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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Scottish & Newcastle Plc v Raguz [2007] EWCA Civ 150 (06 March 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2007/150.html Cite as: [2007] L & TR 20, [2008] 1 P & CR 2, [2007] 2 All ER 871, [2007] 1 EGLR 47, [2007] 11 EG 161, [2007] EWCA Civ 150, [2007] 15 EG 148, [2007] Bus LR 841, [2007] NPC 29 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
CHANCERY DIVISION
BIRMINGHAM DISTRICT REGISTRY
MR JUSTICE HART
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE RIX
and
LORD JUSTICE LLOYD
____________________
SCOTTISH & NEWCASTLE plc |
Claimant Respondent |
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- and - |
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ZELJKO STEPHEN RAGUZ |
Defendant Appellant |
____________________
WordWave International Ltd
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Christopher Stoner (instructed by Eversheds LLP) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 24 January 2007
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Lloyd:
Introduction
i) Was the Claimant legally liable to pay to NCP all the rent arrears that it did in fact pay? As to some payments, no question arises on the appeal, including those covered by the summary judgment. As to others a different question arises, mentioned at sub-paragraph (iii) below. The point at issue here, however, is whether it is a precondition to such liability that the reversioner should have served notice on the original tenant under section 17(2) of the Landlord and Tenant (Covenants) Act 1995 within 6 months of the original unreviewed rent falling due, followed by a notice under section 17(4) on the completion of the review, or whether it is sufficient to serve notice under section 17(2) when the rent review has been completed. This is the point raised by the Respondent's Notice.ii) If the judge was right to hold that a notice under section 17(2) should have been served at the first stage, followed by one under section 17(4) after the rent had been reviewed, so that NCP could not have sued the Claimant for that part of the arrears in respect of which no such notices were served, was he right to hold that the Claimant was entitled to an indemnity from the Defendant in respect of the sums which it actually paid to NCP on account of that part of the arrears of rent under the lease?
iii) As regards £49,350 of the rent, for which notices under section 17(2) were served in due time on 27 February 2003, just before the rent was paid by the Claimant, the issue is whether the Claimant is entitled to an indemnity despite it having prompted NCP to serve those notices.
The requirement of notice under section 17 of the 1995 Act
"17(1) This section applies where a person ("the former tenant") is as a result of an assignment no longer a tenant under a tenancy but—
(a) (in the case of a tenancy which is a new tenancy) he has under an authorised guarantee agreement guaranteed the performance by his assignee of a tenant covenant of the tenancy under which any fixed charge is payable; or
(b) (in the case of any tenancy) he remains bound by such a covenant.
(2) The former tenant shall not be liable under that agreement or (as the case may be) the covenant to pay any amount in respect of any fixed charge payable under the covenant unless, within the period of six months beginning with the date when the charge becomes due, the landlord serves on the former tenant a notice informing him
(a) that the charge is now due; and
(b) that in respect of the charge the landlord intends to recover from the former tenant such amount as is specified in the notice and (where payable) interest calculated on such basis as is so specified.
…
(4) Where the landlord has duly served a notice under subsection (2) or (3), the amount (exclusive of interest) which the former tenant … is liable to pay in respect of the fixed charge in question shall not exceed the amount specified in the notice unless
(a) his liability in respect of the charge is subsequently determined to be for a greater amount,
(b) the notice informed him of the possibility that that liability would be so determined, and
(c) within the period of three months beginning with the date of the determination, the landlord serves on him a further notice informing him that the landlord intends to recover that greater amount from him (plus interest, where payable)."
Section 17(1)(b) applies to the position of the Claimant under the leases. The claim for rent is a claim for a fixed charge within the terms of the section: section 17(6)(a).
"3. I/we as landlord3 hereby give you notice that the fixed charge(s) of which details are set out in the attached Schedule4 is/are now due and unpaid, and that I/we intend to recover from you the amount(s) specified in the Schedule [and interest from the date and calculated on the basis specified in the Schedule]5. (see Notes 2 and 3 overleaf)
4.6 There is a possibility that your liability in respect of the fixed charge(s) detailed in the Schedule will subsequently be determined to be for a greater amount. (see Note 4 below)"
Footnote 4 to paragraph 3 is as follows:
"The Schedule must be in writing, and must indicate in relation to each item the date on which it became payable, the amount payable and whether it is rent, service charge or a fixed charge of some other kind (in which case particulars of the nature of the charge should be given). Charges due before 1 January 1996 are deemed to have become due on that date, but the actual date on which they became due should also be stated."
Footnote 6 to paragraph 4 is as follows:
"Delete this paragraph if not applicable. If applicable (for example, where there is an outstanding rent review or service charge collected on account) a further notice must be served on the former tenant or guarantor within three (3) months beginning with the date on which the greater amount is determined. If only applicable to one or more charge of several, the Schedule should specify which."
