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R v Rent Officer for the London Borough of Camden, ex parte Felix

Rent Act 1977 — Applications by landlord of four properties for judicial review refused — Applications to rent officer to register fair rents signed by some but not all joint tenants — Whether Turley v Panton principle applicable — Landlord’s allegations of non-receipt of copies of applications and invitations to consultations — Effect of lengthy delay by landlord in applying for judicial review — Judge’s discretion — Applications ‘singularly lacking in merit’ but raised questions as to rent officer’s jurisdiction — It should be explained that the relevant agreements purported to grant non-exclusive licences, not tenancies, and issues had been raised elsewhere as to their status, but for the purpose of the present applications for judicial review it had been agreed that the transactions should be assumed to create tenancies

In the first
of the four cases the application to the rent officer had been signed by two
out of the three joint tenants, the third having moved out — The judge held
that in this case it was proper to infer from the evidence that the two who
signed were authorised to apply on behalf of the third as well as themselves —
He preferred, however, to rest his decision on the alternative ground that the
evidence justified the conclusion that the arrangement made with the landlord
was the grant of a joint tenancy to the three, to be followed on the departure
of one by a joint tenancy of the other two — The challenge to the rent
officer’s jurisdiction accordingly failed

In the second
case the application to the rent officer was signed by one only of the five
joint tenants — The landlord admittedly received notice of this application and
an invitation to attend a consultation, but he did not attend — All five
tenants attended and the rent officer took the opportunity of obtaining
signatures to the application from the other four joint tenants — He then sent
out a further letter to the landlord, enclosing a copy of the amended
application, and issued an invitation to the fresh consultation — That letter,
addressed to the landlord’s proper address, was returned, with a note that it
had not been ‘called for’ — The landlord evidently did not take business-like
steps to ensure receipt of mail — The rent officer proceeded to determine a
fair rent — This was challenged by the landlord on the grounds that the first
application was invalid as made by one out of five joint tenants and that the
rent officer’s determination was a nullity as the landlord had not received the
amended application or the notice of the second consultation — As the judge
found clear evidence that the first application was made with the full
authority of all five joint tenants, it was unnecessary to consider the effect
of the non-receipt of the amended application and invitation to a second
consultation — Here again the landlord’s challenge failed

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