[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 >> Jewelcraft Ltd v Pressland & Anor [2015] EWCA Civ 1111 (29 October 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2015/1111.html Cite as: [2015] HLR 48, [2015] EWCA Civ 1111 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
ON APPEAL FROM CENTRAL LONDON COUNTY COURT
HH JUDGE DIGHT
3CL10384
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE TOMLINSON
and
LORD JUSTICE VOS
____________________
JEWELCRAFT LIMITED |
Appellant/ Claimant |
|
- and - |
||
(1) PAUL PRESSLAND (2) JUSTIN PRESSLAND |
Respondents/ Defendants |
____________________
Mr Anthony Radevsky (instructed by Bishop & Sewell LLP) for the Respondents
Hearing date : 8 October 2015
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Patten :
"(1) For purposes of this Part of this Act, "house" includes any building designed or adapted for living in and reasonably so called, notwithstanding that the building is not structurally detached, or was or is not solely designed or adapted for living in, or is divided horizontally into flats or maisonettes; and—
(a) where a building is divided horizontally, the flats or other units into which it is so divided are not separate "houses", though the building as a whole may be; and
(b) where a building is divided vertically the building as a whole is not a "house" though any of the units into which it is divided may be."
"at the relevant time (that is to say, at the time when he gives notice in accordance with this Act of his desire to have the freehold or to have an extended lease, as the case may be) he has-
(i) in the case of a right to acquire the freehold, been tenant of the house under a long tenancy for the last two years;"
"….. unless, at the relevant time, the tenant has been occupying the house, or any part of it, as his only or main residence (whether or not he has been using it for other purposes) —
(a) for the last two years; or
(b) for periods amounting to two years in the last ten years."
"9. The two parts of the definition are in a sense "belt and braces": complementary and overlapping, but both needing to be satisfied. The first looks to the identity or function of the building based on its physical characteristics. The second ties the definition to the primary meaning of "house" as a single residence, as opposed to say a hostel or a block of flats; but that in turn is qualified by the specific provision relating to houses divided horizontally. Both parts need to be read in the context of a statute which is about houses as places to live in, not about houses as pieces of architecture, or features in a street scene, or names in an address book."
"The question that I have to address is not whether it is possible but whether it is reasonable to call the building in this case, a house. I have had regard to the history of the property, the physical appearance of it, the layout, the terms of the lease, and the user of the premises over the years. The starting point, as far as I am concerned, is that the building does not look like a house. It is part of a parade of shops with living accommodation over it. It was not, in my judgment, built as a house. It was built as a shop with living accommodation over it. The two elements are not as they were in Tandon. It was not built as a house. Nor is it now a physically mixed unit. The two units have been separate for the last 40 years."
"I do not think that a tower block of flats would reasonably be called a "house." But I think a four-storied building like the present one is reasonably called a "house." Take it in stages. First, if the tenant occupied the building entirely by himself, using the ground floor for his shop premises, that would plainly be a "house" reasonably so called. Second, if the tenant, instead of using the ground floor himself for business purposes, sublets it, that does not alter the character of the building. It is still a "house" reasonably so called. And that is this case."
"In my judgment there was no evidence on which it could be possible to uphold a finding that this building could not reasonably be called a house with its ground floor converted into a shop. I am encouraged in coming to this conclusion by the reflection that this appellant, living in a house of this kind in these circumstances, is obviously the sort of person to whom the legislature intended to give security of tenure. It is, I think, well recognised that in construing a word in a statute one is entitled to look at the general purpose of the Act."
"Section 2(1) evidently recognises that not every building which is partly designed or adapted for living in is a house; if every such building were a house, then a large factory or office building with living accommodation in a caretaker's flat might qualify. That result is avoided by the provision which limits the meaning of house by adding the qualification that the building must be reasonably so called. The limitation directs attention to the character of the building and the main element in the character of a building is its appearance. The fact that a building, originally designed solely as a house, has been partly adapted or converted into a shop is, in my view, not relevant per se. Partial conversion is relevant only in so far as it affects the present appearance of the building, as it usually does. In Lake v. Bennett [1970] 1 Q.B. 663 both Salmon L.J. and Cross L.J. referred to the building having had its ground floor "converted into" or "made into" a shop, but I think they were only explaining the reason for the appearance of the building at the relevant date. If they meant to imply that the fact of conversion was relevant in itself, I would respectfully disagree. Some buildings which were designed and originally used solely as houses, but have had their ground floors converted into shops, retain most of their original character as houses. Others do not. The character of each building has to be considered separately, as a question of fact. Lake v. Bennett did not, in my opinion, decide as a matter of law that all buildings with shops on the ground floor and living accommodation above are "houses" in the sense of the Act. If Parliament had intended that to be the law it could easily have said so, but it did not."
"I do not think that it is contended that all mixed units are houses reasonably so called: if it were I should reject the contention: there is no warrant for it in the Act. Nor can I agree that there is any presumption that mixed premises are to be regarded as a house. The Act extends to dwellings: it does not extend to shops: there is no warrant for forcing one category into the other. Nor do I think it our task to prescribe a simple formula which will solve the judges' problem for them. Certainty can always be purchased for the price of injustice, and I know of no rule which prevents different cases from being differently decided. To suppose that judges, if left without firm guide-lines, will give anomalous decisions seems to me to underrate their common sense. The judge has to decide each case using his knowledge and applying the Act, and unless he applies a wrong test the decision is decisive."
"Small corner shops and terrace shops combined with living accommodation are to be found in almost every town and village in England and Wales. Parliament plainly intended that a tenant who occupied such premises as his residence should have the benefit of the Act if the building could reasonably be called a "house." It is imperative, if the law is to be evenly and justly administered, that there should be not only uniformity of principle in the approach of the courts to the question but also a broad consistency in the conclusions reached. The question must not, save within narrow limits, be treated by the courts as a question of fact: for the variations of judicial response could well be such as to give rise to unacceptable, indeed unjust, differences between one case and another. This could lead to the statute being applied to two practically identical buildings one way by one judge and another by another - an echo of equity and the length of the Chancellor's foot. For this reason, the Court of Appeal's decision in Lake v. Bennett [1970] 1 Q.B. 663 was welcome as stating a principle and confirming the question of fact to a narrow area. I deduce from it the following propositions of law: (1) as long as a building of mixed use can reasonably be called a house, it is within the statutory meaning of "house," even though it may also reasonably be called something else; (2) it is a question of law whether it is reasonable to call a building a "house"; (3) if the building is designed or adapted for living in, by which, as is plain from section 1 (1) of the Act of 1967, is meant designed or adapted for occupation as a residence, only exceptional circumstances, which I find hard to envisage, would justify a judge in holding that it could not reasonably be called a house. They would have to be such that nobody could reasonably call the building a house."
"[46] While the observation is tolerably clear, I am not sure that I would agree with it. It appears to place decisive weight on the user covenant in a lease, whereas it seems to me that the thrust of the judgments in Lake's case and the opinion of Lord Roskill in Tandon's case (as opposed to the dissenting opinion of Lord Fraser in that case) is that the question whether a building is a 'house… reasonably so called' is to be determined essentially by reference to its external and internal physical character and appearance."
"[41] As will be apparent from my earlier analysis of Tandon, I cannot agree that Lord Roskill regarded "external and internal physical character and appearance" as the determining factors. I agree with the Master of the Rolls that the terms of the lease as such should not have been treated as the major factor. However, in so far as Mummery LJ treated the use of the building, rather than its physical appearance, as determinative, his approach was in my view entirely consistent with the reasoning of the majority in Tandon as I have explained it. I consider that Prospect Estates [2009] 1 WLR 1313 was rightly decided, and that the ratio need not be limited in the way the Master of the Rolls proposed."
"47 . . . First of all, not only has there in the past been no residential use since even before the grant of the lease, but there is no design in the property at 252 for residential use (or there was not at any rate until 2009) or for mixed use or for residential use to be combined with commercial use. In short no shopkeeper ever lived above or was intended by the design to do so at the time of the grant of the lease or since. At the time of the grant the shop was a shop, it had no access to the first floor, while the first floor could only be accessed and used from number 250 next door or, after 1997, by going against rather than along the fire escape route and opening the fire escape door from the outside. Mixing and words connoting combination of uses are particularly inappropriate in this case; the two uses have always been and still are completely independent, and they are independent by reason of the design of the building, that is the physical characteristics of the building."
"… first, the external and internal physical character and appearance of the building and the lease descriptions of it are not determining factors in deciding whether the building is a house reasonably so-called; and secondly, the use of a building at the relevant date, rather than its physical appearance, may be treated as determinative."
"55. The Premises were neither adapted for residential use at the date when the Lease began nor were they ever used as such until the recent adaptation for living in, which was completed shortly before the claimants gave notice under the 1967 Act. The upper floor was a subsidiary part of the building, being smaller and previously used for non–residential purposes in connection with an adjoining building. The case is distinguishable from Tandon where the living accommodation above was physically connected with the shop unit below. In that case there was a bathroom at the rear of the shop, as well as a connecting staircase at the rear to the first floor. In this case there was no connecting access from the commercial unit on the ground floor to the flat on the first floor. On the contrary, the only means of access to the flat involved traipsing to the back of the building, climbing an outside metal staircase and then walking along a passageway. In my view, the judge was entitled to place the use of the upper floor relied on as at the date of the notice, upon which the claimants place such emphasis, into the proper setting of the use of it under the Lease during the preceding 70 plus years."