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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 >> Hush Brasseries Ltd v Rlukref Nominees (UK) One Ltd & Anor [2022] EWHC 3018 (Ch) (01 December 2022) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2022/3018.html Cite as: [2022] EWHC 3018 (Ch) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
PROPERTY, TRUSTS AND PROBATE LIST (ChD)
Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
HUSH BRASSERIES LIMITED |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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(1) RLUKREF NOMINEES (UK) ONE LIMITED (2) RLUKREF NOMINEES (UK) TWO LIMITED |
Defendants |
____________________
Katharine Holland KC (instructed by DAC Beachcroft LLP) for the Defendants
Hearing date: 16 November 2022
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Crown Copyright ©
HH Judge Klein:
"The Landlord may determine this agreement by written notice to the Tenant if:
(a) the Tenant is in breach of any of the provisions of this agreement…
(b) any of the events set out in clause 5.1 of the Lease [(that is, the Lease executed in 1999)] occurs."
"The Tenant shall not assign or charge or part with or otherwise deal with its interest under this agreement provided that the Tenant may with the prior written consent of the Landlord (such consent not to be unreasonably withheld or delayed) assign its interest in this agreement provided that the Landlord may withhold consent where:
(a) any of the circumstances specified in clauses 3.15(a) and 5.3(a) (sic) of the Lease exists;
(b) the Tenant is not also simultaneously assigning the residue of the term of the Previous Lease to the same assignee,
and provided further that such consent will be deemed to have been granted if consent is given by the Landlord to an assignment of the residue of the term of the Previous Lease to the identical assignee."
"5.1.1 If any event specified in sub-clause 5.1.2 occurs the landlord may at any time afterwards re-enter the…Premises, or any part of them in the name of the whole, and this Lease will then immediately determine...
5.1.2 The events referred to in sub-clause 5.1.1 are as follows:
(a) any rent reserved remains unpaid for twenty-one days after becoming due and payable, and in the case of the rent first reserved this means whether formally demanded or not;
(b) the Tenant fails to comply with any obligation which it has undertaken or any condition to which it is bound under this Lease…"
"The events set out in clause 5.1 [of the Lease] include the following:
"5.1.2...
(a) any rent reserved remains unpaid for twenty-one days after becoming due and payable, and in the case of the rent reserved this means whether formally demanded or not;
(b) the Tenant fails to comply with any obligation which it has undertaken or any condition to which it is bound under this Lease."
As at today's date, significant arrears of rent reserved remain unpaid under the Lease in the total sum of £426,443.56, set out for illustrative purposes only in the attached Schedule of Arrears. These sums have remained unpaid for over 21 days.
Accordingly, being that rents reserved remain unpaid for substantially more than twenty-one days after becoming due. and being that you have failed to comply with your obligations under the Lease in respect of those rents, we hereby give you notice for and on behalf of our client to determine the Option Agreement pursuant to clause 14.1 thereof.
Pursuant to clause 14.3 of the Option Agreement you must now apply to the Land Registry for removal of all notices relating to the Option Agreement from our client's registered title and we look forward to receiving official copies of the duly amended title from you in due course."
i) by the Option, it obtained a, or, as the Defendants contend, a sufficient, proprietary interest in the Premises. I will refer to this as "the first pre-condition";
ii) the Operative Provision secured the performance of the tenant covenants in the Lease, in particular the rent payment obligation. I will refer to this as "the second pre-condition".
Counsel also agreed that, if the Claimant proves that at least these two pre-conditions have been met, the court retains a discretion whether or not to grant relief from forfeiture.
"Relief from forfeiture is one of those equitable remedies which plays a valuable role in preventing the unconscionable abuse of strict legal rights for purposes other than those for which they were conferred. But it needs to be constrained with principled boundaries, so that the admirable certainty of English law in the fields of business and property is not undermined by an uncontrolled intervention of equity in any situation regarded by a judge as unconscionable."
"It has always been a condition for equitable relief from forfeiture that the forfeiture provision in question should have been conferred by way of security for the enforcement of some lesser primary obligation such as, but not limited to, the payment of money…"
"17. Equitable relief from forfeiture is a remedy of ancient origin. Prior to the conveyancing and property legislation consolidated in 1925, its main spheres of activity lay in relation to leases and mortgages of land, but those are now statutory. For present purposes, it is unnecessary to trace its antecedents back before 1972, when the rationale for and main principles regulating the remedy were restated in this well-known passage in the speech of Lord Wilberforce in Shiloh Spinners Ltd v. Harding [1973] AC 691, 723-724:
"it remains true today that equity expects men to carry out their bargains and will not let them buy their way out by uncovenanted payment. But it is consistent with these principles that we should reaffirm the right of courts of equity in appropriate and limited cases to relieve against forfeiture for breach of covenant or condition where the primary object of the bargain is to secure a stated result which can effectively be attained when the matter comes before the court, and where the forfeiture provision is added by way of security for the production of that result. The word "appropriate" involves consideration of the conduct of the applicant for relief, in particular whether his default was wilful, of the gravity of the breaches, and of the disparity between the value of the property of which forfeiture is claimed as compared with the damage caused by the breach."
18. That passage contains a trenchant restatement of the central rationale and condition for the exercise of the remedy, namely that the primary object of the bargain should be the securing of a stated result, for which the forfeiture provision is added by way of security…
29. Ms Holland QC drew the court's attention to Union Eagle Ltd v. Golden Achievement Ltd [1997] AC 514, a vendor and purchaser case in which the purchaser was ten minutes late in tendering the purchase price under a contract which made time for completion of the essence. Giving the judgment of the Privy Council on an appeal from Hong Kong, Lord Hoffmann rejected a claim for relief from forfeiture, concluding at page 523 as follows:
"In his dissenting judgment, Godfrey JA said that the case "cries out for the intervention of equity". Their Lordships think that, on the contrary, it shows the need for a firm restatement of the principle that in cases of rescission of an ordinary contract of sale of land for failure to comply with an essential condition as to time, equity will not intervene."
30. This decision is not of significant assistance for present purposes. It was a case in which a contract for the purchase of legal title to land was found to have been repudiated by the failure by the purchaser to comply with a time of the essence provision. Thus the property the subject matter of the contract never became subject to the vendor's obligation to convey. While it may be said that the purchaser had a species of equitable interest pending completion, the facts were far removed from cases such as the present, where the rights subject to forfeiture are perpetual in nature and have already been conferred and enjoyed for many years prior to the event giving rise to termination."
"…while it is essential for the certainty of the law that the scope for equitable intervention on grounds of unconscionability should be delimited by reference to reasonably clear boundaries, they should be identified by reference to a principled understanding of the nature and purpose of the relevant equity, rather than be merely arbitrary…"
"It is necessary next to address Vauxhall's submission that a better boundary than one which merely accommodated possessory rights would be one which extended the equitable jurisdiction in relation to all forms of right to use property, provided only that the right of termination is intended to secure the payment of money for the performance of other obligations. I would reject this submission as well. It was heavily based upon an over-literal reading of Lord Wilberforce's speech in Shiloh Spinners Ltd v. Harding [1973] AC 691 which, as noted above, did not include as a condition of the existence of the jurisdiction any requirement as to the nature or quality of the rights liable to forfeiture. But he had no reason to do so, since the rights liable to forfeiture in that case amounted to a proprietary interest in land, and the question whether the jurisdiction might extend to any right to the use of property never arose for argument, let alone decision.
To expand the ambit of the equitable jurisdiction in that way, leaving all control upon its use as a matter of discretion, would offend against the well-recognised need to ensure that equity does not undermine the certainty of the law. Furthermore it would set at nought the careful development of the principled limitation of the jurisdiction to the forfeiture of proprietary or possessory rights, worked out over many years in a succession of broadly coherent authorities.
I would however wish to sound one note of caution against the slavish application of the whole of that jurisprudence to land. The requirement, developed in the On Demand case [2003] 1 AC 368 and Celestial Aviation Trading 71 Ltd v. Paramount Airways Private Ltd [2011] 1 All ER (Comm) 259 that the possessory right should be one which is indefinite, rather than time limited to a period shorter than the full economic life of the chattel or other species of personal property, may have unintended consequences in relation to land. Chattels by their nature are of limited economic life, and most intellectual property rights, and patents in particular, have their own inherent time limitations. By contrast, land is a form of perpetual property, and I can well conceive of forms of possessory rights in relation to land which are not perpetual, but which might nonetheless qualify for equitable relief from forfeiture. The point need not be decided in this case since, most unusually, this licence was indeed granted in perpetuity. It is to be noted that the acknowledgment in The Scaptrade [1983] 2 AC 694 that equity might relieve from the forfeiture of a demise charter (which is typically for much less than the economic life of the ship) suggests that even in relation to chattels a rule that the possessory right should be indefinite may go too far."
"The doctrine of relief from forfeiture is an equitable doctrine. I would approach it from the standpoint of equity rather than through the prism of property law. Equity is a body of principles which alleviates the strict application of rules of law in appropriate cases. In this case, the relevant rule of law is that the court will enforce the terms of the parties' agreement because there is no reason in law why it should not be enforced. Equity serves to finesse rules of law in deserving cases. It thus makes the system of law in England and Wales one which is more likely to produce a fair result than would be possible if equity did not exist. This must surely be one of the reasons why the law of England and Wales is held in high regard in the world.
Some element of uncertainty in the application of the doctrine of relief from forfeiture is inevitable…
Another element of inherent uncertainty arises from the fact that the doctrine of relief from forfeiture is a general doctrine and will apply to new circumstances, such as where the court has to deal with a particular form of property, or (as here) interest in or in relation to property, for the first time. The most obvious new circumstances are the creation of new forms of property or interest in property…
It inevitably follows that there will be respects in which the equitable doctrine of relief from forfeiture will be "unfenced". So, while I agree with Lord Briggs JSC that there is a need for there to be certainty in this area of the law, especially in the commercial field, I would go further and conclude that certainty for the purposes of a general doctrine of equity differs from that which results from a hard-edged rule of law. As Sir Richard Arden MR explained in Eaton v. Lyon (1798) 3 Ves 689, 692: "At Law a covenant must be strictly and literally performed: in Equity it must be really and substantially performed according to the true intent and meaning of the parties, so far as circumstances will admit …""
"What then is the principle on which equity acts when it grants relief from forfeiture? The fundamental principle was, as Lord Briggs JSC has said, that equity intervenes to restrain forfeiture where (1) the right had been conferred to secure the performance of some other covenant and (2) although the covenantor had breached his covenant, he was now in a position to perform it and to pay any compensation that might be appropriate: see Peachy v. Duke of Somerset (1721) Fin PR 568. These are the preconditions to relief from forfeiture in the sense that they must be present, but they are not necessarily sufficient of themselves to justify the intervention of equity, even putting on one side the exercise of the judge's discretion. In the striking phrase of Dr P G Turner in his valuable case note on the decision of the Court of Appeal in this case (entitled "What Delimits Equitable Relief from Forfeiture?" [2019] CLJ 276, 279): "Equity will only relieve where the security purpose stands ahead of any other.""
i) the Lease has its own security provisions (that is, its own forfeiture clause), to which the Operative Provision added nothing;
ii) the Option was separate from the Lease, so that, for example, the exercise of the Operative Provision did not automatically terminate the Lease, which would have require the Defendants to operate the forfeiture clause in the Lease;
iii) the Operative Provision did not "purely" secure the performance of the tenant covenants in the Lease;
iv) when exercising an option, the grantee has to strictly comply with the terms of the option agreement. To allow a grantee to obtain relief from forfeiture, when a grantor terminates an option before it is exercised, would be "in stark contrast" to that.
"The consequence of termination is that the Claimant merely loses the privilege of the option under which it might, one day, have been able to seek a new term. There is no particular unfairness in this respect…[T]he Claimant now accepts that there was a contractual right to terminate and there is no question of the Defendants having done anything to abuse their rights. Accordingly,…the Court should be cautious before granting equitable relief in the circumstances of this case."
"Although this [(that is, the right to grant relief from forfeiture)] confers an apparently broad discretion, it has been emphasised that a court should exercise caution before preventing A from enforcing a term that is, ex hypothesi, contractually valid: as the jurisdiction ultimately depends on unconscionability, it should be seen as exceptional."
By the Option, did the Claimant obtain a, or a sufficient, proprietary or possessory interest in the Premises? Has it met the first pre-condition?
"2-007 Because it vests in the grantee a right to call for a transfer of the land, thereby taking away from the grantor its estate or interest without its consent (at the time of exercise as opposed to grant), an option to purchase land creates an immediate equitable interest in the land…However, the grantor does not become a trustee for the grantee following the mere grant of an option. Until the option is exercised and an ordinary contract for a sale and purchase arises, the grantee, though having an equitable interest in the land, does not have equitable ownership of the land. The exercise of the option changes the relationship between the parties in a fundamental way, because the option holder as purchaser becomes, in equity the owner of the property…
2-059 As was said in the leading case:
"The right to call for a conveyance of the land is an equitable interest or equitable estate. In the ordinary case of a contract for purchase there is no doubt about this, and an option for repurchase is not different in its nature. A person exercising the option has to do two things, he has to give notice of his intention to purchase, and to pay the purchase money; but as far as the man who is liable to convey is concerned, his estate or interest is taken away from him without his consent, and the right to take it away being vested in another, the covenant giving the option must give that other an interest in the land."
Accordingly, an option to purchase land (unless personal to the contracting parties) is not merely a contractual obligation. A call option creates in favour of the option holder an equitable interest in that land. An enforceable option creates an immediate equitable interest in land, even before the option holder exercises it. The basis of the principle is equity's ability to enforce a conveyance of the land by a decree of specific performance…
2-061 In the leading case the exercise of the option to repurchase was dependent purely on the volition of the grantee, as is often the case with such rights. However, whether it is correct to regard an option as creating an immediate interest in land in a case where the grantee's ability to exercise the option is itself conditional on other matters merits consideration.
A typical instance is where the option is exercisable (although being an option it need never be exercised) by the grantee only if planning permission is granted for specified development of the subject land. Such a condition is particularly common in options granted to developers. Whether or not planning consent is forthcoming is not something within the control of the grantee, being a matter for the relevant planning authority. Nonetheless, it is considered that the better view is that this does not alter the fundamental nature and status of the right created by the option. "It makes no difference whether or not the contingency is within the sole power of the purchaser. The important point is that his [i.e. the grantor's] estate or interest is taken away from him without his consent."
That being so, it is considered that an option does give rise to an immediate equitable interest from the date of its creation, notwithstanding that there remain conditions required to be fulfilled before the option becomes exercisable..."
"An option to buy land is a different sort of contract. The landowner is only bound to sell if and when the grantee of the option calls on him to do so. None the less, the grantee of the option has an interest in the land even before he exercises his right: see the passage, already referred to, from London and South Western Railway Co. v. Gomm."
"…The right to call for a conveyance of the land is an equitable interest or equitable estate. In the ordinary case of a contract for purchase there is no doubt about this, and an option for repurchase is not different in its nature. A person exercising the option has to do two things, he has to give notice of his intention to purchase, and to pay the purchase-money; but as far as the man who is liable to convey is concerned, his estate or interest is taken away from him without his consent, and the right to take it away being vested in another, the covenant giving the option must give that other an interest in the land.
It appears to me therefore that this covenant plainly gives the company an interest in the land…"
"There is…no authority to support the proposition that the mere grant of an option to purchase makes the grant or trustee for the grantee. I assume if it is a trustee, the trust would be in the nature of a constructive trust. Even on a contract for the sale of land where it is recognised that the vendor is in a sense the trustee for the purchaser because the contract is specifically enforceable that is a curious kind of trust which does not have all the attributes of a normal trust…[I]n the House of Lords case of Jerome v. Kelly [2004] 1 WLR 1409, Lord Walker of Gestingthorpe with whose speech Lords Nichol, Scott and Brown agreed, observed at paragraph 32:
"It would...be wrong to treat an uncompleted contract for the sale of land as equivalent to an immediate irrevocable declaration of trust or assignment of beneficial interest in the land. Neither the seller nor the buyer has unqualified beneficial ownership. Beneficial ownership of the land is in a sense split between the seller and buyer on the provision or assumptions that specific performance is available and that the contract will in due course be completed, if necessary by the court ordering specific performance. In the meantime, the seller is entitled to enjoyment of the land or its rental income. The provision or assumptions may be falsified by events such as rescission of the contract either under contractual term or in breach. If the contract proceeds to completion the equitable interest can be viewed as passing to the buyer in stages as title is made and accepted and as the purchase price is paid in full."
If that is the position on a contract of sale, the grant of a mere option to purchase that might never be exercised is still further removed from the ordinary concept of a trust with all the attendant obligations on a trustee…"
"The question is a short one. A useful introduction to it will be found in the judgment of Danckwerts LJ in Hare v. Nicoll [1966] 2 QB 130. At page 145F, he said that the law was correctly stated in Halsbury's Laws of England, (3rd ed., 1954) vol.8, page 165:
"An option for the renewal of a lease, or for the purchase or re-purchase of property, must in all cases be exercised strictly within the time limited for the purpose, otherwise it will lapse."
I entirely agree that that is a correct statement of the law…
…A…practical business explanation why a stipulation as to the time by which an option to acquire an interest in property should be exercised by the grantee must be punctually observed, is that the grantor, so long as the option remains open, thereby submits to being disabled from disposing of his proprietary interest to anyone other than the grantee, and this without any guarantee that it will be disposed of to the grantee. In accepting such a fetter upon his powers of disposition of his property, the grantor needs to know with certainty the moment when it has come to an end.
Those observations clearly affirm a settled and invariable rule in relation to options to purchase. However, Mr Stockill has relied on them as a basis for submitting that the rule does not apply where it can be shown that the grantor does not reasonably need to know with certainty the date when the option period has come to an end…
I have no hesitation in rejecting Mr Stockill's submission. The rule is a universal one and, except where the language of the option demonstrates the contrary, it applies irrespective of what may or may not be reasonably thought to have been the needs of the grantor…"
"A notice is an entry in the register in respect of the burden of an interest affecting a registered estate or charge."
"The really important point, however, is that whether or not a conditional option to renew a lease in the future is to be regarded as an "interest in land" is not the relevant question for present purposes. The relevant question for present purposes is whether the right of the grantee is sufficiently "proprietary" to come within the jurisdiction for relief from forfeiture…"
"This decision is not of significant assistance for present purposes. It was a case in which a contract for the purchase of legal title to land was found to have been repudiated by the failure by the purchaser to comply with a time of the essence provision. Thus the property the subject matter of the contract never became subject to the vendor's obligation to convey. While it may be said that the purchaser had a species of equitable interest pending completion, the facts were far removed from cases such as the present, where the rights subject to forfeiture are perpetual in nature and have already been conferred and enjoyed for many years prior to the event giving rise to termination."
"When a vendor exercises his right to rescind, he terminates the contract. The purchaser's loss of the right to specific performance may be said to amount to a forfeiture of the equitable interest which the contract gave him in the land…But the right to rescind the contract, though it involves termination of the purchaser's equitable interest, stands upon a rather different footing. Its purpose is, upon breach of an essential term, to restore to the vendor his freedom to deal with his land as he pleases. In a rising market, such a right may be valuable but volatile. Their Lordships think that in such circumstances a vendor should be able to know with reasonable certainty whether he may resell the land or not.
It is for this reason that, for the past 80 years, the courts in England, although ready to grant restitutionary relief against penalties, have been unwilling to grant relief by way of specific performance against breach of an essential condition as to time…"
i) to satisfy the first pre-condition, the Claimant only needs to establish that, immediately before the service of the Notice, it had a proprietary interest in the Premises, by virtue of the Option;
ii) the Claimant's relevant land interest was such a proprietary interest;
iii) so that the Claimant has established the first pre-condition.
Did the Operative Provision secure the performance of the tenant covenants in the Lease? Has it met the second pre-condition?
"…Where a proprietary interest or a "proprietary or possessory right" (such as a patent or a lease) is granted or transferred subject to revocation or determination on breach, the clause providing for determination or revocation is a forfeiture…" (emphasis added).
"There is, however, a second condition that must be satisfied in order to engage the jurisdiction to grant relief. That is that the right of termination must have been intended to secure the payment of money or the performance of other obligations. I have no doubt that that was the case as regards clause 5. The rights granted were rights granted "in perpetuity subject to the rent or annual sum hereinafter made payable and the covenants on the part of Vauxhall and the conditions hereinafter contained". Clearly then, payment of the annual sum and performance of the covenants were the substratum on which the grant depended. Clause 5 is exercisable only if there is a default in performance by Vauxhall. It is the sanction for non-performance; and it is applicable whether the breach of obligation in question is serious or trivial. Its form of drafting mirrors that of a forfeiture clause in a lease, save only that it inserts the stage of a preliminary notice…" (emphasis added).
Should the discretion to grant relief from forfeiture be exercised in the Claimant's favour?
"There is likewise an equitable remedy of great (sixteenth century) antiquity whereby the court grants relief against forfeiture when a strict and literal construction of the contractual terms would permit the plaintiff to retain or recover property by reason of the defendant's default in performance of the contract, but the court regards it as unconscionable to do so. The classic example is the landlord's contractual right to recover the leased property upon any default, however minor, of the tenant's obligation to pay the agreed rent…"
Evans LJ continued, at page 140, in relation to the case before the court:
"…the breaches which have occurred and the losses which the plaintiffs have suffered, together with the advantages which the defendants have gained for Mr Woolhouse [(the defending counterclaimant's director)], are clear evidence that substantial compensation is due to the plaintiffs, and that the equitable balance is weighted heavily in their favour when the defendants claim that the clause should not be enforced according to its terms.
For these reasons, and others stated by the learned judge, the defendants in my judgment should not be granted relief."
"…The forfeiture rule looks at the position after the breach when the innocent party is enforcing the forfeiture. It asks whether in all the circumstances it would be unconscionable to allow the forfeiture to take effect. This is an exercise of discretion to grant equitable relief…
The circumstances in which the court will exercise this jurisdiction have been the subject of some debate in Australia. In Legione it was said that the jurisdiction was exceptional and that relief would be granted only in cases in which it was unconscionable of the vendor to rescind the contract. The subsequent majority decision in Stern v. MacArthur (1988) 165 CLR 489 appears to inject elements of the mechanical penalty rule into the question of whether rescission would be unconscionable and to hold that it is unconscionable to exercise a right of rescission which would produce penal consequences if the right was intended to be security for performance of the contract.
Speaking for myself, I have some sympathy with the view of Mason CJ that this is "to eviscerate unconscionability of meaning", and with the observations of Deane and Dawson JJ that the law in this field in England and Australia appears to be developing on divergent lines. But I need not pursue these questions, because Miss Heilbron does not suggest that Mr Woolhouse should have been given more time to find the money. This is because he plainly had no prospect of finding it and this remains the position today."
"Relief can therefore be granted even in the absence of such bad faith or improper purpose. Equally, the mere fact that A may have some additional, collateral motivation for enforcing a security right by means of a forfeiture clause does not, of itself, provide any grounds for relief against forfeiture. It has been stated that "the paradigm case for relief", in the classic case of relief for a mortgagor or lessee, is "where the primary object of the bargain is to secure a stated result which can be effectively attained when the matter comes before the court, and where the forfeiture provision is added by way of security for the production of the result". So if, for example, the provision operates where B has failed to pay, the general approach of the court is to grant relief on terms that B "pays what is due plus the costs of the other party." It is submitted that the central question is whether B can show that it would be unconscionable for A to insist on enforcing a clause designed as security for a primary stipulation. This depends on whether the clause would impose a burden on B, or give A a benefit, that is excessive when compared to that which would arise through performance of the secured duty."
In short, the court apparently exercises its discretion to grant relief from forfeiture when, on all the evidence before it, it concludes that it would be unconscionable for the non-defaulting party to rely on its contractual termination right.
In the eyes of equity, the proviso for re-entry was merely a "security" for the rent. Equity is in the "constant course" of relieving against forfeiture where the tenant pays the rent and all expenses. Thus save in exceptional circumstances the function of the court is to grant relief when all that is due for rent and costs has been paid up. The same applies where the breach for which forfeiture has occurred is non-payment of sums analogous to rent such as service charges…However, where the tenant "plays the system" taking advantage of procedural points to delay payment, the court may exercise its discretion against him…"
"The word "appropriate" involves consideration of the conduct of the applicant for relief, in particular whether his default was wilful, of the gravity of the breaches, and of the disparity between the value of the property of which forfeiture is claimed as compared with the damage caused by the breach."
Disposal