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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Newport City Council v Charles [2008] EWCA Civ 1541 (17 July 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2008/1541.html Cite as: [2009] PTSR 1048, [2009] 1 WLR 1884, [2009] HLR 18, [2008] EWCA Civ 1541 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM CARDIFF COUNTY COURT
(HIS HONOUR JUDGE JARMAN QC)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE LONGMORE
and
LORD JUSTICE RICHARDS
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NEWPORT CITY COUNCIL |
Respondent/Claimant |
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- and - |
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CHARLES |
Appellant/ Defendant |
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Mr A Arden QC and Mr I Wightwick (instructed by Newport City Council) appeared on behalf of the Respondent.
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Laws:
"The accommodation afforded by the dwelling house is more extensive than is reasonably required by the tenant and --
(a) the tenancy vested in the tenant by virtue of section 89 (succession to periodic tenancy), the tenant being qualified to succeed by virtue of section 87(b) (members of family other than spouse), and
(b) notice of the proceedings for possession were served under section 83 [(or, where no such notice was served, the proceedings for possession were begun)] more than six months but less than twelve months after the date of the previous tenant's death."
"(a). unless the landlord has served on the tenant a notice [of particulars of the ground relied on] or
(b). the court considers it just and equitable to dispense with the requirement of such a notice."
"The court shall not make an order for possession of a dwelling-house let under a secure tenancy except on one or more of the grounds set out in Schedule 2."
And in this case ground 16 was the only ground having any potential application. Yet on 4 October 2007 District Judge Fraser made the possession order sought and on 22 February 2008 HHJ Jarman dismissed the appellant's appeal in substance, though he set aside the possession order and remitted the claim to a district judge for further determination. That was only because there remained a live issue as to whether suitable alternative accommodation would be available for the appellant, and that was something that had to be shown if a possession order was to be made. The critical point is that both district judge and the circuit judge accepted there was jurisdiction substantively to hear the claim and to make an order for possession if it were right on the facts to do so; and that was so albeit that the 12-month time limit stipulated by ground 16(b) was not met.
"Mrs Protheroe told the Defendant that if his mother was the next of kin they could only deal with her regarding his brother's flat. The Defendant informed the Council that his mother was currently unwell and that she had asked him to act on her behalf. Mrs Protheroe told him that if that was the case the Council would require a letter, that was on 3rd April.
7. A week later, on 10th April, the Defendant brought in the letter, which he stated was from his mother. That is an exhibit to this matter and we all know, at this hearing, that that was not correct and was a fraudulent letter. Following the receipt of the letter of 10th April, enquiries were made on 11th April and it was apparent that Mrs Charles had been buried."
That act, deceitful though it certainly was, of course took place in any event well after the expiry of the statutory 12-month time limit".
"…a representation by conduct on the part of the appellant that the tenancy continued after 6 January 2003 to be in the name of his mother on the basis that his mother was still alive."
"Mr Beckley [representing the appellant] does not dissent from the argument on behalf of the local authority that, on the basis of that representation, the local authority relied upon it in assuming that his late mother was still alive and in not serving the notice, in other words they acted to their detriment."
"…it is idle to suggest that either estoppel or res judicata can give the court a jurisdiction under the Rent Restriction Acts, which the statute says it is not to have".
"To treat the tenant here as estopped from denying that the tenancy is unfurnished when it is in fact unfurnished is to confer on the courts by the act of one of the parties a jurisdiction (namely, an untrammelled power to make orders for possession of premises in fact unfurnished) which Parliament has said that the court should not have…Just as in general parties are not competent to contract out of the protection of the Acts… where the true facts attract that protection, so here the tenant cannot, in my view, be estopped from proving the true facts, where those facts attract that protection."
"Once there is in fact an actual tenancy to which the Act applies, the protection of the Act follows and we do not see how, consistently with Johnson v Moreton 1980 A.C. 37, the parties can effectively oust the protective provisions of the Act by agreeing that they shall be treated as inapplicable. If an express agreement to this effect would be avoided, as it plainly would, then it seems to us to follow that the statutory inability to contract out cannot be avoided by appealing to an estoppel. The terms of section 2(1) are mandatory once the factual situation therein described exists, as it does here, and it cannot, as we think, be overridden by an estoppel even assuming that otherwise the conditions for an estoppel exist: see, for instance, the somewhat similar though not wholly analogous position under the Rent Acts: Welch v. Nagy [1951] KB 455. We agree with the judge that having regard to the purpose of the Act of 1948, it cannot be said to be unconscionable for the tenant who is protected by it to rely upon the protection the statute specifically confers upon him. Once the protection attaches, the jurisdiction to grant possession is exercisable only subject to the statutory provisions and it is a little difficult to see how the parties can, by estoppel, confer on the court a jurisdiction which they could not confer by express agreement."
Mr Barnes also referred to Islington London Borough Council v Uckac [2006] EWCA Civ 340, but with respect I need not cite the passage from Dyson LJ to which he refers.
"I have no hesitation in agreeing…that the doctrine of estoppel may operate to modify (and sometimes perhaps even counteract) the effect of section 2 of the Act of 1989; that is the Law of Property Miscellaneous Provisions Act 1989. The circumstances in which section 2 has to be complied with are so various, and the scope of the doctrine of estoppel is so flexible, that any general assertion of section 2 as a "no-go area" for estoppel would be unsustainable.
…
If an estoppel would have the effect of enforcing a void contract and subverting Parliament's purpose it may have to yield to the statutory law which confronts it...
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In enquiring whether the parliamentary purposes is frustrated, is necessary to note the live range of relief which may be granted where a claim to proprietary estoppel is established."
Mr Arden cites Clarke LJ as he then was to like effect at 181 to 182.
"If A under an expectation created or encouraged by B that A shall have a certain interest in land, thereafter, on the faith of such expectation and with the knowledge of B without objection by him, acts to his detriment in connection with such land, a Court of Equity will compel B to give effect to such expectation."
"…accepting that proprietary or equitable estoppel may create a cause of action it is limited to places involving proprietary rights, whether or not confined to land, Western Fish Products v Penwith District Council [1981] 2 AER 204, 217."
"…when A to the knowledge of B acts to his detriment in relation to his own land in the expectation, encouraged by B, of acquiring a right over B's land, such expectation arising from what B has said or done, the court will order B to grant A that right on such terms as may be just."
Megaw LJ stated also (218 J) that there was no good reason to extend the principle further. Mr Barnes correctly submitted this morning that a proprietary estoppel may actually create an interest in the property, and the burden of his submission is that its scope or application is in fact limited to the creation of property rights along the lines described in particular by Oliver J and also by Megaw LJ.
Lord Justice Longmore:
Lord Justice Richards:
Order: Appeal allowed