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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 >> Sara & Hossein Asset Holdings Ltd v Blacks Outdoor Retail Ltd [2020] EWCA Civ 1521 (13 November 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2020/1521.html Cite as: [2020] EWCA Civ 1521 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
PROPERTY, TRUSTS AND PROBATE LIST (Ch D)
KELYN BACON QC (sitting as a Deputy Judge of the High Court)
CH-2019-000345
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE NEWEY
and
LORD JUSTICE ARNOLD
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SARA & HOSSEIN ASSET HOLDINGS LIMITED |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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BLACKS OUTDOOR RETAIL LIMITED |
Respondent |
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Morayo Fagborun Bennett and Usman Roohani (instructed by Gateley plc) for the Respondent
Hearing dates: 28 July 2020
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice David Richards :
"1. There shall be calculated by the Landlord as soon as practicable after the 31st day of December in each year the total reasonable and proper cost to the Landlord during the calendar year ending on such 31st day of December of the services and expenses specified in Part II of this Schedule (excluding costs and expenses met by the insurers under the policy of insurance effected by the Landlord hereinbefore mentioned)
2. The further rent payable by the Tenant shall be a sum equal to a fair and reasonable proportion of such total cost of the service [sic] and expenses specified in Part II of this Schedule and in the event of the Term commencing or determining during the course of the calendar year in question a corresponding proportion of such sum
3. The Landlord shall on each occasion furnish to the Tenant as soon as practicable after such total cost and the sum payable by the Tenant shall have been ascertained a certificate as to the amount of the total cost and the sum payable by the Tenant and in the absence of manifest or mathematical error or fraud such certificate shall be conclusive
6. The contribution payable by the Tenant of the total costs of the services and expenses incurred by the Landlord hereunder shall be the proportion which the net internal area of the Demised Premises bears to the net internal area of the aggregate of all areas of the Building which are let or intend to be let and any dispute between the parties as to the proportion shall be determined by Expert Determination"
"Blacks served a Defence and Counterclaim on 14 May 2019, mounting a number of challenges to the sums claimed. Some of those were characterised as challenges to the charges themselves. These included complaints that some of the works were unnecessary or were not repair works within the meaning of the relevant repairing covenants, and that the cost of the work was increased by past failures to keep the premises in good repair. In addition, Blacks alleged various breaches that were relied on by way of set-off or counterclaim, including some of the same matters giving rise to its challenges to liability, as well as additional complaints such as failure to progress the works with reasonable speed and failure to remove scaffolding promptly when the works were completed."
"24. That is, at its inception, a difficult proposition. There is to my mind a fundamental distinction between a contractual provision that assigns matters that might potentially be disputed to an independent expert, and a provision that is said to confer on one of the parties to the contract the power to determine conclusively (subject to limited exceptions for obvious errors and fraud) the question of whether that party has complied with its obligations under the contract. In this case, the lease provided a clear example of the former, in paragraph 6 of Schedule 6 which provided for an expert determination of the proportion of the total costs that were payable by the tenant. On S&H's case, however, the landlord has the power to decide conclusively all of the issues that might arise in determining whether certain costs were properly claimed as service charges under the lease at all, including issues of law and principle as to the correct construction of the lease.
25. As the Deputy Master noted, that would make the landlord judge in his own cause. Notwithstanding the express provisions in Schedule 6 excluding from the service charges matters such as (for example) costs caused or necessitated by the negligence of the landlord, or the cost of improvement or modernisation the premises, the tenant would be precluded from enforcing those provisions against the landlord, absent obvious errors or fraud. Mr Fowler was not able to identify any precedent authority that supported his position on this point."
"In the present case, the Certification Provision provided for the landlord's certificate to set out "the amount of the total cost and the sum payable by the Tenant". The natural and obvious construction of that provision is that the certificate is conclusive as to "the amount of the total cost" of the services said to be comprised within the service charge. There is, however, a clear distinction between a certificate establishing "the amount" of a cost, and the question of whether that cost should properly have been incurred in the first place, within the scope of the obligations in the lease. As to that latter question, Schedule 6 makes no provision for any conclusive determination by the landlord or indeed anyone else. It follows that, in the ordinary way, that must be a matter which the tenant can put in issue and which is capable of determination by the court in the event of a dispute between the parties."
"30….The certificate is conclusive as to the amount of the costs incurred, absent manifest or mathematical error, or fraud, but is not conclusive as to the question of whether those costs as a matter of principle fall within the scope of the service charge payable by the tenant under the lease. The Deputy Master's example of a routine accounting matter is one example of a matter on which the certificate might be conclusive. It is, as the Deputy Master noted, not necessary to define exhaustively the circumstances in which a certificate would or might be conclusive; rather it is sufficient for the purposes of this appeal to find that the landlord's certificate is not conclusive as to the various matters relied upon by Blacks which the Deputy Master considered were properly characterised as defences to liability."
"It is not easy to see how the amount can be certified unless the certifier forms some conclusion as to what items ought to be taken into account, and such a conclusion goes to the existence of the indebtedness. Perhaps such a clause should not be interpreted as covering all grounds which go to the validity of a debt; for instance illegality…But the manifest object of the clause was to provide a ready means of establishing the existence and amount of the guaranteed debt and avoiding an inquiry upon legal evidence into the debits going to make up the indebtedness. The clause means what it says…"
Lord Justice Newey:
Lord Justice Arnold: