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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Shaw v Doleman [2009] EWCA Civ 279 (01 April 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2009/279.html Cite as: [2009] 2 P & CR 12, [2009] BPIR 945, [2009] EWCA Civ 279, [2009] 27 EG 92, [2009] Bus LR 1175, [2009] 2 BCLC 123, [2009] 14 EG 86 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE CHICHESTER COUNTY COURT
HHJ BARRATT QC
8C100173
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE STANLEY BURNTON
and
LORD JUSTICE ELIAS
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GABRIELLA SHAW |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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HAZEL DOLEMAN |
Respondent |
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WordWave International Limited
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MR TIMOTHY FANCOURT QC and MR EDWARD PETERS (instructed by MacDonald Oates) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 5th March 2009
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Mummery :
Introductory
"When the rent payable under the lease is higher than the rental value of the property at the time of the tenant's default, the landlord's financial interests may be better served by looking to the guarantor than by taking possession of the property and reletting it. Similarly, if the impecunious tenant is not the original tenant but a person to whom the lease has been assigned, the landlord may look to the original tenant for payment. When the lease was granted the original tenant covenanted with the landlord to pay the rent and to do so throughout the whole term of the lease. This included any increased rent payable under the rent review provisions. In these cases the loss falls on the guarantor or the original tenant, not the landlord."
"Sometimes, in post-assignment cases, the landlord's protection may be achieved at an unreasonably high price to others. The insolvency may occur many years after the lease was granted, long after the original tenant parted with his interest in the lease. He paid the rent until he left, and then took on the responsibility of other premises. A person of modest means is understandably shocked when out of the blue he receives a rent demand from the landlord of the property he once leased. Unlike the landlord, he had no control over the identity of the assignees down the line. He had no opportunity to reject them as financially unsound. He is even more horrified when he discovers that the rent demanded exceeds the current market rental value of the property.
Mounting public concern at this post-assignment state of affairs led to the enactment of the Landlord and Tenant (Covenants) Act 1995. In future, where a tenant lawfully assigns premises demised to him he will be released from the covenants falling to be complied with by the tenant of the premises."
Background
The Lease and AGA
"3.1 The Guarantor guarantees to the Landlord that the Assignee will pay the rents reserved by, and perform and observe the tenant's covenants in the Lease and the Guarantor will pay and make good to the Landlord on demand any losses, damages, costs and expenses suffered or incurred by the Landlord if the Assignee fails to do so."
The legislation
"A disclaimer under this section-
(a) operates so as to determine, as from the date of the disclaimer, the rights, interests and liabilities of the company in or in respect of the property disclaimed; but
(b) does not, except so far as is necessary for the purpose of releasing the company from any liability, affect the rights and liabilities of any other person."
" …the best answer seems to be that the statute takes effect as a deeming provision so far as other persons' preserved rights and obligations are concerned. A deeming provision is a commonplace statutory technique. The statute provides that a disclaimer operates to determine the interest of the tenant in the disclaimed property but not so as to affect the rights or liabilities of any other person. Thus when the lease is disclaimed it is determined and the reversion accelerated but the rights and liabilities of others, such as guarantors and original tenants, are to remain as though the lease had continued and not been determined. In this way the determination of the lease is not permitted to affect the rights or liabilities of other persons. Statute has so provided."
The judgment
"23…..This authorised guarantee agreement was drawn up in the context of the decision of the House of Lords in relation to the construction of the Insolvency Act, particularly section 178(4) of that Act, in terms of the way and the extent and degree to which existing liabilities they continued by operation of law in the event that there was a disclaimer via liquidator of the original terms of the tenancy. That is the principle of law which I accept , as contended for by Counsel for the Claimant, applies; that is the statutory context within which this authorised guarantee agreement falls to be construed and applied, and the meaning, in my judgment, to be given to the liability period. It is to be understood to be subject to those principles and the operation of law as provided for in section 178(4) of the Insolvency Act."
Tenant's submissions on appeal
Discussion and conclusions
Result
Lord Justice Stanley Burnton:
22 Lord Nicholls explained in Hindcastle v. Barbara Attenborough why the former practice [of including a put option in a guarantee] was unnecessary. He pointed out that the operation of section 178 of the Insolvency Act 1986 is limited by the provisions in paragraph (b) of subsection (4). The disclaimer takes effect under the section only in so far as is necessary for the purpose of releasing the insolvent company from liability. The disclaimer does not affect the rights and liabilities of other persons, in particular persons such as a surety or an original tenant. Nevertheless, the tenancy, itself, does cease to exist as an estate in the land demised by the lease. The relationship of landlord and tenant is preserved notionally for the purposes only of giving rise to an obligation on the surety or other third parties.
It is because the relationship of landlord and tenant is preserved notionally for the purpose of the liabilities of the Appellant that for that purpose the Assignee notionally continues to be bound by the tenant covenants in the lease.
"that as from the date when the lessee's estate and interest in the lease shall be assigned to the assignee pursuant to the licence hereinbefore contained and thenceforth during the residue of the term created by the lease the assignee will pay the rents thereby reserved . . ."
(See the judgment of Millett LJ in the Court of Appeal at [1995] QB 95, 106.) The argument that the liability of the second defendant was determined by the disclaimer of the lease because the term created by the lease then came to an end failed. Similarly, the argument that the surety's liability, which was to run "during the continuance of the lease", had been terminated because disclaimer resulted in the termination of the lease, failed. This was because, as against them, the effect of section 178(4)(b) was that the term and the lease were deemed to continue. I see no distinction between the provisions of these instruments and that of the AGA in the present case.
Lord Justice Elias: