Bromley Park Garden Estates Ltd v George
(Before Lord Justice FARQUHARSON and Lord Justice BELDAM)
Rent Act 1977 — Effect on subtenancy of surrender of superior tenancy — Argument based on section 137(3) of the Rent Act untenable in Court of Appeal in view of decision in Pittalis v Grant — Submission that decision in Cow v Casey was reached per incuriam having regard to section 139(1) of the Law of Property Act 1925 — Limited effect of section 139(1) — County court judge’s grant of possession order in favour of freeholders approved
The facts so
far as material to the questions of law involved in this case were as follows —
The appellant occupied a flat on a regulated subtenancy granted by Barclays
Bank plc in a building leased by the bank, of which the ground floor was used
by the bank for its business and the upper two floors were divided into flats
of which the appellant’s flat was one — The bank held a lease of the whole
building which was due to expire on December 25 1989, but it assigned the
residue of the term on April 12 1989 to F & H Services Ltd, who surrendered
what little was left of the term on December 22 to the freeholders, the
respondents to this appeal — Thus the appellant, whose regulated subtenancy had
become a monthly subtenancy, and the respondent freeholders were brought into
direct relationship — It was the precise nature and consequences of this
relationship which gave rise to the legal problems involved in this appeal —
The respondents served a notice to quit on the appellant, who held over
claiming the benefit of the Rent Act 1977 — The county court judge decided in favour
of the respondents, holding that the case turned solely on questions of law and
expressing the view that they could be resolved in the appellant’s favour only
by the House of Lords
On appeal the
appellant claimed to be entitled to the protection of the Rent Act and put
forward two submissions in support of this claim — One of the submissions,
based on section 137(3) of the Rent Act, was acknowledged by the appellant to
be unsustainable in the Court of Appeal in view of the court’s decision in
Pittalis v Grant and the earlier decision of the House of Lords in Maunsell v Olins (which
remained authoritative except in relation to agricultural holdings, where it
was specifically reversed by the last limb of section 137(3)) — The second
submission, however, gave rise to argument
Rent Act 1977 — Effect on subtenancy of surrender of superior tenancy — Argument based on section 137(3) of the Rent Act untenable in Court of Appeal in view of decision in Pittalis v Grant — Submission that decision in Cow v Casey was reached per incuriam having regard to section 139(1) of the Law of Property Act 1925 — Limited effect of section 139(1) — County court judge’s grant of possession order in favour of freeholders approved
The facts so
far as material to the questions of law involved in this case were as follows —
The appellant occupied a flat on a regulated subtenancy granted by Barclays
Bank plc in a building leased by the bank, of which the ground floor was used
by the bank for its business and the upper two floors were divided into flats
of which the appellant’s flat was one — The bank held a lease of the whole
building which was due to expire on December 25 1989, but it assigned the
residue of the term on April 12 1989 to F & H Services Ltd, who surrendered
what little was left of the term on December 22 to the freeholders, the
respondents to this appeal — Thus the appellant, whose regulated subtenancy had
become a monthly subtenancy, and the respondent freeholders were brought into
direct relationship — It was the precise nature and consequences of this
relationship which gave rise to the legal problems involved in this appeal —
The respondents served a notice to quit on the appellant, who held over
claiming the benefit of the Rent Act 1977 — The county court judge decided in favour
of the respondents, holding that the case turned solely on questions of law and
expressing the view that they could be resolved in the appellant’s favour only
by the House of Lords
On appeal the
appellant claimed to be entitled to the protection of the Rent Act and put
forward two submissions in support of this claim — One of the submissions,
based on section 137(3) of the Rent Act, was acknowledged by the appellant to
be unsustainable in the Court of Appeal in view of the court’s decision in
Pittalis v Grant and the earlier decision of the House of Lords in Maunsell v Olins (which
remained authoritative except in relation to agricultural holdings, where it
was specifically reversed by the last limb of section 137(3)) — The second
submission, however, gave rise to argument
The second
submission involved the quite bold assertion that Cow v Casey had been decided
per incuriam — The ground for this was the claim that the attention of the
court in that case had not been drawn to section 139(1) of the Law of Property
Act 1925 — It was submitted that the effect of section 139(1) was that the
respondents’ estate in the present case must be deemed the reversion for the
purpose of preserving the same incidents and obligations as would have affected
the original reversion if there had been no surrender — Beldam LJ, however,
pointed out that the preservation must be understood to be limited to the
duration of the unexpired portion of the subtenancy only — The object was to
preserve the same incidents and obligations as would have affected the original
reversion if there had been no surrender or merger — The word ‘deemed’ in
section 139(1) did not create the relationship of statutory landlord and tenant
between the freeholders and the subtenant on the expiry of the contractual term
— In support of the view that section 139(1) did not have the effect for which
the appellant contended Beldam LJ not only cited a string of decisions in which
Cow v
Casey was approved but, interestingly, mentioned the fact that counsel of pre-eminence
in landlord and tenant law as the tenant’s counsel in Cow v Casey (Lionel
Blundell) had not put forward an argument based on the subsection
In the result
neither of the appellant’s arguments could succeed and the appeal was dismissed
— Leave to appeal to the House of Lords was refused but a stay of the
possession order was granted to allow for a petition to the House for leave to
appeal
The following cases are referred to in
this report.
Cow v Casey [1949] 1 KB 474; (1949) 65
TLR 84; [1949] 1 All ER 197, CA
Critchley v Clifford [1962] 1 QB 131;
[1961] 3 WLR 763; [1961] 3 All ER 288, CA
Hobhouse v Wall [1963] 2 QB 124; [1963] 2
WLR 604; [1963] 1 All ER 701, CA
Legge v Matthews [1960] 2 QB 37; [1960]
2 WLR 620; [1960] 1 All ER 595, CA
Maunsell v Olins [1975] AC 373; [1974] 3
WLR 835; [1975] 1 All ER 16, HL
Parker v Jones [1910] 2 KB 32
Pittalis v Grant [1989] QB 605; [1989] 3
WLR 139; [1989] 2 All ER 622; [1989] 2 EGLR 90; [1989] 28 EG 126
This was an appeal by the occupier, David
Charles George, from the decision of Judge Dobry, at Bloomsbury County Court,
holding that the freeholders, Bromley Park Garden Estates Ltd, the
respondents to this appeal, were entitled to possession of the flat occupied by
the appellant at 237C Brecknock Road, Tufnell Park, London N19.
G W Roddick QC and Philip Reed
(instructed by Bolt Burdon) appeared on behalf of the appellant; Robert Reid QC
and Miss Karen Lord (instructed by Hamlin Slowe) represented the respondents.
Giving the first judgment at the
invitation of Farquharson LJ, BELDAM LJ said: The appellant, Mr David
Charles George, appeals to the court against the order of His Honour Judge
Dobry of May 21 1990 holding that the respondents, Bromley Park Garden Estates
Ltd, were entitled to possession of the flat occupied by the appellant and
known as 237C Brecknock Road, London N19. The learned judge also gave judgment
for £202.50 mesne profits and ordered the appellant to pay the costs of the
proceedings but directed that this order was not to be enforced without leave
of the court. The appellant has occupied the flat for over 10 years. It is
situated in a building which is on the apex of the corner of Fortess Road and
Brecknock Road in the London Borough of Camden. The building is very close to
Tufnell Park Station and has three floors. The ground floor was occupied by
Barclays Bank plc and used in its banking business. The upper two floors were
divided into four flats of which the appellant’s flat was one. The building as
a whole was known as 156-158 Fortess Road and 235 Brecknock Road. In 1968 the
owners of the freehold were St John’s College, Cambridge. By a lease dated
January 17 1968 they let the whole of the building, including the four flats,
to Barclays Bank for a term of 21 years from December 25 1968. On September 25
1978 St John’s College sold the freehold reversion to the respondents. On July
1 of the following year Barclays Bank plc sublet the flat 237C Brecknock Road
to the appellant for a term of two years. The appellant’s sublease was renewed
from time to time and on November 27 1985 it was again renewed for a period of
two years and thereafter from month to month.
The lease to Barclays Bank was due to
expire on December 25 1989, but on April 12 1989 they assigned the remainder of
the term to Folkard & Hayward Services Ltd, to whom I shall refer as F
& H Services, who, in turn, on December 22 1989 surrendered their term to
the respondents.
