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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 >> Restaurant EC3 Ltd v Tavor Holdings Ltd [2024] EWHC 3104 (Ch) (03 December 2024) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2024/3104.html Cite as: [2024] EWHC 3104 (Ch) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
CHANCERY APPEALS (ChD)
Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
RESTAURANT EC3 LIMITED |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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TAVOR HOLDINGS LIMITED |
Respondent |
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Adam Rosenthal KC & Jonathan A Titmuss (instructed by Memery Crystal) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 27 November 2024
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Miles :
Introduction
"And UPON the Court requiring further submissions from the Respondent in the event that it seeks to argue as a matter of law that from the claim for mesne profits arising from the alleged unlawful forfeiture, there should not be deducted by set off or cross-claim the rent due under the subsisting lease for the same period as the mesne profits may be awarded (which, if not argued/established as law by the Respondent, results in an undisputed debt to be paid of £290,175.26)
And UPON the Court being satisfied that there is in any event an undisputed debt due and owing to the Petitioner of £120,000 odd (at least)
And UPON the Court being satisfied that the usual compulsory order for the winding up of the company should be made in the event that the company cannot pay the Petitioner £120,000 subject to any future decision by the Court to adjourn the Petition for payment within a reasonable period of time"
"2. The Respondent shall, in the event that it seeks to persuade the Court of the matters set out in the sixth recital above, file and serve short written submissions on the point by no later than 4pm on the 12th February 2024.
3. The Respondent shall, in the event that it seeks an adjournment for time to pay, file and serve evidence, by no later than 4pm on the 12th February 2024, as to its ability to pay the undisputed element of the petition debt (either £120,000 or £290,175.26)."
"And UPON the Court determining that:
a) the amended petition debt of £290,175.26 is immediately due and owing to the Petitioner; and
b) there is no genuine or substantial dispute, set off or cross claim capable of reducing the amounts due to the Petitioner
And UPON the Court being satisfied that the usual compulsory order for the winding up of the company should be made in the event that the company cannot pay the Petitioner £290,175.26 within a reasonable period of time
And UPON the Court concluding that the evidence provided at this hearing by the company was insufficient to satisfy that the petition debt could and would be paid within a reasonable period of time."
Permission to appeal
Summary of the appeal
Authorities
"It appears to me to be clear, both as a matter of principle and of authority, that in a case of this sort the plaintiff, when he has established that the defendant has remained on as a trespasser in residential property, is entitled, without bringing evidence that he could or would have let the property to someone else in the absence of the trespassing defendant, to have as damages for the trespass the value of the property as it would fairly be calculated; and, in the absence of anything special in the particular case it would be the ordinary letting value of the property that would determine the amount of the damages."
"It is sometimes said that these cases are an exception to the rule that damages in tort are compensatory. But this is not necessarily so. It depends how widely one defines the "loss" which the plaintiff has suffered. As the Earl of Halsbury L.C. pointed out in Mediana (Owners of Steamship) v. Comet (Owners of Lightship) [1900] AC 113, 117, it is no answer for a wrongdoer who has deprived the plaintiff of his chair to point out that he does not usually sit in it or that he has plenty of other chairs in the room.
In Stoke-on-Trent City Council v. W. & J. Wass Ltd. [1988] 1 W.L.R. 1406 Nicholls L.J. called the underlying principle in these cases the "user principle." The plaintiff may not have suffered any actual loss by being deprived of the use of his property. But under the user principle he is entitled to recover a reasonable rent for the wrongful use of his property by the trespasser. Similarly, the trespasser may not have derived any actual benefit from the use of the property. But under the user principle he is obliged to pay a reasonable rent for the use which he has enjoyed. The principle need not be characterised as exclusively compensatory, or exclusively restitutionary; it combines elements of both."
"But, in the case of unlawful eviction, damages for trespass must compensate the tenant not merely for the letting value of the property of which he has been deprived but also for the anxiety, inconvenience and mental stress involved in the loss of what was the tenant's home. A summary of recent County Court decisions indicate awards ranging between £100 and £300 per night. Judge Owen accepted that the District Judge had been wrong to place the reliance she did on the decision in Wallace and that although each case inevitably turns on its own facts, her award of £40 per night was considerably out of line with what might be called the current tariff for this kind of award. The judge held that the correct figure was £130 per night."
"(i) User damages in tort
25 In tort, although damages may in some circumstances be awarded for punitive purposes, the general principle is that damages are compensatory. As Lord Blackburn said in Livingstone v Rawyards Coal Co (1880) 5 App Cas 25, 39:
"I do not think there is any difference of opinion as to its being a general rule that, where any injury is to be compensated by damages, in settling the sum of money to be given for reparation of damages you should as nearly as possible get at that sum of money which will put the party who has been injured, or who has suffered, in the same position as he would have been in if he had not sustained the wrong for which he is now getting his compensation or reparation."
