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England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Bentleys Stokes & Loweless v Eagle Major Ltd [2003] EWHC 41 (Ch) (23 January 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2003/41.html Cite as: [2003] EWHC 41 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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Bentleys Stokes & Loweless |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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Eagle Major Limited |
Respondent |
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Mr John Wardell QC (instructed by Linnells) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 14 January 2003
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Peter Smith:
INTRODUCTION
BACKGROUND
TERMS OF LEASE
"Any improvement to the Premises made by the Tenant the Tenant's sub-tenants or their respective predecessors in title with the consent of the Landlord other than those:
(a) made in pursuance of an obligation to the Landlord, or
(b) completed by the Tenant, the Tenant's sub-tenant and/or their predecessors in title more than 35 years before the relevant Market Review Date. "
ISSUES
(1) Can it be said that at this stage that the Claimants' case has no prospect of success on the basis of a claim for negligence and/or breach of contract?
(2) If contrary to that primary submission there is a claim is the claim time barred on the basis that it accrued when the Lease was entered into on 2 February 1994 and accordingly prima facie became time barred in contract and tort on 2 February 2000. In this context the Claim Form was issued on 24 July 2001.
(3) If the primary limitation period did not commence on 2 February 1994 did it commence in June 2000 for the reasons that I have set out earlier in this Judgment?
(4) If the primary limitation period began on 2 February 1994 was that postponed by virtue of section 32 of the Limitation Act 1980?
(5) If the primary limitation period began on 2 February 1994 was it in the alternative postponed pursuant to section 14A Limitation act 1980? If so did the Claimant have the requisite knowledge less that three years before the issue of the Claim Form?
PRINCIPLES
THE DOCUMENTATION
INTRODUCTION OF MARKET VALUE BASIS
"With regard to the rent review we understand it has been agreed in principle that in addition to the reviews in accordance with the Retail Prices Index there will be a review every 10 years based on the open market rental of the property so the rental is brought back into line if there is any unusual swing in the Retail Price Index. The wording will be needed to cover this ".
"The matters to be disregarded in clause 4.2 include improvements made to the premises save for those made in pursuance of obligations to the landlord. This coincides with my wording as otherwise one is not entitled to take into account the actual development of the site when calculating rent which would clearly be unfair. There is also excluded from the disregarded matters (i.e. including items that can be taken into account on the rent review) improvements completed more than 21 years before the relevant market review date. I am not sure this is necessary. The development of the site should clearly be taken into account when that is covered by a sub-clause (a); I do not see why other improvements should be included"
Now Mr Crawford submits with some force to my mind that reading this part of the letter makes it quite clear that the future rent review is to be assessed on the basis of the development. I am not sure (and he was unable to explain) why any other basis would be "unfair" to the landlord. Of course the Percivals did not have, so far as I can see full extract of the Lease and the wording to a lawyer to my mind does seem clear.
SUBSEQUENT EVENTS IN 1995
"The rent is reviewed in line with the RPI, but at 10 yearly intervals either party may seek a review to the market rent. In our opinion this would result in the tenant paying rent on the initial development not just a ground rent.
We advise this matter is checked by your solicitor and in any event that his interpretation differs from ours the valuation should be referred back to us for further consideration".
"7.4 We particularly draw your attention to the rent review clause which favours the landlord. Current rents for Golf Courses are going through a period of rapid change, but it is our opinion in the event that the Course is trading well the annual rent could increase to as much as £100,000.00 at current prices ".
"It was never intended that the rent would be anything other than "a market rent". Although Eagle Major Ltd. has borne the costs of construction of the Golf Course it did not pay a premium for the Lease and negotiations always proceeded on the basis of a commercial rent.
Naturally this will take into account the development which has taken place and for which you have borne the cost but which will hopefully enable you to make substantial profits part of which will be utilised to pay the agreed rent ".
"I am surprised by the rather bold statement in paragraph 7.4 of the valuation about the rent review clause; these clauses commonly favour the landlord since they very rarely (if ever) provide for anything other than upwards only reviews. The reasons for the alternative methods of calculating rent in your lease were to give the opportunity to bring the rent into line with the "market" and to ensure the rent didn't rapidly increase due to galloping inflation. Although the rent cannot come down on service of a market rent notice it might provide that it does not increase for the next 5 years even if there has been an increase in the Retail Price Index. Conversely it might result in rent being higher that it would have been on a simple Retail Price Index increase but we all agreed in those circumstances, if the market warranted a higher rent that would be presumably because Golf Courses were booming in trade and profits would be such as would sustain such an increase".
"We then discussed the rent review provisions and the fact that it was always agreed that rent would be payable on the basis of the market rent and that it would therefore only rise if the market which presupposed that golf clubs were doing well. We discussed the terms of normal commercial Leases and rent review clauses and the fact that they were normally weighted in favour of the Landlords since they were inevitably "upwards" ".
The draft letter was varied to include a final paragraph as follows:-
"From what I have seen, it appears that the valuers may have misapprehended the terms upon which you entered into the lease with the result that undue weight has been given to the rent review provisions without taking into account the full picture which never contemplated that rent would be anything other than a market/commercial rent on the whole development".