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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Patel & Ors v MRD Property Developments Ltd [2012] EWCA Civ 727 (31 May 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2012/727.html Cite as: [2012] EWCA Civ 727 |
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ON APPEAL FROM CENTRAL LONDON COUNTY COURT
Mr Recorder Stephen Jourdan QC
ICL10149
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE LONGMORE
and
LORD JUSTICE PATTEN
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(1) Rajesh Patel (2) Syed Rizvi (3) Kumara Mardaymootoo |
Appellants |
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- and - |
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MRD Property Developments Ltd |
Respondent |
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Mr Russell Stone (instructed by Whitmore Law LLP Solicitors) for the respondent
Hearing date: 21st May 2012
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Ward:
(1) At paragraph 08:
"There were never any formal demands for payment of the insurance rent but Mr Kholsa [the landlord's secretary] said he provided copies of the insurance renewal demands from the insurance company to Mr Mardaymootoo."
At paragraph 27:
"Mr Kholsa's evidence in relation to this issue was as follows: "At ex. RK/2 I attach a schedule that shows a history of all payments of the claimants and also copies of the insurance demand notes raised by our insurer and provided to the Third Claimant." The insurance demand notes that are referred to take the form of documents produced by Aviva, and they are each described as "Renewal Notice" and they include a statement of the premium due. They show the following amounts [as set out at [7] above]. So the evidence is that these demands were given to Mr Mardaymootoo and that is not disputed."
(2) At paragraph 30:
"I am not satisfied on the evidence that the tenants were aware that they needed to be given a written demand and so if the landlord does need to establish that fact in order to succeed, it fails."
(3) At paragraph 09:
"[Mr Kholsa] said that there was then another meeting on 3rd April 2009 with himself, the two directors of the landlord and the three tenants at which time he said the arrears stood at £33,057.89. He said that at that meeting the tenants agreed to pay £7,900 immediately and would pay the arrears as quickly as they could thereafter. He also said that it was agreed that £5,000 of that £7,900 would be applied towards paying insurance rent that was due, and some costs. … On 15th April, shortly after that meeting, £7,900 was paid by a company controlled by Mr Mardaymootoo to the landlord."
At paragraph 29:
"… Mr Kholsa said that he had received a cheque for £2,500 from Mr Mardaymootoo which Mr Mardaymootoo had asked Mr Kholsa to put towards the insurance; and that at the meeting on 3rd April it had been agreed that out of £7,900 that was to be paid following that meeting £5,000 was to be applied in paying off the insurance premiums together with some costs … I accept Mr Kholsa's evidence on the facts which are relevant to this point which I have identified, namely, that Mr Mardaymootoo paid £2,500 towards insurance and that at the meeting on 3rd April it was agreed that £5,000 out of the £7,900 would be put towards insurance and costs."
(4) At paragraph 26:
"I do not think that there are any other substantial issues of fact which I need to decide where the evidence of Mr Patel and Mr Rizvi differs from that of Mr Kholsa; however, for the reasons given above, where there is such a conflict I prefer the evidence of Mr Kholsa."
"27. The second issue is this: was there a written demand for the Insurance Rent, and if not, does that matter? The Lease is a lease of the whole of the building, and the building as a whole was insured by the Landlord with Aviva. The Lease does not set out any particular requirement which a written demand must satisfy. It does not say, for example, that the written demand must have a date on it or that it must contain any particular information or satisfy any particular formalities. In my judgment, the minimum that is needed is that there is a document of some kind served by the Landlord on the Tenants which would indicate to a reasonable recipient in the position of the Tenants that the Landlord was asking the Tenants to pay a specified sum by way of Insurance Rent. So if a document is sent by the Landlord to the Tenants which says "Please pay the following sum by way of Insurance Rent" that is plainly sufficient. If it does not use express words of that kind, but a reasonable reader knowing the terms of the Lease would appreciate that the document was requiring the Tenants to pay a specified sum in respect of insurance then I think that would suffice. … So the evidence is that these [insurance demand notes] each described as a "renewal notice" were given to Mr Mardaymootoo and that is not disputed.
28. Mr Davies on behalf of the Tenants points out correctly that there are two separate contracts with which we are concerned – the contract between the Landlord and the insurance company under which the insurance company is entitled to demand payment from the Landlord, and a quite separate contract between the Landlord and the Tenants under which the Landlord is entitled to payment of the insurance premiums but only 14 days after making a written demand. Mr Davies accepts that if Mr Kholsa had written on the Renewal Notices "please pay" and then had handed that document with those words on it to Mr Mardaymootoo that would suffice, because the words "please pay" would convey to the recipient that the Landlord wanted payment of the amount set out in the documents. But he says that in the absence of those words simply handing the document over does not suffice to constitute a written demand. In my judgment read against the background of the Lease, which tells the Tenant that the Tenant is expected to pay the insurance premiums on receiving a written demand to do so, a reasonable person in the position of the Tenants on being handed a Renewal Notice by a representative of the Landlord would appreciate that the Landlord was, by handing the document over, demanding that the Tenants pay the sums set out in the document. As Mr Stone said in his submissions, the purpose of requiring the written demand is to ensure that the Tenant has a piece of paper which clearly sets out the amount that he should pay, and as Mr Stone said, a letter that said please pay £2,383.05 would do; handing over the document that shows that amount being demanded by the insurance company is better, since it shows the Tenant very clearly the provenance of the demand and the accuracy of the demand. Handing over a renewal notice is better from the Tenant's point of view than receiving a letter from the Landlord that demands a payment of an amount which the Tenant cannot verify. Where there are three joint Tenants, and there is nothing to indicate any of them requires separate service, I consider that delivering a written demand to one of them would suffice and the contrary has not been suggested.
29. If that is right, then that disposes of this point …"
"That would be an entirely hypothetical issue, given my findings on written demand and I would need time to consider it. I think it is sufficient for me to find the facts in the way I have and to decide the point in the landlord's favour on the basis that handing over the Renewal Notices did constitute delivery of a written demand."
"of whether the Defendants' actions in providing insurance renewal documents to one of the Claimants amounted to valid demands for Insurance Rent pursuant to clause 4.2 of the Lease so that Insurance Rent was properly due and owing from the Claimants to the Defendants."
By its respondent's notice, the Landlord seeks to uphold the Recorder's findings on the additional ground that the fact that payments were specifically made and accepted in respect of insurance premiums amounts to a waiver of the right to require a formal demand in writing.
"The learned Recorder erred in law in holding that, where there are three joint tenants, notice to one is sufficient and that notice need not be given to each of the three."
We refused permission to amend the grounds of appeal. The application for leave to amend was very late. The point was never taken in the court below and if it was not technically conceded, no argument to the contrary was suggested as the judge observed at the end of paragraph 30 of his judgment. Moreover if the point had been taken, the Landlord would almost certainly have wished to have led evidence to deal with the matter.
"The Premium to renew this policy from the Renewal Date shown should be paid by the Renewal Date or within 15 days thereafter …"
Under "Your Details" the Landlord is named as the policy holder. The meaning and effect of this notice is as plain as can be. It informs the Landlord as policy holder that to renew the policy the specified premium must be paid before the renewal date or within 15 days thereafter. The renewal notice is, therefore, the best evidence the Landlord can provide of the Insurance Rent, i.e. the sum which the Landlord must pay by way of a premium for insuring the premises.
Lord Justice Longmore:
Lord Justice Patten: