![]() |
[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 >> Hood v HM Revenue and Customs [2018] EWCA Civ 2405 (30 October 2018) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2018/2405.html Cite as: [2018] EWCA Civ 2405, [2018] BTC 40, [2018] STC 2355, [2018] STI 2451 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
ON APPEAL FROM THE UPPER TRIBUNAL (TAX AND CHANCERY CHAMBER)
[2017] UKUT 0276 (TCC)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE HENDERSON
and
SIR COLIN RIMER
____________________
VISCOUNT HOOD (Executor of the estate of DIANA, LADY HOOD deceased) |
Appellant |
|
- and - |
||
THE COMMISSIONERS FOR HER MAJESTY'S REVENUE AND CUSTOMS |
Respondents |
____________________
Mr Jonathan Davey QC (instructed by the General Solicitor and Counsel to HMRC) for the Respondents
Hearing dates:19 June and 12 July 2018
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Henderson:
Introduction and Background
"102. Gifts with reservation.
(1) Subject to subsections (5) and (6) below [which in the present case are agreed to be immaterial], this section applies, where, on or after 18th March 1986, an individual disposes of any property by way of gift and either-
(a) possession and enjoyment of the property is not bona fide assumed by the donee at or before the beginning of the relevant period; or
(b) at any time in the relevant period the property is not enjoyed to the entire exclusion, or virtually to the entire exclusion, of the donor and of any benefit to him by contract or otherwise;
and in this section "the relevant period" means a period ending on the date of the donor's death and beginning seven years before that date or, if it is later, on the date of the gift.
(2) If and so long as –
(a) possession and enjoyment of any property is not bona fide assumed as mentioned in subsection (1)(a) above, or
(b) any property is not enjoyed as mentioned in subsection (1)(b) above,
the property is referred to (in relation to the gift and the donor) as property subject to a reservation.
(3) If, immediately before the death of the donor, there is any property which, in relation to him, is property subject to a reservation then, to the extent that the property would not, apart from this section, form part of the donor's estate immediately before his death, that property shall be treated for the purposes of the 1984 Act [i.e. the Inheritance Tax Act 1984] as property to which he was beneficially entitled immediately before his death.
(4) If, at a time before the end of the relevant period, any property ceases to be property subject to a reservation, the donor shall be treated for the purposes of the 1984 Act as having at that time made a disposition of the property by a disposition which is a potentially exempt transfer."
"4. Terms of Lease
4.1 This lease is made upon the same terms and subject to the same covenants provisos and conditions as are contained in the Head Lease ("the Head Lease Provisions") except as to the rent and term of years granted and as varied by the remaining provisions of this Lease so that this Lease shall be construed and take effect as if the Head Lease Provisions as varied were repeated in this Lease in full with such modifications only as are necessary to make them apply to this demise.
4.2 To the extent that the Head Lease Provisions are inconsistent with this Lease the provisions of this Lease shall prevail
5. Mutual Covenants
The Landlord and the Tenant mutually covenant that they will respectively perform and observe the Head Lease Provisions as varied as if they had been repeated in full in this Lease"
Clause 6.2 then provided that the term "Landlord" included the person in whom the reversion immediately expectant on the determination of the sub-lease was for the time being vested, and that the obligations of the Tenant were joint and several.
Relevant Legislation
"… property taken under any gift, whenever made, of which property bona fide possession and enjoyment shall not have been assumed by the donee immediately upon the gift and thenceforward retained, to the entire exclusion of the donor, or of any benefit to him by contract or otherwise: …"
"Its policy has puzzled people for a long time. For one thing, it is in one sense a penal section. Not only may you not have your cake and eat it, but if you eat more than a few de minimis crumbs of what was given, you are deemed for tax purposes to have eaten the lot. Secondly, a superficial reading of phrases like "beneficial enjoyment of the property" and enjoyment of property "to the entire exclusion… of the donor" has led to numerous occasions in the past century in which the revenue has put forward the proposition that, as a matter of practical common sense, it simply must be contrary to the policy of the statute for a donor to be able to give away property such as a house and go on enjoying the benefit of the property by continuing to live there. This is the premise upon which the revenue claim the high ground of substance and reality. Mr Nugee said that for Lady Ingram to have made a potentially exempt transfer and retained the right to stay in the house was simply too good to be true and in the Court of Appeal, Evans LJ accepted this proposition. But this approach ignores the fact that "property" in section 102 is not something which has physical existence like a house but a specific interest in that property, a legal construct, which can co-exist with other interests in the same physical object. Section 102 does not therefore prevent people from deriving benefit from the object in which they have given away an interest. It applies only when they derive the benefit from that interest.
…
What, then, is the policy of section 102? It requires people to define precisely the interests which they are giving away and the interests, if any, which they are retaining. Once they have given away an interest they may not receive back any benefits from that interest. In Lang v Webb, 13 C.L.R. 503, 513 Isaacs J suggested that the policy was to avoid the "delay, expense and uncertainty" of requiring the revenue to investigate whether a gift was genuine or pretended. It laid down a rule that if the donor continued to derive any benefit from the property in which an interest had been given, it would be treated as a pretended gift unless the benefit could be shown to be referable to a specific proprietary interest which he had retained. This is probably the most plausible explanation …"
Authorities
"In this case can anybody doubt that something has been reserved to the settlor? The settlement itself has reserved 4,000 l. a year, and has reserved a right also on the part of the settlor that all his debts up to the period of his death should be paid, and the payment secured by the estate. It seems to me that it is burning daylight to say that is not within the express language of the statute, and I am really wholly unable to understand why these words are not as plain in the statute itself as any explanatory exposition could make them. That, my Lords, is really all I have to say upon the subject. It seems to me it is a particularly plain case…"
"The whole transaction reeked of benefits to the donor, some arising out of the property actually conveyed and assigned by way of gift to the donee, others arising out of covenants entered into by the donee collaterally and in reference to the gift… There is nothing laid down as law in that case which conflicts with the view that the entire exclusion of the donor from possession and enjoyment which is contemplated by [section 11(1) of the 1889 Act] is entire exclusion from possession and enjoyment of the beneficial interest in property which has been given by the gift, and that possession and enjoyment by the donor of some beneficial interest therein which he has not included in the gift is not inconsistent with the entire exclusion from possession and enjoyment which the sub-section requires."
"The net result of the transactions so far described was that the property formerly subject to the resettlement had been converted into (a) 50,000 fully paid ordinary shares of the company, (b) the right to receive from the company a capital sum of £750,000 by the instalments already mentioned, and (c) the above-mentioned sum of £100,000 paid by the company to the trustees.
By a deed poll dated March 28, 1927, Lord St Levan and Mr Ponsonby, in exercise of their overriding power, appointed that the said sum of £100,000 and the said sum of £750,000 payable by instalments, and any interest which might become payable in respect of any instalment, should be held upon trust for Lord St Levan and that he should be entitled thereto for his own sole use and benefit instead of for his life only.
The trustees thereupon paid over the said sum of £100,000 to Lord St Levan and he immediately paid the like amount to the company in consideration of the issue to him of 100,000 preference shares fully paid.
By a further, and final, deed poll dated March 29, 1927, Lord St Levan and Mr Ponsonby in exercise of their overriding power appointed new trusts of (in effect) the whole of the property then remaining subject to the resettlement, i.e., the 50,000 issued ordinary shares of the company. The terms of the new trusts so declared were somewhat complicated but they admittedly had the effect of extinguishing the life interest of Lord St Levan in the 50,000 ordinary shares and of excluding him from all benefit so far as those shares and the income thereof were concerned."
"if bona fide possession and enjoyment of the property in which the interest subsisted was assumed immediately thereafter by the person becoming entitled by virtue of or upon the disposition or determination and thenceforward retained to the entire exclusion of the person who had the interest and of any benefit to him by contract or otherwise…"
"It appears to me, my Lords, that this is nothing but the logical application to a more complex situation of the proposition which I venture to think was self-evident, viz., that the life tenant of two separate pieces of property can surrender his life interest in one and retain it in the other without duty becoming exigible in respect of the former. The question is what he has given… I venture to think that much of the argument that was addressed to the House in this case and much of the confusion that has arisen in the past on this admittedly difficult branch of the law have been due to the failure to bear in mind that that of which enjoyment is to be assumed and retained and from which there is to be exclusion of the donor and any benefit to him by contract or otherwise is that which is truly given, a proposition which is obvious enough in the case of two separate estates but more difficult to follow and apply where trusts are declared of a single property which are not completely exhausted in favour of a donee. It should at least be clear from the judgment of Lord Russell of Killowen that by retaining something which he has never given a donor does not bring himself within the mischief of the section… To avoid misunderstanding I must add that different considerations arise where the donor obtains some benefit which is "referable" to the gift or "attributable" to it. Thus, if in the present case there had been a bargain by which in consideration of the surrender of his life interest in part of the settled property Lord St Levan had been enabled to enlarge his life interest in another part of it, it might well be that following Worrall's case [1895] 1 QB 99 I should be bound to hold that he had not been excluded from the surrendered part. But as I have already pointed out, here was no bargain of any kind. What Lord St Levan chose to give he gave, and what to keep he kept. He made no bargain and he was entirely excluded from, and obtained no benefit referable to, that which he gave."
