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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Edwards v Kumarasamy [2015] EWCA Civ 20 (28 January 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2015/20.html Cite as: [2015] WLR(D) 40, [2015] EWCA Civ 20, [2015] 1 Ch 484, [2015] 2 WLR 1408, [2015] HLR 18, [2015] PIQR P11, [2015] Ch 484, [2015] 1 CH 484 |
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ON APPEAL FROM BOW COUNTY COURT
Her Honour Judge May QC
21R71402
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE LEWISON
and
LORD JUSTICE CHRISTOPHER CLARKE
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SAMUEL EDWARDS |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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BALADAS KUMARASAMY |
Respondent |
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(Transcript of the Handed Down Judgment of
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MR JOSHUA SWIRSKY (instructed by MacLeod James & Goonting) for the Respondent
Hearing date : 20 January 2015
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Lewison:
"(1) In a lease to which this section applies …there is implied a covenant by the lessor—
(a) to keep in repair the structure and exterior of the dwelling-house (including drains, gutters and external pipes)…
(1A) If a lease to which this section applies is a lease of a dwelling-house which forms part only of a building, then, subject to subsection (1B), the covenant implied by subsection (1) shall have effect as if—
(a) the reference in paragraph (a) of that subsection to the dwelling-house included a reference to any part of the building in which the lessor has an estate or interest…
…
(1B) Nothing in subsection (1A) shall be construed as requiring the lessor to carry out any works or repairs unless the disrepair (or failure to maintain in working order) is such as to affect the lessee's enjoyment of the dwelling-house or of any common parts, as defined in section 60(1) of the Landlord and Tenant Act 1987, which the lessee, as such, is entitled to use.
(3A) In any case where—
(a) the lessor's repairing covenant has effect as mentioned in subsection (1A), and
(b) in order to comply with the covenant the lessor needs to carry out works or repairs otherwise than in, or to an installation in, the dwelling-house, and
(c) the lessor does not have a sufficient right in the part of the building or the installation concerned to enable him to carry out the required works or repairs,
then, in any proceedings relating to a failure to comply with the lessor's repairing covenant, so far as it requires the lessor to carry out the works or repairs in question, it shall be a defence for the lessor to prove that he used all reasonable endeavours to obtain, but was unable to obtain, such rights as would be adequate to enable him to carry out the works or repairs"
"They are attached in that manner to the house for the purpose of access to this dwelling house, and they are part of the dwelling house which is necessary for the purpose of anybody who wishes to live in the dwelling house enjoying that privilege. If they have not means of access of some sort they could not get there, and these are simply the means of access. They are outside structures, steps that are built, and therefore it seems to me they are plainly part of the building, and therefore the covenant implied by [s 11] of the Act fits and applies to the obligations of the landlords in this case."
"That rule rests upon the principle that the landlord is not the occupier of the premises, and has no means of knowing what is the condition of the premises unless he is told, because he has no right of access to the demised premises, whereas the occupier has the best means of knowing of any want of repair."
"But although created by statute the legal nature of this obligation was contractual. Its characteristics were the same as those of an obligation created by a repairing covenant in a lease. What the statute was providing was that any contract for the letting of premises to which it applied should be read and given effect to as if it contained an express covenant by the landlord to keep the premises in such a state of repair as would make them reasonably fit for human habitation."
"At this stage it is sufficient to say that as I read [the two] cases their ratio decidendi was based upon (a) the contractual nature of the landlord's obligation resulting from the statutory requirement that it should be implied as a term in the contract of letting and (b) the legal characteristics of a repairing covenant by a landlord in a lease or tenancy agreement."
"…it has the same essential characteristics: (a) that the landlord's obligation results from a statutory requirement that it should be implied as a term in the contract of letting and (b) that the term to be implied has the legal characteristic of a repairing covenant by a landlord in a lease."
"… by 1926 the result of half a century of judicial decision was that it was well established that, at any rate where the state of disrepair was known to the tenant, the landlord's obligation to start carrying out any works of repair did not arise until he had information about the existence of a defect in the premises such as would put a reasonable man upon inquiry as to whether works of repair were needed." (Emphasis added)
"… where a defect occurs in the demised premises themselves, a landlord is in breach of his obligation to keep them in repair only when he has information about the existence of the defect such as would put a reasonable landlord on inquiry as to whether works of repair to it are needed and he has failed to carry out the necessary works with reasonable expedition thereafter" (emphasis added)
"We do not accept the lessors' contention in so far as it would limit "the structure and exterior of the dwelling house" to that which, in the conveyancing meaning, is included in the particular terms of the demise in the lease. Anything which, in the ordinary use of words, would be regarded as a part of the structure, or of the exterior, of the particular "dwelling house," regarded as a separate part of the building, would be within the scope of paragraph (a). Thus, the exclusion by the words of clause 2 of the underlease of "any part of the outside walls" would not have the effect of taking outside the operation of paragraph (a) that which, in the ordinary use of language, would be regarded as the exterior wall of the flat - an essential integral part of the flat, as a dwelling house; that part of the outside wall of the block of flats which constitutes a wall of the flat. The paragraph applies to the outside wall or walls of the flat; the outside of inner party walls of the flat; the outer sides of horizontal divisions between Flat 20 and flats above and below; the structural framework and beams directly supporting floors, ceilings and walls of the flat."
i) Liability under the extended covenant only applies where the disrepair affects the tenant's enjoyment of the dwelling-house or common parts and in practice the tenant is likely to be the first person to become aware of the existence of defects falling within the landlord's obligation;
ii) There is nothing in O'Brien v Robinson to indicate that the House of Lords thought it was doing anything other than laying down a general rule of general application to section 11.
Lord Justice Christopher Clarke:
The Chancellor of the High Court (Sir Terence Etherton):