![]() |
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | |
England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Cantrell v Wycombe District Council [2008] EWCA Civ 866 (29 July 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2008/866.html Cite as: [2009] PTSR 96, [2008] EWCA Civ 866 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Buy ICLR report: [2009] PTSR 96] [Help]
COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE READING COUNTY COURT
HER HONOUR JUDGE ANN CAMPBELL
LOWER COURT CASE NO: 7HW00279
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
THE RIGHT HONOURABLE LORD JUSTICE STANLEY BURNTON
and
THE HONOURABLE MR. JUSTICE LEWISON
____________________
MICHAEL CANTRELL |
Appellant |
|
- and - |
||
WYCOMBE DISTRICT COUNCIL |
Respondent |
____________________
Mr. Ashley Underwood QC and Mr Richard Moules (instructed by Wycombe District Council) for the Respondent.
Hearing date : 21st July 2008
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Lewison :
"enforceable without any limit of time against any body or person deriving title from the original covenantor in respect of its interest in the properties and any person deriving title under it in respect of any lesser interest in the properties … as if that body or person had been an original covenanting party …"
"the Association will let each of the properties on a periodic tenancy to a nominee of the Council … "
"Where—
(a) a local housing authority have disposed of land held by them for any of the purposes of this Act and the person to whom the disposal was made has entered into a covenant with the authority concerning the land, or
(b) an owner of any land has entered into a covenant with the local housing authority concerning the land for the purposes of any of the provisions of this Act,
the authority may enforce the covenant against the persons deriving title under the covenantor, notwithstanding that the authority are not in possession of or interested in any land for the benefit of which the covenant was entered into, in like manner and to the like extent as if they had been possessed of or interested in such land."
i) There was no assistance to be gained from the words of section 609 itself because it did not refer to restrictive covenants; nor did it refer to specific and positive covenants;ii) There was no authority on the proper interpretation of the section;
iii) The textbooks took different views, but the weight of academic authority was in favour of the conclusion that section 609 allowed positive covenants to be enforced;
iv) The words "in like manner" and "to the same extent" meant "in the same way" and "to the same degree" as if the housing authority had been possessed of or interested in land;
v) The purpose of section 609 was to benefit the public interest and to ensure that if a local housing authority makes an investment in housing stock it can continue to keep some form of control over that stock;
vi) Bearing in mind the purpose of the Act and the majority of academic opinion supported the view that section 609 displaces the common law, section 609 allows positive covenants to run with the land.
i) The covenant is negative in substance: Rhone v Stephens;ii) The covenant is made to protect land retained by the covenantee; and the covenantee continues to retain that land when he seeks to enforce the covenant: LCC v Allen [1914] 3 KB 642;
iii) The burden is intended to run with the land of the covenantor;
iv) The subsequent purchaser is not a bona fide purchaser for value without notice of the covenant.
"Restrictive covenants deprive an owner of a right which he could otherwise exercise. Equity cannot compel an owner to comply with a positive covenant entered into by his predecessors in title without flatly contradicting the common law rule that a person cannot be made liable upon a contract unless he was a party to it. Enforcement of a positive covenant lies in contract; a positive covenant compels an owner to exercise his rights. Enforcement of a negative covenant lies in property; a negative covenant deprives the owner of a right over property."
i) The manner of enforcement is by injunction or damages in lieu;ii) No enforcement is possible unless the covenantee retains land which has the benefit of the covenant (i.e. there is no extent to which the covenant may be enforced);
iii) If enforcement is possible at all, the extent of enforcement is:
a) the extent to which the covenants are negative in substance; andb) the extent to which the covenants were taken to protect the land of the covenantee.
"This section displaces the general rule of equity that a person disposing of property subject to a restrictive covenant can enforce it against a subsequent purchaser only if, at the time of the disposal, he retained other land benefited by the restriction. It enables a local authority who on selling or exchanging land held for housing purposes impose a covenant concerning the land (for instance, preventing it from being used for other than residential purposes) to enforce the covenant against subsequent purchasers notwithstanding that general rule. The references to selling or exchanging reflect the language of the old section 105 (1)(b). Under the new section 104 "A disposal … may be effected in any manner". For instance land could (with the Secretary of State's consent) be conveyed gratuitously subject to a covenant restricting its use. There seems no reason to distinguish such a transaction from one involving a sale for a nominal consideration.
We therefore recommend that the provision reproducing section 151 of the 1957 Act should apply to all disposals within the new power. Effect is given to this recommendation in clause 609 of the Housing Bill."
"The purpose of a consolidation Act is to remove this difficulty by bringing together in a single statute all the existing statute law dealing with the same subject-matter which forms the general context in which the particular provisions of the Act fall to be construed, so that it will no longer be necessary to seek that context in a whole series of amended and re-amended provisions appearing piecemeal in earlier statutes.
This is the only purpose of a consolidation Act; this is the only 'mischief' it is designed to cure. It is true that a consolidation Act is not intended to alter the law as it existed immediately before the Act was passed, but to treat this absence of intention as justifying recourse to the previous legislation repealed by the consolidation Act in order to ascribe to any of the provisions of that Act a meaning different from that which it would naturally bear when read only in the context of the other provisions of the consolidation Act itself, would be to defeat the whole purpose of this type of legislation—to allow the absence of a tail to wag the dog."
"Where any person is willing to agree with the National Trust that any land or any part thereof shall so far as his interest in the land enables him to bind it be made subject either permanently or for a specified period to conditions restricting the planning development or use thereof in any manner the National Trust may if it thinks fit enter into an agreement with him or accept a covenant from him to that effect and shall have power to enforce such agreement or covenant against persons deriving title under him in the like manner and to the like extent as if the National Trust were possessed of or entitled to or interested in adjacent land and as if the agreement or covenant had been and had been expressed to be entered into for the benefit of that adjacent land."
"The Lands Tribunal held that the National Trust must be deemed to be the owner of adjacent land; but there is a difficulty about this. There is no land specified. We do not know the area or extent of that adjacent land, nor where it would be situated. In these circumstances I am inclined to think that we do not have to deem any particular land to be in the ownership of the National Trust. Section 8 is simply machinery to give the National Trust a standing to enforce the restriction where they would have no standing at common law. I am prepared to accept the view that the National Trust, when a covenant of this kind is made, are entitled to enforce it so as to protect the interests of which they are the custodians in this country. They are, under the statute, the custodians of the natural beauty of our land, the cliffs and downs, fields and woods, rivers and shores; and of the stately homes, historic buildings, cottages, and barns. In respect of any injury to their interest as custodians of our natural beauty, I think they would be qualified to insist on these covenants."
"For I regard it as very regrettable that a public body should be prevented from enforcing a restriction on the use of property imposed for the public benefit against persons who bought the property knowing of the restriction, by the apparently immaterial circumstance that the public body does not own any land in the immediate neighbourhood. But, after a careful consideration of the authorities, I am forced to the view that the later decisions of this Court compel me so to hold."
Lord Justice Stanley Burnton:
Lord Justice Moore-Bick: