Aldrington Garages v Fielder
(Before Lord Justice STEPHENSON, Lord Justice ROSKILL and Lord Justice LAWTON)
Rent Act–Separate but identical agreements made with two occupiers of same flat at same time–Agreements framed as licences and so as not to confer exclusive possession–Recital that the agreement was entered into to avoid creation of a tenancy–Whether agreements could be read together to create a joint tenancy–One of the occupiers terminated her occupation under a clause in agreement and left flat–Whether remaining occupier could claim to be a tenant–Held that the agreements created separate non-exclusive licences–The fact that they enabled the operation of the Rent Act to be avoided did not prevent effect being given to them if, as the court held, the documents truly created licences–Somma v Hazelhurst considered
This was an
appeal by Aldrington Garages from a decision of His Honour Judge Dewar at
Clerkenwell County Court on December 22, when they were refused a possession
order of flat no 3, 16-18 Hornsey Lane, Highgate, London N6, against Robert
George Fielder. The defendant contended that he and a former co-occupant, Miss
Sylvia Maxwell, were joint tenants; that the agreements which they entered into
with the plaintiffs gave rise to joint tenancy, not to separate licences, and
that after Miss Maxwell’s departure from the flat, the defendant was entitled
to exclusive possession.
Michael Rich
(instructed by I A Landy, Laufer & Co) appeared for the plaintiffs
(appellants); Lord Gifford (instructed by North Islington Law Centre)
represented the defendant (respondent).
Rent Act–Separate but identical agreements made with two occupiers of same flat at same time–Agreements framed as licences and so as not to confer exclusive possession–Recital that the agreement was entered into to avoid creation of a tenancy–Whether agreements could be read together to create a joint tenancy–One of the occupiers terminated her occupation under a clause in agreement and left flat–Whether remaining occupier could claim to be a tenant–Held that the agreements created separate non-exclusive licences–The fact that they enabled the operation of the Rent Act to be avoided did not prevent effect being given to them if, as the court held, the documents truly created licences–Somma v Hazelhurst considered
This was an
appeal by Aldrington Garages from a decision of His Honour Judge Dewar at
Clerkenwell County Court on December 22, when they were refused a possession
order of flat no 3, 16-18 Hornsey Lane, Highgate, London N6, against Robert
George Fielder. The defendant contended that he and a former co-occupant, Miss
Sylvia Maxwell, were joint tenants; that the agreements which they entered into
with the plaintiffs gave rise to joint tenancy, not to separate licences, and
that after Miss Maxwell’s departure from the flat, the defendant was entitled
to exclusive possession.
Michael Rich
(instructed by I A Landy, Laufer & Co) appeared for the plaintiffs
(appellants); Lord Gifford (instructed by North Islington Law Centre)
represented the defendant (respondent).
GEOFFREY LANE
LJ, giving the first judgment at the invitation of Stephenson LJ, said that the
agreement entered into71
by the defendant with the plaintiffs recited that the agreement was entered
into to avoid the situation where a tenancy was created, that the occupier
should not part with possession to persons not approved by the owners, and that
he should have no right to grant a licence or to control the owners’ choice of
person ‘to whom we may grant a licence to share with you.’ Miss Maxwell, who also occupied the flat, had
signed an agreement in identical terms.
It was also
plain from the agreements that each could independently determine his or her
respective agreement within seven days, and it was also clear that there was no
clause which on the face of it was inconsistent with the grant of a licence
rather than a tenancy. There was no doubt that Mr Fielder, and possibly to a
lesser extent Miss Maxwell, were somewhat reluctant to sign. Mr Fielder said he
knew that the flat had previously been allocated at a registered rent, and,
though he was obviously somewhat confused as to its precise legal effect, he
seemed to have assumed that that entitled him to be what he himself called a
registered rent tenant.
The owners’
agent with whom he was dealing made it plain that, although Mr Fielder could
sign the agreement relating to flat 3, or could return to the smaller flat
which he and Miss Maxwell had just vacated, or could remove himself from the
premises altogether, the agreement which he (the agent) was proffering was not
caught by the Rent Act in his view, and that the registered rent was irrelevant
to the considerations then facing the parties. In the end, as a concession, he
added clause 6 to enable the occupier to determine the agreement at any time on
seven days’ prior written notice. Mr Fielder and Miss Maxwell stayed in flat 3
until on June 1 1977 Miss Maxwell, having duly terminated her agreement by
written notice under clause 6, departed, having had her £30 deposit returned to
her pursuant to the agreement. Thereafter Mr Fielder remained in occupation,
paying £54.17p a month in respect of the months of June and July 1977.