26 Lord Blackburn's principle can readily be applied in situations where some tangible loss has been sustained: for example, where real property has been damaged or taken by a trespasser (as in the Livingstone case itself), or where goods have been converted. Its application is less obvious in situations where there has been an invasion of rights to tangible moveable or immoveable property, but there has been no pecuniary loss or physical damage to the property in question. Nevertheless, where a trespasser has made valuable use of someone else's land, without causing any diminution in its value, the landowner has been held to be entitled to damages measured as what a reasonable person would have paid for the right of user: see, for example, Whitwham v Westminster Brymbo Coal and Coke Co [1896] 2 Ch 538. A similar approach has been adopted in cases of detinue, such as Strand Electric and Engineering Co Ltd v Brisford Entertainments Ltd [1952] 2 QB 246. Damages are also available on a similar basis for patent infringement and breaches of other intellectual property rights.
27 The basis of the award of damages in cases of this kind was considered by Lord Shaw of Dunfermline in Watson, Laidlaw & Co Ltd v Pott, Cassels & Williamson 1914 SC (HL) 18; 31 RPC 104. The case concerned the sale of machines which infringed the pursuers' patent. The issue in dispute was whether the pursuers were entitled to recover damages for sales which had been made by the defenders in a territory where the pursuers could not themselves have traded, and which, moreover, the defenders would have made even if the machines had not incorporated the infringing part. It was held that they were so entitled. Lord Shaw contrasted the principle underlying the assessment of "damages in general", whether in contract or in tort, which he described as the principle of "restoration" as he defined it, with a second principle of "price or hire", applicable not only to patent cases but "wherever an abstraction or invasion of property has occurred": 1914 SC (HL) 18, 29-31. As he explained, this distinction was relevant to the case before him, since the restoration principle could not support a claim by a patentee relating to a section of trade in which, it was argued, "he can have sustained no damage, because he would never have sold his patented articles within that section": p 30.
28 Lord Shaw described the second principle as follows, in a passage at p 31 subsequently quoted by Brightman J in the Wrotham Park Estate case [1974] 1WLR 798, 813:
"It is at this stage of the case, however, that a second principle comes into play. It is not exactly the principle of restoration, either directly or expressed through compensation, but it is the principle underlying price or hire. It plainly extends - and I am inclined to think not infrequently extends - to patent cases. But, indeed, it is not confined to them. For wherever an abstraction or invasion of property has occurred, then, unless such abstraction or invasion were to be sanctioned by law, the law ought to yield a recompense under the category or principle, as I say, either of price or of hire."
He illustrated this by the example of the liveryman's horse, also at p 31:
"If A, being a liveryman, keeps his horse standing idle in the stable, and B, against his wish or without his knowledge, rides or drives it out, it is no answer to A for B to say: 'Against what loss do you want to be restored? I restore the horse. There is no loss. The horse is none the worse; it is the better for the exercise.'"
Lord Shaw also endorsed the view expressed by Fletcher Moulton LJ in Meters Ltd v Metropolitan Gas Meters Ltd (1911) 28 RPC 157, 165 that, even if it was not the claimant's practice to grant licences, "it would be right for the court to consider what would have been the price at which - although no price was actually quoted- could have reasonably been charged for that permission, and estimate the damage in that way".
29 The approach adopted in these cases was described by Nicholls LJ in Stoke-on-Trent City Council v W & J Wass Ltd [1988] 1 WLR 1406 as the "user principle". He summarised it as follows, at p 1416:
"It is an established principle concerning the assessment of damages that a person who has wrongfully used another's property without causing the latter any pecuniary loss may still be liable to that other for more than nominal damages. In general, he is liable to pay, as damages, a reasonable sum for the wrongful use he has made of the other's property. The law has reached this conclusion by giving to the concept of loss or damage in such a case a wider meaning than merely financial loss calculated by comparing the property owner's financial position after the wrongdoing with what it would have been had the wrongdoing never occurred. Furthermore, in such a case it is no answer for the wrongdoer to show that the property owner would probably not have used the property himself had the wrongdoer not done so. In The Mediana [1900] AC 113, 117, Earl of Halsbury LC made the famous observation that a defendant who had deprived the plaintiff of one of the chairs in his room for 12 months could not diminish the damages by showing that the plaintiff did not usually sit upon that chair or that there were plenty of other chairs in the room."
