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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Field & Anor v Bryant & Anor [2003] EWCA Civ 1957 (18 December 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2003/1957.html Cite as: [2003] EWCA Civ 1957 |
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IN THE COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE TAUNTON COUNTY COURT
(His Honour Judge Roach)
Strand London, WC2 |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE LATHAM
SIR MARTIN NOURSE
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(1) JOHN BRIAN FIELD | ||
(2) ELIZABETH ALICE FIELD | Claimants/Respondents | |
-v- | ||
(1) RAYMOND WILLIAM BRYANT | ||
(2) VERA BRYANT | Defendants/Appellants |
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Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited
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Crown Copyright ©
Thursday, 18th December 2003
"4.1(a) The Tenant will use the Holding for agricultural purposes only unless the Landlord gives written consent in advance to an alternative use.
(b) The Tenant will use the Holding for permanent pasture for livestock only throughout the Term but, for the avoidance of doubt, this shall not prevent the making of hay and silage."
By clause 4.2 it was agreed (a) that the tenant would not break up or convert into tillage any part of the holding or burn any heather or moorland on the holding, and (b) that the tenant would not remove any turf, topsoil, stone or gravel from the holding.
"The Landlord agrees at the request of the Tenant to relocate by the 31st July 1997 the sheep building shown marked 'A' on the attached plan 2 to, or to provide another building which affords similar facilities to such building on, such part of the Holding as the parties may agree between them or, failing agreement by the 30th June 1997 as fixed by an independent expert under the provisions of clause 12 (but in a location which is reasonably accessible from the rest of the Holding), such building to be connected to a water supply and to have a hard standing access."
Clause 13 provided that the agreement contained the whole agreement between the landlord and the tenant concerning the holding and that no custom of the country was to give or affect any right of either party.
"(a) whether the term livestock in clause 4(1)(b) of the Farm Business tenancy included a dairy herd;
(b) as in paragraph 14.2 of the Defendant's solicitors' witness statement dated 7th February a copy of which is annexed."
Paragraph 14.2 of that statement was in the following terms:
"Mr and Mrs Bryant would be able to put in place such temporary facilities at the relocated farm outbuilding as to enable them to continue their farm business, including the milking of their dairy herd and the carrying out of the terms of their contract with Milk Marque."
"(a) The Farm Business Tenancy does not provide for the running of a milking and dairying enterprise on the holding.
(b) The term at paragraph 14.2 of the Defendants' solicitors witness statement dated 7 February 2003 is not to be implied into the Farm Business Tenancy."
It was agreed between counsel that on the basis of those declarations the counterclaim should be dismissed, and it was dismissed accordingly. The defendants were ordered to pay the claimants' costs of the counterclaim, to include the cost of the preliminary issue. The defendants' application for permission to appeal was refused.
"There is a real prospect of persuading this court that clause 4.1(a) is concerned with the type of business and 4.1(b) with how the land is to be farmed. If so, the judge's conclusion may well be wrong. I am also worried at the lack of findings of fact as to the matrix."
"In my judgment, the words that follow under the title 'use and management of the holding' ... do these things: paragraph 4.1(a) sets out as a general provision that the tenants (Mr and Mrs Bryant) must use the holding for agricultural purposes and no other purpose unless Mr Field gives permission. The words there are obvious and I accept the submission made by Mr Mawhinney that what flows thereafter is a further delineation of the use to which the tenants can put the holding, and that further delineation is clear in 4.1(b). The words of the clause are, 'The tenant will use the holding for permanent pasture for livestock only throughout the term.' The words 'permanent pasture', in my judgment, can only mean that the tenant is entitled to graze livestock on the land, but no more."
(1) It was the intention of the defendants that on the sale of the farm they would acquire another suitable property within the locality to continue the farm business.
(2) The defendants already owned two other farms, Higher Brown Farm and Syndercombe Farm.
(3) The defendants' farming business included a dairy herd and a flock of sheep.
(4) The farm buildings included a dairy and a milking parlour.
(5) The sheep house was not normally used for keeping or milking cows.
"The land lies within an attractive ring fence, consisting of a number of conveniently sized and shaped enclosures of level or undulating pasture land ... and whilst the whole of the farm is currently into pasture, it would nevertheless be highly suited to a variety of alternative cropping."
Order: Appeal allowed with costs here and below. There will be a declaration that the Farm Business Tenancy permits the running of a milking and dairying enterprise on the farm land. The Counterclaim will be dismissed. Application for permission to appeal refused.