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Appleton v Aspin and others

Rent Act 1977, section 98(1) — Whether a court is prohibited from making a possession order against a protected tenant who has agreed with the purchaser of the subject dwelling-house to join with the landlord, the vendor, in giving vacant possession on completion — Appeal from decision of Millett J, who held that a court was not so prohibited — The agreement by the protected tenant not to enforce any right of possession or occupation against the purchaser was contained in a special condition in the contract of sale, which the tenant signed (in addition to the other two parties) in order to bind herself to the purchaser — The tenant did not receive any monetary consideration — The tenant did not give possession to the purchaser after completion and the latter brought proceedings for specific performance — The tenant claimed that, as she was a protected tenant, the special condition was rendered inoperative by section 98(1) of the 1977 Act — Held by the Court of Appeal, reversing the decision of Millett J, that the case was covered by the general principle of Barton v Fincham that the agreement of a protected tenant to give up possession cannot be enforced against her if she is entitled under the Act to remain in possession and chooses to do so — Where the legislature has restricted the jurisdiction of the court, as section 98(1) does, the parties cannot by agreement give the court a jurisdiction which the statute says that it is not to have — The court distinguished the decision in Dudley and District Benefit Society v Emerson, upon which Millett J had relied, and rejected an alternative argument based on the suggestion that the tenant could be treated as having assigned her tenancy without monetary consideration to the purchaser, a transaction recognised by section 120 of the 1977 Act — Appeal by tenant allowed

The following
cases are referred to in this report.

Barton v Fincham [1921] 2 KB 291

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