if she lost the collateral warranty claim, and the inference is that she could not do so. In those circumstances, I am not able, consistently with the principles I have identified, to grant relief. There has to be evidence that she will be able to pay the arrears within a fixed time. It is not enough to produce evidence that she will be able to pay the arrears if she wins the collateral warranty claim.
She has to cover the situation that she does not succeed in that claim. In appropriate circumstances, she can apply for the trial of that claim to be expedited. 1 am unable to accede to Mr Brock's argument that Mrs Langton is unlikely to proceed with the collateral warranty claim if the master's order is not upheld. That is not a manner to which, in the circumstances, I can give great weight: she would be free to carry on. However, I have not given weight to Mr Field's contention that the Master's order should be set aside because irrecoverable costs may be incurred by the claimant in connection with the collateral warranty claim. The question is whether the court can be reasonably satisfied that the arrears will be paid within a reasonable time, and the costs of defending the collateral warranty claim have no direct bearing on this."
"However, I propose to grant Mrs Langton 21 days in which to consider whether to present some different proposal for payment."
"202. As to his client's ability to commit to paying any sums within a fixed and relatively short period of time as a condition of relief from forfeiture, Mr Perhar had no alternative but to concede that his client currently had no funds to enable him to do so. The face that he may be able to do so if and when, as the phrase goes, 'his ship comes in' and he settles or wins the action against Mr Stephens (which he has apparently so far declined to settle, in the face of an offer of £60,000), is nothing to the point; see per Arden J in Inntrepreneur v Langton.
203. So, the end result is that, in respect of the 1972 lease of the blue land, applying the principled approach of Pennycuick J and Arden J in the cases I have mentioned, for want of the ability on the claimant's part to demonstrate that he could pay the comparatively modest sums of (a) £1,798.44 rent arrears, (b) compensation for putting right the breaches of covenant in respect of field 3, and, if any, field 30 (being part, but by no means all, of the sum estimated by the defendants at £10,000), and (c) whatever proportion of the defendants' relevant costs of the forfeiture action I award them in due course, I have no alternative but to refuse relief from forfeiture. If ever there was a case of spoiling a ship for a ha'path of tar, this must be it."
"My Lords, in my opinion, it follows, as a clear conclusion of fact, that the appellants manifested no intention to abandon, or to refuse future performance of or to repudiate the contract. And the issue being one of fact, citation of other decided cases on other facts is hardly necessary. I shall simply state that the proposition that a party who takes action relying simply on the terms of the contract, and not manifesting by his conduct an ulterior intention to abandon it, is not to be treated as repudiating it is supported by James Shaffer Ltd. v Findley Durham & Brodie [1953] 1 W.L.R. 106 and Sweet & Maxwell Ltd. v Universal News Services Ltd. [1964] 2 Q.B. 699."
"… the tenant can properly put forward questions in good faith for the decision of the Court, as Lindsay J had held, and here, in this case, there was nothing to suggest that Frolan would persist in its denial if the court decided issues against it."
"There is nothing in the passages from the pleadings from which I have quoted that suggest to me, reverting to the more modern formulation of the test, that the claimant is indicating by necessary implication a repudiation of the relationship of landlord and tenant, and unequivocally demonstrating that he is no longer prepared to be bound by it. On the contrary, the passages are drafted on the basis that he is a tenant, and is simply questioning the true identity of his correct landlord to the extent I have quoted. The claim to forfeit for denial of title fails."
Lord Justice Scott Baker:
Lord Justice May:
Order: Appeal allowed.