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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 >> Quadracolour Ltd v Crown Estate Commissioners [2013] EWHC 4842 (Ch) (11 December 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2013/4842.html Cite as: [2013] EWHC 4842 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
7 Rolls Buildings Fetter Lane London EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
Sitting as s Deputy Judge of The Chancery Division
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QUADRACOLOUR LIMITED |
Claimant |
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- and – |
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CROWN ESTATE COMMISSIONERS |
Defendant |
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01 Finsbury Pavement London EC2A 1ER
Tel No: 020 7421 6131 Fax No: 020 7421 6134
Web: www.merrillcorp.com/mls Email: [email protected]
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
The Defendant was not represented
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Jeremy Cousins QC:
as a car park.
"If at any stage in the future the Seller [that is Columbia] no longer requires the use of the Tanks the Seller shall serve notice to that effect on the Buyer. The Seller shall then use all reasonable endeavours to procure the release of the rights to which the Retained Land [that is the green land] is subject pursuant to clause 3 of the Transfer and the release of covenants in clause 4 of the Transfer. The Seller shall not be required to make any payment or provide any other consideration for the release of those rights and covenants. In the event of those rights being released the Seller shall ensure that the Tanks are emptied and made safe. Within seven days of the release of the rights or if later the date three months from the date of the Seller's notice that the use of the Tanks is no longer required the Seller shall serve a further notice on the Buyer indicating as the case may be that the rights have been released or that a release cannot be obtained after which the Seller shall be under no further obligation in relation to the release of the covenants and rights. The Buyer may then within 28 days of receipt of such notice serve a counter notice on the Seller requiring the Seller to convey the Retained Land to the Buyer in consideration of which the Buyer shall pay to the Seller the sum of £1.00."
"As you are aware, the final action required by Columbia before the yard can be handed over to Quadracolour, is to pump out and dispose of the stored contaminated water from the four smaller tanks in the yard and then have them filled with suitable material in order to make them permanently safe. It is proposed these works are carried out on Wednesday 14 February starting at about 8am. I will be in attendance to oversee and help if required. Except for tankers and trucks involved, with the work entering and leaving the site, there should be no problems with access for lorries to your premises, but it will require the whole of the yard in the front of the building to be free of your vehicles during the operation. I have been informed that the operation should be completed in this one day. I regret the inconvenience that this work will involve you in, but it should finally draw a line under the saga of the last two years."
"I understand that you wish to do work on it in order to make it into a flat parking area for your people to use. May I suggest that if you do this, the small access hole, along the edge, near to the pavement is not filled in but has a small cover put over it. In this way, as with the access in your building, we will still be able to take water sample, should environmental questions arise in the future.One further point arises. If you tarmac the yard, please do not do so in the area where our tankers unload. If this is coated, any spill that may occur will attack it, turning it very sticky and could lead to problematical environmental contamination."
"When a company is dissolved, all property and rights whatsoever vested in or held on trust for the company immediately before its dissolution (including leasehold property, but not including property held by the company on trust for any other person) are deemed to be bona vacantia and—(a) accordingly belong to the Crown, or to the Duchy of Lancaster or to the Duke of Cornwall for the time being (as the case may be), and(b) vest and may be dealt with in the same manner as other bona vacantia accruing to the Crown, to the Duchy of Lancaster or to the Duke of Cornwall."
"Thus the great weight of authority is in favour of automatic escheat. So is the principle of the thing. If the effect of disclaimer is that there is no tenant of the freehold, and clearly it is, then there is no one holding any interest below, or adverse to, that of the Crown. The Crown therefore has an unfettered right to the land; to put it more accurately, the Crown's seignory is no longer encumbered by the freehold interest.The principle of nulle terre sans seigneur referred to at p. 34 of Megarry & Wade, in the sentence cited above, compels the same conclusion. After the conclusion of oral argument in this case, Mr Thom brought to my attention the recently reported decision of the Privy Council in Ho Young v Bess [1995] 1 WLR 350 . In that case the Privy Council stated at p. 355E, 'the general proposition that the law abhors a vacuum and that title to land must always be in someone, whether the Crown or a subject', and on the basis of that proposition decided, consistently with A-G v Parsons , that the words 'shall be forfeited' in the statute under consideration meant 'shall be liable to be forfeited' and did not operate so as automatically to forfeit land to the Crown. Since disclaimer of a freehold ipso facto determines the company's interest in the land, this general proposition requires title on disclaimer to be immediately and automatically in the Crown."
"I conclude that I am bound to hold, and I do hold, that on an escheat brought about by a disclaimer under the 1986 Act the Crown becomes the owner of the land in question freed from the previous freehold interest, without any action on the part of the Crown to bring about this result."
"There is a curious result of this conclusion. Section 654 of the Companies Act 1985 deems all property whatsoever vested in a dissolved company to be bona vacantia and provides that it accordingly belongs to the Crown. Curiously, as in the case of the disclaimer provisions of the Insolvency Act, leaseholds are specifically mentioned, but not freeholds: however, as in the case of s. 178 of the Insolvency Act , the wording is quite general and clearly includes freeholds. I note that under s. 654 of the 1985 Act acquisition by the Crown is automatic. However, by s. 656 , the Crown is empowered to disclaim such property, and s. 657 provides that, as regards property in England and Wales, s. 178(4) and s. 179-182 of the Insolvency Act apply as if the property had been disclaimed by the liquidator immediately before the liquidation of the company. The result of the disclaimer by the Crown of a freehold of a dissolved company appears to be, therefore, that the property ultimately comes back to the Crown as an escheat. It is difficult to see the object of these provisions, in so far as they concern freeholds. The boomerang effect of disclaimer by the Crown under what are now s. 651 et seq. of the Companies Act was the subject of comment at (1954) 70 LQR 25, but has not been explained. One is left with the impression that the draftsman forgot that bona vacantia could, by reason of the statutory deeming provision, include freeholds, or that no consideration was given to the effect of disclaimer of a freehold under s. 178 of the Insolvency Act ."
"However, in any event, it is our understanding that the option agreement in favour of your client creates a trust and the legal estate in property held in trust by a company does not come to an end on the dissolution of the company, but continues in existence. In which case, property held on trust does not become subject to escheat. As such, the Crown Estate does not have the remit to deal with this parcel of land and you should consider applying for a vesting order pursuant to s44 of the Trustee Act 1925."
"Where by reason of the dissolution of a corporation either before or after the commencement of this Act, a legal estate in any property has determined, the court may, by order, create a corresponding estate and vest the same in the person who would have been entitled to the estate which determined had it remained a subsisting estate."
"It would be wrong to treat an uncompleted contract for the sale of land as equivalent to an immediate and irrevocable declaration of trust or assignment of beneficial interest in the land. Neither the seller nor the buyer has an unqualified beneficial ownership. Beneficial ownership of the land was, in a sense, split between the seller and buyer on the provisional assumptions that specific performance is available and the contract would, in due course, be completed if necessary by the court ordering specific performance. In the meantime, the seller was entitled to enjoy the land or its rental income ... but provision or assumptions may be falsified by events such as rescission of the contract either under contractual term or a breach. If a contract proceeds to completion, the equitable interest will be due as passing to the buyer in stages at the time it was made and accepted and as the purchase price is paid in full."