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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> IDC Group Ltd & Ors v Clark & Ors [1991] EWCA Civ 3 (25 June 1991) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/1991/3.html Cite as: [1991] EWCA Civ 3 |
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B e f o r e :
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IDC GROUP LTD AND OTHERS | ||
V | ||
CLARK AND OTHERS |
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Herring has requested Pall Mall to make an opening in the party wall between Nos 30 to 35 and No 23 at the level of the fifth floor of Nos 30 to 35, so as to provide No 23 with the fire escape routes hereinafter mentioned, and with the approval and consent of the trustees and the Friends' Provident, Pall Mall have carried out such works as the parties hereto acknowledge.
Then I must read the larger part of the operative part of the deed:
(1) The trustees hereby grant their licence and consent to Pall Mall, having made the opening in the wall dividing Nos 30 to 35 and No 23 at the position indicated in red on the attached plan numbered 531/1 and to the erection of the doorway now erected in the said opening.
(2) The trustees and Pall Mall do hereby each of them grant licence to Friends' Provident and to Herring and other of the occupiers for the time being of No 23, (a) to pass through the said opening and doorway in case of fire only and in such case to enter into Nos 30 to 35 by such means and to pass along its passages, corridors and stairways and through its entrance doorway to the public street and (b) in case of fire only to use the fire escape routes from the seventh floor parapet of No 23 to the roof and balconies of Nos 30 to 35 on the St James's Square frontage and a similar fire escape route on the same level on the Pall Mall frontage, and to pass along its passages, corridors and stairways and through its entrance doorway to the public street, which said fire escape routes are more particularly shown on the attached plans numbered 1508/23, 1508/10 and 1508/11.
(3) Each of the parties hereto covenant with the other that they will use their best endeavours to ensure that no obstruction is made so as to prevent free access to the said fire escape routes.
(4) The expressions 'the trustees', 'Pall Mall', 'Friends' Provident' and 'Herring' shall include their respective successors in the title and assigns.
the matters specified in Part II of the Fourth Schedule hereto.
Part II of the fourth schedule contains the following words:
The entries on the Property and Charges Register of title number NGL 357395 excluding any charges to secure money.
There is therefore in the underlease itself an express subjection of the demised premises to the matters referred to in the register of the headlease and the register of the headlease in turn refers to the 1969 deed.
the property is sold together with the rights, but subject to the rights exceptions, reservations, covenants, stipulations and conditions, whereof a copy has been already supplied to the purchaser or her solicitors contained or referred to in the said lease and the purchaser shall be deemed to purchase with full knowledge thereof and shall not raise any objection or requisition in respect thereof.
The contract also contains an admission by Mrs Clark that she had inspected the property. The property was transferred to Mrs Clark by a registered transfer dated March 29 1985.
(1) Whether the deed dated March 28 1969 referred to in paragraph 3 of the amended statement of claim created any rights capable in law of binding the defendant.
(2) Whether any rights created by the said deed are binding on the defendant as registered proprietor at HM Land Registry of the underlease dated October 2 1981 referred to in paragraph 4(2) of the amended statement of claim in view of the contents of the register relating thereto at HM Land Registry.
an easement, right, privilege or benefit in, over, or derived from land
He said that this escape route was a right, privilege or benefit in or over no 22. Therefore section 60 operated to transfer a freehold interest in it.
By contrast, there are many cases in which land is expressly conveyed subject to possible incumbrances when there is no thought at all of conferring any fresh rights on third parties who may be entitled to the benefit of the incumbrances. The land is expressed to be sold subject to incumbrances to satisfy the vendor's duty to disclose all possible incumbrances known to him, and to protect the vendor against any possible claim by the purchaser if a third party establishes an overriding right to the benefit of the incumbrances against the purchaser. So, for instance, land may be contracted to be sold and may be expressed to be conveyed subject to the restrictive covenants contained in a conveyance some 60 or 90 years old. No one would suggest that by accepting such a form of contract or conveyance a purchaser is assuming a new liability in favour of third parties to observe the covenants if there was for any reason before the contract or conveyance no one who could make out a title as against the purchaser to the benefit of the covenants.
In matters relating to the title to land certainty is of prime importance. We do not think it desirable that constructive trusts of land should be imposed in reliance on inferences from slender materials.
It is important always to bear in mind that it is of the greatest importance that the title to land should be capable of being ascertained in accordance with well-known procedures. To raise constructive trusts which do not fit into the conveyancing machinery currently operating, thereby giving rise to liabilities of which purchasers might otherwise not be aware, is a dangerous course to pursue.
Judgment was given for the defendant with costs: plaintiffs to pay also the third party's costs. Leave to appeal was given if leave was necessary.
The electronic text of this judgment was provided by Estates Gazette, whose assistance is gratefully acknowledged.