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Dibbs and others v Campbell and another

Rent Act 1977, Case 19 in Schedule 15, and Housing Act 1980, section 52 —- Protected shorthold tenancy — Failure to comply with technical requirements of section 52(1)(c) of 1980 Act — Purported surrender of tenancy and creation of new shorthold tenancy — Whether effective — The parties intended to enter into a protected shorthold tenancy for one year but there was a failure to comply with section 52(1)(c) — Landlords could have sought possession at the end of the year and asked the court to exercise discretion under section 55(2), but instead the parties decided to retrieve the position by the surrender of the existing tenancy (whatever it was) and the grant by the landlords of a new protected shorthold tenancy, this time for three years — A formal deed of surrender of the tenancy was executed and a refund of rent over a registered amount was made to the tenants — It had been intended that the tenants should vacate the property for a short time before the new shorthold tenancy was created, but, in the inclement weather conditions then prevailing, this was not in fact done — A notice complying with section 52(1)(b) was served on the tenants and the grant of what was intended to be a new shorthold tenancy for three years was made

The tenants
went into possession for three years and at the end the landlords served the
appropriate notice of proceedings123 for possession under Case 19 — The judge below made an order for possession in
favour of the landlords — He found that a protected shorthold tenancy for three
years had been entered into by the parties and that it had been properly
determined in accordance with Case 19 by the landlords — On appeal it was
argued, inter alia, on behalf of the tenants that the purported surrender of
the original tenancy was ineffective, as the tenant had not physically vacated
the premises — The result, it was submitted, was that the purported grant of a
protected shorthold tenancy for three years fell foul of section 52(2) of the
1980 Act as being ‘granted to a person who, immediately before it was granted,
was a protected or statutory tenant of that dwelling-house’ — After considering
authorities, including Collins v Claughton and Scrimgeour v Waller, the court held that it was well
established that it was not necessary in order to effect the surrender of a
protected tenancy for the tenant physically to remove himself from the
premises; the surrender can be achieved by the conduct and intention of the
parties — This was the position here; the new protected shorthold tenancy had
thereafter been properly created; and three years later properly terminated —
Appeal dismissed

The following
cases are referred to in this report.

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