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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Lymington Marina Ltd v MacNamara & Ors [2007] EWCA Civ 151 (02 March 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2007/151.html Cite as: [2007] 2 All ER (Comm) 825, [2007] NPC 27, [2007] EWCA Civ 151, [2007] Bus LR D29 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE CHANCERY DIVISION
Patten J
HC03 C03838
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LADY JUSTICE ARDEN
and
SIR MARTIN NOURSE
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LYMINGTON MARINA LIMITED |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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(1) BINGHAM MACNAMARA (2) JOHN MACNAMARA (3) RORY MACNAMARA |
Respondents |
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Michael Norman (instructed by Clive Sutton Solicitors) for the Respondents
Hearing dates : 7/8 December 2006
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Crown Copyright ©
Lady Justice Arden :
Introduction
The terms of the licence
"T H I S L I C E N C E is made the 11th day of March One thousand nine hundred and sixty nine B E T W E E N LYMINGTON MARINA LIMITED whose Registered Office is situate at The Shipyard Lymington Hampshire (hereinafter called "the Company" which expression where the context so admits shall include its successors in title to the property hereafter described) of the one part and [,as from 5 February 2002, Bingham as assignee] (hereinafter called "the Licensee" which expression where the context so admits shall include persons deriving title under the Licensee) of the other part.
1. IN consideration of the sum of ONE THOUSAND POUNDS paid by the Licensee to the Company the receipt whereof the Company hereby acknowledges the Company HEREBY GRANTS unto the Licensee for NINETY EIGHT YEARS from the First day of April One thousand nine hundred and sixty nine (a) the right to moor a yacht not exceeding Fifty five feet in length overall or Twenty feet in beam owned by the Licensee and nominated by him in writing to the Company not less than one month before exercising the rights hereby granted at such place within the Marina at Lymington Hampshire owned by the Company as the Company may from time to time indicate (b) the right to park not more than two private cars in such place or places as may from time to time be indicated by the Company adjacent to the Marina and (c) to use such lavatories showers and washing facilities as are to be provided adjacent to the Marina.
2. THE Licensee shall pay to the Company a yearly sum of FIFTY POUNDS per annum in advance on the First day of March in each year the first payment to be made on the First day of March One thousand nine hundred and sixty nine
3. The Licensee HEREBY AGREES AND UNDERTAKES with the Company:
(a) to pay the sum hereby made payable promptly on the day and in the manner aforesaid…
(k) not to assign transfer charge or otherwise alienate this Licence or the rights hereby granted or any of them and will not [sic] part with possession or occupation or use or grant any licence in respect of the said rights or any of them or any part thereof
PROVIDED ALWAYS that the Licensee may:
(i) assign this Licence as a whole (but not any of the rights hereby granted separately) to an assignee approved by the Company which approval may be granted or withheld at the Company's absolute discretion or(ii) authorise a third party to exercise all the rights hereby granted as a whole but not any of the rights hereby granted separately for a period of not less than one month and not more than twelve months PROVIDED ALWAYS that such third party shall first be approved by the Company or(iii) serve on the Company three months' notice in writing calling on the Company to accept a surrender of this Licence and on the expiry of such notice the Company shall in exchange for such surrender pay to the Licensee the market value of the licence at such date of surrender. The market value is to be decided in default of agreement between the parties by an independent expert to be appointed by the President for the time being of the Institute of Chartered Accountants in England and Wales acting as an expert and not as an arbitrator
(l) that the Licensee will within four weeks after the date of every assignment or sub-licence leave the assignment or instrument of devolution with the Company for the purpose of registration… "
Judgment of Patten J
"1. All the Claimant's claims in this Action (save to the extent that any of the same are consistent with the declaratory relief set out below) are dismissed
2. It is declared that the Claimant was not entitled to act as it did in refusing by its solicitors' letter dated 30th September 2003 to approve the 2nd and 3rd Defendants as third parties for the purposes of clause 3(k)(ii) of the licence dated 11th March 1969 and referred to in paragraphs 4 and 5 of the Particulars of Claim.
3. In relation to clause 3(k) of the licence it is further declared as follows:
a. The power of the Claimant to refuse to approve an assignee or a third party may only be exercised on grounds which relate to the proposed person and his suitability as an assignee or user of the mooring rights as the case may be:
b. Such power may not be exercised so as to further the commercial interests of the Claimant or any associated company such as the Berthon Boat Company Limited:
c. There is no duty to give reasons but the absence of reasons given [sic] which conform to the grounds for refusal permitted under clause 3(k) may be taken as indicating that no proper reasons exist.
4. It is further declared that the discretion to approve an assignee under clause 3(k)(i) of the licence and a third party under the proviso to clause 3(k)(ii) is qualified to the extent that it is to be exercised honestly in good faith and rationally in the Wednesbury sense after consideration and on the basis of grounds relevant to the suitability of the assignee or third party to exercise the rights granted under clause 1.
5. It is further declared that clause 3(k)(ii) of the licence permits the licensee to grant authorities thereunder subject only to the following 3 (and to no other) restrictions:
a. That the authority granted should be of all the rights granted under clause 1:
b. That the authority granted should be between 1 and 12 months in length:
c. That the third party authorised should be first approved by the Claimant.
6. It is further declared in relation to authorities granted under clause 3(k) (ii) of the licence:
a. That it is not a pre-condition of the right to grant such an authority that the licensee should first have exercised his own rights under clause 1
b. That there is no restriction against successive grants of authority (whether or not the same be to the same person)."
Issues on this appeal
i. Does clause 3(k)(ii) permit Bingham to grant rotational sub licences to John and Rory, that is sub licences for permitted periods on a recurring basis, or is the holder of the licence restricted to granting a sub licence on a temporary and occasional basis?
ii. On what grounds can LML refuse to approve a third party under clause 3(k) (ii) of the licence?
iii. Was LML's refusal in fact for reasons that fell within clause 3 (k)(ii)?
iv. Was a refusal on good faith but in error as to the permitted grounds for refusing approval a valid refusal of approval for the purposes of clause 3(k)(ii)?
Issue (i): rotational licences
Issue (ii) the ambit of the power to decline to approve
"The court is entitled to investigate the action of the local authority with a view to seeing whether they have taken into account matters which they ought not to take into account, or, conversely, have refused to take into account or neglected to take into account matters which they ought to take into account. Once that question is answered in favour of the local authority, it may still be possible to say that, although the local authority have kept within the four corners of the matters which they ought to consider, they have nevertheless come to a conclusion so unreasonable that no reasonable authority could ever have come to it." (per Lord Greene MR in the Wednesbury case at pages 233 to 234)
"Where A and B. contract with each other to confer a discretion on A, that does not render B subject to A's uninhibited whim. In my judgment, the authorities show that not only must the discretion be exercised honestly and in good faith, but, having regard to the provisions of the contract by which it is conferred, it must not be exercised arbitrarily, capriciously or unreasonably."
"In that case, the judge held that the owner acted unreasonably in the sense that there was no material on which a reasonable owner could have exercised the discretion in the way he did. Leggatt LJ (with whom the other two members of the court agreed) found that various factors called into question the owners' good faith and strongly suggested that their decision was arbitrary. He also upheld the judge's approach to the question of reasonableness. Thus the word "unreasonably" in the passage at page 404 must be understood in a sense analogous to unreasonably in the Wednesbury sense: Associated Provincial Picture Houses Ltd v Wednesbury Corporation…"
"30… While, in any such situation, the parties are likely to have conflicting interests and the provisions of the contract effectively place the resolution of that conflict in the hands of the party exercising discretion, it is presumed to be the reasonable expectation and therefore the common intention of the parties that there should be a genuine and rational, as opposed to an empty or irrational, exercise of discretion. Thus the courts impose an implied term of the nature and to the extent described."
"76. In summary, the right to withhold approval was, here, Gan's, and no one else's. It is a right to be exercised in good faith after consideration of and on the basis of the facts giving rise to the particular claim, and not with reference to considerations wholly extraneous to the subject matter of the particular reinsurance or arbitrarily. It is to be exercised by considering the claim as a whole. The court cannot substitute its own view of the reasonableness of the reinsurer's decision to withhold approval …"
Issue (iii): lawfulness of the LML's actual reasons for declining to approve the proposed sub licences
"What can be said is that there would not be any sharing of the rights under the licence between the three brothers. Any use by persons other than Mr Bingham Macnamara would be on a casual and temporary basis and be entirely subsidiary to Mr Bingham Macnamara's use of the marina berth. There would then be no effective subdivision of the licence as feared by you."
"In this case the beneficiaries understand your clients' concerns not to have a situation where the berth is effectively used in rotation by three people. In saying this they do not necessarily accept that the terms of the licence preclude this, because Clause 3(k)(ii) allows the licensee to authorise a third party to use the whole of the rights granted by the licence separately for a period of not less than one month and not more than 12 months with the proviso that only the third party, as opposed to the letting itself, should be approved by the company.
However, if it assists in an understanding of the respective parties' positions my clients are quite content that one of the beneficiaries shall continue to use the licence in the same way as the late Brian Macnamara, and any necessary adjustments between the beneficiaries can be made through the estate…
In operating the licence on the above basis your clients said they would be assiduous to ensure that the licence was operated for the sole purpose of the licensee and not for any collateral purpose, such as the division of the use of the licence amongst more than one party. Accordingly their policy is to approve sublettings which are consistent with normal non use of the berth. This would be on the basis of the licensee being absent from the berth in the normal course of sailing or extended cruising. However, the artificial removal of the yacht from the berth in order to accommodate another yacht by way of sub licence would not be approved and similarly the extended absence of the vessel from the berth for the purposes of accommodating a sub licensee would also not be approved.
Similarly the artificial return of the authorised vessel to the berth for the purposes of the appearance of compliance with the above requirements would not be accepted."
"The licence does not specify that the vessel in question nominated has to be moored. The licence is only for the right to moor a yacht. There then appears to be no other necessary procedures before the right to subletting can be invoked. There is no limitation on the exercise of his right by virtue of any delay or qualifying period or frequency on which the right can be exercised. The right is quite clear, namely for a period of not more than 12 months. This obviously prevents casual day lettings which understandably would be inconvenient to the marina because of the potential changes of vessel, and also extended sublettings which by virtue of their length could virtually be assignments."
"[LML's] rights under the licence will be fully preserved…[Bingham], through me, has given a clear statement of the basis upon which he intends to exercise his rights under the licence when assigned to him. I would hope that would be a reasonable position, and if and when he exercises his rights, and he acts in a significantly different way, it would obviously be a point you would be able to make in any action needed to be taken to enforce the licence. His view is that the licensing operated perfectly satisfactory during the time it was used by his father for the last 30 years and also that he cannot see that there is any need for the terms to be reinterpreted at this stage.
Your clients of course have their remedies in the event that you feel there is an improper use of the licence…"
"proceeded on the basis that LML had not resiled from its stated position in relation to clause 3(k)(ii) and that [Bingham] (despite having formerly taken issue with this through Mr Sutton) had indicated that when he returned with his boat to the marina any sublicensing would be of a very limited kind. Later, of course, his position changed when he decided to remain in Spain and subsequently sold his boat." (judgment, para. 51)
Issue iv: Was a refusal in good faith but in error as to the permitted grounds for refusing approval a valid refusal of approval for the purposes of clause 3(k)(ii)?
Disposition
Sir Martin Nourse:
Lord Justice Pill:
ii) authorise a third party to exercise all the rights hereby granted as a whole but not any of the rights hereby granted separately for a period of not less than one month and not more than twelve months PROVIDED ALWAYS that such third party shall first be approved by the company.
"Where A and B contract with each other to confer a discretion on A, that does not render B subject to A's uninhibited whim. In my judgment, the authorities show that not only must the discretion be exercised honestly and in good faith, but, having regard to the provisions of the contract by which it is conferred, it must not be exercised arbitrarily, capriciously or unreasonably."
"I would therefore accept, as a general qualification, that any withholding of approval by re-insurers should take place in good faith after consideration of and on the basis of the facts giving rise to the particular claim and not with reference to considerations wholly extraneous to the subject matter of the particular reinsurance."
"It is one thing to imply a term that a lender will not exercise his discretion in a way that no reasonable lender, acting reasonably, would do. It is unlikely that a lender who was acting in that way would not also be acting either dishonestly, for an improper purpose, capriciously or arbitrarily. It is quite another matter to imply a term that the lender would not impose unreasonable rates."
The submission that once the rate charge exceeded by two percentage points standard rates on the market, unreasonable rates were being charged within the meaning of the implied term was rejected. Reasonableness was not to be assessed by the objective standards of the market. In the present case, the judge introduced Wednesbury: Associated Provincial Picture Houses Ltd v Wednesbury Corpn [1948] 1 KB 223. While I accept that unreasonableness, in the sense used by Leggatt LJ and Mance LJ is analogous to the use of the word in Wednesbury, it appears to me unnecessary, and undesirable, to introduce expressions appropriate to public law challenges, of which reasonableness is only one, into the construction of commercial contracts. I agree with Arden LJ that it was inappropriate to use the expression "Wednesbury sense" in the order made in this case, particularly when Wednesbury is misquoted in that the word "reasonable" is replaced by the word "rational". It does not lead to clarity.
"If there is any further implication, it is along the lines that the re-insurer will not withhold approval arbitrarily, or (to use what I see as no more than an expanded expression of the same concept) will not do so in circumstances so extreme that no reasonable company in its position could possibly withhold approval. This will not ordinarily add materially to the requirement that the re-insurer should form a genuine view as to the appropriateness of settlement or compromise without taking into account considerations extraneous to the subject matter of the reinsurance."