The learned
judge, in a detailed and well-thought-out judgment, weighed the pros and cons
of the ‘tenancy’ view and the pros and cons of the ‘licence’ view, and then
stated his conclusion. If, on a proper view of the agreements, neither Mr
Fielder nor Miss Maxwell had exclusive possession, neither could be a tenant;
their liability would be several and not joint. The learned judge concluded
that the joint signing of document P3 (a letter) in the presence of a director
of the plaintiff company, and the simultaneous signing of documents P1 and P2
in such presence, meant that P1 and P2 constituted in substance and in fact one
single agreement made between the plaintiffs on the one hand, and the defendant
and Miss Maxwell jointly on the other.
Mr Rich agreed
that it was true that neither agreement would have been signed without the
other, and the joint signature of the letter reinforced that point, but in his
submission that did not make them one single agreement, nor did it make them a
joint agreement, if there was any difference between those two concepts. In his
submission what happened afterwards did not help in construing the nature of
the agreement, and the learned judge reached his conclusion–that this amounted
to a joint tenancy, and not to separate licences–only by looking at extraneous
matter. Was that a right conclusion?
Lord Gifford wished to repeat the arguments he advanced in Somma
v Hazelhurst (1978) 246 EG 311, [1978] 1 EGLR 69 that, in considering
questions arising under the Rent Acts, the court must look to the substance and
reality of the transaction rather than merely to the form. The court was
entitled, indeed bound, to look back at the documents and the surrounding
circumstances. One could not alter the nature of a document by giving it a
wrong label. Apart possibly from matters of emphasis, his Lordship would find
little to quarrel with in that submission. But Lord Gifford finally submitted
that the court must have regard to the policy of the Rent Acts and should be
astute to prevent their evasion. With that his Lordship did not go–at least,
not to the extent that Lord Gifford would wish.
It seemed to
his Lordship that if the parties succeeded in producing an agreement which, in
all the circumstances of the case, was in fact a licence and not a tenancy,
they should not be prevented from that course by the courts bending over
backwards to ensure that landlords did not manage to avoid the provisions of
the Rent Act. The mere fact that an agreement which did not fall within the
Rent Act might result in large profits for the owners did not necessarily mean
that agreement should be construed as a tenancy and not as a licence.
Lord Gifford
cited Samrose Properties Ltd v Gibbard [1958] 1 WLR 235, a case
where a sum paid by the occupier was held to be commuted rent; Elmdene
Estates Ltd v White [1960] AC 528, where a premium was masquerading
as a sale at an undervalue; and Regor Estates Ltd v Wright [1951]
1 KB 689, another premium case. As his Lordship saw it, the most one could
derive from those decisions was that in Rent Act cases the court had to be
specially wary, and specially careful to see that the wool was not pulled over
its eyes, and specially careful to see that things like premiums were not being
used to conceal payment of rent, and so on; but in the present case there
seemed to his Lordship to be nothing disguised as a licence, no one was
disguising exclusive possession to make it look like something else.
Either
exclusive possession did exist on the agreement, and the facts against which it
had to be read, or it did not. Lord Gifford had drawn their Lordships’
attention to the judgment of His Honour Judge McDonnell, reported in the Legal
Action Group Bulletin for October 1977, at p 230, a judgment which had been
praised by Cumming-Bruce LJ in Somma (supra). Whether the result arrived
at by Judge McDonnell was correct was a matter into which their Lordships did
not have to delve. There were obvious differences between that case and this.
The main point in Lord Gifford’s submission was that it was possible and
necessary in the circumstances of this case to read those two agreements
together, so that they formed a composite unit granting a joint tenancy to Mr
Fielder and Miss Maxwell. Finally, he submitted, in circumstances such as this,
where the learned county court judge had considered the facts of the case, the
Court of Appeal should not, even if it would not have come to the same
conclusion, interfere with that judgment.
There was a
temptation to strain the facts or the law in favour of the occupier because the
owner was obviously trying to avoid the provisions of the Rent Act, in order, inter
alia, to increase his profits. But there seemed to be nothing wrong in
trying to escape onerous provisions, or increase one’s profits, if one could
legitimately do so. If there was here truly a licence, and not a tenancy
dressed up in the verbiage or trappings of a licence, the landlord was entitled
to succeed. It was not a situation where the court should allow itself to be
influenced one way or the other by its sympathies. In Shell-Mex & BP Ltd
v Manchester Garages Ltd [1971] 1 WLR 612, Buckley LJ said at p 619 that
it might be that the plaintiff company in that case had adopted a device to
avoid the possible consequences of the Landlord and Tenant Act 1954 which would
have affected a transaction being one of landlord and tenant, but that in his
judgment ‘one cannot take that into account in the process of construing such a
document to find out what the true nature of the transaction is.’ See also per Lord Evershed MR in Foster
v Robinson [1951] 1 KB 149, and Scott LJ in Maclay v Dixon
[1944] All ER 22, which cases are collated in the judgment of Morris LJ in Samrose
Properties Ltd v Gibbard [1958] 1 WLR 235, at p 244.
Mr Fielder
must show that the two agreements must be72
read together and, being so read, were effective to create a joint tenancy
between himself and Miss Maxwell on the one hand, and the owners on the other.
It was here that his case faltered. If the two agreements were separate, there
was no exclusive possession and no tenancy. If joint, how was the obligation
upon each occupier to pay his consideration of £54.17 per month to be
construed? In order to find the
intention of the parties to be to create a joint tenancy, it would be necessary
to read the agreements as making Mr Fielder and Miss Maxwell jointly and
severally liable for the total consideration of £108.34 per month, as opposed
to the several liability under the agreement of £54.17 each. As Cumming-Bruce
LJ said in Somma, this would not be construing the agreement between the
parties, but re-writing it in the absence of any claim for rectification or any
allegation of fraud. That passage was one of the rationes decidendi in
the Somma case, and their Lordships were accordingly bound by it.
That, in his
Lordship’s view, concluded the litigation, and there was no need to enter upon
an examination of all the difficulties which might arise over notices to quit
if these documents were to be construed as one joint tenancy. Miss Maxwell had
now departed, but it seemed that if there were to be a joint tenancy her notice
to quit and her departure would not absolve her from liability to pay the full
rent herself should Mr Fielder fail to do so.
His Lordship
would allow the appeal.
Roskill LJ,
agreeing, said that ultimately it was a question of construction, and his
approach was identical to that of Geoffrey Lane LJ. No doubt the agreements in
this case could be used as a device to avoid the operation of the Rent Act
1968, but this did not mean that the court must refuse to give effect to those
agreements, properly construed against the factual background, and prevent them
from having the effect which the property owner sought to achieve. His Lordship
did not think it right to approach the question of construction with any
prejudice one way or the other. The court was concerned to see that those
vulnerable to pressure were not subjected to it, but it was important that the
court should hold a balance fairly between the two, and his Lordship would
respectfully adopt the phrase of Geoffrey Lane LJ, that the court should be
specially careful to see that no wool was being pulled over its eyes. His
Lordship thought it a legitimate approach to remember that at the same time
another agreement was entered into with Miss Maxwell. He was quite unable to
take the view that the agreement entered into could be condemned as a sham.
When construed against the factual background, did it represent the bargain as
made? His Lordship did not think that in
every case where documents of this kind were used, it must necessarily follow
that the court would reach the conclusion that a licence was involved and not a
tenancy. It must in every case depend on the factual background against which
the agreement had to be construed.
STEPHENSON LJ,
also agreeing, said that he concurred that what was granted and obtained was
not a tenancy masquerading as a licence. The document, in its natural meaning,
was an unambiguous licence to occupy.
The appeal
was allowed, and an order made for possession in 28 days. The plaintiffs were
awarded the costs of the appeal, but not of the hearing in the court below,
because a condition of their leave to appeal out of time was that they would
not seek to disturb that order. Their Lordships made an order that the
defendants’ costs be paid out of the Legal Aid Fund unless the Law Society
objected within 14 days.