Carega Properties SA (Formerly Joran Developments Ltd) v Sharratt
(Before Lord DIPLOCK, Viscount DILHORNE, Lord ELWYN-JONES, Lord FRASER OF TULLYBELTON and Lord RUSSELL of KILLOWEN)
Rent Act–Appeal against possession order–Scope of Schedule 1, para 3 to Rent Act 1968 (now Schedule 1, para 3 to Rent Act 1977)–Meaning of ‘family’–Whether a person between whom and deceased statutory tenant there is no connection by way of consanguinity, of affinity, of adoption or of regular sexual intercourse can be a member of the tenant’s ‘family’–Relationship in present case was platonic and quasi-filial–18 years of ‘kindness and affection’–Held that appellant was not entitled to become a statutory tenant by succession after death of elderly widow–House of Lords refused to undertake a general consideration in this case of meaning of ‘a member of the original tenant’s family’
This was an
appeal from the decision of the Court of Appeal reversing the decision of Judge
Solomon at the West London County Court. He had refused the landlords an order
for possession of flat 48, Coleherne Court, London SW5, on the ground that the
relationship between the late statutory tenant, Lady Salter, and the defendant
(the present appellant) constituted a ‘familial nexus.’ The Court of Appeal decision was reported at
(1978) 247 EG 645, [1978] 2 EGLR 72.
Derek Wood QC
and Miss T Moorhouse (instructed by Douglas Mann & Co) appeared on behalf
of the appellant; Ronald Bernstein QC and J Gaunt (instructed by Alexander
Gowers & Co) represented the respondents.
Rent Act–Appeal against possession order–Scope of Schedule 1, para 3 to Rent Act 1968 (now Schedule 1, para 3 to Rent Act 1977)–Meaning of ‘family’–Whether a person between whom and deceased statutory tenant there is no connection by way of consanguinity, of affinity, of adoption or of regular sexual intercourse can be a member of the tenant’s ‘family’–Relationship in present case was platonic and quasi-filial–18 years of ‘kindness and affection’–Held that appellant was not entitled to become a statutory tenant by succession after death of elderly widow–House of Lords refused to undertake a general consideration in this case of meaning of ‘a member of the original tenant’s family’
This was an
appeal from the decision of the Court of Appeal reversing the decision of Judge
Solomon at the West London County Court. He had refused the landlords an order
for possession of flat 48, Coleherne Court, London SW5, on the ground that the
relationship between the late statutory tenant, Lady Salter, and the defendant
(the present appellant) constituted a ‘familial nexus.’ The Court of Appeal decision was reported at
(1978) 247 EG 645, [1978] 2 EGLR 72.
Derek Wood QC
and Miss T Moorhouse (instructed by Douglas Mann & Co) appeared on behalf
of the appellant; Ronald Bernstein QC and J Gaunt (instructed by Alexander
Gowers & Co) represented the respondents.
In his speech
LORD DIPLOCK said: The only question in this appeal is one of construction of
the Rent Act 1968. It83
is whether a person between whom and the deceased statutory tenant of a
dwelling-house there is no connection by way of consanguinity, of affinity, of
adoption (de jure or de facto) during minority or of regular sexual intercourse
(past or present) can be a member of the tenant’s family within the meaning of
Schedule 1, paragraph 3, to the Act, so as to entitle him to become the
statutory tenant of the dwelling-house by succession to the deceased.
The facts of
the instant case, if they are not unique, are certainly most unusual, and for
that reason they do not, in my opinion, provide a suitable occasion for this
House to undertake a general consideration of what persons may be included in
the expression ‘a member of the original tenant’s family’ where at the time of
the tenant’s death there did exist between him and the claimant to a statutory
tenancy by succession a relationship of one or other of the various kinds to
which I have referred above. In particular, the difficult question posed by Dyson
Holdings Ltd v Fox [1976] QB 503 as to the extent, if any, to which
changed social attitudes towards cohabitation between unmarried couples and the
offspring of such liaisons may have enlarged the meaning of the expression
‘family’ in the Rent Act 1968 does not arise in the instant case and is best
left for consideration in the light of the actual facts of a case in which it
does arise.
The deceased
statutory tenant of Flat 48, Coleherne Court, London SW5, of which the
respondents claim possession, was Lady Salter, the widow of a High Court judge,
who had died as long ago as 1929. In 1957, when she was aged 75, she first met
the appellant, Mr Sharratt, who was then aged 24. They shared a mutual interest
in politics and the theatre and a close friendship grew up between them. In the
following year, Lady Salter suggested that Mr Sharratt should come to live in
her flat at Coleherne Court. He fell in with this suggestion and for the first
three years that he resided there he paid her £4 a week for bed and breakfast.
After that the payments ceased. Lady Salter at all times paid the rent of the
flat but the other expenses were shared between them. This continued until her
death at the age of 94 in April 1976.
The
relationship between them throughout was platonic and filial. He behaved
towards her as a dutiful and affectionate son and looked after her during her
declining years. She would have liked to speak of him as her son, but this was
not acceptable to Mr Sharratt, whose mother was still alive; so they decided
that he would call her Aunt Norah and she addressed him by an affectionate
nickname. There was, throughout, no question of his being financially dependent
on her. All that he did for her over the 18 years that he resided with her in
the flat had no other motive than kindness and affection.
My Lords, the
bare recital of these facts makes one desirous, if one can, to gratify Mr
Sharratt’s wish to continue to reside in the flat where he had lived for so
long before Lady Salter’s death. Judge Solomon in the West London County Court,
where the action by the landlords for possession of the flat was brought, felt
himself able to do so. ‘I have come to the conclusion,’ he said, ‘that Lady
Salter and this defendant achieved through their relationship what must surely
be regarded in a popular sense, and in commonsense, as a familial nexus. That
is to say, a nexus such as one would find only within a family. I am sure Shakespeare’s
man would say: ‘Yes, it is stranger than fiction, but they established a
familial tie. Everyone linked to her through the blood was remote by comparison
with the defendant.”
The reference
to Shakespeare’s man is an allusion to the description ‘base common and
popular’ which in Langdon v Horton [1951] 1 KB 666, 669, Lord
Evershed MR borrowed from Henry V Act IV, Scene 1, to describe the ordinary man
mentioned by Cohen LJ in Brock v Wollams [1949] 2 KB 388 at p
395, where he said: ‘The question the county court judge should have asked
himself was this: Would an ordinary man, addressing his mind to the question
whether Mrs Wollams was a member of the family or not, have answered ‘Yes’ or
‘No’.’ This test, which does no more
than say that ‘family’ where it is used in the Rent Acts is not a term of art
but is used in its ordinary popular meaning, has been repeatedly referred to
and applied in subsequent cases.
The Court of
Appeal (Megaw, Lawton and Browne LJJ) unanimously reversed the judgment of
Judge Solomon. Megaw LJ after quoting the ‘Cohen question’ went on to say, in
my view quite correctly:
It is for
this court to decide, where such an issue arises, whether, assuming all the
facts found by the judge to be correct, the question may, as a matter of law,
within the permissible limits of the meaning of the phrase ‘a member of the
tenant’s family’ be answered ‘Yes.’
Megaw LJ and
Lawton LJ both answered the question with a confident ‘No’; and so would I.
Browne LJ agreed, but rather more hesitantly. However, he also thought that the
Court of Appeal was bound to allow the appeal because of two previous decisions
of its own, Gammans v Ekins [1950] 2 KB 328 and Ross v Collins
[1964] 1 WLR 425.
Gammans v Ekins was a case of cohabitation by an unmarried couple, a
relationship which raises questions upon which I find it unnecessary and
inappropriate to enter for the purpose of disposing of the instant appeal. Ross
v Collins, on the other hand, was much like the instant case, save that
the sexes of the older party, who was devotedly cared for, and the younger
party who did the caring, were reversed. As my reason for dismissing the
instant appeal, I would not seek to improve upon what was said there by my
noble and learned friend (then Lord Justice Russell):
Granted that
‘family’ is not limited to cases of a strict legal familial nexus, I cannot
agree that it extends to a case such as this. It still requires, it seems to
me, at least a broadly recognisable de facto familial nexus. This may be
capable of being found and recognised as such by the ordinary man–where the
link would be strictly familial had there been a marriage, or where the link is
through adoption of a minor, de jure or de facto, or where the link is ‘step-,’
or where the link is ‘in-law’ or by marriage. But two strangers cannot, it
seems to me, ever establish artificially for the purposes of this section a
familial nexus by acting as brothers or as sisters, even if they call each
other such and consider their relationship to be tantamount to that. Nor, in my
view, can an adult man and woman who establish a platonic relationship
establish a familial nexus by acting as a devoted brother and sister or father
and daughter would act, even if they address each other as such and even if
they refer to each other as such and regard their association as tantamount to
such. Nor, in my view, would they indeed be recognised as familial links by the
ordinary man.
I would
accordingly dismiss this appeal with costs up to June 12 1979, being the date
on which the respondents became aware that a legal aid certificate had been
issued to the appellant. It being conceded on behalf of the appellant that the
order of the Court of Appeal as drawn up omitted the decision of the Court of
Appeal that the present appellant should pay the present respondent’s costs of
the appeal to that court. The order of that court as drawn up should be varied
by adding ‘And that the costs of the plaintiffs of this appeal be taxed and
paid by the defendant.’
Agreeing that
the appeal should be dismissed, VISCOUNT DILHORNE said: The meaning to be given
to the words ‘a member of the original tenant’s family’ in Schedule 1,
paragraph 3, to the Rent Act 1968 is in my view a question of law. ‘Family’ is
a word the content of which varies with the context in which it is used. When
used in a statute, it has not in my opinion the same meaning as the word
‘household.’ While a household may
consist only of members of a family, it can include persons not capable of
being so regarded. I accordingly cannot accept the argument that ‘family’ in
the Act can be read as meaning ‘household.’
While the question which Cohen LJ said in Brock v Wollams
[1949] 2 KB 388, 395 the county court judge should have asked himself, namely:
‘Would an ordinary man, addressing his mind to the question whether Mrs Wollams
was a member of the family or not, have answered ‘Yes’ or ‘No’,’ has not
infrequently been84
posed, the answer to the question is not likely to extract any more than the
judge’s personal view. It is to the highest degree unlikely that a judge would
ever say, ‘I think the answer is ‘Yes’ but I think an ordinary man would say
‘No” and if a judge did that he would in my opinion be wrong.
It is for the
judge to construe the statute and it is for him to state his conclusion as to
the meaning to be given to the word ‘family’ in the context in which it
appears, giving it, unless the context otherwise requires, its ordinary natural
meaning.
To such a
question if posed in the present case, I would unhesitatingly answer that the
appellant was not a member of Lady Salter’s family. Indeed were it not for the
argument addressed to us in the House I would have been content to express my
agreement with the judgments of Megaw and Lawton LJJ and with the speech of my
noble and learned friend Lord Diplock.
LORD
ELWYN-JONES, LORD FRASER OF TULLYBELTON and LORD RUSSELL OF KILLOWEN also
agreed that the appeal should be dismissed.
The appeal was dismissed, the order for costs being
as mentioned at the end of the speech of Lord Diplock.