(Before Lord Justice STEPHENSON, Lord Justice LAWTON and Lord Justice GEOFFREY LANE)
Third Court of Appeal case on question whether transaction was a non-exclusive licence or a protected tenancy–A property owner can order his affairs so as to prevent his property being enmeshed in the Rent Acts, but present case distinguished from Somma v Hazlehurst and Aldrington Garages v Fielder–Evidence of prior oral agreement in terms appropriate to tenancy–‘Licence’ did not reflect parties’ true agreement–Tenancy disguised in trappings of a licence–County court judge justified in deciding that ‘licence’ document was a sham
This was an
appeal by the plaintiff, John O’Malley, from the dismissal by Judge Dow at
Clerkenwell County Court of his action against Colin Michael Seymour for
possession of a ground-floor flat at 13 Ribblesdale Road, London N8. This was
the third case in chronological order before the Court of Appeal raising the
question whether a document constituted a non-exclusive licence excluding the
application of the Rent Acts or whether it created a tenancy within the Acts.
The fourth case, Demuren v Seal Estates Ltd has already been
reported in ESTATES GAZETTE: see (1979) 249 EG 440, [1979] 1 EGLR 102.
Miss M T
Catterson (instructed by Kingsford, Dorman & Co, agents for Merrill,
Skerritt & Co, of Luton) appeared on behalf of the appellant; D Watkinson
(instructed by Tyrer, Roxburgh & Dawson) represented the respondent.
Third Court of Appeal case on question whether transaction was a non-exclusive licence or a protected tenancy–A property owner can order his affairs so as to prevent his property being enmeshed in the Rent Acts, but present case distinguished from Somma v Hazlehurst and Aldrington Garages v Fielder–Evidence of prior oral agreement in terms appropriate to tenancy–‘Licence’ did not reflect parties’ true agreement–Tenancy disguised in trappings of a licence–County court judge justified in deciding that ‘licence’ document was a sham
This was an
appeal by the plaintiff, John O’Malley, from the dismissal by Judge Dow at
Clerkenwell County Court of his action against Colin Michael Seymour for
possession of a ground-floor flat at 13 Ribblesdale Road, London N8. This was
the third case in chronological order before the Court of Appeal raising the
question whether a document constituted a non-exclusive licence excluding the
application of the Rent Acts or whether it created a tenancy within the Acts.
The fourth case, Demuren v Seal Estates Ltd has already been
reported in ESTATES GAZETTE: see (1979) 249 EG 440, [1979] 1 EGLR 102.
Miss M T
Catterson (instructed by Kingsford, Dorman & Co, agents for Merrill,
Skerritt & Co, of Luton) appeared on behalf of the appellant; D Watkinson
(instructed by Tyrer, Roxburgh & Dawson) represented the respondent.
Giving
judgment, STEPHENSON LJ said: This is an appeal from a judgment of His Honour
Judge Dow, given on November 4 1977 in the Clerkenwell County Court, dismissing
the plaintiff-appellant’s claim for possession of the ground-floor flat, 13
Ribblesdale Road, London N8. The whole issue in this case, as the judge said
and as Miss Catterson has submitted on behalf of the unsuccessful plaintiff,
is: on what terms did Mr Seymour, the defendant/respondent, enter into
occupation of it? Did he go in under a
short-term lease for six months? Or is
he, as the plaintiff alleges, merely a licensee for a fixed term?
