Sefton Holdings Ltd v Cairns
(Before Lord Justice LLOYD and Sir Roualeyn CUMMING-BRUCE)
Rent Act 1977 — Second succession to tenancy on death — Meaning of ‘member of the first successor’s family’ in Sched 1, para 7 — Claim by lady, now aged 70, who had lived with the family since 1941 when she was 23, rejected; and appeal by landlords against decision of county court judge in favour of claim allowed — Respondent claimant had come to live with the family, then consisting of a father, mother and daughter, in 1941 after both her own parents had died and her boy friend had been killed in the war — The daughter of the family became the first statutory successor to the tenancy on her father’s death in 1965 — When the daughter died in 1986 the landlords sought possession of the dwelling-house and the respondent claimed to be entitled to remain as second statutory successor — She had continued to live in the house for some 45 years, being treated by the parents as a daughter and by the first successor as a sister — The question was whether she was a member of the first successor’s family within the meaning of the statutory provision as the county court judge had held — It was pointed out by the Court of Appeal that ‘family’ had to be given its ordinary everyday meaning — There was a distinction between being a member of the family and being a member of the household — There was also a distinction between being a member of the family and living as, or being treated as, a member of the family — The principles applicable had been stated in Rose v Collins and had been applied in Joram Developments Ltd v Sharratt — The suggestion that the respondent became a member of the family by adoption could not be sustained — Adoption must be de jure or de facto and applies to a minor, not an adult; in any case in the present context ‘family’ meant the family of the first successor — Held, although the court sympathised with the respondent’s position, that the judge had been in error in deciding that she was a member of the first successor’s family — Appeal by landlords allowed
The following
cases are referred to in this report.
Brock v Wollams [1949] 2 KB 388; [1949] 1 All ER 715, CA
Rent Act 1977 — Second succession to tenancy on death — Meaning of ‘member of the first successor’s family’ in Sched 1, para 7 — Claim by lady, now aged 70, who had lived with the family since 1941 when she was 23, rejected; and appeal by landlords against decision of county court judge in favour of claim allowed — Respondent claimant had come to live with the family, then consisting of a father, mother and daughter, in 1941 after both her own parents had died and her boy friend had been killed in the war — The daughter of the family became the first statutory successor to the tenancy on her father’s death in 1965 — When the daughter died in 1986 the landlords sought possession of the dwelling-house and the respondent claimed to be entitled to remain as second statutory successor — She had continued to live in the house for some 45 years, being treated by the parents as a daughter and by the first successor as a sister — The question was whether she was a member of the first successor’s family within the meaning of the statutory provision as the county court judge had held — It was pointed out by the Court of Appeal that ‘family’ had to be given its ordinary everyday meaning — There was a distinction between being a member of the family and being a member of the household — There was also a distinction between being a member of the family and living as, or being treated as, a member of the family — The principles applicable had been stated in Rose v Collins and had been applied in Joram Developments Ltd v Sharratt — The suggestion that the respondent became a member of the family by adoption could not be sustained — Adoption must be de jure or de facto and applies to a minor, not an adult; in any case in the present context ‘family’ meant the family of the first successor — Held, although the court sympathised with the respondent’s position, that the judge had been in error in deciding that she was a member of the first successor’s family — Appeal by landlords allowed
The following
cases are referred to in this report.
Brock v Wollams [1949] 2 KB 388; [1949] 1 All ER 715, CA
Joram
Developments Ltd v Sharratt [1979] 1 WLR
928; [1979] 2 All ER 1084; sub nom Carega Properties SA v Sharratt (1979)
39 P & CR 76; [1979] EGD 514; 252 EG 163, HL
Ross v Collins [1964] 1 WLR 425; [1964] 1 All ER 861, CA
This was an
appeal by Sefton Holdings Ltd, the landlords, from the decision of Judge
Downey, at Liverpool County Court, holding that the defendant (the present
respondent), Miss Florence Cairns, was the statutory tenant of 49 Cherry
Avenue, Liverpool, by virtue of para 7 of Sched 1 to the Rent Act 1977.
Miss
Bernadette Goodman (instructed by Redferns, agents for R H Vyner-Brooks &
Co, of Liverpool) appeared on behalf of the appellants; Miss Linda Pearce (instructed
by Ashby Cornforth & Co, of Liverpool) represented the respondent.
Giving
judgment, LLOYD LJ said: This is an appeal from a decision of Her Honour Judge
Downey sitting in the Liverpool County Court on August 11 1987. It concerns a
house at 49 Cherry Avenue, Liverpool. The question is whether the defendant,
Miss Florence Cairns, is entitled to protection under the Rent Acts, that is to
say, whether she is a statutory tenant under section 2 of the Rent Act 1977.
