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Cooper and others v Tait and another

Rent Act 1977, section 12(1) — Joint landlords — One joint landlord resident — Whether resident landlord exception in section 12(1) applied, so that tenancy was not protected — Tenant’s dwelling-house in five-storey terraced house, not a purpose-built block of flats — One of the joint landlords lived in a basement flat in the house, the others not being resident there — Appeal from decision of county court judge who held that tenancy was not protected — Held, dismissing appeal, that section 12(1) read literally covered residence by one of several joint landlords and that such a construction accorded with the intention of Parliament to encourage people to divide up accommodation without risk of never again being able to regain possession — It was ‘too simple to say that [the case] was on all fours with Tilling v Whiteman’ (per Eveleigh LJ), but ‘Tilling v Whiteman assists the court’ (per Stephen Brown LJ)

This was an
appeal by the tenant, Miss Moira Tait, from a decision of Judge Butter at Bloomsbury
and Marylebone County Court, whereby she was ordered to give up possession of a
flat at 49 Ossington Street, Kensington, London W2, to the landlords, Eric
Cooper, Paul Cooper and Hilary Cooper. One of the joint landlords, Eric Cooper,
lived in a basement flat at this address, a five-storey 19th-century terraced
house converted into flats.

Gordon Bennett
(instructed by Lewis & Pearson) appeared on behalf of the appellant tenant;
Geoffrey Stephenson (instructed by Blacket Gill & Swain) represented the
respondent landlords.

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