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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Avon Ground Rents Ltd v Cowley & Ors [2019] EWCA Civ 1827 (29 October 2019) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2019/1827.html Cite as: [2019] EWCA Civ 1827, [2020] HLR 6, [2019] WLR(D) 594, [2020] 2 P & CR 2, [2020] WLR 1337, [2020] L & TR 2, [2020] 1 WLR 1337 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE UPPER TRIBUNAL (LANDS CHAMBER)
MARTIN RODGER QC, DEPUTY CHAMBER PRESIDENT
[2018] UKUT 92 (LC)
Strand, London, WC2A 2 LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE COULSON
and
LAD JUSTICE NICOLA DAVIES DBE
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AVON GROUND RENTS LIMITED |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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(1) MRS ROSEMARY COWLEY AND OTHERS (2) METROPOLITAN HOUSING TRUST (3) ADVANCE (4) MAY HEMPSTEAD PARTNERSHIP |
Respondents |
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Timothy Clarke (instructed by Legal Services) for the Second Respondent
The First, Third and Fourth Respondents did not attend and were not represented
Hearing date: Thursday 10 October 2019
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Crown Copyright ©
Lady Justice Nicola Davies:
i) to give credit for the anticipated payment when assessing the reasonable amount to be credited on account; or
ii) to take account of third-party payments only when they are received and thereafter apply those monies as balancing the charge back to the leaseholders?
Background
"7. The leases of the different units of occupation at the development are in substantially the same form so far as service charges are concerned. Each leaseholder is required to contribute towards expenditure by the landlord in connection with the repair, management and maintenance of the building and the provision of services. The services are divided into three categories, with leaseholders contributing a different 'specified proportion' of expenditure in either two of these categories, or in all three, depending on usage. To take the lease of one of the private residential flats as an example, the leaseholder of Flat 10 is required to pay 1.93% of the 'Building Provision', 1.44% of the 'Estate Provision' and 2.94% of the 'Residential Common Parts Provision'.
8. In the private residential leases and in the third respondent's lease of Unit 1 the required contribution to each category of expenditure is a fixed percentage, as is the contribution of the second respondent to the Building Provision. The second respondent's contribution to the Estate Provision is not fixed, but is to be a 'fair and reasonable proportion.' Similarly, the fourth respondent, as leaseholder of Unit 2, is required to pay 'a fair proportion' of both the Building Provision and the Estate Provision.
9. By clause 6.2 of each of the leases the leaseholder has covenanted to pay the Service Charge by quarterly payments in advance. The amount payable is the aggregate of the specified proportions of the Building Provision, the Estate Provision and (in the case of the private residential leases) the Residential Common Parts Provision, which are to be estimated at the start of the 'Account Year' beginning on 25 June. Each of the component Provisions is to comprise 'the reasonable and proper expenditure estimated by the landlo rd as likely to be incurred in the Account Year by the landlord upon the matters specified in sub-clause 6.5.' At the end of each Account Year the appellant is required to determine 'the amount by which the estimate … shall have exceeded or fallen short of the actual expenditure in the Account Year' (clause 6.5); each leaseholder is then required to pay its specified proportion of any shortfall or is entitled to an allowance reflecting any surplus as the case may be.
10. The matters specified in sub-clause 6.5 as being the subject of service charge expenditure include the cost of repairs and other usual services. They also include 'any interest and fees in respect of money reasonably borrowed to finance the provision of the services.'"
"6.6. As soon as practicable after the end of each Account Year the Landlord shall determine and certify the amount by which the estimate referred to in paragraph (a) of sub-clause (4) of this C lause shall have exceeded or fallen short of the actual expenditure in the Account Year and shall supply the Leaseholder with a copy of the certificate and the Leaseholder shall be allowed or as the case may be shall pay within 15 days of receipt of the certificate of the Specified Proportion of the excess or the deficiency."
16. In subsequent exchanges between the appellant's agent and NHBC it sought to identify under which of the three Buildmark warranties the claim was being made, as that was relevant to the amount of the excess which would be applied. Possibly because of difficulty in ascertaining exactly where the defect had occurred, that question was not one which the appellant was immediately able to answer. It was also of concern to NHBC to establish in what proportions each of the leaseholders were obliged to contribute; it is less clear why so much importance was placed on this.