30 In these cases, the courts have treated user damages as providing compensation for loss, albeit not loss of a conventional kind. Where property is damaged, the loss suffered can be measured in terms of the cost of repair or the diminution in value, and damages can be assessed accordingly. Where on the other hand an unlawful use is made of property, and the right to control such use is a valuable asset, the owner suffers a loss of a different kind, which calls for a different method of assessing damages. In such circumstances, the person who makes wrongful use of the property prevents the owner from exercising his right to obtain the economic value of the use in question, and should therefore compensate him for the consequent loss. Put shortly, he takes something for nothing, for which the owner was entitled to require payment."
"(1) Damages assessed by reference to the value of the use wrongfully made of property (sometimes termed "user damages") are readily awarded at common law for the invasion of rights to tangible moveable or immoveable property (by detinue, conversion or trespass). The rationale of such awards is that the person who makes wrongful use of property, where its use is commercially valuable, prevents the owner from exercising a valuable right to control its use, and should therefore compensate him for the loss of the value of the exercise of that right. He takes something for nothing, for which the owner was entitled to require payment."
Summary of the parties' submissions
i) The starting point is to assume that the landlord has unlawfully re-entered and has therefore been a trespasser since October 2022. The company is therefore entitled to damages for trespass.
ii) The Lease gave the company a valuable right against everyone, including the landlord, and the company has been deprived of its valuable right of possession. That is a right of exclusive possession. The landlord has taken something for nothing.
iii) The company is therefore entitled to require payment, measured as a reasonable notional rent. That is reasonably measured by reference to the rent payable under the Lease. This measure accords with the principles set out in One-Step. The landlord is required to pay that much as the price or fee for wrongfully taking possession.
iv) There should be no deduction of the amount of rent that would have been payable by the company under the Lease. That would lead to damages of nil, which would undervalue the economic value of the Lease to the company (and the use wrongly made by the landlord).
v) Though the amounts that would have been payable under the lease were deducted from the reasonable notional rent in Inverugie, the point went by concession and is not binding.
vi) In Smith v Khan (another case of a trespassing landlord) the court did not consider any deduction was needed for the rent the tenant would have had to pay under the lease. This is therefore a Court of Appeal authority in favour of the company's position.
vii) If a notional deduction of the rent that would have been payable were required, damages would be nominal. Lessors would be able to evict lessees unlawfully without the sanction of damages. It would be a right without a remedy.
viii) The deduction of rent from the damages is also contrary to the principle that rent is suspended by the entry of the lessor (see Woodfall's Landlord and Tenant para 7.138).
i) It is not accepted that the landlord wrongfully evicted the company. But for present purposes this is to be assumed.
ii) Damages for trespass are compensatory. Though there was a period when some courts referred to mesne profits as restitutionary, One-Step has put the analysis beyond doubt.
iii) The user principle is concerned with compensating the claimant for the loss of its valuable asset, including the right to require payment for use.
iv) In the present case the company's right to occupation of the land (including as against the landlord) arises under the Lease. Proper compensation for the landlord's trespass requires a deduction of the rent that would have been payable under the Lease.
v) Though the point went by concession in Inverugie, it remains telling that deductions were made in that case of the amounts payable that would have been payable by the plaintiff under the lease of the apartments, including ground rents.
vi) Damages measured by reference to a notional rent payable by the landlord with no deduction would overcompensate the company and amount to a windfall.
vii) In Smith v Khan there was no argument about any deductions of the kind in issue here. The reasonable rate selected in that case was based on a series of cases which had reached something akin to a tariff for wrongful eviction of residential tenants, and it took account of anxiety, mental stress and disruption involved in the loss of a tenant's home.
viii) The company would be compensated for the loss of an asset which would only have had any value had it continued to pay the rent.
ix) As to the suggestion that there would be a right without a remedy there are several answers. This is an unusual case in which (as it turned out) the tenant did not carry on any business from the Premises and therefore cannot claim for business disruption. There are other remedies available to commercial tenants, including injunctions. Moreover it would be open to a tenant to show that the open market rental value of their property was higher than that reserved under their lease and they would be entitled to claim the difference as mesne profits.
Analysis and conclusions on the measure of damages
The decision to wind up
"Therefore the parent company alone could pay the Petition Debt. However, given the substantial sum, the Respondent asks the Court for 8 weeks to pay the Petition debt so that it can assess whether the funds should be obtained from the parent company or other group companies and ensure that the company or companies that are providing the funds are left with sufficient funds to continue to operate. If the Petition Debt is to be paid from Snowville's portfolio, then 8 weeks will also be necessary in order to liquidate those assets."
Conclusion