On January 24 1990 the respondents served
notice to quit on the appellant terminating his periodic tenancy on March 5
1990. The appellant held over, claiming to be entitled to the benefit of the
Rent Act 1977. On March 13 1990 the respondents issued proceedings for
possession in Bloomsbury County Court. The facts of the case as I have recited
them are not in dispute and, as the learned judge held, the result of the case
turned solely on questions of law. Those, he said, were beyond argument before
him and could be resolved in the appellant’s favour only in the House of Lords.
Accordingly, he found that the respondents were entitled to an order for
possession.
Before us Mr Roddick, for the appellant,
advanced two arguments in support of his contention that the appellant was a
statutory tenant under the Rent Act 1977 at the date of the hearing before the
learned judge. The basis of the appellant’s first argument was that the
periodic tenancy under which he held the flat, initially from Barclays Bank and
subsequently from F & H Services, was a tenancy to which the provisions of
the Rent Act 1977 applied; that on the surrender by F & H Services on
December 22 1989 of the remainder of the 21-year term his periodic tenancy
continued but with the rights and obligations under its terms being transferred
to the respondents. There was, therefore, the relationship of landlord and
tenant between the appellant and the respondent and to that relationship the
provisions of the Rent Act 1977 applied.
The basis of the appellant’s second
argument was that the appellant could rely upon Part XI of the Rent Act 1977
and in particular section 137(3). When, therefore, F & H Services
surrendered the superior tenancy and it came to an end, the terms of the Rent Act
1977 applied in relation to his flat as if there had been a separate tenancy of
the part of the premises comprising his flat. Mr Roddick acknowledged that this
second argument was untenable in this court, which is bound by the decision in Pittalis
v Grant [1989] QB 605* and by the decision of the House of Lords in Maunsell
v Olins [1975] AC 373. Mr Roddick further acknowledged that at first
sight an earlier decision of this court in Cow v Casey [1949] 1
KB 474 required the court to reject his first argument, but he contended that
the decision in that case was reached per incuriam and that this court
should on that ground disregard it. Alternatively, he said that it was a
decision by a court of two judges on an appeal in an interlocutory matter and
so was not binding on the court.
*Editor’s note: Also reported at [1989] 2
EGLR 90.
It is common ground that the tenancy
created by the grant of the lease for 21 years to Barclays Bank was not a
statutory tenancy under the Rent Act 1977. It was excluded by virtue of section
24(3) as a tenancy to which Part II of the Landlord and Tenant Act 1954
applied. The property comprised in the tenancy included premises which were
used by the bank for the purposes of its business. It was equally not in
dispute that the appellant’s tenancy with Barclays Bank plc was a regulated
tenancy. Mr Roddick, relying upon the case of Parker v Jones [1910]
2 KB 32, asserted that by voluntarily surrendering the remainder of their term F
& H Services could not thereby prejudice the appellant’s tenancy. In those
circumstances, at common law the appellant’s tenancy continued as a tenancy
between the subtenant and the reversioner. As the tenancy of the appellant was
a regulated tenancy, on surrender the respondents took subject to that tenancy.
This argument, however, was rejected in
the case of Cow v Casey (supra) on similar facts.
It had been advanced on behalf of the appellant tenant in that case by Mr
Lionel Blundell. At p 476 he submitted:
Where, however, the head tenancy came to
an end by surrender before the determination of the subtenancy, the subtenant
became the direct tenant of the head landlord. The result is that on June 24
the defendant as subtenant became the direct tenant of a dwelling-house to
which the Rent Restrictions Act applied under the plaintiffs, the head
landlord. It was not until June 26 that the plaintiffs could claim possession.
Then s3 of the Act of 1933 protected the defendant.
This argument was dismissed by Lord
Greene MR at p 479 as:
. . . completely misconceived.
Lord Greene referred to section 15(3) of
the Increase of Rent and Mortgage Interest (Restrictions) Act 1920 dealing with
the case of subtenancy. He said:
In my opinion, it is impossible to rely
on that section. It deals with the case of a tenant, whom I will call the head
tenant, whose tenancy is determined either as the result of an order or
judgment for possession or ejectment, or for any other reason. It would cover,
therefore, quite clearly the case where the head tenancy is determined by a
surrender. But the subsection is limited to a case where the tenant whose
tenancy is determined, that is to say, the head tenant, is tenant of a
dwelling-house to which the Act applies. I should have thought that is clearly
what the Act means. The company was not a tenant of a dwelling-house to which
the Act applies; it was tenant of a dwelling-house to which the Act did not
apply, and the fact that they had granted a subtenancy of this flat could not
alter that circumstance.
And later in his judgment he said:
If that was not the case, the position
would be fantastic. It would simply mean that the tenant of a house to which
the Act did not apply could grant a subtenancy of a part and then, his own
tenancy having been brought to an end, could leave the landlord saddled with a
statutory subtenant; in other words, it would put the head tenant in a position
to foist upon the head landlord a statutory tenant by carving out of the house
demised to him a small portion and subletting it. Subsection (3) permits
nothing of the kind, in my opinion.
Thus the court held that when the
interest of the subtenant was determined, he became a trespasser in the
premises and not entitled to the protection of the Rent Act. Mr Roddick argues
that this decision was reached per incuriam. The court’s attention had
not been drawn to section 139(1) of the Law of Property Act 1925 and he says
that the respondent’s estate or interest is by that section to be deemed the
reversion for the purpose of preserving the same incidents and obligations as
would have affected the original reversion had there been no surrender by F
& H Services of the term.
I do not consider that section 139(1) has
the effect claimed for it by Mr Roddick. I have no doubt that the purpose of
the section is to preserve the ability to enforce the covenants and conditions
of the sublease for the benefit both of the sublessee and the holder of the
next vested right to the land, but for the unexpired portion of the sublease
only, for the purpose is to preserve the same incidents and obligations as
would have affected the original reversion had there been no surrender or
merger. In my view, the use of the word ‘deem’ in this context is not apposite
to create the relationship of statutory landlord and tenant between the
freeholder and the sublessee on the expiry of the contractual term. Moreover,
having regard to the pre-eminence of counsel for the tenant in Cow v Casey
in the field of the law of landlord and tenant, I find it inconceivable
that if the section had made any difference to his argument he would not have
advanced it. It is equally extremely unlikely that the Master of the Rolls and
Wynne-Parry J would have overlooked the point if it had a bearing on the case.
But these are not the only difficulties which stand in the way of the
appellant’s first argument. The decision in Cow v Casey (supra)
has been referred to in subsequent cases without disapproval of the principle
that in the circumstances of that case the subtenant ceased to have any
residual right to possession after his existing right had been determined. In Legge
v Matthews [1960] 2 QB 37 Pearson LJ, as he then was, referred to it
without disapproval; in Critchley v Clifford [1962] 1 QB 131 at p
143 Willmer LJ also referred to the decision without disapproval and in Hobhouse
v Wall [1963] 2 QB 124 Upjohn LJ, as he then was, at p 130 said:
Where, therefore, the landlord of
premises determined a tenancy by surrender, or where it expired, if part of
those premises was subject to the Rent Restrictions Acts, the subtenant of that
part could not plead the Rent Restrictions Acts against the head landlord
although, of course, he had had that protection against his own immediate
landlord.
Finally, in Maunsell v Olins
[1975] AC 373 Lord Reid, Viscount Dilhorne and Lord Wilberforce all considered
the decision in Cow v Casey and appear to have accepted that it
was rightly decided. In those circumstances I do not think it is open to this
court to depart from the principle laid down in Cow v Casey. I am
fortified in this view by the fact that to give effect to the argument for the
appellant would, in Lord Wilberforce’s words in Maunsell v Olins (supra),
be to give protection to subtenants of individual dwelling-houses in
. . . complexes, industrial or business
or in any large estate of any kind. To do this would represent a very great
enlargement of the rights of subtenants . . .
It would also substantially detract from
the combined effect of section 23(1) of the Landlord and Tenant Act 1954 and
section 24(3) of the Rent Act 1977. Accordingly, I would reject the appellant’s
first argument. As Mr Roddick has conceded that his second argument cannot
succeed in this court, it is not necessary for me to consider it. I would
therefore dismiss the appeal.
FARQUHARSON LJ agreed and did not add
anything.
The appeal was dismissed with costs;
order for costs not to be enforced without leave of the court; application for
leave to appeal to the House of Lords was refused; but stay of order for
possession for six weeks provided petition for leave to appeal is filed within
that time.