17. NHBC does not appear at any stage seriously to have disputed its liability to contribute towards the cost of the necessary remedial works, but it has not yet been prepared to commit itself to paying a specific sum. Its position before the first instalment of the advance payments fell due can be seen from the following extract from an email sent on 8 June 2016 to the appellant's agents:
'In principle we find the claim to be valid as there is damage caused by a defect which is principally what all three policy types cover. What we cannot do at this stage is confirm our liability on each policy type, the excess owed on each policy type and our contribution to each policy types' liability. Once the tribunal has ascertained apportionment I can advise exactly what NHBC will be liable for.'
18. NHBC's reference to the tribunal was to the FTT, at which the appellant had issued two applications under the Landlord and Tenant Act 1985 on 31 March 2016. The first was under section 27A(3) and raised specific questions concerning the appellant's proposed remedial scheme and the liability of the leaseholders to contribute towards it, while the second sought dispensation under section 20ZA from the statutory consultation requirements in the event that they had not been completed properly.
19. The appellant's section 27A(3) application asked the FTT to consider its entitlement to a service charge if it were to incur the costs of the proposed remedial works, estimated to be a little over £291,000, and to determine the liability of each respondent to pay their due proportion of those costs. The determination was said to require consideration of the proportions applicable to each respondent, the reasonableness of the proposed costs, and the adequacy of the section 20 consultation procedures.
20. In its statement of case and evidence for the FTT the appellant did not make it clear under which category of expenditure it considered the cost of the remedial works fell. Nevertheless, in the estimate of expenditure provided with the demand for the first instalment of the advance service charge served on 10 June 2016 the apportionment appears to have followed the proportions applicable to the Estate Provision. It certainly did so in the case of the second respondent, which was charged 25.95% of the total, that being the percentage which had always been treated by the appellant as the second respondent's fair and reasonable contribution towards Estate matters. The basis on which the other leaseholders were charged is less clear, as only the demands themselves have been produced and not the breakdown, but it seems reasonable to assume that the same principle was applied.
21. Applying the Estate Provision proportions to the total of £291,000 which the appellant sought to recover in advance by quarterly instalments from June 2016, each of the private residential leaseholders would be required to contribute between £3,114 and £6,286 (£778 to £1,571 per quarter) while the second respondent was asked to pay £75,514 (or £18,878 per quarter). These are relatively substantial sums, especially for the individual leaseholders.
22. The appellant has made it clear at each stage of the proceedings that it is willing to apply the proceeds of the NHBC warranty to the service charge account when they were received."
The FTT decisions
i) The contribution required from the first respondents towards the cost of the remedial work was nil as the NHBC was liable to pay the full amount apportioned to the private residential leases;
ii) The second respondent was liable to pay £11,697.98 to the appellant, taking into account the NHBC contribution net of excess.
It follows from those determinations that the FTT rejected the appellant's contention that no allowance should be made for the anticipated monies from the NHBC. The FTT also considered an application pursuant to section 20C of the 1985 Act, having regard to the extent of the parties' respective successes. It concluded that not more than half of the costs incurred by the appellant in connection with the proceedings should be passed onto the first and second respondents through the service charge.
The Upper Tribunal
Developments since the UT decision
Ground one
"19 Limitation of service charges: reasonableness.
(1) Relevant costs shall be taken into account in determining the amount of a service charge payable for a period—
(a) only to the extent that they are reasonably incurred, and(b) where they are incurred on the provision of services or the carrying out of works, only if the services or works are of a reasonable standard;
and the amount payable shall be limited accordingly.
(2) Where a service charge is payable before the relevant costs are incurred, no greater amount than is reasonable is so payable, and after the relevant costs have been incurred any necessary adjustment shall be made by repayment, reduction or subsequent charges or otherwise. "
Ground two
The second respondent
Discussion and conclusion
i) An effective policy of insurance was in place in respect of the repair works which would cover the majority of the works;
ii) The appellant had agreed to give credit for any sums received from NHBC by way of insurance;
iii) The amount of the insurance contribution was not hypothetical, the sums payable by the first and second respondents following receipt of the insurance contribution were identified to the FTT and formed the unchallenged factual basis for its determination.
Lord Justice Coulson:
Lord Justice McCombe: