Back
Legal

Ozer Properties Ltd and another v Ghaydi

Rent Act 1977 — Possession action — Defendant’s plea of res judicata — Defendant was in occupation of a room in a rooming house consisting of more than 20 rooms — It had been owned by a succession of landlords and rents had been collected by a succession of persons, some of them authorised agents, but at least one of them a fraudulent person who deceived the present defendant — This person took a deposit of £100 and promised a rent book, but then disappeared — In fact the defendant never had a tenancy and, although she did not realise it, was a trespasser — Subsequently the defendant was locked out of her room but obtained an interim injunction ordering the then landlords (not the present plaintiffs) to allow her to return — In subsequent proceedings as plaintiff against these landlords the present defendant obtained a judgment ‘that the plaintiff do recover against the defendant damages to be assessed and costs’ — This judgment and a subsequent assessment of damages were given in default of service of defence by these landlords — These facts gave rise to the issue in the present appeal by the defendant from the judgment of Judge Hayman granting possession to the present landlords — It was contended that the judgment which the defendant had obtained in the previous proceedings for damages to be assessed created a situation of res judicata, determining in her favour that she was a tenant and, it was suggested, that she had a tenancy protected by the Rent Act — Held, rejecting this submission, that in order for a judgment in default to create such a situation there must be an issue which, when formulated, necessarily and with complete precision determined the rights of the parties — It was not, however, necessary in order to support the judgment to postulate that the present defendant had a tenancy of any kind — She was entitled to damages for eviction although she was not in fact a tenant and had not the benefit of the Rent Act — Appeal dismissed

No cases are
referred to in this report.

This was an
appeal by Miss Zara Ghaydi from a decision of Judge Hayman at Bloomsbury County
Court granting to the plaintiffs (the present respondents), Ozer Properties Ltd
and Esther Halpern, possession of room 17 at 93-95 Moscow Road, London W2.

Start your free trial today

Your trusted daily source of commercial real estate news and analysis. Register now for unlimited digital access throughout April.

Including:

  • Breaking news, interviews and market updates
  • Expert legal commentary, market trends and case law
  • In-depth reports and expert analysis

Up next…