This is the
third attempt which this court has had to consider recently by an owner of
property to provide accommodation for somebody desperately in need of it
without attracting the restrictions imposed on the rent he can charge and, more
particularly, on his powers of eviction by the Rent Act 1974; and once again we
have to consider whether the attempt has been successful or whether the judge
was right in this case in holding that it failed. That is a problem which has
perhaps been recently made clearer than it was at the time Judge Dow gave his
judgment that the court ought to approach without any bias in favour of finding
that the agreement was a tenancy and a genuine tenancy. What Buckley LJ said in
the case of Shell-Mex & BP Ltd v Manchester Garages Ltd
[1971] 1 WLR 612 at p 619 has to be borne in mind. He said:
It may be
that this is a device which has been adopted by the plaintiff company to avoid
possible consequences of the Landlord and Tenant Act 1954, which would have
affected a transaction being one of landlord and tenant; but, in my judgment,
one cannot take that into account in the process of construing such a document
to find out what the true nature of the transaction is. One has first to find
out what is the true nature of the transaction and then see how the Act
operates upon that state of affairs if it bites at all. One should not approach
the problem with a tendency to attempt to find a tenancy because unless there
is a tenancy the case will escape the effects of the statute.
We have here
the advantage of a note of the learned judge’s judgment taken by Miss
Catterson, who has presented the appellant’s case. By an unfortunate oversight
it has not been presented, or at any rate presented in time, to the
respondent’s solicitors and counsel for agreement, or to the learned judge for
his approval. We agreed to look at it subject to Mr Watkinson’s right, on
behalf of the respondent, to challenge its correctness. He does not do so and I
am not surprised. It is an admirably clear note; but we have to bear in mind
that it has not been seen or approved by the judge when we come to look at the
criticisms which are made of it by Miss Catterson. I do not wish it to be
thought that in the ordinary way we would look at a judgment of a county court
judge in the form of a note which he had not had an opportunity of revising.
But I am quite satisfied, from the excellence of the note and what Mr Watkinson
has said about it, having compared it with the note of Lord Gifford (who was
then counsel for the respondent in the county court) and with a note taken by
his solicitor, that we can safely act upon the note; but we must not, of
course, attribute every word as it is set out in that note to the judge,
because he might have wished to revise or correct it in minor particulars.
The questions
which arise are, it seems to me: first, what on its true construction is the
nature of the written agreement which the plaintiff relied and relies in his
claim for possession, against the background of the evidence? Secondly, does the evidence prove and entitle
the judge to hold that the document, on its proper construction, does not truly
represent or reproduce the real transaction between the parties? Those are the questions which arise in all
these cases. In this case the learned judge has, I think, construed the
document as a tenancy rather than a licence because he said that ‘it in fact
created a tenancy’ (according to the note); but even if the document is at any
rate capable of being construed as a licence, the judge has clearly found that
it was a sham and did not embody the real transaction between the parties.
He approached
the document in this way:
I remind
myself of the warnings issued over the years in cases dealing with the Rent Act
legislation that courts must be astute to see that a coach and horses are not
driven through the Rent Acts or, as Lord Denning has put it, that an
‘articulated vehicle’ is not driven through them. Unless I am persuaded to
construe the agreement in this case as a licence, it is quite plain that it is
otherwise a tenancy and that on the expiry of the six months specified in the
agreement
which is
exhibited
Mr Seymour
could hold over as a protected tenant. If, on the other hand, it is a licence,
then the period has expired and the plaintiff is entitled to the order which he
seeks.
In my
judgment, that passage, if it accurately records the learned judge’s concluded
opinion, does indicate an approach too favourable to the defendant; but, for
the reasons which I shall try to give, I do not think that the judge would have
reached any different conclusion had he modified that language and that
approach to accord with the judgments of this court in Somma v Hazlehurst,
decided on March 3 of this year, and Aldrington Garages v Fielder,
decided on July 7 of this year*.
*Somma
v Hazlehurst was reported in (1978) 246 EG 311, [1978] 1 EGLR 69 and Aldrington
Garages v Fielder at (1978) 247 EG 557.
He went on to
say that it was ‘essential to look at the background to this matter.’ He stated that the plaintiff had ‘his main
home in Eire where he has his family and farm. He has become the owner of more
than one property in or around London, and he makes periodic trips to this
country to look after the property he owns and to see if the necessary ‘moneys’
payable by the occupants has been received.’
