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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> L M Homes Ltd & Anor v Queen Court Freehold Company Ltd [2020] EWCA Civ 371 (13 March 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2020/371.html Cite as: [2020] EWCA Civ 371, [2020] 2 P & CR 12, [2020] QB 890, [2020] RVR 271, [2020] L & TR 17, [2020] WLR(D) 162, [2020] 2 WLR 1135 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE UPPER TRIBUNAL (LANDS CHAMBER)
Mr Martin Rodger QC Deputy Chamber President
LRA/16/2018
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE LINDBLOM
and
LORD JUSTICE LEGGATT
____________________
L M HOMES LIMITED JOHN TOBOLE EMORE & FLORENCE ESIAKPOBERUO EMORE DALVIR KAUR |
Appellants |
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- and - |
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QUEEN COURT FREEHOLD COMPANY LIMITED |
Respondent |
____________________
(instructed by Peppers LLP) for the 2nd Appellants
Mr Philip Rainey QC & Mr Carl Fain (instructed by Cripps Pemberton Greenish) for the Respondent
Hearing date : 5th March 2020
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Lewison:
Introduction
i) The airspace above Queen Court;
ii) Part of the basement of Queen Court; and
iii) Sub-soil underlying Queen Court.
The facts
The statutory framework
"either—
(a) it is appurtenant property which is demised by the lease held by a qualifying tenant of a flat contained in the relevant premises; or
(b) it is property which any such tenant is entitled under the terms of the lease of his flat to use in common with the occupiers of other premises (whether those premises are contained in the relevant premises or not)."
"Any right or obligation under this Chapter to acquire any interest in property shall not extend to underlying minerals in which that interest subsists if—
(a) the owner of the interest requires the minerals to be excepted, and
(b) proper provision is made for the support of the property as it is enjoyed on the relevant date."
"(1) Subject to section 4, this Chapter applies to any premises if—
(a) they consist of a self-contained building or part of a building . . .;
(b) they contain two or more flats held by qualifying tenants; and …
(2) For the purposes of this section a building is a self-contained building if it is structurally detached… "
"… the interest of the tenant under any lease … under which the demised premises consist of or include—
(a) any common parts of the relevant premises, …
where the acquisition of that interest is reasonably necessary for the proper management or maintenance of those common parts, … on behalf of the tenants by whom the right to collective enfranchisement is exercised."
"common parts", in relation to any building or part of a building, includes the structure and exterior of that building or part and any common facilities within it"
The freehold
"It is, however, axiomatic that a conveyance of land carries with it all that is beneath the surface and it is quite clear that the parcels in the conveyance whether you regard only the verbal description "all that dwellinghouse and premises," or whether you pay regard to the plan thereon, did convey the surface over the cellar. And be it never so unlikely that Holroyd intended to include the cellar, it was not in terms excepted from the property conveyed. Read without regard to the surrounding circumstances, it could not, in my judgment, be doubted that the conveyance operated to convey all that was beneath the surface of what was admittedly conveyed."
"The Courts will presume that Parliament did not intend a statute to have consequences which are objectionable or undesirable; or absurd; or unworkable or impracticable; or merely inconvenient; or anomalous or illogical; or futile or pointless."
"It is well established that Parliament does not legislate in a vacuum: statutes are drafted on the basis that the ordinary rules and principles of the common law will apply to the express statutory provisions: …As a result, Parliament is presumed not to have intended to change the common law unless it has clearly indicated such intention either expressly or by necessary implication."
"The thing most necessary for the use of the cathedral as a place for public worship is that the congregation which frequents it should be able to stand or kneel upon the ground embraced within its walls and forming the floor of it, or sit upon chairs resting upon that floor. The use of the floor is infinitely more essential than the use of a roof. In fact, it is impossible to conceive the public worship of God being carried on in a building without the use of the land which it embraces within its walls, as it is impossible to conceive walls existing without the support, direct or indirect, of the soil of the earth."
"… the word "building", as used in ordinary language, comprises not only the fabric of the building, but the land upon which it stands." (Emphasis added)
"I accept the tenants' second argument. They submit that the word "building" is not necessarily confined to the bricks and mortar of which the building is constructed. In Governors of St Thomas's Hospital v Charing Cross Railway Co (1861) 1 J & H 400 it was held that section 92 of the Lands Clauses Consolidation Act 1845 (which provided that the owner of land being compulsorily acquired could not be required to convey "a part only of any house, or other building or manufactory") required the purchase not only of the whole house but also of the gardens and appurtenances of the house.
