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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Shirley v Crabtree [2007] EWHC 1532 (Admin) (27 June 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2007/1532.html Cite as: [2008] 1 WLR 18, [2007] EWHC 1532 (Admin), [2008] WLR 18, [2008] WTLR 133 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
The Honourable Andrew Shirley Tamara Shirley Jason Bowerman The Right Honourable Countess Ferrers (as Trustees of the Shirley Children's Settlement) |
Appellants |
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- and - |
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Ruth Elizabeth Mary Crabtree |
Respondent |
____________________
Miss Caroline Hutton (instructed by Nigel Davis, solicitors) for the Respondent
Hearing dates: 14 June 2007
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Crown Copyright ©
Beatson J :
The legislation
"(1) The eligible person named in the retirement notice may… apply
under section 53 below to the Tribunal for a direction entitling him to a
tenancy of the holding unless excluded by section 51 below.
(2) For the purposes of section 49-58 of this Act, "eligible person"
means (subject to the provisions of Part 1 of Schedule 6 to this Act as
applied by subsection (4) below) a close relative of the retiring tenant
in whose case the following conditions are satisfied-
(a) in the last seven years his only or principal source of livelihood
throughout a continuous period of not less than five years, or two or
more discontinuous periods together amounting to not less than five
years, derived from his agricultural work on the holding or on an
agricultural unit of which the holding
forms part, and
(b) he is not the occupier of a commercial unit of agricultural land……"
"If the Tribunal are satisfied -
(a) that the nominated successor was an eligible person at the date of the giving of the retirement notice, and
(b) that he has not subsequently ceased to be such a person, the Tribunal shall determine whether he is in their opinion a suitable person to become the tenant of the holding."
The decision of the Tribunal and the case stated
"Whether, on an application by a nominated successor for a direction under section 53 of the Agricultural Holdings Act 1986 entitling her to a tenancy on the retirement of the tenant, the nominated successor must satisfy the livelihood condition in section 50(2)(a) not only by reference to the last seven years ending with the date of the giving of the retirement notice, but also by reference to the seven years ending with the date of the Tribunal hearing."
"3. The period of seven years ending with the giving of the retirement notice commenced on 22 March 1997. Mrs Crabtree adduced expert evidence from an accountant concerning the sources of her livelihood for the six years ending 5 April 1999 to 5 April 2004. We found that in five of those six years (not including the year ending 5 April 2003) she derived her only or principal source of livelihood from her agricultural work on the holding."
"Had we accepted the contentions of the landlords we would have found that Mrs Crabtree had not demonstrated that she was eligible to apply for a tenancy and we would have dismissed her application".
The landlords' case
Mrs Crabtree's case
Analysis
"is almost identical to the principal livelihood test which applies in
the case of succession on death; however the test in the case of
succession on death refers to the last seven years ending with the
date of death but there is no specified end-date in the case of
succession on retirement. It would seem to follow that, in the case
of succession on retirement, because the principal livelihood test
has to be satisfied at all times during a period of time
beginning with the service of the retirement notice and ending with
the consideration of the matter by the Tribunal, the relevant
periods of seven years are the periods of seven years immediately
before all the dates on which eligibility falls to be considered."
The release containing this paragraph was last amended in September 2006 and, in a footnote, states that in the present case the Agricultural Land Tribunal did not accept its reasoning.
"The nominated successor must be a close relative of the retiring tenant, must be otherwise eligible within the meaning of the principal livelihood and the occupancy conditions, and must be found suitable by the Tribunal. These conditions are closely modelled on the conditions for succession on death and the commentary above will with minor modifications apply."
Paragraph 14.110 states that the earlier detailed discussion of eligibility and suitability in relation to succession on death applies mutatis mutandis to succession on retirement. Neither work, however, refers to or discusses the difference in the wording of sections 36(3)(a) and 50(2)(a).
"Section 50(2)(a) speaks of 'the last seven years' and does not specify whether the seven year period expires on the date of the retirement notice, on the date of the application or on the date on which the retirement notice is to take effect (i.e. more than a year after the date of the retirement notice). It is submitted that since the retirement notice must nominate a 'single eligible person' the Applicant must be possessed of the qualifications of eligibility at the date on which the retirement notice is given and, therefore, the seven year period expires on the date of the retirement notice and not on any later date. Furthermore, section 53(5) requires the Tribunal to be satisfied in due course that the Applicant was 'an eligible person at the date of the giving of the retirement notice'."