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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> GLN (Copenhagen) Southern Ltd. v Tunbridge Wells Borough Council [2004] EWCA Civ 1279 (27 August 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2004/1279.html Cite as: [2004] EWCA Civ 1279 |
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IN THE COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT
CHANCERY DIVISION
(MR KEVIN GARNETT QC)
Strand London, WC2 |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE WALL
LORD JUSTICE NEUBERGER
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GLN (COPENHAGEN) SOUTHERN LTD | Appellant/Claimant | |
-v- | ||
TUNBRIDGE WELLS BOROUGH COUNCIL | Respondent/3rd Defendant |
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Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited____________________
MR PETER CRAMPIN QC & MR ALISTAIR CRAIG (instructed by Frank Martin Harris, Borough Secretary and Solicitor on behalf of Tunbridge Wells BC) appeared on behalf of the Respondent
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Crown Copyright ©
"The Transferee for itself and its successors in title hereby covenants with the Transferor ... that the Transferee shall not trade in the property hereby transferred or make use of the names 'Associated British Cinemas', 'ABC' or 'ABC Cinemas' ... nor to use or permit the use of the property hereby transferred or any part of it
12.2.1 as a cinema or
12.2.2[a] for the principal purpose of use for image projection for the showing of whole films in an auditorium setting or [b] for any associated or ancillary or similar use or
12.2.3 for any theatrical or related purpose."
(i) use for the Cinema would be within clause 12.2.2(a) and
(ii) use of the stairs, lift, escalator and Concourse as a means of access to the Cinema would be "associated or ancillary" to such a use within the meaning of clause 12.2.2(b).
(i) use as a cinema did not fall within the ambit of 12.2.2(a) and accordingly it was unnecessary to consider issue (ii), but, if that was wrong,
(ii) the use of the part of the Property occupied by the staircase, lift, escalator and Concourse would have been precluded by clause 12.2.2(b), as it would be ancillary to Cinema use.
(i) the reason for the proceedings was to establish that the Scheme put forward by the Council could not proceed because it would involve a breach of covenant by GLN;
(ii) the only persons who could have enforced the covenant, namely the Covenantees, have a binding decision against them that they cannot enforce the covenant so as to prevent the Scheme;
(iii) the Covenantees are not appealing that decision and
(iv) therefore the appeal is pointless because the Scheme can self-evidently go ahead because the Covenantees are bound by the decision of Mr Garnett and, in any event,
(v) declaratory relief is discretionary and should not be granted in a case such as this where the issue has become entirely hypothetical.
"... I have never found the presumption against superfluous language particularly useful in the construction of leases. The draftsmen traditionally employ linguistic overkill and try to obliterate the conceptual target by using a number of words or phrases expressing more or less the same idea. I cannot therefore rely upon the language alone but must, as it seems to me, construe the words also by reference to the commercial effect which would be produced by one construction or the other."
Although that observation was connected with leases, it was concerned with covenants regulating use, which is what that this case is concerned with, and, in my view, it applies equally to conveyances and transfers.
"I think, my Lords, that the argument from redundancy is seldom an entirely secure one. The fact is that even in legal documents (or, some might say, especially in legal documents) people often use superfluous words. Sometimes the draftsmanship is clumsy; more often the cause is a lawyer's desire to be certain that every conceivable point has been covered. One has only to read the covenants in a traditional lease to realise that draftsmen lack inhibition about using too many words. I have no wish to add to the anthology of adverse comments on the drafting of the JCT Standard Form Contract."
"The paradox in the learned judge's construction is that the further away the use is to being categorised as that of a cinema the greater the extent of the prohibition [from clause 12.2.2(b)]."
"[Counsel for the Co-op] submits that the provision of amenity land for the benefit, inter alia, of customers of a food retailing store is ancillary or incidental to the carrying on of a food retailing business.
I accept that the act of making amenity land available for that purpose is incidental to the carrying on of a food retailing business. But it does not follow that the use to which the land is thereafter put is for the purpose of a food retail business."
"The use of ordinary language to convey meaning often involves subtle discriminations which for most people are intuitive rather than capable of lucid explanation. An explanation of why ordinary English words in a particular context convey a given meaning is frequently more likely to confuse than to enlighten. Perhaps this is what judges mean when they say that questions of construction are often matters of impression."
ORDER: Appeal dismissed; no order as to costs; words of declaration in paragraph 2 to be amended by the parties (to be agreed if possible) and submitted to Neuberger LJ for approval by 16/9/4).