Then he called
attention to other facts which were common ground. First of all, among the
properties which the plaintiff owned was a property at 88 Cecile Park. Part of
that property he advertised in, I think, the Evening Standard as to
let–‘a flat to let’ in that property–and it was that advertisement which the
defendant, Mr Seymour, saw; it was that advertisement which he answered, and it
was as a result of answering that advertisement that he met the plaintiff at
that other property. Now that property was let off in five or six bed-sitting
rooms, and there was evidence before the learned judge of rent books in respect
of two of those; rent books held by occupants117
who were not occupants under licence but were tenants. The learned judge found
that the plaintiff was not a resident landlord and quite clearly knew very well
that he was, as the learned judge put it, ‘saddled with the people in those
bedsitters.’ He rejected the plaintiff’s
evidence that he did not know that. He said if the plaintiff had been buying
the property on that basis–that is to say the basis that the occupants were
licensees–one would expect him to be furnished by the vendor’s solicitors with
the relevant licence agreements.
At the
defendant’s meeting with the plaintiff the plaintiff told the defendant that he
did have another flat which might be suitable for the defendant. So both went
off to that other flat, which was the ground-floor flat at 13 Ribblesdale Road
of which the plaintiff has been refused possession. The defendant was told–and
this is all common ground–that he would have to pay a deposit in relation to
the condition of the flat and a month’s rent in advance, and he would be
allowed into occupation for a period of six months. So far, the background is
one of negotiating for a suitable flat to let.
The learned
judge then went on to deal with the written agreement which the plaintiff told
him he got hold of from another property owner; an agreement which was clearly
devised–and it is similar to other agreements which this court has looked at–to
avoid the consequences of the 1974 Rent Act. That agreement, it was common
ground, was presented to the defendant for signature on September 11 1976. But
before that agreement was presented to him or signed, the evidence showed an
oral agreement which is not in terms, as Miss Catterson rightly pointed out,
referred to or found as an agreement by the learned judge. It is, however, in
my judgment, the basis of his finding that the written agreement signed on
September 11 1976 was a sham, and it emerges clearly from the evidence of the
plaintiff in cross-examination. The judge’s note of the plaintiff’s evidence
(which we have got) reads in this way:
I told him I
would want a month’s rent in advance. He did pay this sum. He said he would
return next day to give me the deposit money and a month’s rent. He said he
wanted to move in that week-end. It was a firm verbal agreement made on the
evening. I took him to no 13. I expressed in no uncertain terms that the
tenancy was for six months only.
The agreement
itself is in these terms:
This
agreement is made the 11th day of September 1976 between John O’Malley
(hereinafter called ‘the owner’) of the one part and Colin Michael Seymour (hereinafter
called ‘the licensee’) of the other part,
and a curious
feature, not referred to by the judge in the note which we have of his
judgment, is that the agreement is signed in the top right-hand corner by Mr
Seymour, the defendant, against the words which I have just read.
The agreement
goes on:
Whereby it is
agreed as follows: (1) In consideration of the sum of £520 payable by the
licensee to the owner as hereinafter mentioned, the owner grants to the
licensee the right to use in common with others who have been granted or will
be granted the like right the premises known as
and then
filled in in manuscript
ground-floor
back flat, 13 Ribblesdale Road, Crouch End, London N8, together with the
fixtures furniture furnishings and effects now in the said premises for six
months from the date hereof.
(2) The licensee agrees with the owner as
follows: (i) to pay the said sum of £520 by equal instalments of £86.66 per
month on the first day of each month, the first of such payments to be made on
the signing hereof; (ii) not to damage or cause any damage to the walls or
floors of the said premises or any part thereof and to preserve the fixtures
furniture and furnishings and effects from being destroyed or damaged in any
way and to replace all broken glass; (iii) upon the termination of this licence
(whether by effluxion of time or otherwise) to pay to the owner a sum equal to
£7.50 of the cost of washing and cleaning all counterpanes, blankets and
curtains soiled, whether or not by the licensee, during the period of this
licence; (iv) not to impede the use of the said premises or any part of it not
nor [sic] upon the terms that each shares the cost of gas electricity
and telephone services to impede the use of any services supplied to the said
premises or any part of it by such other persons not exceeding three in number
to whom the owner shall grant licence
I think the
‘not’ is probably right, although it might more readily have been ‘nor.’
(v) not to assign this agreement nor to permit
any other person, except as licensed by the owner, to sleep reside in or share
occupation of the said premises or any part of it at any time; (vi) not to do
or suffer to be done in or upon the said premises any act or thing which may be
a nuisance damage or annoyance to the owner or to the occupiers of any
adjoining property or which may vitiate any insurance on the premises against
fire or otherwise or increase the ordinary premium thereon;
(3) Provided as follows: (i) if the said
instalments or any of them or any part thereof shall be in arrear or unpaid for
at least seven days after the same shall have become due, or (ii) in the event
of any breach by the licensee of the agreements herein contained, then the
owner may terminate this agreement and the licensee’s rights hereunder shall
absolutely determine but without prejudice to any other remedies of the owner
hereunder.
(4) The owner agrees with the licensee to pay all
general and water rates payable in respect of the premises but not any charges
for the supply of gas or electricity or for the use of the telephone.
(5) The licensee shall pay the sum of
and that is
left blank
which shall be
retained by the owner until the termination of this agreement as a deposit to
secure to the owner the performance by the licensee of the agreements on the
part of the licensee herein contained, but without prejudice to the owner’s
rights under and in respect of this agreement. At the termination of this
agreement and on the licensee vacating the said premises and subject to the
proper performance by the licensee of his obligations herein contained, the
owner will refund the said deposit to the licensee.
(6) It is hereby agreed and declared that
possession of the premises vests in and is retained by the owner subject to the
right of the licensee to use of the premises given by this licence.
In fact a
deposit was paid by the defendant by cheque dated September 9 for £50, and the
learned judge also saw a receipt undated for £86, which it was accepted was
paid before the defendant went into occupation.
The plaintiff
sought to persuade the judge that before the agreement was signed he handed to
the defendant a letter–a letter, I think, in the same form as was in evidence
in the Aldrington Garages case and there subjected to some criticism.
Nothing more need be said about that letter in this case, or what (if any) its
effect could be on the transaction as a whole, because the defendant denied
ever having received the document which the plaintiff swore he had given him
and the learned judge accepted the defendant’s denial.
The learned
judge said of the defendant: ‘I am not dealing with an illiterate or an
unsophisticated person. Mr Seymour has a good job and I found him an honest and
straightforward witness.’ The defendant
conceded that he had read through the agreement which I have read before he
signed it, so there was no doubt about that; this agreement was signed by a
sophisticated and literate person. The learned judge added that he did ‘not
think for a moment that he’ (the defendant) ‘appreciated the legal effect of
the term ‘licensee.’ He was bothered
about the limitation of the period to six months because he was reluctant to
take the place with that limitation, but in the event he was so anxious for
accommodation that he accepted it.’
The learned
judge then went on to consider the written agreement. He referred to the
opening provision for the payment of £520 by instalments and said ‘the crux of
the case is to be found immediately in clause 1 of the agreement . . .’, that
is in the opening words which stamp the agreement with the attempt, at any
rate, to make the grant a grant of a right to use in common with others, a
grant to a licensee to share with others, not a right of exclusive possession
granted to a tenant. Of that the learned judge said: ‘I am convinced that that
wording was designed to try and defeat one of the tests used to distinguish
between a licence and a tenancy, that is to118
say whether there is exclusive possession. Mr O’Malley’ (the plaintiff) ‘was
honest enough to admit that he never contemplated for a moment foisting any
other persons on the defendant. He knew that Mr Seymour wanted exclusive
occupation for his own purposes. There was no suggestion ever made in the six
months that Mr Seymour should accept any other person.’
The learned
judge went on: ‘Because he,’ that is the defendant, ‘signed a document
referring to him as a licensee, the court is asked to infer that he does not
have a tenancy under the Rent Act and that the plaintiff is entitled to the
order he seeks.’ That might be
criticised as an over-simplification of the plaintiff’s case, but the judge
went on: ‘The defendant says that this is not a genuine licence agreement but
in effect a sham to avoid the Rent Acts, and that he is therefore entitled to
remain.’
The learned
judge’s opinion was that ‘Both parties here intended that Mr Seymour should
occupy the flat for the payment of a periodic sum; Mr O’Malley intended that to
be so and that Mr Seymour would not be disturbed in his occupation of the
premises.’
Then the
learned judge went through the rest of the agreement part by part. One must
remember, looking at his comments on the clauses, that they follow his initial
comment on the first part of clause 1, which was that that was, as I understand
his judgment, a device, and an unsuccessful device, to impart to the agreement
between the parties a fundamental characteristic which it did not have. I do
not think it necessary to refer to the learned judge’s comments on the
individual clauses. Miss Catterson does not quarrel substantially with any of
them. Apart from the constant references to ‘licensee’ and ‘licence,’ a label
which may or may not be a true description of the nature of the agreement and
the relationship between the two parties to it, there are clauses which are
consistent, perhaps only consistent, with a licence; there are clauses which
are consistent–perhaps more consistent, though none I think only
consistent–with a tenancy; and there are clauses which are in my judgment,
neutral and ambiguous. But I would accept Miss Catterson’s submission that to
turn this written agreement into a tenancy would require the court to rewrite
substantial parts of it and that it is itself a licence and would by itself
create a licence.
The learned
judge went on to say that he had watched both the parties in the witness box
and that he accepted the defendant’s denial that he had ever seen this letter,
as I have already stated. He came ‘unhesitatingly to the conclusion’–and I
quote from the note–‘that this is an attempt by the plaintiff to avoid the
provisions of the Rent Acts. To set up this agreement as a licence is a sham;
it in fact created a tenancy and I find that Mr Seymour is holding over as a
protected tenant’ and so he gave judgment for the defendant.
Miss
Catterson, in what; in my judgment, was a model argument, has challenged that
conclusion of the learned judge. She submits that the written agreement is
appropriate to, indeed is, a licence, not a tenancy. She accepts that the
learned judge was fully entitled to look at the background in order to see what
the real transaction between the parties was. She does not challenge the right,
and the duty, of the judge to find that the written agreement was a sham if
that finding is justified on the primary facts which he finds, but she submits
that his conclusion that this agreement was a sham is an inference which he
ought not to have drawn from the facts he found.
She concedes
that the learned judge was right in recording a fact (which is not in his note
of the evidence) that the plaintiff did concede–and I had better repeat the
actual words, ‘that he never contemplated for a moment foisting any other
persons on the defendant. He knew that Mr Seymour wanted exclusive occupation
for his own purposes. There was no suggestion ever made in the six months that
Mr Seymour should accept any other person.’
But she says, first of all, that there are in this agreement clear,
genuine provisions relating to sharing: in clause 1, which I have read; in
clause 2(iv), which the judge called an obscure clause, about not impeding the
use of the premises or services supplied to them by others; and in clause 6,
agreeing and declaring that the possession of the premises was, among other
things, retained by the owner.
She relies
strongly on the fact found by the learned judge, and indeed admitted by the
defendant, that he had read this agreement before he signed it, and the finding
of the judge that he was not illiterate or unsophisticated. Though she cannot
challenge the judge’s finding that the defendant did not understand the legal
consequences of the label ‘licence’ and ‘licensee’ the only part of the
agreement which he was really interested in was the limitation of his
occupation to six months. She said it was clear from his evidence that he did
not regard himself as entitled under the agreement to stay on beyond the six
months’ period, and that evidence is quite inconsistent with his believing that
he had a right to stay on given him by the law; he knew that that right was
entirely dependent upon the will of the plaintiff, and that could only be true
of a licence and not of a protected or regulated tenancy. ‘I read the
document,’ said the defendant, ‘I noticed the limitation to six months’ period.
I told the plaintiff that I wanted accommodation for a period longer than six
months. The plaintiff gave me to understand that the agreement could be
renewed,’ and in cross-examination: ‘I do accept that I read through the whole
of the agreement before I put my signature on it. The only query I raised was
as to the six months’ period. The plaintiff told me that it was his custom not
to give an agreement for longer than six months’ and then the plaintiff said he
did not envisage any difficulty about renewing the agreement after six months.
‘I did notice the terms about people not exceeding three being nominated to
share the flat with me. I thought I would be able to pay the rent myself and
therefore no question would arise of bringing in other people to share in the
payment of the rent.’
Miss Catterson
correctly submits that if there is no exclusive possession there cannot be a
tenancy, although the converse is not true, and here, she says, are provisions
in this agreement which show that possession is not to be exclusive; there is a
right in the owner, the plaintiff, to share it with the defendant, and there is
provision for others, not more than three, to share it. She submits that not
only is that the position demonstrated by the written agreement, but that is
what the judge should have found the oral agreement between the parties to have
been when it was made firmly on the previous evening. She submits that the
statement of both parties that there was no intention of sharing at the time
the agreement was entered into is not really relevant, because an agreement may
give you a right to share even if you do not intend to exercise it.
The great
difficulty in the way of her submissions is the finding of the learned judge
that all these so-called rights to share, or references to sharing, were bogus,
they were all part of the sham. If the ‘rights’ really existed, if they were
really agreed upon between the parties, they would take this groundfloor flat
out of the Rent Act 1974 and enable the plaintiff to turn the defendant out at
the end of six months. But the learned judge has found that that was not the
agreement between the parties. The real transaction between the parties was the
grant of a six months’ tenancy with all the legal consequences that flow under
the Rent Act 1974 from that fact.
Miss Catterson
summarised her contentions as well as she had made them. She said that the
learned judge was wrong to give the weight he did to the evasion of the Rent
Act. I have already indicated the extent of my agreement with that submission,
but my opinion is that it did not alter the judgment which he would have come
to had he had later decisions of this court before him.
Then she
submits that the plaintiff knew that the defendant wanted exclusive occupation
and would not contemplate putting anybody else in, but that is not inconsistent
with his119
having an agreed right to do so. I have already dealt with that. But in
connection with that submission it is relevant to point out, as was pointed out
by my Lord, Geoffrey Lane LJ, in the course of the argument, that this case differs
very materially from the two other cases, the Somma case and the Aldrington
Garages case, not only that in one of those cases there was evidence about
the possible use of that right which would have entitled the court to regard
the provision of it as genuinely agreed and not a dead letter or a sham, but in
each of those cases there was a contemporaneous agreement signed by a person
wishing to share the same accommodation and granting exactly the same rights on
the same terms, and those two agreements had to be read together. So there was
absent from those cases the striking feature of this case that there was, in
fact, no one to share this flat with the defendant and no intention of there
being anyone to share this flat with the defendant during the period of his
occupation.
Finally, Miss
Catterson submitted that the defendant having read this agreement before he
signed it, the court can look at the agreement and discern in it the true
nature of the relationship between the parties. Of course it must look at the
agreement, but the question whether it discerns there the true relationship
between the parties has, in my judgment, already been decided for us by the
learned county court judge. There was, in my opinion, clearly evidence on which
he could have found that this agreement was a sham. I would go further and say
on the evidence that was before him, if I had taken the same view of the
witnesses as he did–as no doubt I should–I should have reached the same
conclusion as he did, that it was a sham.
For those
reasons, in spite of the excellent argument of Miss Catterson, I would affirm
the judgment of the learned judge and dismiss the appeal.
Agreeing,
LAWTON LJ said: A property owner is entitled to arrange his affairs so as not
to get his property enmeshed in the Rent Acts. What he is not entitled to do is
to arrange his affairs in one way, which brings his property within the Rent
Acts, and then to dress them up in another way so as to give the impression
that it is outside the Rent Acts. The fact that he gets someone else to
co-operate with him in that dressing-up does not affect the fact that he has
done some dressing-up. What he has done is a sham.
The learned
judge in this case decided that the plaintiff had been party to a sham. He had
dressed up what was a letting for six months to look like a licence. If there
was evidence to support such a finding, the learned judge was entitled to make
it. In my judgment, the evidence was overwhelming that that was what the
plaintiff had done. It was particularly convincing evidence because most of it
came out of his own mouth.
Mr Seymour met
the plaintiff on September 9 1976. The meeting had come about because the
plaintiff had inserted an advertisement in the Evening Standard that he
had a flat to let. At the meeting the plaintiff and the defendant discussed the
letting of a flat. In the end there was no letting of the flat which had been
advertised, but the pair of them went to the flat which is the subject-matter
of this appeal. The plaintiff, as my Lord has pointed out, never at any time
suggested to the defendant that he was to have anything other than exclusive
possession of the flat. In the course of the discussion with the defendant on
September 9 1976 the plaintiff used the language of letting. I read from the
judge’s notes of evidence: ‘I told him I would want a month’s rent in advance.
. . . He said he wanted to move in that week-end. It was a firm verbal
agreement. . . . I expressed in no uncertain terms that the tenancy was
for six months only.’ As a result of
that meeting and before the agreement was produced and signed the defendant
paid the plaintiff no less than £80 or thereabouts, being a month’s rent in
advance as asked for by the plaintiff, and had also paid the sum of £50 by way
of deposit to protect the plaintiff from what he might well have called
dilapidations. It was only after the money had been paid and after, in the
plaintiff’s own words, a firm verbal agreement had been made that this document
dated September 11 came into existence. That document did not reflect the
agreement which had been made. Nevertheless he put it forward as an agreement
which had been made.
In my
judgment, the county court judge was entitled to find–indeed I would have
found–that the licence agreement was a sham. I agree with my Lord that this
appeal should be dismissed.
Also agreeing,
GEOFFREY LANE LJ said: This appeal demonstrates how much each case of this sort
must depend upon its own particular facts. The owner of the premises here was
trying to put forward the same sort of arguments as did the owners in Somma’s
case, decided in March of this year, and the Aldrington Garages’ case,
decided on July 7. Here, however, the basic, if not the only, problem which had
to be decided was whether the written document which was proffered by the
plaintiff and signed by the defendant purporting to record the agreement
already reached between the parties was a genuine attempt to record the agreed
terms or whether it was a sham. In other words, was it an attempt to disguise
what was truly a tenancy in the trappings of a licence? The document itself, which was signed by the
defendant, bore many similarities to the equivalent documents in the two cases
which I have mentioned, but here there was, to say the very least of it, ample
evidence that the document was indeed a sham. The plaintiff’s own answers in
cross-examination to which my Lords have already referred really concluded the
matter against him, because he effectively conceded that the prior oral
agreement was firmly concluded and, secondly, that it was in the terms of a
tenancy and not in the terms of a licence. The opposite contention was, on the
evidence, scarcely arguable. There was plainly a tenancy here and not a
licence. I would dismiss the appeal accordingly and would only add my tribute
to the excellence of Miss Catterson’s approach and argument in this appeal.
The appeal
was dismissed with costs.