The answer depends on the meaning to be given to the word ‘family’ in para 7 of
Part I of Schedule 1 to that Act.
The facts are
that the plaintiffs, Sefton Holdings Ltd, are the landlords of the premises in
question. They let it to a Mr Richard Gamble some time between 1939 and 1941
when the house was built. Mr Gamble died in 1965. His daughter, Ada, then
succeeded to the tenancy. Miss Ada Gamble died in 1986. The defendant came to
live with Mr and Mrs Gamble and their daughter Ada in 1941. She was then 23 and
single. Both her parents had died. Her boyfriend had just been killed in the
war. Miss Ada Gamble asked her parents if they would take the defendant in,
which they did. They treated her as their own daughter. She called them ‘Mom
and Pop’. She has lived in the same house ever since. She is now some 70 years
of age.
On June 6
1986, shortly after Miss Ada Gamble died, the plaintiffs served on the
defendant a notice to quit. The defendant claims that she is entitled to remain
on in the house as a statutory tenant under para 7 of Part I of Schedule 1,
which provides:
Where
paragraph 6 above does not apply but a person who was a member of the first
successor’s family was residing with him at the time of and for the period of 6
months immediately before his death then, after his death, that person or if
there is more than one such person such one of them as may be decided by
agreement, or in default of agreement by the county court, shall be the
statutory tenant if and so long as he occupies the dwelling-house as his
residence.
Miss Ada
Gamble was the first successor within the meaning of that paragraph. So what we
have to decide in this case is whether the defendant is a member of her family
who was residing with her at the time of, and for the period of six months
immediately before, her death. The defendant was clearly residing with Miss Ada
Gamble at the time of Miss Ada Gamble’s death. But was she a member of Miss Ada
Gamble’s family? That is the question.
The county court judge has decided that she was, and there is now an appeal to
this court.
No court could
help feeling sympathy for an elderly lady of 70 who is in danger of being
turned out of the house in which she has lived for nearly 50 years. But it goes
without saying that we have to put sympathy on one side and apply the law to
the best of our ability. It has been held over and over again that, in deciding
whether a person is a member of another person’s family, we must give the word
‘family’ its ordinary everyday meaning. We cannot extend that meaning in order
to cover what might appear to be a hard case; we must not let affection press
upon judgment.
If the judge
has given the word too wide a meaning, then she has erred in law and we are
obliged in this court to correct her, however much we might like to agree.
We have been
referred to a number of cases as to what is meant by saying that a person is a
member of another person’s family. The cases go back at least 60 years. Not all
the cases are, at first sight at any rate, easy to reconcile. That may be
because, as has been suggested, the meaning of the word ‘family’ has broadened
over the years. But we do not have to go into that question now.
The most
useful passage from among the decided cases is to be found in the judgment of
Russell LJ in the case of Ross v Collins [1964] 1 WLR 425 at p
432. In that case Russell LJ said:
100
Granted that
‘family’ is not limited to cases of a strict legal familial nexus, I cannot
agree that it extends to a case such as this. It still requires, it seems to
me, at least a broadly recognisable de facto familial nexus. This may be
capable of being found and recognised as such by the ordinary man — where the
link would be strictly familial had there been a marriage, or where the link is
through adoption of a minor, de jure or de facto, or where the
link is ‘step-‘, or where the link is ‘in-law’ or by marriage. But two
strangers cannot, it seems to me, ever establish artificially for the purposes
of this section a familial nexus by acting as brothers or as sisters, even if
they call each other such and consider their relationship to be tantamount to
that. Nor, in my view can an adult man and woman who establish a platonic
relationship establish a familial nexus by acting as a devoted brother and
sister or father and daughter would act, even if they address each other as
such and even if they refer to each other as such and regard their association
as tantamount to such. Nor, in my view, would they indeed by recognised as
familial links by the ordinary man.
That passage
was expressly approved and adopted by Lord Diplock giving the leading speech in
the House of Lords in Joram Developments Ltd v Sharratt [1979] 1
WLR 928.
It seems to me
that the facts of the present case are covered by the principle stated by
Russell LJ. I have no doubt that the defendant and Miss Ada Gamble did regard
each other as sisters and may well have called each other such. There is
evidence, to which I have already referred, that the defendant called Mr and
Mrs Gamble ‘Mom and Pop’. But the fact remains that when the defendant was
taken in nearly 50 years ago she was taken in, to use the language of Russell
LJ, as a stranger; and however long she may have lived with the family and
however kindly they may have treated her, and however close their friendship
may have become, the defendant did not, and in my judgment could not have,
become a member of Ada’s family. As Miss Goodman put it in the course of the
argument, length of residence cannot transform a resident into a member of the
family.
Miss Pearce,
in seeking to support the judge’s judgment, argued that the defendant at any
rate became a member of Mr and Mrs Gamble’s family by adoption. If she had,
then she would have been within the protection of the Act. For it has been held
by this court in the case of Brock v Wollams [1949] 2 KB 388 that
de facto adoption is good enough to make a child a member of the family
in question.
But there are
two difficulties with that argument. In the first place, the section requires
us to ask whether the defendant was a member of Miss Ada Gamble’s family, not
the family of her parents. Even if we could surmount that difficulty, there is
a second difficulty. There is no case which has been drawn to our attention in
which the courts have held that the protection of the Rent Acts covers the
adoption of an adult (if such a concept is possible). It will be noted
that in the passage I have read from Russell LJ’s judgment he refers to the
adoption of a minor; and Lord Diplock (at p 929) refers to ‘adoption (de
jure or de facto) during minority’.
Miss Pearce
sought to distinguish Ross v Collins and Joram Developments v
Sharratt from the present case. She submits that in those cases a young
person went to live with an older person and gradually took over the running of
the house; here, by contrast, a young person, an orphan, was taken in by the
family as a whole. It was not a case, says Miss Pearce, of one adult taking in
another. The relationship therefore had, so she submits, the necessary quality
to make it a familial relationship. Mr and Mrs Gamble should be treated as
being in loco parentis.
I would, as I
have said already, like to accept Miss Pearce’s distinction if I could find a
way of doing so. I agree that there are factual differences between the cases.
There always are. But our approach should be the same as that laid down by
Russell LJ and adopted by Lord Diplock. No case has gone as far as Miss Pearce
would like us to go in the present case. The defendant was 23 when she came to
live with Mr and Mrs Gamble and their daughter. It cannot be said that she was
brought up as an adopted child of the family. It may be that things were
different in 1941 from what they are now. But, if I ask myself the question
whether the defendant became a member of Mr and Mrs Gamble’s family (if that be
the right question) by adoption, whether de facto or de jure, I
am in all honesty compelled to answer that question ‘No’.
Various
attempts have been made by the courts from time to time to define the word
‘family’, by identifying various categories within which a person would be a member
of another person’s family. But Lord Diplock did not embark on that task in Joram
Developments v Sharratt, and I do not propose to embark on that task
myself. All I would say is that, in approaching this case, I have found it
useful to bear two matters in mind. First, there is the distinction drawn by
Viscount Dilhorne in Joram Developments v Sharratt between being
a member of the family and being a member of the household. Second, there is
the distinction between being a member of the family and living as
a member of the family. There is no doubt that the defendant lived as a
member of the family and that may be why the judge decided this case in her
favour. But the question we have to ask ourselves is not whether she lived as a
member of the family but whether she was a member of the family. I am clear
that she was not and that the man in the street would take the same view.
We should in
this court be slow to reverse a county court judge on a matter of this kind.
But, for the reasons which I have attempted to give, I for my part feel
compelled to allow this appeal.
Agreeing,
‘with some feeling of regret’, SIR ROUALEYN CUMMING-BRUCE said: I have been
aided by the guidance given by Lord Dilhorne in the speech to which Lloyd LJ
has referred. It seems to me clear beyond a peradventure that the plaintiff in
this case became a member of the household of Mr and Mrs Gamble and, in spite
of her age of 23, was offered and accepted a high degree of kindness and
support which led the learned judge to make the finding that she reminded
herself that in 1941 young women of 23 did not by and large live in the
independent way that so many young women do today. Mr and Mrs Gamble were
giving her a home and they took her in as a daughter and in every way treated
her as such.
Like Lloyd LJ,
it is with diffidence that I am moved to differ from the view of a learned
county court judge familiar with the local circumstances of the Liverpool
environment; but the question is a question of law, although, like all
questions of law, it involves a nice appreciation of the relevant facts.
Throughout the now mounting line of cases which deal with the meaning of the
word ‘family’ in the context of the relevant schedule it is to be observed that
in no case has the court found it possible to identify the necessary ingredient
or quality that distinguishes a familial nexus from a nexus less than familial.
The approach of the courts has been to look at all the circumstances and then
to seek to answer the question: what would an ordinary person characterise the
relationship as? For the reasons
explained by Lord Dilhorne, I do not myself think that, putting the test in
that way (accepting that it has been so frequently), it really adds very much
to the question: what is the ordinary meaning of someone being a member of
somebody else’s family? To be a member
of a family is different from being treated as a member of the family.
I would hold
that the judge was wrong as a matter of law and that, like Lloyd LJ, the appeal
should be allowed.
The appeal
was allowed; legal aid taxation of respondent’s costs ordered. Leave to appeal
to the House of Lords refused but stay granted pending the petition for leave.
Directions given in regard to possession.