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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Spring House (Freehold) Ltd v Mount Cook Land Ltd [2001] EWCA Civ 1833 (12 December 2001) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2001/1833.html Cite as: [2001] NPC 182, [2002] 2 All ER 822, [2001] EWCA Civ 1833, [2002] 1 P & CR DG23 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM CENTRAL LONDON COUNTY COURT
HIS HON. JUDGE RICH Q.C.
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL Wednesday 12th December 2001 |
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B e f o r e :
and
LORD JUSTICE RIX
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SPRING HOUSE (FREEHOLD) LTD. |
Respondent |
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- and - |
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MOUNT COOK LAND LTD. |
Appellant |
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Smith Bernal Reporting Limited, 190 Fleet Street
London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7421 4040, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Andrew Walker (instructed by Finers Stephens Innocent for the Respondent)
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Ward and Lord Justice Rix:
"All that piece or parcel of ground with the messuage or dwelling house and all other erections thereupon built situate and being on the West side of and numbered 70 and 71 in Wells Street and on the South side of Margaret Street in the Parish of St. Marylebone in the County of London and which said premises are known as St. Andrews National Schools and with the dimensions and abuttals thereof are more particularly delineated and described in the Plan in the margin hereof Together with all yards areas vaults ways lights easements watercourses and appurtenances to the said premises belonging (Except the free passage of water and soil from other premises of the Trustee or the Lessor or his or their tenants through the channels and drains appertaining to the said premises hereby demised and commonly used for that purpose) TO HOLD the said demised premises unto the said Lessees ..."
"That (without such previous written consent as aforesaid) no placard advertisement or announcement of any description shall at any time be exhibited on the outside of the said premises (save and except that there may be exhibited in the windows of the ground floor of the said demised premises any placard advertisement or announcement relating to goods actually dealt in by and in the ordinary course of the business or occupation of the occupant or occupants of the said premises and except that there may be placed on the outside of the said ground floor by means of a suitable fascia board permanently fixed either above the windows and door or on the window sill an inscription showing the name or names or business or occupation or businesses or occupations of the said occupant or occupants) And that no goods shall at any time be or remain placed outside the said premises which or of any nature which the Lessor shall have forbidden to be or to remain so placed."
(The use of a capital "A" is a faithful transcription of the copperplate manuscript in which the lease is drawn even though it otherwise appears to be part of one sentence).
i) Are motor vehicles "goods" within the meaning of that clause? The judge held that they were not. This ruling is the subject of the appeal.ii) Is it apt to say that a motor car is "placed" outside the said premises? The judge held that the word is not inappropriate. There is a cross-appeal by the lessee against that part of the decision.
iii) Are the motor cars placed "outside the said premises"? The judge held that the words meant outside the building even though within the demise. The lessee also challenges this ruling in its respondent's notice.
The meaning of "no goods shall at any time be or remain placed ..."
As for the meaning of "placed".
"Placed is a general word which may be apt to describe vehicles which would be parked. I accept, of course, that if one were using a phrase specifically directed to the parking of vehicles, one would be unlikely to use the word "placed" and "park" would be the apt word. But if one needs a generic word to cover both vehicles and other things, "placing" is as apt a description of leaving them in a position on the ground as any and is the most general word available."
Conclusions as to the meaning of "placed".
(2) In our judgment "place" is such a colourless, general word that it throws no light on the shades of meaning to be given to "goods".
As for the meaning of "goods".
"There is no doubt at all in my mind that the word "goods" can be used to include a motor vehicle and there can be little doubt that, in certain circumstances, it must necessarily be apt to include a motor vehicle. An example would be where the premises were used for the sale of motor vehicles which is indeed one of the uses which is contemplated as a possibility and therefore specifically prohibited in Clause II.8 of this lease. But, the word "goods", in my judgment, is as citations from dictionaries indicate, capable of meaning not only any possessions or personal property, but also more specifically property which is used as merchandise or wares offered for sale.
The sub-clause which I have to construe is in the context of a clause which so far as its first words are concerned, deals with the display of advertisement for business and for goods. The part to which I have already referred deals, amongst other things, with a placard advertisement or announcement relating to goods actually dealt in by the occupant of the premises. It appears to me that in the context of this clause, the use of the word "goods" is intended to be more limited than a word such as "thing" which would have been apt to exclude any item of property by which the lessor might have thought it appropriate to prohibit. I can see the objective in terms of a restriction in the use of the premises, which might embrace the display or accommodation of goods in this more limited sense, falling sensibly within Clause II.9. If the clause had been intended to restrict in every way anything that might have a visual impact upon the passer by or might be restrictive of the use of the premises, more generally than is already provided by the long list of prohibitions in Clause II.8, I think that it would have been necessary to use more specific words than those that have been chosen by the draftsman of this clause.
In case of ambiguity it is accepted that the words must be construed restrictively against the grantor rather than extensively. Goods normally is commonly used with a restricted meaning, albeit that it is capable of a wider and less restricted meaning. In this context, I construe it as having a restricted meaning and vehicles parked on the property as not being goods in the sense used in Clause II.9 ..."
Conclusions as to the meaning of "goods".
"The word "goods" in the section does not appear to have anything other than the ordinary meaning. ... I cannot see why ... (a motor car) does not come within the definition "goods"".
Danckwerts L.J. agreed with that judgment and said at p. 676:-
"In my view, the word "goods" must include all chattels of which physical possession is possible, notwithstanding that they are not easily moveable ..."
The case was, of course, one concerned with the meaning of the word in the statute but the reference to the ordinary meaning of the word is at least persuasive even if it is not conclusive.
The meaning of "outside the said premises".
"It is first to be noted that (the earlier) part of the sub-clause uses indiscriminately "premises" and "demised premises" in the same way as they are used in other clauses which it is not necessary for me to recite also.
That part of the clause, however, is directed to the prohibition of advertisement or the like, visible from outside the premises, whichever premises means in this context. It uses the phrase "on the outside of the said premises" whereas the phrase in the part of the clause which I have to construe uses the phrase "outside the said premises".
In my judgment, in each case, the reference is to the area which is outside the building, albeit that the placards and advertisements for display "on the outside of the said premises" would include, in my judgment, exhibits on the outside railings as they then were, or on the forecourt as it now is. I construe "outside the said premises" in the sub-clause which I have to construe as certainly incorporating the area where the vehicles are in fact parked as being outside the building."
"It is, of course, conceded that in strict conveyancing language the word "premises" is used as meaning the subject-matter of the habendum in a lease ..."
In Bracey v Read [1963] Ch. 88, Cross J. said at p. 92:-
"The word "premises" is not defined in the Act (the Landlord and Tenant Act 1954). Its legal meaning, of course, is the subject matter of the habendum in a lease, and it would cover any sort of property of which a lease is granted ..."
"My Lords, I think it is fair to say that in some of the earlier sections of the Act it is plain that the Legislature is considering primarily physical premises such as buildings. We find, for instance, in s. 4, sub-s. 1(a), a reference to the possibility of "the premises" being demolished; and we find in s. 5, sub-s. 3(b) (ii.), that the landlord can prove that he intends to pull down or remodel "the premises," and it was argued on behalf of the appellant that this phrase and other similar instances showed that the Legislature, when it used the word "premises," meant only buildings. That contention proves too much. It is conceded – indeed it must be conceded – that the word "premises" does not mean only buildings; it means also at least the land on which the buildings are erected and the land immediately surrounding the buildings, and yet the expression "pull down or remodel the premises" would be wholly inept for such a purpose. It was conceded in argument also that it must include some incorporeal hereditaments such as, for instance, easements. When one gets that concession, which I think was quite properly and necessarily made, then it is manifest that although the word "premises" is being used in a narrow sense to this extent that the Legislature is at times contemplating rather the buildings in which the trade is carried on than the whole of the subject-matter of the lease, yet it does not intend to exclude other things which are properly described as premises in the strict legal sense when it is appropriate that they should be included."
"... but no doubt the word is used sometimes in a popular sense which is considerably more restricted, in the sense of buildings, or buildings with land immediately adjoining them. I do not think that in the popular sense anybody would say that some gallops on a downland with no buildings on or near them, could be described as "premises". Undoubtedly sometimes in legislation "premises" has been construed in a popular rather than in a legal sense."
Conclusions as to the meaning of the words "the said premises".
The result of the appeal and cross appeal.
Order: Appeal dismissed with costs agreed in the sum of £6,000; application for permission to appeal to the House of Lords refused.