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Service of statutory notices: the ‘reasonable recipient test’ is an objective one

The High Court has upheld a decision that a notice to quit agricultural premises under the Agricultural Holdings Act 1986 served on an individual shortly after the lease had been assigned to a company was valid in Turner and others v Thomas and another [2022] EWHC 1239 (Ch); [2022] PLSCS 84.  

The claimants/respondents owned agricultural land in Gwynedd let to the first defendant on an oral tenancy protected by the 1986 Act. In November 2019, their predecessor served a notice to quit on the first defendant, unaware that, days before, he had assigned the tenancy to the second defendant/appellant, a company of which he was the sole director and shareholder. The first defendant continued to farm the land, but on behalf of the company instead of himself. The respondents first learned of the assignment when agents for the first defendant wrote to their solicitors in October 2020 arguing that the notice was invalid because it had not been addressed to the company.  

Section 93 of the 1986 Act governs service of notices but does not require that a notice must be addressed to the tenant in writing. Service on an agent is good service provided that the agent is authorised to receive such notice, but service on an assignor following an assignment is ineffective.  

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