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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 >> Sunset Ltd & Anor v Al-Hindi [2023] EWHC 2443 (Ch) (05 October 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2023/2443.html Cite as: [2023] EWHC 2443 (Ch) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
INSOLVENCY AND COMPANIES LIST (ChD)
In the Matter of the Insolvency Act 1986
Re Abdulla Al-Hindi
Rolls Building, Fetter Lane, London EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
Between :
____________________
(1) Sunset Limited (2) Morville Limited |
Petitioners |
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- and – |
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Abdulla Al-Hindi |
Debtor |
____________________
Mr Carlton Christensen (instructed by Lexsure Solicitors) for the Debtor
Hearing date: 30th June 2023
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
ICC Judge Mullen :
i) Flat A, 102 Star Street, London W2 1QF;
ii) Flat B, 102 Star Street, London W2 1QF;
iii) Flat C, 102 Star Street, London W2 1QF; and
iv) Flat 3b, Hyde Park Mansions, Transept Street, London NW1 SEP
i) those contained in the strike out application;
ii) that the debt relied on was not due and payable by reason of section 48 of the Landlord and Tenant Act 1987 ("the 1987 Act");
iii) that the petitioners could not put in evidence of the tenancies relied on by reason of the tenancy agreements not having been stamped.
He gave directions for further evidence in relation to the strike out application, the details of which I need not set out now.
"2… Judge Barber granted a further adjournment through her case management powers because the Respondent claimed that he had not received the section 48 Notice of the Landlord's address. It is at least rather convenient that the Respondent only raised this issue after failing to comply with an 'unless order'. The Respondent was debarred from defending this petition, ultimately as a result of several breaches of an unless order.
…
8. The issues in dispute between the parties are as follows:
8.1 At the hearing on 21 February 2023, ICC Judge Prentis ordered that following the dismissal of the Respondent's application for relief from sanctions emanating from breach of an 'unless order', the defendant remained 'debarred from defending the Petition on the basis of any fact raised by him' (page 237). It is respectfully submitted that that in line with ICC Judge Prentis' order, the Respondent's attempt to relitigate this interim application and seek relief from sanctions must be dismissed. At its highest, this serious breach of an "unless order" would be prohibit [sic] the respondent from defending any of the other three issues raised by him.
8.2 If the court is still minded to consider the issues raised by the Respondent, it is submitted that Rovati Consultants were not authorised to instruct Mr Rahman because they were not entitled to be on the record and conduct litigation. The Respondents further argue that that all of the important steps undertaken by Rovati would be held to be void or voidable.
8.3 The second issue is nothing more than another attempt by the Respondent claiming that he had not been properly served with notice as to where and to whom rent is payable. The Respondent argues that as such no rent was lawfully owed during the time both the Statutory Demand and Petition were served, because he was only served with notice on 3 February 2023.
8.4 Finally, the Respondent argues that as Stamp Duty Land Tax (SDLT) was due on account of arears, the Petitioner's failure to pay SDLT makes any agreement unenforceable. The Respondent argues that this is because it is the duty of the petitioner to ensure that the SDLT has been paid."
While they are somewhat opaque, the impression created by these paragraphs is that Mr Al-Hindi had been debarred from raising these issues and was seeking to do so improperly when in fact the order of ICC Judge Prentis is clear that it remained open to him to do so. The notice of adjournment giving the date of this hearing, prepared and served on Mr Al-Hindi on behalf the petitioners, also baldly states that "The Respondent is debarred from defending the petition on the basis of any fact raised by him", without referring to the three matters that Judge Prentis had expressly stated the debtor could raise, although it is fair to say that Judge Prentis's order was in the bundle. There was another error in the petitioners' skeleton that did not assist in the determination of the case in the time allowed, to which I shall refer below. The bundle, aside from not complying with the Chancery Guide as to the preparation of hearing bundles, also omits certain documents, such as Mr Al-Hindi's strike out application, so that the history of the matter was not as clear as it might have been. Having now had the opportunity to consider the court file in conjunction with the hearing bundle, however, I am satisfied that I have seen everything of relevance.
"48 Notification by landlord of address for service of notices.
(1) A landlord of premises to which this Part applies shall by notice furnish the tenant with an address in England and Wales at which notices (including notices in proceedings) may be served on him by the tenant.
(2) Where a landlord of any such premises fails to comply with subsection (1), any rent, service charge or administration charge otherwise due from the tenant to the landlord shall (subject to subsection (3)) be treated for all purposes as not being due from the tenant to the landlord at any time before the landlord does comply with that subsection.
(3) Any such rent, service charge or administration charge shall not be so treated in relation to any time when, by virtue of an order of any court or tribunal, there is in force an appointment of a receiver or manager whose functions include the receiving of rent, service charges or (as the case may be) administration charges from the tenant."
This is a matter which the debtor is expressly permitted to rely upon under the order of ICC Judge Prentis.
"Second, reliance is placed on a statutory demand dated August 6 1991 made by or on behalf of the landlord under the Insolvency Act 1986. That asserts that the demand is served by the creditor, Lindsey Trading Properties Inc. It gives the registered office in Panama and includes an address 'care of' Franks Charlesly at Hulton House in London. The statutory demand, at Part A, indicates that any communication regarding that demand is to be addressed to Franks Charlesly. It does not anywhere contain notice that Franks Charlesly are authorised to receive notices which may be served by the tenant on the landlord in connection with matters under the lease other than the rent which is the subject-matter of the statutory demand."
"The requirement is that the landlord 'by notice furnish the tenant with an address in England and Wales at which notices (including notices in proceedings) may be served on him by the tenant'. By section 54(1) such a notice shall be in writing and may be sent by post. There is no prescribed form for such a notice. Chadwick J proceeded upon the basis that such a notice must state that the address given is the address at which notices, including notices in proceedings, may be served on the landlord by the tenant; and that it would not be sufficient to state an address which is shown to be such that, if notice in proceedings were served on the landlord at that address, it would in any particular circumstances be held to be effective service. In short, the tenant is to be told at what address notices, including notices in proceedings, may be served. In my judgment, Chadwick J was right to proceed on that basis."
"The letter of December 3 was a valid notice under section 48(1). This provision can be given no effect in derogation of the landlord's legal rights beyond that required by the terms of the enactment. The rent 'otherwise due', therefore, is to be treated as not due from the tenant 'at any time before the landlord does comply with' section 48(1); but such rent becomes due at the time when the landlord so complies and continues due thereafter. There is no justification for any extension of the period of time over which the rent is treated as not due whether until the end of that day, or for a reasonable time, or until the next rent day. The cases cited for this purpose are, in my judgment, of no relevance. No question of construction of contractual obligations arises as to when the rent was 'otherwise due from the tenant'. The rent in respect of which the notice was served was due from the tenant when he received the notice."
"If the landlord wishes to avoid the consequences of the unqualified statement in his address given in the agreement, he may serve a separate section 48(1) notice at once or at a later date if he changes his address. That result seems to me to be in conformity with good sense and with the provisions of section 4 and 5 of the Landlord and Tenant Act 1985, and with the intention of Parliament as expressed in the 1987 Act."
Stuart-Smith LJ said at 76:
"What the section requires is that the tenant is told, so that he knows, the landlord's name and address in England or Wales at which he can be served with notices. If the name and address is stated in the lease or tenancy agreement without limitation or qualification, it is a necessary implication that he, or in the case of a corporation it, can be communicated with at that address and hence it is a place to which notices can be sent. The section does not require that the notice shall state that it is the address at which notices can be served. The mischief at which the section was aimed was the problem created where the landlord's identity was not known and/or the tenant did not know of an address within the jurisdiction to which notices could be sent and proceedings served. Mr Baker, in his attractive submissions, argued that notice within section 48(1) did not have to be written; oral notice was sufficient. There are, of course, occasions when notice of something can be given orally. Someone has notice of a fact when he knows it, and hence when he is told it. The means of telling is immaterial. But in some contexts the word 'notice' implies a written notice. In my opinion, quite apart from section 54 of the Act, it does so here, to give meaning both to the words 'furnish' and 'notice'.
This is also consistent with the purpose of the section, which is to provide certainty and ease of proof, but provided the name and address is communicated to the tenant in writing, which it is if it is stated in the lease or tenancy agreement, there is no need for a separate notice."
All three Lord Justices held that, whether or not section 54 of the 1987 Act, requiring certain notices to be writing, covered a notice under section 48, it was implicit in section 48 itself that writing was required. It did not however require that the address given should be expressly stated to be the address to which notices should be sent pursuant to section 48 or to follow the statutory language.
"The Respondent argued at Paragraph 7 in his skeleton that the only address for service was provided in cl. 42 of each of the tenancy agreements. This is incorrect as the Respondent was provided with an address for service in England and Wales (being the address for Bernard Graham [sic] found at p. 22) when he was served with the statutory demand on 8 April 2022 by Richard Lessing, the Process Server of Trademark Associates. Further at p. 218, Rovati Consulants [sic] Limited, the Landlord's agent wrote to the Respondent providing him with the Landlord's agent's [sic]. This was written in line with Section 48(1) of the Landlord and Tenant Act 1987. There have also been other instances of the Respondent being asked to pay off his arears by former solicitors to the Petitioner, JPS Law Solicitors at pages 166-169, Bernad Graham [sic] at pages 170-171, along with the Notice to Quit that also provided addresses for service at p. 212."
"It is submitted that facts in Rogan v Woodfield Building Services Ltd [1995] 1 EGLR 72 to the pertinent as in this case [sic], a s48(1) notice was served in the course of proceedings rectifying and 'perceived' [sic] failure to provide a s48(1) notice. The Court of Appeal dismissed the tenant's appeal, with Stuart-Smith LJ clarifying at page 78 of Rogan that a landlord can provide a compliant notice after the point has been taken in a defence by a tenant in proceedings for arears [sic]. Therefore, once an address is provided, it has retrospective effect over all of the unpaid arears [sic] right from the beginning of the tenancy."
The report of Rogan runs to page 77 and I was left unclear as to the passage that Mr Rahman intended to refer. The word "perceived", appearing in quotes in the skeleton, does not appear in the report at all, as far as a word search of the PDF shows, and I cannot see that Stuart-Smith LJ's judgment says anything of the sort.
"I accept the submission of Mr Baker that, if this court is required to set aside the conclusion of Judge Rountree as based upon an erroneous reading of section 48(1) and as contrary to the decision of this court in Dallhold, justice requires that the defendants be permitted to amend the counterclaim so that it is to be treated as reissued in October 1993 and, accordingly, rent was lawfully due as the basis for upholding the suspended order for possession."
Again, at 75 he continued:
"If the point of a purely formal failure to comply with section 48 should be taken, the county court would often be able to deal with it effectively by allowing a notice to be served followed by amendment. For my part, however, I am persuaded that the submissions of Mr Baker are, in substance, right on the construction of the tenancy agreement, correspondence and section 48(1), and that the appeal should be dismissed on that ground."
In Rogan, the point was academic because the giving of the landlord's address in England and Wales in the tenancy agreement, without more, was sufficient. Sir Ralph Gibson did not say that the giving of the section 48 notice during the currency of proceedings would be curative in all circumstances, though one can see that it may have that effect in some situations. Nor does he say that such a notice has retrospective effect. Indeed, he stated that the amended counterclaim would need to be treated as "reissued in October 1993" – i.e. after service of the section 48 notice, not that the effect of section 48 simply fell away.
"(1) A petition for a bankruptcy order to be made against an individual may be presented to the court in accordance with the following provisions of this Part—
(a) by one of the individual's creditors or jointly by more than one of them,
Section 267 then provides:
"(1) A creditor's petition must be in respect of one or more debts owed by the debtor, and the petitioning creditor or each of the petitioning creditors must be a person to whom the debt or (as the case may be) at least one of the debts is owed.
(2) Subject to the next three sections, a creditor's petition may be presented to the court in respect of a debt or debts only if, at the time the petition is presented—
(a) the amount of the debt, or the aggregate amount of the debts, is equal to or exceeds the bankruptcy level,
(b) the debt, or each of the debts, is for a liquidated sum payable to the petitioning creditor, or one or more of the petitioning creditors, either immediately or at some certain, future time, and is unsecured,
(c) the debt, or each of the debts, is a debt which the debtor appears either to be unable to pay or to have no reasonable prospect of being able to pay, and
(d) there is no outstanding application to set aside a statutory demand served (under section 268 below) in respect of the debt or any of the debts."
Section 268 provides, insofar as is relevant:
"(1) For the purposes of section 267(2)(c), the debtor appears to be unable to pay a debt if, but only if, the debt is payable immediately and either—
(a) the petitioning creditor to whom the debt is owed has served on the debtor a demand (known as 'the statutory demand') in the prescribed form requiring him to pay the debt or to secure or compound for it to the satisfaction of the creditor, at least 3 weeks have elapsed since the demand was served and the demand has been neither complied with nor set aside in accordance with the rules…"
Was the debt due "immediately" or "at some certain, future time" "at the time the petition was presented" for the purposes of section 267? The answer must be no. The failure to serve the section 48 notice meant that the debt cannot be treated as due at the time the petition was presented. Nor was it due at some "future, certain time" as a compliant notice might never have been served.
Conclusion