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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Azhar Shah & Ors v Colvia Management Co Ltd [2008] EWCA Civ 195 (18 March 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2008/195.html Cite as: [2008] EWCA Civ 195 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
CHANCERY DIVISION
ANTHONY ELLERAY QC sitting as a Deputy High Court Judge
HC07C01115
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE MAURICE KAY
and
LORD JUSTICE LLOYD
____________________
SYED MOHAMMED AZHAR SHAH AND OTHERS |
Claimants / Respondents |
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- and - |
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COLVIA MANAGEMENT CO LTD |
Defendant / Appellant |
____________________
WordWave International Limited
A Merrill Communications Company
190 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7404 1400, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Martin Young (instructed by H Montlake & Co) for the Respondents
Hearing date: 29 February 2008
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Lloyd:
The leases
"(i) the right to pass and repass on foot only over and along the footpaths and with or without vehicles to pass and repass only over and along the accessways roads and rights of way shown on the plan annexed hereto but only insofar as is necessary for gaining access to or egress from the demised premises and subject to compliance by all persons exercising such rights with all reasonable regulations directions and signs as may be made or erected by the Company or the landlord for controlling the free flow of traffic throughout the estate
…
(iii) the full right and liberty for the Tenant and all persons authorised by him (in common with all other persons entitled to the like right) to use the car parks on the Estate and the amenity land on the Estate for the purpose from time to time allocated by the Company and subject to such reasonable rules and regulations for the common enjoyment thereof as the Company may from time to time prescribe."
That last proviso is at the heart of this case.
"(xvi) … not to obstruct or permit to be obstructed any roads or accessways on the Estate Provided That this shall not prevent the Tenant from loading or unloading vehicles where necessary for the carrying out of his trade or business such loading or unloading to be done as expeditiously as possible and so as to cause the minimum of inconvenience to the other owners or occupiers of units on the Estate;
(xvii) Not to allow vehicles to be permanently parked in any area set aside for parking and not to allow any vehicle to be maintained or repaired on any road accessway or on any part of the other land on the Estate apart from that area demised by this Lease
…
(xx) To comply with and observe all regulations which the Company may from time to time make in general meeting consistent with the provisions of this deed to govern the use of the units and the common parts roads accessways and amenity land on the Estate which regulations may be restrictive of acts done on the Estate detrimental to its character and amenity or the rights of other owners or occupiers of units contained within the Estate
(xxi) to contribute and pay on demand
(a) the proportionate part set out in the [Fourth] Schedule hereto of all costs charges and expenses from time to time incurred or to be incurred by the Company in performing and carrying out the obligations and each of them on the part of the Company herein contained including all administrative and other expenses as set out in the Fourth Schedule hereto
(b) such amount as may from time to time be required by the Company for the proper performance of its said obligations on account of the sum payable pursuant to paragraph (a) of this sub-clause …"
The proposed scheme
The Claimants' challenge to the scheme
i) It would affect the Claimants' businesses disproportionately, because many vehicles brought to them for repair are damaged to the extent that they cannot be driven and have to be left overnight until repaired and collected after repair.
ii) It would impose an unreasonable restriction on vehicles being left overnight in the parking area.
iii) It would have the effect of producing significant income for Colvia at the expense of the Claimants whereas the effect of the service charge provisions of the leases is that Colvia should recover a proportionate part of the relevant costs from each lessee.
The second of these points does not seem to be truly an independent point, rather than a different way of putting the first.
The law
"During the course of argument many cases were cited to us, as they were to the judge. I do not propose to set them out in detail here; many of the older cases were considered in the full judgment of the Court of Appeal in Pimms Ltd v Tallow Chandlers Company [1964] 2 QB 547. From the authorities I deduce the following propositions of law.
(1) The purpose of a covenant against assignment without the consent of the landlord, such consent not to be unreasonably withheld, is to protect the lessor from having his premises used or occupied in an undesirable way, or by an undesirable tenant or assignee: see per A L Smith LJ in Bates v Donaldson [1896] 2 QB 241 at 247 approved by all the members of the Court of Appeal in Re Gibbs & Houlder Bros & Co Ltd's Lease [1925] Ch 575.
(2) As a corollary to the first proposition, a landlord is not entitled to refuse his consent to an assignment on grounds which have nothing whatever to do with the relationship of landlord and tenant in regard to the subject matter of the lease: see Re Gibbs & Houlder Bros & Co Ltd's Lease, a decision which (despite some criticism) is binding on this court: see Bickel v Duke of Westminster [1977] QB 517.
A recent example of a case where the landlord's consent was unreasonably withheld because the refusal was designed to achieve a collateral purpose unconnected with the terms of the lease is Bromley Park Garden Estates Ltd v Moss [1982] 1 WLR 1019.
(3) The onus of proving that consent has been unreasonably withheld is on the tenant: see Shanley v Ward (1913) 29 TLR 714 and Pimms Ltd v Tallow Chandlers Company [1964] 2 QB 547 at 564.
(4) It is not necessary for the landlord to prove that the conclusions which led him to refuse consent were justified, if they were conclusions which might be reached by a reasonable man in the circumstances: see Pimms Ltd v Tallow Chandlers Company [1964] 2 QB 547 at 564.
(5) It may be reasonable for the landlord to refuse his consent to an assignment on the ground of the purpose for which the proposed assignee intends to use the premises, even though that purpose is not forbidden by the lease: see Bates v Donaldson [1896] 2 QB 241 at 244.
(6) There is a divergence of authority on the question, in considering whether the landlord's refusal of consent is reasonable, whether it is permissible to have regard to the consequences to the tenant if consent to the proposed assignment is withheld. In an early case at first instance, Sheppard v Hongkong and Shanghai Banking Corp (1872) 20 WR 459 at 460 Malins V-C said that by withholding their consent the lessors threw a very heavy burden on the lessees, and they therefore ought to show good grounds for refusing it. In Re Gibbs & Houlder Bros & Co Ltd's Lease [1925] Ch 575 at 584 Warrington LJ said:
'An act must be regarded as reasonable or unreasonable in reference to the circumstances under which it is committed, and when the question arises on the construction of a contract, the outstanding circumstances to be considered are the nature of the contract to be construed and the relations between the parties resulting from it.'
In a recent decision of this court, Leeward Securities Ltd v Lilyheath Properties Ltd (1984) 271 EG 279, a case concerning a subletting which would attract the protection of the Rent Act, both Oliver and O'Connor LJJ made it clear in their judgments that they could envisage circumstances in which it might be unreasonable to refuse consent to an underletting, if the result would be that there was no way in which the tenant (the sub-landlord) could reasonably exploit the premises except by creating a tenancy to which the Rent Act protection would apply, and which inevitably would affect the value of the landlord's reversion. O'Connor LJ said (at 283):
'It must not be thought that, because the introduction of a Rent Act tenant inevitably has an adverse effect upon the value of the reversion, that that is a sufficient ground for the landlords to say that they can withhold consent and that the court will hold that that is reasonable.'
To the opposite effect are the dicta, obiter but nevertheless weighty, of Viscount Dunedin and Lord Phillimore in Viscount Tredegar v Harwood [1929] AC 72 at 78, 82. There are numerous other dicta to the effect that a landlord need consider only his own interests: see, for example, West Layton Ltd v Ford [1979] QB 593 at 605 and Bromley Park Garden Estates Ltd v Moss [1982] 1 WLR 1019 at 1027. Those dicta must be qualified, since a landlord's interests, collateral to the purposes of the lease, are in any event ineligible for consideration: see paragraph (2) above.
But in my judgment a proper reconciliation of those two streams of authority can be achieved by saying that while a landlord need usually only consider his own relevant interests, there may be cases where there is such a disproportion between the benefit to the landlord and the detriment to the tenant if the landlord withholds his consent to an assignment, that it is unreasonable for the landlord to refuse consent.
(7) Subject to the propositions set out above, it is, in each case, a question of fact, depending on all the circumstances, whether the landlord's consent to an assignment is being unreasonably withheld: see Bickel v Duke of Westminster [1977] QB 517 at 524 and West Layton Ltd v Ford [1979] QB 593 at 604, 606."
The judge's decision
"I have heard no evidence that the company considered or researched a proper overnight space rental figure. It is true that neither Mr Cutting nor Mr Joseph suggests that the particular figures of which notice had been given in reference to the overnight scheme were unreasonable, but the evidence before me is that the figures given in that notice and indeed the reduced figures since offered by the company have been calculated simply in reference to the need to generate sufficient income for the company to meet the rates."
"132. It is not on this point contended, and I do not consider it unreasonable, to introduce the overnight ban. A criticism of earlier allocation of bays to, for example, vehicle repairers was that it was not properly policed. The current scheme seeks, by the employment of outside agents, in particular ISTM, such proper policing. In my view, the scheme might not have been unreasonable if the company had considered or researched the proper Barking market value for such overnight spaces, in the circumstances that members have, up to now, never needed to pay for parking on the estate and, further, the relatively limited margins in a car repair business and the fact that, properly policed, the use of some bays overnight might raise some useful income but does not, in fact, affect the vast majority of unit-holders who do not want to park overnight. In reference to proper demand, it may have been necessary, and in my judgment would have been quite proper, to ration these overnight bays by price.
133. The exercise under that consideration, including the consideration and research I have mentioned, was not, as I find, carried out. The price was only seized upon, including in its later reductions on offer, by reference to meeting the ISTM costs of the scheme and the annual rates bill for the car park. Those two items are inherently matters to be raised from all tenants or sub-tenants from the service charges, not from particular tenants or a group of tenants. It may be, for example, in due course or time of consideration by the company as to daytime policing to properly ensure accessways are kept free of cars, that it may decide ultimately, in connection with the proper policing of the area, to raise car parking charges and in consequence have to employ, either directly or indirectly, the equivalent of parking attendants. It will doubtless seek, by way of service charge, to recover relevant costs from all the tenants. As a matter of principle, in my judgment, the essential approach in relation to the overnight charges of ISTM and the rates should have been to charge all tenants, but that is not to render unreasonable whether, as part of the overnight ban more generally, the charging of a proper price, having regard to the market, the needs and the value of spaces, for use by those who apply to and take the overnight bays now being allocated, which, in all likelihood and probability, are going to be vehicle repairers such as the Claimants, since they have the need for the overnight parking."
"The parking scheme proposed by the Defendant for implementation at Barking Industrial Park is declared unreasonable on the grounds that
(a) in determining the amount of the charges for parking in allocated bays provided for under the said scheme the Defendant failed to carry out any research as to the proper market value to be charged for such parking; and
(b) in determining the amount of the charges for overnight parking provided for under the said scheme the Defendant took into account matters which were not relevant to the exercise of its power to make regulations to regulate parking contained in the various leases of units on the said Barking Industrial Park."
Discussion
"It is important to appreciate that the regulations are intended to operate for the benefit of all who have the right to park. It is a common feature of regulations of this nature that a regulation which is intended to operate for the benefit of members of a group as a whole may have the effect of restricting the way in which each member of that group is able to enjoy his rights. The restriction of each individual in the exercise of the common right operates for the benefit of all the individuals in the group. That, plainly, is what regulations made or determined by the estate owners under this power may properly seek to achieve."
It is a striking reflection of the importance of the motor car that the present appeal is the third to reach the Court of Appeal in seven years about steps taken to control parking, the first having been Saeed v Plustrade Ltd [2001] EWCA Civ 2011.
"The overnight scheme is intended to free up spaces for the morning, and I accept the company has been balancing general car parking needs with a need for overnight provision in particular for the vehicle repairers."
Conclusion
Lord Justice Maurice Kay
Lord Justice Pill