"… there is a difference between using words to explain a point and using words to define a proposition; and the words "referable to" are in themselves of too ambiguous an import to afford any satisfactory gloss upon the meaning of the section."
"There is this much, and not more than this much, to be said for the proposition advanced by the Crown. It was decided long ago in Attorney-General v Worrall [1934] AC 61, that a contractual benefit may interfere with the exclusive possession and enjoyment required by such a provision (in that case section 11(1) of the Customs and Inland and Revenue Act, 1889) even though it does not amount to a reservation out of the property that is the subject of the gift. My Lords, so it may. For my part, I see nothing in the decision of Worrall's case that cannot readily be accepted as good law. But what did it decide? A father had made a present to his son of a sum of about £24,000 secured on mortgage and the son had bought in the equity of redemption for a small sum; in return for his father's gift the son had covenanted to pay him an annuity of £735 per annum during his life. In effect the son was returning to the father the income on the property given during the remainder of the other's life. It seems to me reasonable enough for a court to hold in those circumstances that the son had not obtained the enjoyment of what was given free from a contractual benefit to the father which encumbered the enjoyment of the very thing that was given. To hold otherwise would have been to stop at the mere form of the transaction. Even if I did not think that Worrall's case was rightly decided, as I do, I should not think it right at this date to suggest that it ought to be overruled. It has stood too long, and has too often been relied upon. But I think it is a very mistaken form of reasoning to deduce from a decision that a benefit, to be within the mischief of the section, need not necessarily be by way of reservation out of the subject-matter of a gift the general proposition that all benefits are within the mischief of the section, whether they are by way of reservation out of the subject-matter of the gift or not. To deny the validity of one general proposition is not to assert the general validity of its opposite. I suggest, therefore, that your Lordships can safely put aside the case of Attorney-General v Worrall as having no further bearing on this appeal than that of showing that the benefit of the instalment payments which Lord St Levan retained was not without the mischief of the section merely because the company's contract to pay them was neither a charge upon nor a reservation out of the property which consisted of the ordinary shares. But it leaves unresolved the essential question whether that benefit was nevertheless within the mischief of the section.
I do not believe that there is any great difficulty in answering that question. I think that in this, and in other cases arising on similar legislative provisions, there are two matters that have to be attended to before the answer can be given. The first is, How did the deceased come to be in enjoyment of that benefit by contract, the existence of which is said to compromise the possession and enjoyment of the property released? The second is, What precisely is the property the life or other interest in which has been determined? On the first point the answer is plain. The deceased enjoyed that contractual benefit because he decided to create it and to take it for himself… Nor can there be any doubt about the answer to the second point. It was the ordinary shares in which the life interest was determined; not the ordinary shares as they might have been had some scheme been operated other than that which was in fact adopted, but the ordinary shares as in fact they were, shares in a company which had acquired assets on the terms of paying for them in part by the satisfaction of this instalment debt.
Now, if that was the situation, the possession and enjoyment of the rights which constituted the ordinary shares were only affected by the existence of the instalment debt in the sense that the half-yearly payment of the instalments reduced the resources which, had there been no debt, would have been available for the benefit of the shareholders of the company. But I think that there is formidable authority against the view that in such a situation the possession and enjoyment of the relevant property is not exclusive of a benefit to the donor or releasor of such property. A man may have an arrangement which gives him contractual benefits that affect an estate and may subsequently make a gift of his interest in that estate; if he does the donee has possession and enjoyment of what is given, to the entire exclusion of the donor or of any benefit to him. That is the Munro case. Shares may be made the subject of a trust for another person, the maker of the trust having the right under it to be one of the trustees, to retain in his control the voting-power in respect of the shares and to take an ultimate resulting interest; yet that benefit does not bring the property within the mischief of a similar provision. That is Commissioner of Stamp Duties for New South Wales v Perpetual Trustee Co. Ld. No more is possession and enjoyment of a gift compromised if a man vests property in trustees upon trust to provide out of it certain limited benefits for a donee, but subject thereto upon trust for himself. That is In re Cochrane, [1905] 2 IR 626; [1906] 2 IR 200. All these decisions proceed upon a common principle, namely, that it is the possession and enjoyment of the actual property given that has to be taken account of, and if that property is, as it may be, a limited equitable interest or an equitable interest distinct from another such interest which is not given or an interest in property subject to an interest that is retained, it is of no consequence for this purpose that the retained interest remains in the beneficial enjoyment of the person who provides the gift.
My Lords, I think that the application of that principle is sufficient to destroy the Crown's claim under section 43. In substance the position of Lord St Levan was the position of a man who creates a rentcharge in his own favour upon property which is in his absolute disposition and then makes a gift of that property subject to that charge. Nothing is then given except the interest so charged. Is possession and enjoyment of what is given exclusive of the donor or of any benefit to him, despite his continued receipt of the amounts secured by his charge? I conclude that it is, for I cannot imagine that, had the law been otherwise, the case of Grey v Attorney-General, would have taken the course that it did. In that case Earl Grey had at least created a rentcharge for himself in parting with his estates; but I think that the judgments in the Court of Appeal make it plain that it was not because he had done that, but because he had done and secured for himself so much more than that, that liability for duty attached. The explanation of that decision which was offered by the Irish Court of Appeal in In re Cochrane, makes it turn upon the existence of the covenants which the transferor had secured for himself by the transaction and which left him still the effective master of all that he had transferred, and the reasoning of Lord Russell in the Perpetual Trustee case seems to me to be directed to making the same point. I agree with those views…"
"Having thus reviewed the authorities, we return to the question what was given, and we think that a grant of the fee simple, subject to and with the benefit of a lease back where such grant is made by a person who owns the whole freehold free from any lease, is a grant of the whole fee simple with something reserved out of it, and not a gift of a partial interest leaving something in the hands of the grantor which he has not given. It is not like a reversion or remainder expectant on a prior interest. It gives an immediate right to the rent, together with a right to distrain for it, and, if there be a proviso for re-entry, a right to forfeit the lease. Of course, where, as in Munro v Commissioner of Stamp Duties (N.S.W) [1934] AC 61, the lease, or, as it then may have been, a licence coupled with an interest, arises under a prior independent transaction, no question can arise because the donor then gives all that he has, but where it is a condition of the gift that a lease back shall be created, we think that must, on a true analysis, be a reservation of a benefit out of the gift and not something not given at all.
In our judgment, however, it is not necessary to reach a final conclusion on this point, since there are in our view two unanswerable reasons why this case is caught by the statutory provision, each independent of the other and sufficient in itself.
The first is this. In clause 3(1) the lease contained a full repairing covenant by the son, and in this respect the lease was in the form which the equitable obligation bound him to accept. We have already noted the many occasions in which the covenant to pay the rent charge in the Earl Grey case [1900] AC 124 was regarded as in itself bringing the section into operation, and the covenant in this case is surely a fortiori sufficient. The right to have the mansion house and outbuildings repaired under that covenant did not exist before, and therefore could not be something simply not given. Moreover, it was reserved out of that which was given, since it was a covenant immediately operative and running with the land. In any event, however, being a covenant for the benefit of the donor, at the expense of the donee, and one which he was as a condition of the gift obliged to enter into and for the protection and better enjoyment of the property by the donor, it must, in our judgment, be a benefit to the donor by contract or otherwise referable to the gift and so within the section. It appears to us to be just as much a benefit taken by the donor out of that which was given as the power to charge remuneration in the Oakes case [1954] AC 57.
The second point arises out of the alteration which was made in the form of lease. [Goff J went on to explain why this argument too had to succeed]."
"Sir Henry Cochrane obtained no benefit either by way of reservation out of the gift, or collaterally in reference to the gift."
Moreover, Goff J might have added, with reference to St Aubyn, although Lord Radcliffe had been unhappy with the expression "referable to the gift", the same could not be said of Lord Simonds, who used it as a touchstone throughout his discussion of the claim to estate duty on the 50,000 shares at [1952] AC 15, 26-30.
