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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 >> University of East London Higher Education Corporation v London Borough of Barking & Dagenham & Ors [2004] EWHC 2710 (Ch) (09 December 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2004/2710.html Cite as: [2004] EWHC 2710 (Ch), [2005] Ch 354, [2005] 3 All ER 398 |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
UNIVERSITY OF EAST LONDON HIGHER EDUCATION CORPORATION |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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LONDON BOROUGH OF BARKING AND DAGENHAM LONDON BOROUGH OF REDBRIDGE PERSONS UNKNOWN OWNING OR OCCUPYING PROPERTY FORMING PART OF THE BECONTREE ESTATE, EAST LONDON |
Defendants |
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Ms Karen Walden-Smith (instructed by Legal Services Department, London Borough of Redbridge, Town Hall, High Road, Ilford, Essex IG1 1DD) for the Second Defendant
None of the Third Defendants attended and were not represented
Hearing dates: 14th-20th July 2004
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Lightman:
I. INTRODUCTION
II. RELEVANT HISTORY
(a) General
(b) Devolution of the Barking Campus
"subject to the provisions of this Agreement... the Constituent Authorities [i.e. the three local authorities] hereby agree that all of their functions and powers with respect to the provision of facilities of further education by [NELP] shall be exercised on their behalf by the [JEC] save and except the powers to borrow money or to raise a rate."
Certain powers and functions specified in the First Schedule were not to be exercised by the JEC without prior approval of the three local authorities. Clause 6(i) of the 1969 Agreement provided that the Barking Campus would continue to vest in the LBBD "for the use of the NELP" under the control of the Governing Body in accordance with its Instrument and Articles of Government which were approved by the Secretary of State for Education on the 24th October 1969 pursuant to section 1(2) of the Education (No.2 Act) 1968. The formula of words "for the use of NELP" in the 1969 Agreement and the similar wording in what I later refer to as the 1986 Agreement no doubt were used because the fact that NELP was not a legal entity precluded the grant to it of a tenancy or the creation of a trust in its favour. Clause 6(v) provided that the LBBD was to be responsible for the maintenance and repair of the Barking Campus as agents of the JEC. The Governing Body comprised of 37 individuals of whom three were from LBBD.
(c) Devolution of Becontree Estate
"all contracts, deeds, bonds, arrangements and other instruments subsisting in favour of, or against, and all notices in force which were given by, or to, the first-mentioned authority [i.e. LCC] in respect of such property, or in respect of liabilities transferred by the Act [i.e. 1963 Act] or by this article, shall be of full force and effect in favour of, or against, the authority to whom such property and liabilities are transferred"
i) the London Authorities (Transfer of Housing Estates etc) Order 1971 (No 231);ii) the London Authorities (Transfer of Housing Estates etc) (No 1) Order 1972 (No 171);
iii) the London Authorities (Transfer of Housing Estates etc) No 3) Order 1972 (No 173);
iv) the London Authorities (Transfer of Housing Estates etc) Order 1973 (No 417);
v) the Greater London Council (Transfer of Land and Housing Accommodation) Order 1980 (No 320) and the deposited schedule;
vi) the Greater London Council (Transfer of Land and Housing Accommodation) Order 1981 (No 289);
vii) the Greater London Council (Transfer of Land and Housing Accommodation) Order 1982 (No 301).
III. CONVEYANCES
"This Conveyance is made the eighth day of June One thousand nine hundred and thirty-one Between THE LONDON COUNTY COUNCIL (hereinafter called ' the Vendors') of the one part and THE COUNTY COUNCIL OF THE ADMINISTRATIVE COUNTY OF ESSEX (hereinafter called 'the Purchasers') of the other part.Whereas:-
(1) The Vendors are seised in fee simple in possession free from incumbrances of the property hereinafter described and intended to be hereby conveyed.(2) The Vendors have agreed with the Purchasers for the sale to them of the said property in fee simple in possession free from incumbrances at the price of Three Thousand Six Hundred and Fifty Pounds.
Now in pursuance of the said agreement and in consideration of the sum of Three Thousand Six Hundred and Fifty Pounds paid by the Purchasers to the Vendors (the receipt of which sum the Vendors hereby acknowledge) this Deed Witnesseth as follows:-
1. THE Vendors hereby convey unto the Purchasers All that piece or parcel of land situate in the Parish of Barking in the County of Essex having a frontage of six hundred and ten feet or thereabouts to a certain road called Longbridge Road and a depth therefrom along the east and west boundaries of four hundred and twenty feet or thereabouts and forming part of an area of land known as the Becontree Estate acquired and in course of development by the Vendors under the Housing Act 1925 and the Acts thereby consolidated. Which said piece or parcel of land hereby conveyed with the boundaries thereof is more particularly delineated and described in the plan annexed to these presents and thereon-edged pink To Hold unto the Purchasers in fee simple but subject to all rights and easements (if any) existing in over or under the same.2. THE Purchasers for themselves their successors and assigns hereby covenant with the Vendors their successors and assigns to erect and for ever afterwards maintain to the satisfaction of the Vendors an unclimbable iron fence not less than six feet in height along all the boundaries of the property (except the frontage to Longbridge Road aforesaid) And also that they the Purchasers their successors and assigns will henceforth at all times hereafter observe and perform all the restrictions and stipulations contained in the Schedule hereto.
3. PROVIDED ALWAYS AND IT IS HEREBY AGREED AND DECLARED that the Conveyance hereby made shall not be deemed to include and shall not operate to convey any ways water courses sewers drains lights liberties privileges easements rights or advantages whatsoever in through over or upon any land or property of the Vendors adjoining or near to the property hereby conveyed.
4. PROVIDED ALSO AND IT IS FURTHER AGREED AND DECLARED that the Purchasers their successors and assigns shall not at any time be entitled to the delivery over or production to them or any of them of any title deeds or evidence of title in the possession or control of the Vendors relating (whether solely or not) to the property hereby conveyed or any part thereof or to any copies or abstracts from any of such title deeds or evidence of title.
5. THE Vendors hereby covenant with the Purchasers that they the Vendors have not done or knowingly suffered or been party or privy to any act or thing whereby they are prevented from conveying the said property in manner aforesaid.
IN WITNESS whereof the parties hereto have caused their respective Common Seals to be hereunto affixed the day and year first before written
The Schedule.(a) Not without the consent in writing of the Vendors to use or allow to be used the said property hereby conveyed or any part or parts thereof for any purposes other than as a site for a building or buildings to be used for educational purposes under the Education Act 1921 or any statutory amendment or re-enactment thereof for the time being in force.(b) Not to erect on the said property hereby conveyed or any part of parts thereof any building or buildings except in accordance with plans and elevations first submitted to and approved by the Vendors it being the intention that such building or buildings shall be in reasonable harmony with the development of the Vendors' said Becontree Estate.
(c) Not during the lives or life of any issue now living of His Majesty King George V or within twenty-one years next after the death of the last survivor of such issue to sell or(except for the purpose aforesaid) part with the possession of the said property hereby conveyed or any part thereof without first offering it for sale to the Vendors and if the Vendors decide to purchase within three months from the date of the offer the purchase money shall in default of agreement between the parties be determined by an arbitrator either agreed on between the parties or in default of agreement nominated on the request of either party by the President for the time being of the Chartered Surveyors' Institution."
"(d) Not to interfere with or build over the five feet barrel surface water outfall sewer constructed in or under the property hereby conveyed the course of which sewer is shewn by a broken black line on the said plan."
"The Purchasers for themselves their successors and assigns hereby covenant with the Vendors their successors and assigns at all times hereafter to observe and perform all the restrictions and stipulations contained in the Schedule hereto."The Schedule provides as follows:
"(a) Not without the consent in writing of the Vendors to use or allow to be used the said property hereby conveyed or any part or parts thereof for any purposes other than as a site for a building or buildings to be used for educational purposes under the Education Act 1944 or any statutory amendment or re-amendment thereof for the time being in force. "(b) and (c) of the Schedule are worded the same as the 1931 Conveyance.
IV. PRELIMINARY COMMENTS ON CONVEYANCES
(a) Right of Pre-emption
(b) "Vendors" and "Purchasers"
(c) "Successors and Assigns"
(d) The Conveyancing Act 1881 ("the 1881 Act")
"(1) A covenant relating to land of inheritance... shall be deemed to be made with the covenantee, his heirs and assigns, and shall have effect as if heirs and assigns were expressed."
(e) Section 78 of the Law of Property Act 1925 ("Section 78")
"41. ... it is impossible to identify any reason of policy why a covenantor should not by express words be entitled to limit the scope of the obligation which he is undertaking: nor why a covenantee should not be able to accept a covenant for his benefit on the basis that the benefit does not pass to all to whom he sells on parts of his retained land( a developer who is selling off land in lots might well want to retain the benefit of a building restriction under his control. Where( development land is sold off in plots without imposing a building scheme, it seems to me very likely that the developer will wish to retain exclusive power to give or withhold consent to a modification or relaxation of a restriction on building which he imposes on each purchaser unfettered by the need to obtain the consent of every subsequent purchaser to whom (after imposing the covenant) he has sold off other plots on the development land(.42 … [S]ection 78 of the 1925 Act defines "successors in title" as the owners and occupiers of the land for the time being of the land of the covenantee intended to be benefited. In a case where the parties to the instrument make clear their intention that land retained by the covenantee at the time of the conveyance effected by the transfer is to have the benefit of the covenant only for so long as it continues to be in the ownership of the original covenantee, and not after it has been sold by the original covenantee – unless the benefit of the covenant is expressly assigned to the new owner – the land of the covenantee intended to be benefited is identified by the instrument as (i) so much of the retained land as from time to time has not been sold off by the original covenantee and (ii) so much of the retained land as has been sold off with the benefit of an express assignment, but not as including (iii) so much of the land as has been sold off without the benefit of an express assignment."
V. THE ISSUES
(a) Single or Separate Covenants
(b) Identity of Beneficiary
i) each of the Conveyances refers to the LCC's acquisition and development of the Becontree Estate under the Housing Act 1925 and accordingly to the status of the Becontree Estate as a municipal housing estate and to the capacity of the LCC as housing authority;ii) the Conveyances were executed under statutory powers conferred upon the LCC as housing authority;
iii) the terms "successor" and "assigns" are apposite for a successor in whole or in part to the housing responsibilities of the LCC in relation to the Becontree Estate;
iv) the terms of the Covenants are apposite for the protection of public housing on the Becontree Estate; and
v) the provisions of the Covenants themselves reserve to the LCC the exclusive power to give consent to any change of user and to plans and elevations for new buildings and (in case of any sale or parting with possession) the right of pre-emption. In a word the key to the Covenants is the position of the LCC which alone has the right to say "Yes" or "No" and to decide whether the Covenants should be enforced.
(c) Identity of parties subjected to the Covenants
(d) Purchase price payable under Pre-emption Covenant
(e) Vesting of benefit of the Covenants
(f) Effect of loss of right to consent or approve or exercise right of pre-emption
VI. UNITY OF SEISIN
"if the restrictions in question exist simply for the benefit of two adjoining premises [and not as part of a building scheme] and both those properties are bought by one man, the restrictions will automatically come to an end and will not revive on a subsequent severance unless the common owner then recreates them."
CONCLUSION