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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Wilderbrook Ltd v Oluwu [2005] EWCA Civ 1361 (16 November 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2005/1361.html Cite as: [2005] EWCA Civ 1361 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL
DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM LAMBETH COUNTY COURT
HIS HONOUR JUDGE
COTRAN
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL | ||
B e f o r e :
and
LORD JUSTICE
CARNWATH
____________________
WILDERBROOK LTD |
Appellants | |
- and - |
||
OLUWU |
Respondent |
____________________
MR E FRANCIS (instructed by Messrs Wellers) for the
Respondent
Hearing dates : 11 October 2005
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Pill:
"At any time not earlier than six months before each successive Review Date the Landlord may serve on the Tenant a notice in writing (hereinafter called "the Rent Notice") providing for the increase in rent payable as from the relevant Review Date to an amount specified in the Rent Notice (hereinafter called "the New Rent") and thereupon the following provisions shall have effect:-
1. The Tenant within one month after the receipt of the Rent Notice may serve on the Landlord a counter-notice calling upon the Landlord to negotiate with the Tenant the amount of the rent to be paid as from the Review Date
2. If the Tenant shall not serve a counter-notice within the period specified he shall be deemed to have agreed to pay the rent specified in the Rent Notice.
3. If the Tenant shall serve on the Landlord a counter-notice calling upon the Landlord to negotiate with him then the parties shall forthwith consult together to reach agreement on the rent payable but failing agreement within one month after service of the counter-notice (or such longer period as the parties may mutually agree) the question of the amount of rent payable shall be referred to an independent surveyor (hereinafter called the "Surveyor") appointed by agreement between the parties or appointed by the President of the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors on the application of the Landlord.
4. Notice in writing of his appointment by the said President shall be given by the Surveyor to the Landlord and the Tenant inviting each to submit within four weeks a valuation accompanied by written representations.
5. The Surveyor shall act as expert and not as arbitrator and shall consider any valuation and representations submitted to him within the said period but shall not be in any way limited or fettered thereby and shall determine the New Rent in accordance with his own professional judgment."
"As respects all periods of time referred to in this Schedule time shall be deemed to be of the essence of the contract PROVIDED ALWAYS that the Landlord or the Tenant may notwithstanding anything in this Schedule require the appointment of the Surveyor or any substitute Surveyor to determine the question of new rent payable at any time after the commencement of each relevant period of years and any delay by the Landlord of the Tenant in this respect shall not deprive the Landlord or Tenant of their respective right to have a New Rent determined by the Surveyor as set out herein."
Paragraph 13
"It seems to me that the purpose of Para 2, looking at the schedule as a whole, is to get on with it and I do not accept that if there is a valid counter-notice (as is accepted now), which is seven days late and seven days late for good reasons, the intention is to shut out the provision as to the determination of the rent by negotiation or by an independent surveyor, which as Mr Francis submits, would frustrate the whole object of this exercise.
It seems to me that para 13 does apply in this case and the lateness of the counter-notice is not something which brings in the deeming provision of Para 2 of the Schedule. Para 13 applies to it, as it applies to the other sections where there might be delay."
The authorities
"I would hold that in the absence of any contra-indications in the express words of the lease or in the interrelation of the rent review clause itself and other clauses or in the surrounding circumstances the presumption is that the time-table specified in a rent review clause for completion of the various steps for determining the rent payable in respect of the period following the review date is not of the essence of the contract."
"(1) …
(2) There is a rebuttable presumption that the time-table specified in the clause for completion of the various steps for determining the rent payable is not of the essence of the contract.
(3) The presumption may be rebutted by:
(a) any contra-indications in the express words of the lease;
(b) any contra-indications in the inter-relation of the rent review clause and other clauses in the lease; or
(c) the surrounding circumstances."
That too was a case where the lessee had a limited period within which to serve a written counter-notice (Clause 4(8))in reply to a lessor's notice specifying a rent. The relevant clause provided:
"If no such counter-notice is served the market rent specified in the lessor's notice shall stand as the market rent payable at and from the relevant review date and shall be paid accordingly".
The court held that the clause was not a sufficient contra-indication to rebut the presumption.
Neill LJ stated, at page 115:
"It seems to me that, in the light of the guidance given by the House of Lords to the effect that prima facie provisions as to time in a rent review clause are not of the essence, the contra-indications must be clear and explicit"
In making that statement, Neill LJ stated that he had found helpful statements as to a flexible approach to interpretation (for example in Mecca Leisure Ltd v Renown Investments (Holdings) Ltd [1984] 49 P&CR 12) subsequently disapproved, but his statement remains, in my respectful view, sound and soundly based on United Scientific.
"I would accordingly conclude … that clause 4(8) on its proper construction is not a deeming provision and, that being so, would unhesitatingly allow the lessee's appeal; to my mind there are certainly no other contra-indications capable of displacing the United Scientific presumption."
"There are, as it seems to me, three ends to which it may be argued that the United Scientific presumption can be put:
1. In the absence of any express terms specifying what is to happen in default of the exercise of the rights given to the respective parties within the permitted periods of time (ie in the absence of a deeming provision), the presumption applies; time is not of the essence unless and until it is made so, and in the result a time stipulation cannot be strictly enforced against whoever fails to observer it. (I decline to use the language of default; there is no obligation to observe such a time limit, merely a prospective loss of the benefits of compliance.)
2. In the event of dispute whether or not there is such an express deeming provision, the presumption applies as a rule of construction to assist the resolution of that dispute.
3. Even if there is such an express deeming provision the presumption can nevertheless still apply to defeat both it and the strict enforcement of the separate time stipulation.
In my judgment, the presumption applies in situations 1 and 2, but not in 3."
Simon Brown LJ added that he would hold that a deeming provision is indeed a "decisive, or virtually decisive, contra-indication displacing the presumption that time was not of the essence". I respectfully agree that certainty is a very important factor in this area of law.
"If the lessees shall fail to serve a counter-notice within the period aforesaid they shall be deemed to have agreed to pay the increased rent specified in the rent notice."
Kay LJ stated, at paragraph 65:
"I am of the view that the deeming provision in this rent review clause clearly sets out what the parties to the contract intended should be the position once the required period had elapsed with no counter-notice having been served and that accordingly the presumption as to time not being of the essence had no part to play in this case."
"[The clause] is a deeming provision and the natural meaning of the word "deem" in my judgment is to introduce a conclusive state of affairs. There has to be some indication that the deemed state of affairs is not to survive in particular circumstances to exclude that normal meaning. There is no provision here to exclude the normal meaning of the word "deem".
At paragraph 78, Arden LJ added that "where there is a deeming provision in this type of case and nothing more, the time for service of the counter-notice should normally be taken to be the final one".
Conclusion
The respondent's notice
Lord Justice Carnwath :
"Statues and contracts often contain a provision notice may be served upon a person by leaving it at his last known place of abode or by sending it to him there through the post. The effect of such a provision is that if notice is served by any of the prescribed methods of service, it is, by law, treated as having been given and received." (p 185 v)