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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Goldmile Properties Ltd. v Lechouritis [2003] EWCA Civ 49 (29 January 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2003/49.html Cite as: [2003] EWCA Civ 49 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE STOCKPORT COUNTY COURT
(H.H. JUDGE TETLOW, SITTING AT MANCHESTER COUNTY COURT)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
and
LORD JUSTICE RIX
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GOLDMILE PROPERTIES LIMITED |
Defendant/Appellant |
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- and - |
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SPEIRO LECHOURITIS |
Claimant/ Respondent |
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Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited, 190 Fleet Street
London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7421 4040, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
MR DAVID BERKLEY QC and JONATHAN RULE (instructed by Messrs Gorvins) for the Respondent
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AS APPROVED BY THE COURT
CROWN COPYRIGHT ©
Crown Copyright ©
Sedley LJ:
This is the judgment of the court.
The appeal
The lease
a) By clause 5.1, an express covenant for quiet enjoyment in the following form:
"That the Tenant paying the rents hereby reserved and observing and performing the several covenants and stipulations on the Tenant's part herein contained shall peaceably hold and enjoy the Demised Premises during the Term without any interruption (except as herein provided) by the Landlord or any person rightfully claiming under or in trust for it"
b) By clause 5.3, the following covenant to provide services:
"That [sic] subject to the Tenant paying the Service Charge to use its reasonable endeavours to provide the services specified in Part IIA of the Fifth Schedule hereto ".
c) The material services as specified in paragraph 1 of part IIA of the schedule:
"Repairing cleansing maintaining renewing replacing amending decorating and putting keeping in substantial repair and condition the roof external and any party walls and other load bearing members of the structure of the Building and such other parts of the Building and the Common Parts as are not the responsibility of the tenants of the Building".
d) In paragraph 2.3, provisions for payment by way of additional rent of a service charge, defined in part I of the fifth schedule to include the costs of structural repairs, apportioned among the tenants of the building.
e) In clause 6.1, a provision for relief from payment of rent where loss of user is caused by an insured event.
The works
The claim
"I accept that the work was carried out to meet, as far as possible, the claimant's requirements within the time scale of the contract period and I believe that the defendant has been as helpful as it can with regard to the reduction and the payment of the service charge. I accept that the defendant is entitled to repair only in such a way that the covenant for quiet enjoyment is not breached and in broad terms, given the extent and nature of the works undertaken by the landlord, I suppose it is inevitable that any tenant will suffer a measure of inconvenience during the duration of the works. There will have been noise; there will have been dust, and there will have been some diminution in the light to the premises as a consequence of the sheeting.
"As I have indicated, I am satisfied that the landlord (the defendant) was necessarily carrying out a repairing obligation under the terms of the lease. In addition to being necessary, those works were extensive. I am satisfied on the evidence before me today that the defendant took all reasonable steps to minimise the potential risks. I am not satisfied that the defendant has breached the covenant for quiet enjoyment and in those circumstances I find for the defendant."
"In the absence of any express provision in the lease, granting a landlord the right to do things which might otherwise breach the covenant of quiet enjoyment, such a right would have to be implied. There is nothing in the wording of the lease that I have been referred to which would give rise to such an implication or give rise to such a construction. … . Such a right cannot be unfettered. If it is fettered, is it a right subject to taking all [or] reasonable steps, or is it a right subject to taking all possible precautions? … .
"I suppose it might be arguable that if the necessary works could not be carried out at all without some disturbance mounting to a breach of covenant, then licence pro tanto would be implied. However, that does not meet the situation here. The finding of all reasonable steps having been taken does not equate to all possible steps having been taken or that the works would be impossible without some nuisance. I decline to put the construction upon the lease asked for by the respondent."
Construing the lease
"the covenant for quiet enjoyment is broken if the landlord or someone claiming under him does anything which substantially interferes with the tenant's title to or possession of the demised premises or with his ordinary and lawful enjoyment of the demised premises. The interference need not be direct or physical" (per Lord Millett at 23).
Other decided cases
"Ought the fact that one of the parties was the grantor and the other the grantee of a lease to dominate the decision of the case? … .if A lets a plot to B, he may not act so as to frustrate the purpose for which in the contemplation of both parties the land was hired. … .The fact that one lets and one hires does not create any presumption in favour of either in construing an expressed contract … .
[Counsel for the plaintiff hotel] argued the case … as though the common intention was that the plaintiffs should have reasonably quiet bedrooms. If it was so, that was only one half of the common intention. The other half was that the defendants should keep on printing. One cannot bisect the intention and enforce one half of it when the effect of doing so would be to frustrate the other half."
The Privy Council's reasoning confirms our view that the two covenants must be construed and applied so far as possible so as to coexist on a basis of parity, not of priority, respecting the terms of both.
"It is further said that the construction of the covenant, as carrying with it an implied licence to enter, is inconsistent with the lessor's covenant for quiet enjoyment. I do not think it is, and for this reason, that the covenant for quiet enjoyment, if read as absolutely unqualified, is as inconsistent with an entry on the warehouse for a single moment as it is with an occupation for a month or a year … I think the covenant for quiet enjoyment must be read as subject to the licence which I have held to be implied in the covenant to repair. "
"Noise and dust caused by demolition and rebuilding will not be actionable if the operations are reasonably carried on, and all reasonable and proper steps are taken to ensure that no undue inconvenience is caused to neighbours."
Reasonableness
Conclusion