In the present case, it would be to attribute to Parliament an entirely capricious intention if we were to hold that the tenants' right to purchase did not extend to the gardens and other appurtenances of the flats which are expressly or impliedly included in the demises of the flats to the tenants. In my judgment we are not forced to adopt such an unreasonable construction since it is a perfectly legitimate meaning of the word "building" that it includes the appurtenances of the building."
"In my judgment, it is perfectly legitimate meaning of the world "building" that it includes the airspace necessary to enable maintenance to be carried out."
Common parts
The basement
"The statutory definition is inclusive not exhaustive. It clearly encompasses more than the ordinary meaning of common parts, which would not cover the exterior of the building. Without attempting a comprehensive definition, I consider that it is intended to include those parts of the building that either may be used by or serve the benefit of the residents in common (using that expression in a non-technical sense), as opposed to those parts of the building that are for the exclusive benefit of only one or a limited number of the residents or for none at all. Thus, I consider it will cover the boiler room or a room housing the lift machinery, although those rooms may be kept locked and no resident ever goes into them. It will encompass a covered atrium that all the residents can use, and also a sunken garden in the centre of the building to which the residents do not have access but which is a common amenity that is to be regarded as part of the building; or a banked rockery at the front of the building over which the residents do not pass but which is maintained for their common benefit and should be considered as part of the "exterior" although not part of the structure. Furthermore, there is no requirement that the part must actually be used by all the residents: for example, the fact that the residents on the ground floor may never use the lift does not prevent it from being a common part."
"For example, the "facility" represented by a boiler is not just the physical structure, but also includes the service of hot water provided from it. If the lessees have the right to obtain hot water from a common boiler, then, whether or not they have access to the boiler room, it can in my view properly be regarded as a "common facility", and therefore within the common parts."
"It is necessary to have regard to the function served by an area when considering whether it is or is not a common part. If the purpose to which a particular room is put is to accommodate service installations used for the benefit of the whole Building that is sufficient to render the whole of the space part of the common parts of the Building."
"By any ordinary understanding of the expression, the whole of the basement which houses the service installations for the whole of the Building is one of the common parts of the Building."
The airspace and sub-soil
Did the areas cease to be common parts on the grant of the leases?
Reasonably necessary to acquire?
Development leases
"If the caretaker's flat is therefore a common part, is it [reasonably] necessary for the respondents to acquire it "for the proper management or maintenance of those common parts"? In my judgment, it clearly is, since if they did not acquire the interest under the lease they would not be able to use that flat to accommodate a caretaker. Indeed, if the lease remained in force, the basement flat would not be maintained as a common part at all."
Basement lease
"What a judge perceives on a view is itself evidence, in the same way as what he sees and hears in the courtroom."
Sub-soil
"Applying that reasoning to the sub-soil, it is clear that it is reasonably necessary that the tenants acquire it. The absence of any requirement for active management or maintenance in the short or medium term does not matter. What matters is that, if implemented, the appellant's intentions with regard to the lease will cause the subsoil to cease to be a common part to the extent required to create the appellant's proposed new residential accommodation. It is reasonably necessary to the tenants' management of the ground on which the Building stands that it should be within their possession, since otherwise the function performed by that ground will change. The fact that support will continue to be enjoyed by the Building from the stratum below that on which it currently stands is beside the point; it is not the management of that stratum which is in issue, but of the stratum which currently provides support and which has been demised."
Airspace
"As with the boiler room and sub-soil, the appellant intends, if planning permission can be obtained, to undertake work which will cause the airspace no longer to be accessible. Convenient access to the structure would become impossible because of the presence of an additional flat or flats on top of it, and any change in the structure would be unnoticed and difficult to monitor. In my judgment the risk of these consequences makes it reasonably necessary for the proper management of the airspace that the airspace lease be acquired. If the lease is not acquired the airspace will be incapable of being managed as it currently is. It does not matter that the respondent will presumably still have access to a new roof over the Building, or that it will have access to the existing structure in the exercise of the rights reserved in the airspace lease, since the former will relate to a different structure and the latter will involve a very much more complex and inconvenient operation than is currently possible."
The reservations
The development rights
Result
Lord Justice Leggatt:
Lord Justice Lindblom: