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Potsos and another v Theodotou

Rent Act 1977, Sched 15, Case 9, para (b) — Dwelling-house reasonably required by landlord for ‘any son or daughter of his over 18 years of age’ — Question in this appeal was whether, where a husband and wife were joint landlords and claimed possession of a dwelling-house on the ground set out in Case 9(b), the claim fell within this ground where the son was the natural (or biological) son of one only of the joint landlords and neither the natural (or biological) nor the adopted son of the other — The county court judge held that the claim was covered by Case 9(b) and granted the joint landlords a possession order — His decision was upheld on appeal

The situation
was that Paul Potsos, now aged 22, was the son of Mrs Potsos by a previous
marriage — He was neither the natural (or biological) nor the adopted son of Mr
Potsos, who was joint landlord of the subject dwelling-house with his wife —
Mrs Potsos was granted legal custody of Paul with his father’s consent but the
father had opposed adoption by the Potsos’, apparently for fear that Mr and Mrs
Potsos might then move with Paul to Cyprus.

It was clear
from existing authorities that two or more persons could together constitute
‘the landlord’ for the purpose of Case 9(b) and it was also clear that an
adopted child was included in ‘any son or daughter’ — The precise point raised
in the present proceedings, however, had not previously been decided — On the
strict interpretation favoured by Asquith LJ in Baker v Lewis and followed in
McIntyre v Hardcastle it would have been necessary in the present case for
Paul to have been the son of Mr and Mrs Potsos, as together constituting ‘the
landlord’ and not only of one of them — In later cases, however, the very
strict doctrine of joint proprietorship became modified in different contexts —
In Lloyd v Sadler Megaw LJ said that:

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