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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 >> Ker v Optima Community Association [2013] EWCA Civ 579 (24 May 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2013/579.html Cite as: [2013] EWCA Civ 579 |
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ON APPEAL FROM BIRMINGHAM COUNTY COURT
HH JUDGE VICTOR HALL
1BM72707
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE PATTEN
and
LADY JUSTICE BLACK
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JASMIN KER |
Appellant/ Defendant |
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- and - |
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OPTIMA COMMUNITY ASSOCIATION |
Respondent/Claimant |
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Christopher Baker (instructed by Anthony Collins Solicitors LLP) for the Respondent
Hearing date : 25th March 2013
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Patten :
"To make things even easier, you'll get around £2,500 for every year you rent with us to use as your deposit. It's a secure way to save, and gives you the freedom to experience your home before deciding to buy"
"What is FlexiBuy?
FlexiBuy is a route to home ownership. With FlexiBuy you can rent a property from us and then choose to buy later under Shared Ownership. We will give you a proportion of your rent back to you to use as a deposit when you choose to buy.
How much of my rent is saved towards my deposit?
We save approximately 40% of your rent to return to you as a deposit.
What if I choose not to buy?
If you choose not to buy then we do have the right to terminate your tenancy agreement and you would lose the deposit we have saved for you."
"BACKGROUND
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2. If the Tenant purchases the Leasehold Interest in accordance with this Option, the Landlord agrees to give an incentive in accordance with the provisions of this Option.
3. At the start of the tenancy agreement the Purchase Price is estimated to be £170,000. For the avoidance of doubt this is just an estimate intending to assist the Tenant in the deposit estimating the ultimate purchase price and is in no way binding on the parties.
…
1. Definitions And Interpretations
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"Deposit Incentive"
A sum to be paid by the Landlord towards the Purchase Price to be calculated in accordance with paragraph 4.
…
2. Determination of Purchase Price
2.1 At any time after the end of the first 12 months of the tenancy, either the Landlord or the Tenant may apply for determination of the Purchase Price.
2.2 The party requesting the Determination of the Purchase Price shall notify the other party in writing of its application for determination of the Purchase Price.
2.3 The Landlord shall propose a surveyor to determine the current market value of the Leasehold Interest on the open market on the date of receipt of the notice referred to in paragraph 2.2 by the other party. The parties will jointly agree who the surveyor will be. If they cannot agree, either the Landlord or the Tenant may ask the President of the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors to appoint a surveyor.
2.4 The determination of the independent surveyor, who must act as an expert and not as an arbitrator, is to be final and binding on the Landlord and the Tenant.
2.5 In relation to the first determination in any 12 month period of the Purchase Price, the fees and expenses of the independent surveyor, including the costs of his appointment, shall be borne by the Landlord. For any further determination(s) in the same 12 month period, the fees and expenses of the independent surveyor, including the costs of his appointment, shall be borne by the Tenant.
3. Exercising the Option
3.1 If the Tenant wishes to purchase the Leasehold Interest, he must give to the Landlord written notice of that wish ("Notice of Exercise of Option").
3.2 The notice may be given within one month of determination of the Purchase Price in accordance with paragraph 2.
3.3 If the Tenant serves a valid Notice of Exercise of Option and all other conditions set out in this Option are fulfilled, the Landlord must sell the Leasehold Interest to the Tenant on payment of the Purchase Price free from encumbrances PROVIDED THAT
3.3.1 No rent or other sums are outstanding under the terms of the tenancy;
3.3.2 No notices to terminate the tenancy have been served;
3.3.3 No proceedings have been issued to terminate the tenancy or to address issues of anti-social behaviour that have arisen under the tenancy and
3.3.4 At the date of serving a valid Notice of Exercise of Option the tenant would qualify to purchase under the relevant zone agent's application process.
