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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 >> York House (Chelsea) Ltd v Thompson & Anor [2019] EWHC 2203 (Ch) (15 August 2019) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2019/2203.html Cite as: [2019] EWHC 2203 (Ch), [2019] WLR(D) 484, [2020] 1 P & CR DG5, [2020] Ch 1, [2019] 3 WLR 727, [2020] L & TR 10 |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES (ChD)
PROPERTY TRUSTS AND PROBATE LIST
Strand, London WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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YORK HOUSE (CHELSEA) LIMITED |
Claimant |
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- and – |
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(1) EDWARD ALLEN VICTOR THOMPSON (2) DOMITILA THOMPSON |
Defendants |
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Stephen Jourdan QC and Anthony Radevsky (instructed by Brethertons LLP) for the Defendants
Hearing dates: 16, 17, 18 and 19 July 2019
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Zacaroli:
A. Introduction
B. The Statutory Framework
"Subject to subsections (3) and (4), this Part applies to premises if— (a) they consist of the whole or part of a building; and (b) they contain two or more flats held by qualifying tenants; and (c) the number of flats held by such tenants exceeds 50 per cent. of the total number of flats contained in the premises."
"In this Part references to a relevant disposal affecting any premises to which this Part applies are references to the disposal by the landlord of any estate or interest (whether legal or equitable) in any such premises, including the disposal of any such estate or interest in any common parts of any such premises but excluding— (a) the grant of any tenancy under which the demised premises consist of a single flat (whether with or without any appurtenant premises); and (b) any of the disposals falling within subsection (2)."
"a disposal by way of gift to a member of the landlord's family or to a charity";
and sub-paragraph (h),
"a disposal consisting of a transfer by two or more persons who are members of the same family either – (i) to fewer of their number, or (ii) to a different combination of members of the family (but one that includes at least one of the transferors)"
"a disposal whether by the creation or the transfer of an estate or interest and (a) includes the surrender of any tenancy and the grant of an option or right of pre-emption, but (b) excludes a disposal under the terms of a will or under the law relating to intestacy".
C. The Issues
D. Were the disposals effected by the Leases within one or other of the exclusions in s.4(2)(e) or (h)?
D1. Gift to a member of the landlord's family
"We therefore approach the question of construction of the legislation on the footing that there was no policy of any sort which would have led Parliament deliberately to exclude exemption in the cases under appeal."
"To apply the words literally is to defeat the obvious intention of the legislation and to produce a wholly unreasonable result. To achieve the obvious intention and produce a reasonable result we must do some violence to the words … it is only where the words are absolutely incapable of a construction which will accord with the apparent intention of the provision and will avoid a wholly unreasonable result, that the words of the enactment must prevail."
"if the construction of the section put forward … would lead to unreasonable results or results which the legislature are unlikely to have intended, we are, in my view, permitted so to construe the section that those unreasonable results are avoided if that can legitimately be done without doing violence to clear language."
"a court would only be justified in departing from the plain words of the statute were it satisfied that: (1) there is clear and gross balance of anomaly; (2) Parliament, the legislative promoters and the draftsman could not have envisaged such anomaly, could not have been prepared to accept it in the interest of a supervening legislative objective; (3) the anomaly can be obviated without detriment to such legislative objective; (4) the language of the statute is susceptible of the modification required to obviate the anomaly."
The purpose of s.4(2)
"Acquisition of the reversion: under the general law the landlord is free to dispose of his interest in the block without reference to the wishes of the tenants; and we had evidence of cases in which the ownership of the freehold passed through several hands in quick succession, leaving the tenants uncertain who their landlord was and unable to take any effective action. The majority of us do not consider that it would be right to give tenants a right to buy the interest of a landlord who wishes to continue to own and manage his own property, even if it could be shown that the management of the block might be improved if it were under the control of the tenants. However where the landlord wishes to dispose of his interest, we consider that the presumption against expropriatory legislation no longer applies with the same force, and that the tenants should have an opportunity to purchase the reversion themselves."
"It seems clear that the committee intended occupying tenants to have a right to acquire the reversion to their leases when their landlord proposed to part with it, and that the ultimate objective was to give the tenants in a block where the majority wanted it a power to manage the block themselves and so to have a greater say in their own affairs."
"Disposal by way of gift"
i) although the tenants' covenants were of benefit to the landlord in three ways (first, because if at some point in the future the tenant wished to act in contravention of the covenants then there was the possibility of the landlord being able to demand compensation for release or variation of the covenants; second, because the covenants assist the landlord with the general management of the building; and third, because they provide the landlord with protection against claims from other tenants);
ii) they had no value in monetary terms, whether in the sense that anyone would have been willing to pay for the benefit of the covenants or in the sense that they increased the value of the freehold.
"The covenants are perfectly consistent with a gift of mortgaged property. The crucial matter is the nature of the property disposed of. Because it was mortgaged, some arrangement had to be come to as to who was to bear the burden of the obligation under the mortgage. The arrangement was that the plaintiff should. But that only means that the parents said, in effect: "We will give you the flat but you must take the burdens as well as the benefit." That, in my view, is in no way inconsistent with a gift of mortgaged property. It merely follows from the nature of the property given.
I should add that the fact that the donee of land enters into some indemnity covenant with the donor in the deed of gift does not by itself indicate a sale. For example, if the property is subject to restrictive covenants, the donee would commonly give a covenant of indemnity against breaches. That again merely results from the nature of the property given."
"I would also agree with Mr Taube that the "property" which Lady Hood gave to her sons can only be identified as the sub-lease of the Property, which has to be regarded as a whole. I do not think that any sensible distinction can be drawn, at this preliminary stage, between the legal estate in land which she created by the sub-demise, on the one hand, and the mutual covenants into which the parties entered in the sub-lease, on the other hand. Both the estate in land and the covenants formed part of a single transaction, and it would be artificial to distinguish between them because neither would have come into existence without the other. Put another way, the gift made by Lady Hood was a gift of an interest in land subject to, and with the benefit of, the obligations which the parties agreed to undertake in the sub-lease." (emphasis added).
Gift "to a member of the landlord's family"
D2. Disposal by way of transfer by two or more persons who are members of the same family to fewer of their number.
D3. Post-script: the Human Rights Act and the criminal sanction contained in the 1987 Act
E. Are the disposals relevant disposals affecting premises to which Part 1 of the Act applies?
E1. The scope of premises within ss.1 and 4
E2. The meaning of "appurtenance"
"it would be to attribute to Parliament an entirely capricious intention if we were to hold that the tenants' right to purchase did not extend to the gardens and other appurtenances of the flats which are expressly or impliedly included in the demises of the flats to the tenants. In my judgment we are not forced to adopt such an unreasonable construction since it is a perfectly legitimate meaning of the word "building" that it includes the appurtenances of the building."
E3. The meaning of "common parts"
E4. The 14 Leases
Lease 1
Lease 2
Lease 3
The corridor
The subsoil
The courtyard
Lease 4
Lease 5
Lease 6
Lease 7
Lease 8
Leases 9-14
Conclusion