R v Rent Officer for Kensington and Chelsea, ex parte Noel
(Before Lord WIDGERY CJ, Mr Justice EVELEIGH and Mr Justice SLYNN)
Fair rent–Motion for order of certiorari to quash rent officer’s registration–Rent officer’s jurisdiction challenged before hearing–Issue as to whether there was a tenancy or a licence–Rent officer’s discretion to decide jurisdiction–Decision, however, based on submissions by parties’ solicitors, not on evidence–Application for certiorari granted accordingly to quash rent officer’s determination
In these
proceedings Mrs Victoria Mary Noel moved for an order of certiorari to quash a
decision of the rent officer of the London Borough of Kensington and Chelsea on
January 16 1975 whereby he determined a fair rent for a three-room ground-floor
flat at 34a Addison Gardens, London W14, at £70 per month exclusive of rates.
She claimed that the rent officer had no jurisdiction because at the material
time the person upon whose application the rent officer purported to act was
not a tenant but a licensee.
Patrick Medd
QC and Norman Banks (instructed by Arnold Fooks Chadwick & Co) appeared for
the applicant; Harry Woolf (instructed by the Treasury Solicitor) represented
the rent officer.
Fair rent–Motion for order of certiorari to quash rent officer’s registration–Rent officer’s jurisdiction challenged before hearing–Issue as to whether there was a tenancy or a licence–Rent officer’s discretion to decide jurisdiction–Decision, however, based on submissions by parties’ solicitors, not on evidence–Application for certiorari granted accordingly to quash rent officer’s determination
In these
proceedings Mrs Victoria Mary Noel moved for an order of certiorari to quash a
decision of the rent officer of the London Borough of Kensington and Chelsea on
January 16 1975 whereby he determined a fair rent for a three-room ground-floor
flat at 34a Addison Gardens, London W14, at £70 per month exclusive of rates.
She claimed that the rent officer had no jurisdiction because at the material
time the person upon whose application the rent officer purported to act was
not a tenant but a licensee.
Patrick Medd
QC and Norman Banks (instructed by Arnold Fooks Chadwick & Co) appeared for
the applicant; Harry Woolf (instructed by the Treasury Solicitor) represented
the rent officer.
Giving the
first judgment, SLYNN J said that in November 1974 Miss Hilary Lowday applied
to the rent officer for the registration of a fair rent of the premises in
Addison Gardens occupied by her under the terms of an agreement made with the
then owner, Arthur Younghusband. The rent officer notified Mr Younghusband of
the application and on December 5 1974 solicitors acting for him wrote taking
two points, only one of which was material, namely that from the terms of the
document ‘misdescribed’ as a tenancy agreement it appeared Miss Lowday was
merely a licensee of the premises. That being the case, claimed Mr
Younghusband’s solicitors, there was no protected tenancy and the rent officer
had no jurisdiction. They also stated that a High Court writ was to be taken
out in the Chancery Division claiming a declaration that Miss Lowday did not
have a tenancy or any other right or interest in the premises. On January 6
1975 the rent officer prepared a memorandum in which he set out what appeared
to him to be the questions to be resolved. In that memorandum he described the
agreement as an ‘artificial cloak’ and went on to state that he was of the
opinion that a tenancy had been created in favour of Miss Lowday. He then
communicated with the parties and informed them he would discuss the matter
with them on January 16. On that day solicitors for the owner and Miss Lowday
attended and made submissions. At the proceedings solicitors acting for the
owner served Miss Lowday with a High Court writ. The rent officer, after
hearing the submissions, decided he had jurisdiction and he then went on to
decide on the evidence before him that there was a tenancy and then purported
to fix a fair rent.
Some time
after the meeting before the rent officer Miss Lowday moved from London and the
Chancery proceedings were abandoned. The property eventually changed hands and
the present applicant now sought to quash the determination of the fair rent.
Proceedings before a rent assessment committee had been adjourned pending the
outcome of the present application to the court. It was against that background
that Mr Medd now contended that the rent officer knew from an early stage that
his jurisdiction was disputed. Accordingly, claimed Mr Medd, he should not have
proceeded to determine a fair rent but should have adjourned so that a decision
on the question whether a tenancy existed could be reached in the Chancery
Division proceedings. Alternatively, if the rent officer had jurisdiction he
had not acted in a judicial manner in that he had prejudged the issue; did not
appreciate the difference between tenancy and licence; and should have dealt
with the matter by hearing evidence as a judge would have done at a trial.
Mr Medd was
not contending that the respondent did not have the power to decide on
jurisdiction. He was right not to go so far. A rent officer was entitled, and
might be bound, to decide in the first instance whether he had jurisdiction if
the question arose. If the matter was such that he considered it more
appropriate for a court to determine, he was entitled to invite the parties to
take the issue to the county court. If he determined the question of
jurisdiction himself the High Court could review his decision.
Section 105 of
the Rent Act 1968 did not automatically require that any question of whether a
tenancy was protected or not had to be referred to the county court. In a
number53
of cases reference had been made to section 105 and this court had been told
that it was apparently considered that, because of one case in particular, if
an issue on jurisdiction arose the matter had to go to the county court. The
court had been referred to the case of R v Brent London Borough Rent
Officer, ex parte Ganatra [1976] 1 QB 576, but that case was not to be
construed as saying that when there was a question falling to be decided under
section 105 of the Act the rent officer must leave the issue to be
decided by the county court.
In the case of
R v Croydon and South West London Rent Tribunal, ex parte Ryzewska
[1977] 1 All ER 312 at p 314 Caulfield J said ‘the rent tribunal proceeded
strictly according to the principles which should be observed by a tribunal in
a situation such as this . . . to listen to the contentions of the parties and
make up their own minds there and then whether it is better for them to proceed
with the determination having first of all decided the preliminary point of
jurisdiction.’ Rent officers could also
gain assistance from R v Fulham, Hammersmith and Kensington Rent
Tribunal ex parte Zerek [1951] 2 KB 1.
The basis of
all these authorities was that a rent officer had a right to consider jurisdictional
facts and that if he goes on to do so his decision will stand subject to an
application to this court. In the present case the rent officer was entitled to
conclude on the material before him that it was proper for him to decide that
he had jurisdiction to determine whether there was a tenancy at all. The court
could not interfere with his decision simply because he had decided to go ahead
and hear the application, but the court had authority to supervise the way in
which a rent officer arrived at a decision and the way in which he conducted
the proceedings. He (his Lordship) would not assume from the memorandum
prepared by the rent officer in January 1965 that he had prejudged the issue
before the meeting on January 16. Nor did what he wrote in the memorandum show
he had failed to understand the distinction between a tenancy and a licence.
On the other
hand, when one considered what happened at the meeting on January 16 the
position at the end of the day was not satisfactory. It was impossible to
resolve an issue of the kind raised in the case merely on the basis of
submissions and arguments put before a rent officer by the solicitors for the
parties. The allegation was that the document relied upon by Miss Lowday as a
tenancy agreement was a ‘sham’ or ‘cloak’ and a device to avoid the effects of
the Rent Acts. That was a matter which could only be properly dealt with by the
hearing of oral evidence and, if necessary, by cross-examination. The rent
officer was not, because of the procedure adopted, in a position to come to a
determination on the issue of whether there was a tenancy in the way that he
did. Accordingly the court should interfere and quash the decision.
EVELEIGH J
agreed.
LORD WIDGERY
CJ, also agreeing, said that the county court was the appropriate court to
decide these matters when the rent officer found them too difficult or was
ordered to take them to court. Nowadays with universal legal aid there was a
tendency to bring matters to the High Court which were really more appropriate
to the county court under section 105 of the Rent Act 1968. The court might
have to take a stricter view about granting prerogative orders if there were
too many applications which were really appropriate to the county court.
The
application for certiorari was allowed with costs.