4. Deposit Incentive
4. 1 On receipt of the Tenant's Notice of Exercise of Option, the Landlord shall determine the value of the Deposit Incentive as follows:
4.1.1 for each of the first 12 months of the tenancy, the sum of £700 (the monthly Net Rent at the start of the tenancy) less the sum of £384.37 (the monthly social housing rent for an equivalent property) plus
4.1.2 For any and each subsequent period of 12 months, the monthly Net Rent payable for the previous year multiplied by the percentage increase in the United Kingdom Retail Price Index ("RPI") over the period of 12 months to the 30th September prior to the relevant increase date plus ½ of 1 per cent. (0.5%) less the social housing rent for an equivalent property during that 12 months, and/or (where the tenancy continues for a number of months less than 12 months) such sum as applicable pro rata. If the RPI or the basis on which it is calculated or published is altered to a material extent (as to which the Landlord's decision shall be conclusive), the Landlord may give written notice of its proposal to substitute an alternative published index of general prices or value for money for calculation of the net rent and this Option will be varied in accordance from the date mentioned in the notice.
The Landlord's calculation of the deposit incentive is final and binding on the parties.
4.2 In calculating the value of the deposit incentive, the Landlord shall act reasonably and properly at all times.
4.3 The Landlord agrees that the deposit incentive, which for the purpose of this clause 4.3 will be calculated at the date of completion of the sale of the Leasehold Interest, may be credited against the Purchase Price on completion of the sale of the Leasehold Interest.
5. Completion
5.1 Completion shall take place within 3 months of the Landlord's receipt of the Notice of Exercise of Option.
5.2 On completion the Tenant must pay to the Landlord the Purchase Price (less the Deposit Incentive), plus VAT if applicable at the rate then in force, together with any Rent and other sums due under the tenancy up to the date of completion.
5.3 The Tenant may choose to mortgage the Leasehold Interest for purposes of completing the purchase of the leasehold Interest.
5.4 The initial percentage of the Leasehold Interest to be purchased shall not be less than 25% nor more than 75%.
5.5 The Landlord will remain the registered proprietor of the Leasehold Interest until the purchase of the Leasehold Interest is completed.
5.6 The terms of the sale of the Leasehold Interest are set out in the draft lease annexed. The Gross Rent shall be 2.75% of the market value of the unsold equity as determined by the surveyor in accordance with paragraph 2.
…
5.7.2 on completion of the Option, the tenancy shall merge with the Leasehold Interest and be extinguished.
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8. Termination of Option
8.1 This Option will terminate on either:
8.1.1 Termination of the tenancy; or
8.1.2 In accordance with clause 8.2; or
8.1.3 In accordance with clause 8.3
8.2 if:
8.2.1 by the Landlord's reasonable estimate, the Deposit Incentive reaches 10% or more of the Landlord's reasonable estimate of the Purchase Price; and
8.2.2 the Landlord notifies the Tenant of this; and
8.2.3 the Purchase Price having been obtained in accordance with paragraph 2 so that the Deposit Incentive is confirmed as 10% or more of the Purchase Price; and
8.2.4 the Tenant failing to serve a valid Notice to Exercise of Option within 1 month of the Purchase Price being determined,
then the Landlord may choose to terminate this Option by notifying the Tenant in writing.
8.3 If the Tenant has served a valid Notice to Exercise of Option but does not complete the purchase of the Leasehold Interest within three months, then:
8.3.1 this Option terminates; and
8.3.2 the Landlord may terminate the tenancy in accordance with the provisions of the tenancy.
8.4 When this Option terminates, it may not be subsequently enforced or exercised again.
…"
"if it has any meaning in law, it means acts done or documents executed by the parties to the "sham" which are intended by them to give to third parties or to the court the appearance of creating between the parties legal rights and obligations different from the actual legal rights and obligations (if any) which the parties intend to create."
"53. In this connection, it is right to refer to a point raised by the Secretary of State. He submitted that a local authority's aim in wanting possession should be a 'given', which does not have to be explained or justified in court, so that the court will only be concerned with the occupiers' personal circumstances. In our view, there is indeed force in the point, which finds support in Lord Bingham's comment in Kay v Lambeth London BC [2006] 2 AC 465, 491, para 29, that to require the local authority routinely, from the outset, to plead and prove that the possession order sought is justified would, in the overwhelming majority of cases, be burdensome and futile. In other words, the fact that the authority is entitled to possession and should, in the absence of cogent evidence to the contrary, be assumed to be acting in accordance with its duties, will be a strong factor in support of the proportionality of making an order for possession. But, in a particular case, the authority may have what it believes to be particularly strong or unusual reasons for wanting possession—for example, that the property is the only occupied part of a site intended for immediate development for community housing. The authority could rely on that factor, but would have to plead it and adduce evidence to support it.
54. Unencumbered property rights, even where they are enjoyed by a public body such as a local authority, are of real weight when it comes to proportionality. So, too, is the right—indeed the obligation—of a local authority to decide who should occupy its residential property. As Lord Bingham said in Harrow London BC v Qazi [2003] 4 All ER 461 at [25]:
'[T]he administration of public housing under various statutory schemes is entrusted to local housing authorities. It is not for the court to second-guess allocation decisions. The Strasbourg authorities have adopted a very pragmatic and realistic approach to the issue of justification.'
Therefore, in virtually every case where a residential occupier has no contractual or statutory protection, and the local authority is entitled to possession as a matter of domestic law, there will be a very strong case for saying that making an order for possession would be proportionate. However, in some cases there may be factors which would tell the other way."
"36. In looking at the factual matrix of this case it is important not to fall into the trap of viewing what happened from an ex-post facto viewpoint but rather seek to consider what the parties were contemplating at the time at which the agreement was being entered into.
37. I set out above the use to which the term "rent" had been put in dealings between the parties and it was always put upon the basis of the higher figure £700. When the question of intermediate market rent came to be considered in September 2009 it was at a lower level without the benefit of the option. Further, it is clear from the option documents included in the bundle and referred to above that the option could only be exercised upon the occurrence of certain contingencies. At that time the landlord would calculate a deposit incentive based upon payment of rent made, which would have the effect of reducing the actual rent paid over the period between the commencement of the tenancy and that point to one equating to a social rent rather than the full market rent that had been charged. I find it very difficult to construe the defendant's understanding of what was being undertaken was the creation of a savings fund or similar." (sic)
"In Street v Mountford [1985] AC 809, 825, I said that:
"Although the Rent Acts must not be allowed to alter or influence the construction of an agreement, the court should, in my opinion, be astute to detect and frustrate sham devices and artificial transactions whose only object is to disguise the grant of a tenancy and to evade the Rent Acts."
It would have been more accurate and less liable to give rise to misunderstandings if I had substituted the word "pretence" for the references to "sham devices" and "artificial transactions". Street v Mountford was not a case which involved a pretence concerning exclusive possession. The agreement did not mention exclusive possession and the owner conceded that the occupier enjoyed exclusive possession. In Somma v Hazelhurst [1978] 1 WLR 1014 and other cases considered in Street v Mountford, the owner wished to let residential accommodation but to avoid the Rent Acts. The occupiers wished to take a letting of residential accommodation. The owner stipulated for the execution of agreements which pretended that exclusive possession was not to be enjoyed by the occupiers. The occupiers were obliged to acquiesce with this pretence in order to obtain the accommodation. In my opinion the occupiers either did not understand the language of the agreements or assumed, justifiably, that in practice the owner would not violate their privacy. The owner's real intention was to rely on the language of the agreement to escape the Rent Acts. The owner allowed the occupiers to enjoy jointly exclusive occupation and accepted rent. A tenancy was created. Street v Mountford reasserted three principles. First, parties to an agreement cannot contract out of the Rent Acts. Second, in the absence of special circumstances, not here relevant, the enjoyment of exclusive occupation for a term in consideration of periodic payments creates a tenancy. Third, where the language of licence contradicts the reality of lease, the facts must prevail. The facts must prevail over the language in order that the parties may not contract out of the Rent Acts. In the present case clause 16 was a pretence."
"44. For this purpose, the court can look at all the relevant circumstances, including the subsequent conduct of the parties (see per Lord Jauncey in Antoniades v Villiers at p 475). There does not have to be a common intention to enter into other obligations or to deceive a third party: in Antoniades v Villiers, for instance, the "licensees" acknowledged in writing that their agreements with the landlord did not have the protection of the Rent Acts (see pp 457-458)."
Lady Justice Black :
Lord Justice Lloyd :