Note 4, referred to in the text of paragraph 4, is in the following terms:
"Change in amount due
4. Apart from interest, the landlord is not entitled to recover an amount which is more than he has specified in the notice, with one exception. This is where the amount cannot be finally determined within six months after it is due (for example, if there is dispute concerning an outstanding rent review or if the charge is a service charge collected on account and adjusted following final determination). In such a case, if the amount due is eventually determined to be more than originally notified, the landlord may claim the larger amount if and only if he completes the paragraph giving notice of the possibility that the amount may change, and gives further notice specifying the larger amount within three months of the final determination."
"24. … Under a typical upwards only rent review provision such as obtained in the present case, the rent capable of being demanded by the landlord will be limited to the unreviewed rent so long as the review process has not been completed. Once, however, that process has been completed the reviewed rent will become payable retrospectively with effect from the review date and can be demanded by the landlord as from the rent day next following the completion of the review process: see South Tottenham Land Securities Ltd v. R&A Millett (Shops) Ltd & others [1984] 1 WLR 710 at 715 and United Scientific Holdings Ltd v. Burnley Borough Council [1978] AC 904, per Lord Diplock at 935. The question is as to what if anything the landlord needs to do to preserve his ability to claim the reviewed rent retrospectively as against the original tenant. Can he wait until the reviewed rent becomes demandable and then serve a notice in Form 1 within 6 months of that date identifying the amount of the reviewed rent which has become demandable? Or must he serve a Form 1 notice within 6 months of the rent day on which the reviewed rent first accrues, and then serve a Form 2 notice within 3 months of the date on which, having been determined, the reviewed rent becomes demandable?
25. In posing the question in that way I have used the word "demandable" in order to avoid the slipperiness of the words "due" or "payable". For this purpose the time at which it is "demandable" is the time at which the tenant could not resist an immediate claim for its payment as a liquidated sum."
"The said yearly rent of £22,000 hereby reserved shall be reviewed at the end of the 14th 28th 42nd 56th 70th and 84th years calculated from the Completion Date so that such rent shall be the amount which the respective Surveyors of the Lessor and the Lessees shall within 2 months of the determination of the said years agree upon in writing as being the then current market rental value of the letting of the premises as a whole … for such term as shall be equal to the then unexpired residue of the term and otherwise upon the terms of this lease and in default of agreement as aforesaid the said rent shall for the appropriate period be ascertained on the basis aforesaid by a surveyor to be appointed by the President for the time being of the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors whose valuation shall be made as an expert and not as an arbitrator and shall be final and binding upon the Lessors and the Lessees Provided Always that the rent payable after the said years respectively as aforesaid shall not be less than that payable for the immediately preceding period."
The leases required the rent to be paid quarterly in advance on the usual quarter days.
"So I think these rent review clauses are to be construed according to their natural meaning. The clause in the present case says that the increased rent, when ascertained, "shall be substituted from such date", that is from September 21 1969. It was, it is true, not ascertained until March 23 1973; but once ascertained it is substituted from September 21 1969. It must be paid from that date. I know this means that it operates retrospectively. But that is the plain intention of the clause. And effect must be given to it."
In United Scientific Holdings Ltd v. Burnley Borough Council [1978] AC 904 Lord Diplock said at page 935:
"Until the market rent has been ascertained the landlords can only recover rent at the rate of £117,340 per annum … It is only when the market rent has been determined and turns out to be higher than £117,340 that the landowner can recover on the rent day following such determination the balance that has been accruing since April 8 1975."
In South Tottenham Land Securities Ltd v. R & A Millett (Shops) Ltd [1984] 1 W.L.R. 710, where the issue was on what date the increased rent determined by a rent review fell due for payment, O'Connor LJ considered the passage which I have just cited from Lord Diplock's speech and said this at page 715:
"If the parties choose to put into a lease that rent is due on quarter days, then there are good grounds for saying, where arrears arise in this fashion [i.e. retrospectively on the determination of a rent review] that they should not be due until the next following quarter day."
He upheld the judge's decision which had been to that effect. Oliver LJ agreed.
"34. I do not think that there is any way of resolving this difficulty. It does not appear to me that the solution can lie in construing s.17(2) and (4) differently depending on whether or not a s.17(2) notice has been served. Either the subsequently determined rent is "due" at the date of its accrual as a liability or at the date of its demandability. I have (somewhat to my own surprise) come to the conclusion that the former is the correct construction.
35. That conclusion does, in my judgment, fit with the policy underlying the section. Sub-s.(2) is designed to relieve the former tenant of liability in respect of any fixed charge unless the landlord has taken a purely formal step of notification to preserve the former tenant's liability. If the law is as I think it is no hardship to the landlord results. In the case of a long drawn out process of rent review he can protect himself against the possibility of the current tenant proving in due course unable to meet his liability by serving protective notices on the original tenant. The original tenant then gets the requisite early warning of what the future may hold. By contrast if the law is as the claimant contends, considerable hardship may result for the original tenant. Years after a particular rental period has passed the original tenant may be faced with a claim in respect of that rental period whereas the statute appears designed to allow the original tenant to be free from claims if he has not received a notice within the period of 6 months of a particular rent payment date. The facts of the present case dramatically illustrate how severely that can impact on the original tenant. A construction of the section which permits an original tenant to sleep easily in respect of a rental period once six months has elapsed without having received a protective notice from the landlord seems to me entirely consistent with Parliament's intention."
The tenant's indemnity under the Land Registration Act 1925 section 24
"(b) on the part of the transferee, a covenant with the transferor, that during the residue of the term the transferee and the persons deriving title under him will pay, perform, and observe the rent, covenants, and conditions by and in the registered lease reserved and contained and on the part of the lessee to be paid, performed and observed, and will keep the transferor and the persons deriving title under him indemnified against all actions, expenses, and claims on account of the non-payment of the said rent or any part thereof, or the breach of the said covenants or conditions or any of them."
"There is no doubt that, at one time, very wild notions were entertained with respect to the contract of indemnity; but these notions are now exploded, and it is considered, that, by a contract of indemnity, is meant that the party indemnified may recover all such charges as necessarily and reasonably arise out of the circumstances under which the party charged became responsible."
and later on the same page:
"As I have stated, it seems that under the contract of indemnity the party is entitled to recover those costs only which have been fairly and reasonably incurred."
The Plaintiff was not entitled to recover his costs of resisting G's action because such resistance was unreasonable and unnecessary.
"the promise was, that, if the Defendant did not pay, the Plaintiff would; there was therefore an agreement, that, if the money was paid for the Defendant, it might be recovered from him."
Baron Parke said much the same at page 514.
"Having regard … to the consideration that where there is a contract to indemnify, express or implied, the person who is to be indemnified ought to be put in the same position as if the act against which he is to be indemnified had been done by the person who is to indemnify him at the time when it ought to have been done, we are of the opinion that the proof for interest ought to be admitted."
"if A, whether expressly or by implication, requests B to guarantee A's debt to C there arises, in the absence of special circumstances, an implication of law that A also requests B to pay the debt if A does not, and not an implication that such request is to pay only if A is himself legally compellable to pay."
He added that the implication "pay if I do not" is capable of being rebutted by evidence that a different request was to be implied, but that no such point arose on the facts.
"109. Standing back from the way in which the claimant has actually pleaded its claim, I would have little hesitation in coming to the conclusion that the answer to both questions is negative, for essentially the same reason in each case. In each case the payment falls within the description of a payment in respect of an " expense" or a "claim" which was "on account of the non-payment of the said rent", that is to say which arose as a direct result of the fact that HSJ was not only failing to meet its current liabilities in respect of rent but was plainly going to be unable to discharge any future liabilities, that NCP was not going to give its consent to an assignment unless HSJ paid all arrears of rent, that unless the claimant funded the payment of those arrears no-one else was going to do so, and that if no assignment took place the claimant would continue to accrue liabilities in respect of future rent to NCP. The claimant thus found itself in a position where, in order to stem the onslaught of future liabilities, it had to incur the expense of meeting the arrears irrespective of its strict liability to NCP to pay the same. If that is the correct analysis, the fact that it paid sums in respect of rent in 2001 which were not the subject of valid s.17 notices, and the fact that it procured the service in 2003 of s.17 notices which would not otherwise have been served, are irrelevant to the question of its being able to recover those sums from the defendant."
"If I am right about the s.17 notices, those demands could have been, if not ignored, defeated. It would, however, still have been in the claimant's interest to have paid those sums if they continued to be demanded (as they would have been) by NCP from HSJ as a condition of consenting to an assignment. It was likewise in the defendant's interest that those sums should be paid. Payment of those sums by the claimant in those circumstances would have been a foreseeable "expense" recoverable by the claimant against the defendant under the s.24 covenant for indemnity."
The relevance of the Claimant having procured the service of a notice by NCP
"As to that dealing with the question of Section 17 Notices, we reiterate that we do understand the point that you make but do not understand your client's reluctance to serve Section 17 Notices in respect of any part of the currently demanded arrears which are not the subject of such a notice in any event.
As, from your client's point of view, this is a purely administrative step but, from our client's point of view, is a step which if untaken will prejudice its ability to recover from its immediate assignee, why not issue the notices?"
It was after that letter that NCP changed its position and did serve such notices.
Conclusion
Lord Justice Rix
Lord Justice Mummery