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Minay v Sentongo

Rent Act 1977 — Technical jurisdictional point in a landlord’s claim for possession based on Case 11 in Schedule 15 to the 1977 Act — Landlord, in order to expedite recovery of possession which she required for her own occupation, made use of the special procedure under the Rent Act (County Court Proceedings for Possession) Rules 1981 — Under these rules it is a condition that the tenant should have been given the requisite notice that possession might be recovered under Case 11 — A landlord who adopts this special procedure by originating application under the 1981 rules cannot, the Court of Appeal have now made clear, ask the court to exercise its dispensing power under Case 11 to waive the requirement to the notice — The dispensing power is exercisable where possession is sought by the ordinary procedure involving the issue of a summons, the service of particulars of claim and so on — In the present case, however, it was established that the landlord had in fact sent the relevant notice to the tenant, but he had not received it — Thus, although the notice had not been ‘given’, as required by the Act, the landlord had properly resorted to the special procedure and honestly believed that she had given the tenant the proper notice — In these particular circumstances the Court of Appeal held that the judge had jurisdiction to exercise the dispensing discretion given to him by Case 11 — Observations by Ackner LJ on the procedure generally, on the scope of the dispensing power and on the county court judge’s power to order proceedings incorrectly commenced by originating application to be continued, if necessary, as if begun by ordinary summons — Tenant’s appeal dismissed

This was an
appeal by the tenant, Jack Sentongo, from a decision of Judge Coulthard at
Bloomsbury and Marylebone County Court in favour of the landlord, Mrs Elsie
Minay, on an originating application by the landlord for possession of a flat,
flat 2 at 48-49 Gloucester Square, London W2.

G Aldous
(instructed by H Omar & Co) appeared on behalf of the appellant; J Elvidge
(instructed by Sherringtons) represented the respondent.

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