Back
Legal

R J Dunnell Property Investments Ltd v Thorpe

Rent Act 1977 and Housing Act 1980 — Whether letting constituted a protected shorthold tenancy — Complex letting arrangements giving rise to questions — Exercise of ‘just and equitable’ discretion under section 55(2) of the 1980 Act in proceedings for possession under Case 19 in Schedule 15 to the 1977 Act — County court judge’s decision (‘a model of its kind’) in favour of landlords upheld by Court of Appeal

The
litigation concerned premises consisting of a shop on the ground floor with residential
accommodation on the two floors above — The appellant (defendant below) had
originally an ordinary protected weekly tenancy of a room on the second floor
(at first a back room but later a larger front room) — Subsequently, when two
rooms on the first floor became vacant it was agreed that he should be granted
‘a shorthold lease’ of these two rooms, which would be in addition to his
existing weekly tenancy of the second-floor room — An agreement on a printed
form providing for a protected shorthold tenancy was signed by both parties,
the letting being for a term certain of one year and thereafter from month to
month — The agreement on the face of it satisfied section 52(1)(a) of the 1980
Act, but not section 52(1)(b) or (c), the conditions for which section 55(2)
provided a ‘just and equitable’ dispensation in Case 19 proceedings — Thus,
subject to the fundamental issue as to whether there was a separate shorthold
tenancy at all, the agreement would attract the mandatory possession ground of
Case 19 if the judge exercised his discretion favourably under section 55(2) —
To complete this part of the historical account, the appellant took over an
extra second-floor room as part of his weekly protected tenancy

A few years
later, the landlords, relying on Case 19, gave the appellant notice to quit the
first-floor rooms — They wished to sell the freehold of the premises to the
ground-floor tenants, who ran a clothing shop and who required the first-floor
residential accommodation as a condition of the sale — It was accepted that the
appellant had a right to continue to occupy the second-floor rooms as a weekly
protected tenant — On the appellant’s failure to quit the first-floor rooms the
respondent landlords took proceedings for possession — They succeeded before
the county court judge and the appellant appealed

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…