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Saleh v Robinson

Rent Act 1977, sections 119, 123 and 125 — Prohibition and recovery of premiums — Appeal from decision of county court judge — Claim for recovery of premium alleged to have been paid by plaintiff to the defendant, who was the sitting tenant, as a condition of a protected tenancy being granted to the plaintiff — Appeal by defendant from judge’s decision in favour of plaintiff and cross-appeal by plaintiff seeking a variation in amount recovered — Question as to payment in respect of furniture, fixtures and fittings — Part played by estate agent — Possibility of a claim for secret profit

Plaintiff,
who was looking for a new flat, was introduced to an estate agent, who was
instrumental in making the subsequent arrangements — It appeared that the agent
told the plaintiff that she would have to pay £12,000 for the flat, or for the
curtains and carpets, which would give her the entree, and that he told the
defendant occupier that all that could be obtained for the flat or for the
curtains and carpets was £10,000 — Apparently £2,000 ‘stuck in the pockets’ of
the agent — Plaintiff paid over the £12,000, defendant received the £10,000,
defendant surrendered his tenancy to his landlords, the Church Commissioners,
and the latter (after some initial difficulty) accepted the plaintiff as
tenant, eventually granting her a lease for nine years

The county
court judge found that the defendant required the sum of £10,000 as a condition
of surrendering his tenancy and vacating his flat — This was a sine qua non of
the new lease granted by the Church Commissioners — On these facts, and relying
on the decision of the House of Lords in Farrell v Alexander, the judge found
that the payment was a premium within section 119(1) of the 1977 Act and
recoverable under section 125

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