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L Batley Pet Products Ltd v North Lanarkshire Council

 


 


 

 

 


good and tenantable condition the Premises and every part thereof with all necessary maintenance, cleansing and rebuilding and renewal works and amendments whatsoever regardless of the age or state of dilapidation of the buildings for the time being comprised in the Premises and irrespective of the cause or extent of the damage necessitating such repair, maintenance, renewal, rebuilding or others and including any which may be rendered necessary by any latent or inherent defects in the Premises …”

 

 


5.3 Expenses

 

 


By the expiration  and sooner determination of the period of the Sub– Lease (or as soon as the licence hereby granted shall become void) if so required by the Mid-Landlord and at the cost of the Sub-tenant to dismantle and remove the Works and to reinstate and make good the Premises and to restore it to its appearance at the date of entry under the Sub-Lease, such reinstatement to be carried out in the same terms (mutatis mutandis) as are stipulated in this Licence with respect to the carrying out of the Works in the first place (including as to consents, the manner of carrying out works, reinstatement, inspection, indemnity, costs and otherwise).”

 

 


(a)     Under the Minute of Agreement it claimed £253,766.44 for both the removal of the alterations and the repair of the sub-let premises; and in the alternative

(b)    under clause 5 of the sublease, which imposed on the Council the obligations of clause 3.12 of the lease, it claimed £189,692.30 for repair of the sub-let premises (excluding the removal of the alterations).

 


12.        Before us, Mr Lindsay sought to defend the Extra Division’s dismissal of Batley’s second basis on the grounds (i) that the claim arose under clause 2.5 of the Minute of Agreement which prevailed over the sub-lease and required written notice, (ii) that Batleys claim was under clause 5.3 of the sub-lease and it had not carried out the repair works which entitled it to reimbursement, (iii) that Batley had not averred that the defects occurred during the currency of the sub-lease and (iv) that Batley had not given written notice to the Council of the requirement to repair and reinstate before the expiry of the sublease.

 

 


proceed from no disrepair, ergo no need to repair’ to no disrepair, ergo no need to put or keep in the required condition’. Leaving aside cases, such as this, where there is special provision for there to have been prior knowledge or notice in the covenantor, all that is needed, in general terms, to trigger a need for activity under an obligation to keep in (and put into) a given condition is that the subject matter is out of that condition.”

 

 


[T]he exercise of construction is essentially one unitary exercise in which the court must consider the language used and ascertain what a reasonable person, that is a person who has all the background knowledge which would reasonably have been available to the parties in the situation in which they were at the time of the contract, would have understood the parties to have meant. In doing so, the court must have regard to all the relevant surrounding circumstances. If there are two possible constructions, the court is entitled to prefer the construction which is consistent with business common sense and to

reject the other.”

 


the sub-Lease. The purpose of that deemed incorporation is clear in the concluding words of clause 5: it was to give the midlandlord the power of irritancy (forfeiture) of the sub-lease if the sub-tenant breached its obligations under the Minute of Agreement. In my view the Council’s case depends on a rather convoluted argument that clause 5 of the Minute of Agreement subjected clause 2.5 to the requirement of writing (in clause 5.8 of the head lease) because the sub-tenant’s obligation in that clause was conditional upon the mid-landlord requiring the sub-tenant to remove the licensed works. I strongly prefer the simpler construction of clause 5 of the Minute of Agreement.

 

 


25.      I am therefore satisfied that the Minute of Agreement did not require the mid– landlord to give written notice of its requirement that the licensed works be removed at the end of the sub-lease. Batley avers that it instructed a named firm of chartered surveyors to produce a schedule of dilapidations and that on 22 December 2008 a named surveyor from that firm informed a named official of the Council that the mid-landlord would be requiring the reinstatement of the premises to their original condition.  Those averments meet the wellknown test of relevancy in Jamieson v Jamieson 1952 SC (HL) 44, Lord Normand at 49-50.  The appellant is not to plead evidence; and as the Council can not only enquire of its official but also take steps to recover from Batley and the surveyor any documents relevant to those averments, there is no unfair lack of notice of the case Batley seeks to prove.

 

 

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