"From these cases I conclude that to come within the scope of the second limb of s102(1)(b) the benefit must consist of some advantage which the donor did not enjoy before he made the gift, and that it is not sufficient if it consists merely of the property which he owned before the gift and which was not included in it.
No such benefit has been identified in the present case. The lease itself was merely property not comprised in the gift. It contained no covenants which would have the effect of transferring to the trustees a liability which would otherwise be borne by Lady Ingram.
The Revenue relied on the landlord's covenant for quiet enjoyment, but in my judgment there is nothing in this point. Such a covenant was present in both Nichols' case and Munro… The court did not rely on the covenant in Nichols' case and the decision in Munro's case would have gone the other way if the covenant were material. In my judgment it is not a benefit within the meaning of the second limb of para (b) because it cannot be separated from the lessee's right of exclusive possession under the lease. It reinforces that right by preventing the landlord and those claiming under him from interfering with the lessee's right of exclusive possession. Thus it merely prevents the donee and his successors from interfering with the donor's continued enjoyment of property which was not included in the gift.
In my judgment Lady Ingram did not reserve any benefit by contract or otherwise within the meaning of the section."
"It is true that as a matter of conveyancing, no lease can come into existence until the freehold has been vested in the intended lessor. But section 102 is concerned not with conveyancing but with beneficial interests. It uses words like "enjoyment" and "benefit". In Attorney- General v Worrall [1895] 1 QB 99, 104, a case on a predecessor of section 102, Lord Esher MR began his judgment with the words:
"It has been held that in cases of this kind the court has to determine what the real nature of the transaction was, apart from legal phraseology and the forms of conveyancing."
If one looks at the real nature of the transaction, there seems to me no doubt that Ferris J was right in saying that the trustees and beneficiaries never at any time acquired the land free of Lady Ingram's leasehold interest. The need for a conveyance to be followed by a lease back is a mere matter of conveyancing form. …
Mr Nugee and Mr Furness, on behalf of the commissioners, each explained patiently and clearly that the great difference was that a lease is a contract as well as an estate. It involves obligations between the parties enforceable in contract or by virtue of privity of estate. It cannot therefore be regarded as the mere reservation of property like a life interest. This is true and if, in addition to the leasehold estate which she reserved, Lady Ingram had obtained by covenant any additional benefits, as in In re Nichols, decd [1975] 1 WLR 534, they would have been benefits reserved. But in a case such as this, when she in fact received no such benefits, the contractual nature of the lease seems to me a matter of conveyancing theory rather than substance."
"16. The revenue submitted that that was the only issue. The court had to decide the source of the positive covenants from which the deceased benefited. Did she receive them back from the underlease of which she disposed, or were they benefits enjoyed by virtue of her reversionary interests in the head lease which was never comprised in her gift? The taxpayers denied that that was the only issue. They contended that even if, contrary to their submission, the source of the positive covenants was the underlease, the benefit the deceased received was not a benefit within section 102(1)(b) of the 1986 Act because it was not a benefit at the expense of the donees' enjoyment of the underlease."
As I shall explain, it was the unanimous decision of the court on this second issue which was determinative, because although Moses LJ would have decided the first issue in HMRC's favour, the other two members of the court preferred to express no view on that question.
"In my view, the references by Millett LJ and Lord Hoffmann in Ingram's case to the absence of covenants demonstrate that the benefit of the positive covenants was enjoyed by the deceased by virtue of the underlease of which she made a gift and not by virtue of the reversion she retained."
"The benefit Sir Peter Nichols obtained from the trustees in the form of the covenant to repair became attached to and part of his leasehold interest. But, even though his leasehold was not… received back from the freehold of which he made a gift, the benefit of the covenant to repair was a reservation from that gift and not comprised in the leasehold retained. Sir Peter Nichols was not able to overcome the conclusion that the covenant to repair was a reservation from the gift by any argument that the covenant to repair "partook of the nature" of his leasehold estate. Millett LJ's and Lord Hoffmann's reference to the absence of any covenant by which additional benefits are obtained… scotches the taxpayers' argument on this point. I conclude that the rights conferred by the covenants were obtained by virtue of the underlease, the subject of the gift, and not by virtue of the reversion the deceased retained."
"Mr Taube contends that the impugned covenants made no difference to the donees' enjoyment of the underlease because the underlessees, under the licence to underlet, had already entered into covenants with the head lessor which mirrored those contained in the underlease. In light of the covenants entered into directly by the underlessees with the head landlord, the covenants with the underlessor, the deceased, did not detract anything further from their enjoyment of the underlease. It was already stamped with obligations to the head landlord which the covenants with the deceased merely duplicated."
"50. It seems to me that there is sufficient support for the taxpayer's contention to be found in the wording of the subsection. The second limb of section 102(1)(b) of the 1986 Act requires consideration of whether the donee's enjoyment of the property gifted is to the exclusion of any benefit to the donor. The focus is not primarily on the question whether the donor has obtained a benefit from the gifted property but whether the donee's enjoyment of the property remains exclusive. The statutory question is whether the donee enjoyed the property to the entire exclusion or virtually to the entire exclusion of any benefit to the donor. If the benefit to the donor does not have any impact on the donee's enjoyment, in my view, then the donee's enjoyment is to the entire exclusion of any benefit to the donor."
Moses LJ added, at [51]:
"If the benefit is irrelevant to such enjoyment it does not "trench upon" the exclusivity of the donee's enjoyment."
"56. Accordingly, I consider it is necessary to enquire whether the benefit the deceased obtained from the positive covenants affected [the trustee's] enjoyment of the flat. In my view, it made no difference whatsoever to the underlessees' enjoyment of the underlease. The underlessees were already under obligations, in the licence to underlet, to the head lessor which precisely matched those obligations into which they entered with the deceased (save that the underlessees were under no obligation to pay rent). The obligations in the positive covenants did not in any way detract from the enjoyment of the underlease because the obligations imposed by those covenants did not in any way add to the obligations already imposed by the licence. It is true they were entered into with a different party, but performance of one set of obligations, for example, those contained in the licence, would have fulfilled the obligations in the positive covenants in the underlease and vice versa. Even if it may be said that the deceased obtained a benefit she had not previously enjoyed, it was not obtained at the expense of the donees' enjoyment of the underlease. It neither added to nor subtracted from their enjoyment in the light of the obligations into which they had already entered with the head landlord.
57. To persist in the possibly over-baked metaphor, the size of the cake remained unaffected, because the portion the deceased is said to have eaten had already been consumed by the head landlord. She gifted a property, the enjoyment of which was already subject to obligations which mirrored the obligations contained in the positive covenants which are said to constitute her benefit. The imposition of duplicate obligations on that property merely mirrored but did not add to the obligations which the underlease already bore under the licence to underlet. For that reason I would allow this appeal."
Submissions
"… the gift by Lady Hood of the sub-lease estate in the Premises is the gift of the whole sub-lease estate and the benefit of the covenants entered into by her sons was a benefit she received back from them and not something that was carved out of the estate which she granted to them."
"Section 24(1) of the Landlord and Tenant Act 1954 provides:
"A tenancy to which this Part of this Act applies shall not come to an end unless terminated in accordance with the provisions of this Part of this Act;…"
The well recognised effect of that provision is to continue a tenancy of business premises after the end of the contractual term. The principal question arising on these appeals is whether it also has the effect of continuing the contractual obligations, particular the obligation to pay rent, of an original tenant who has assigned the tenancy before that date."
The court decided that this question should be answered in the negative, since an original tenant who had assigned his tenancy before the end of the contractual term no longer held the demised premises and could not properly be described as the tenant.
"A lease of land, because it originates in a contract, gives rise to obligations enforceable between the original landlord and the original tenant in contract. But because it also gives the tenant an estate in the land, assignable, like the reversion, to others, the obligations, so far as they touch and concern the land, assume a wider influence, becoming, as it were, imprinted on the term or the reversion as the case may be, enforceable between the owners thereof for the time being as conditions of the enjoyment of their respective estates. Thus landlord and tenant stand together in one or other of two distinct legal relationship. In the first it is said that there is privity of contract between them, in the second privity of estate."
Discussion
"…if, in addition to the leasehold estate which she reserved, Lady Ingram had obtained by covenant any additional benefits as in In re Nichols, decd. [1975] 1 WLR 534, they would have been benefits reserved."
Conclusion
Sir Colin Rimer:
Patten LJ: