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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 >> Mohammadzadeh v Joseph & Ors [2006] EWHC 1040 (Ch) (15 February 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2006/1040.html Cite as: [2006] EWHC 1040 (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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Bijan Mohammadzadeh |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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Howard Joseph Sandra Florence Maxine Joseph Melanie Ross |
Defendants |
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Paul Lettman (instructed by Seddons) for the Defendants
Hearing dates: 15 February 2006
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Etherton :
Introduction
The facts
"2) The Purchasers for themselves and their successors in title hereby jointly and severally covenant with the Vendors at all times hereafter to observe the restrictions and stipulations set out in the first schedule hereto."
3) It is hereby declared that anything herein contained shall not be deemed to grant to the Purchasers any right of light or air over the adjoining land belonging to the Vendors.
a) Within six months of the date hereof to erect to the satisfaction of the Vendors or their surveyor on the western boundary of the land hereby conveyed a fence consisting of a 6" concrete gravel board and on the top thereof a close boarded fence not less than six feet in height with concrete posts and at all times thereafter to repair and maintain the same.
b) Not to erect upon the said land anything other than one detached bungalow with garage in accordance with plans previously submitted to the Vendors or their Surveyor for approval.
c) Not to use any such bungalow erected as aforesaid other than as a private dwellinghouse and not to do or commit any act or thing which may cause a nuisance or annoyance to the Vendors or other the owner or owners of any neighbouring or adjacent property.
d) Not to place upon the land or any part thereof any shed caravan or like structure or vehicle except any shed or building for use during building operations."
The dispute
The rival arguments
"(1) A covenant relating to any land of the covenantee shall be deemed to be made with the convenantee and his successors in title and the persons deriving title under him or them, and shall have effect as if such successors and other persons were expressed.
For the purposes of this subsection in connection with convenants restrictive or the user of land "successors in title" shall be deemed to include the owners and occupiers for the time being of the land of the convenantee intended to be benefited.
"Such covenants can only be validly imposed if they comply with certain conditions. Firstly, they must be negative covenants. No affirmative covenant requiring the expenditure of money or the doing of some act can ever be made to run with the land. Secondly, the covenant must be one that touches or concerns the land, by which is meant that it must be imposed for the benefit or to enhance the value of the land retained by the vendor or some part of it, and no such covenant can never be imposed if the sale comprises the whole of the vendor's land. Further, the land retained by the vendor must be such as to be capable of being benefited by the covenant at the time when it is imposed. Thirdly, the land which is intended to be benefited must be so defined as to be easily ascertainable, and the fact that the covenant is imposed for the benefit of that particular land should be stated in the conveyance and the persons or the class of persons entitled to enforce it."
"In this difficult branch of the law one thing in my judgment is clear, namely, that in order to annex the benefit of a restrictive covenant to land, so that it runs with the land without express assignment on a subsequent assignment of the land, the land for the benefit of which it is taken must be clearly identified in the conveyance creating the covenant."
"… apart from what are usually referred to as building scheme cases (and this is not a case of that sort), a purchaser from the original covenantee of land retained by him when he executed the conveyance containing the covenant will be entitled to the benefit of the covenant if the conveyance shows that the covenant was intended to enure for the benefit of that particular land"
"Now, looking at the conveyance of 1923, I can find nothing whatever which identifies the land for the benefit of which the covenant is alleged to be taken. Mr Binney relies on the fact that Mrs Mardon is described as of Devonia, Fore Street, but that in my judgment is quite insufficient to annex the benefit of the covenant to those premises. There is no other mention whatever of Devonia in the conveyance. In my judgment, therefore, the plaintiff fails on this point"
"23. The benefit of a covenant may pass in equity (as in law) through a chain of assignments. That is not this case. Or the benefit of a covenant may pass where land has been sold off under a building scheme (which is not now alleged). Absent a chain of assignments or a building scheme, the benefit of a covenant may, nevertheless, pass to the owner for the time being of land to which it has been annexed. In covenants made before 1926 it was necessary to show, by construing the instrument in light of surrounding circumstances, that annexation to the covenantee's retained land (or some part of it) was intended. Express words of annexation were not required.
"If, on the construction of the instrument creating the restrictive covenant, both the land which is intended to be benefited and an intention to benefit that land, as distinct from benefiting the covenantee personally, can be clearly established, then the benefit of the covenant will be annexed to that land and run with it, notwithstanding the absence of express words of annexation": see Megarry & Wade, The Law of Real Property 6th ed (2000), para 16-062, citing Judge Rubin in Shropshire County Council v Edwards (1982) 46 P&CR 270, 277.
24. In relation to covenants imposed in instruments made after 1925 (as were the covenants with which we are concerned in this appeal) the position is governed by the provisions of section 78 of the Law of Property Act 1925 (benefit of covenants relating to land)…"
"[Counsel for Mill Lodge] submitted that there were three possible views about section 78. One view, which he described as "the orthodox view" hitherto held, is that it is merely a statutory shorthand for reducing the length of legal documents. A second view, which was the one that [counsel] was inclined to place in the forefront of his argument, is that the section only applies, or at any rate only achieves annexation, when the land intended to be benefited is signified in the document by express words or necessary implication as the intended beneficiary of the covenant. A third view is that the section applies if the covenant in fact touches and concerns the land of the covenantee, whether that be gleaned from the document itself or from evidence outside the document. For myself, I reject the narrowest interpretation of section 78, the supposed orthodox view, which seems to me to fly in the face of the wording of the section. Before I express my reasons I will say that I do not find it necessary to choose between the second and third views because, in my opinion, this covenant relates to land of the covenantee on either interpretation of section 78. Clause 5(iv) shows clearly that the covenant is for the protection of the retained land and that land is described in clause 2 as "any adjoining or adjacent property retained by the vendor". This formula is sufficient for annexation purposes: see Rogers v Hosegood [1900] 2 Ch 388. There is in my judgment no doubt that this covenant "related to the land of the covenantee", or, to use the old-fashioned expression, that it touched and concerned the land, even if [counsel] is correct in his submission that the document must show an intention to benefit identified land. The result of such application is that one must read clause 5(iv) as if it were written: "The purchaser hereby covenants with the vendor and its successors in title and the persons deriving title under it or them, including the owners and occupiers for the time being of the retained land, that in carrying out the development of the blue land the purchaser shall not build at a greater density than a total of 300 dwellings so as not to reduce, etc." I leave out of consideration section 79 as unnecessary to be considered in this context, since Mill Lodge is the original covenantor."
"29. It is clear that the court approached the question of annexation in the Federated Homes case … on the basis that the density covenant was taken for the benefit of retained land which could be identified in the 1971 conveyance. Brightman LJ expressed his conclusion in these terms, at p.605:
"If, as the language of section 78 implies, a covenant relating to land which is restrictive of the user thereof is enforceable at the suit of (1) a successor in title of the covenantee, (2) a person deriving title under the covenantee or under his successors in title, and (3) the owner or occupier of the land intended to be benefited by the covenant, it must, in my view, follow that the covenant runs with the land, because ex hypothesi every successor in title to the land, every derivative proprietor of the land and every other owner and occupier has a right by statute to the covenant. In other words, if the condition precedent of section 78 is satisfied – that is to say, there exists a covenant which touches and concerns the land of the covenantee – that covenant runs with the land for the benefit of his successors in title, persons deriving title under him or them and other owners and occupiers."
There is, in effect, statutory annexation of the benefit of the covenant to "the land intended to be benefited by the covenant". The words which I have emphasised which are incorporated by Brightman LJ in the passage which I have just cited, are derived, of course, from section 78(1):
"For the purposes of this subsection… "successors in title" shall be deemed to include the owners and occupiers for the time being of the land of the covenantee intended to be benefited."
"whether section 78 of the 1925 Act only effects annexation when the land intended to be benefited is described in the instrument itself (by express words or necessary implication, albeit that it may be necessary to have regard to evidence outside the document fully to identify that land) or whether it is enough that it can be shown, from evidence wholly outside the document, that the covenant does in fact touch and concern land of the covenantee which can be identified."
"In my view, that requirement, identified in Marquess of Zetland v Driver [1939] Ch.1 remains a necessary condition for annexation."
"That latter object is achieved if the land which is intended to be benefited is defined in the instrument so as to be easily ascertainable. To require a purchaser of land burdened with a restrictive covenant, but where the land for the benefit of which the covenant was taken is not described in the instrument, to make inquiries as to what (if any) land the original covenantee retained at the time of the conveyance and what (if any) of that retained land the covenant did, or might have, "touched and concerned" would be oppressive. It must be kept in mind that (as in the present case) the time at which the enforceability of the covenant becomes an issue may be long after the date of the instrument by which it was imposed."
Analysis
"and the fact that the covenant is imposed for the benefit of that particular land should be stated in the conveyance and the persons or the class of person s entitled to enforce it."
"if the condition precedent of section 78 is satisfied – that is to say, there exists a covenant which touches and concerns the land of the covenantee – that covenant runs with the land for the benefit of his successors in title, persons deriving title under him or them and other owners and occupiers."
Decision