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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Macattram v London Borough of Camden [2012] EWHC 1033 (Admin) (02 April 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2012/1033.html Cite as: [2012] EWHC 1033 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
THE ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand London WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
(Sitting as a Deputy High Court Judge)
____________________
GENEVIEVE MACATTRAM |
Appellant |
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v |
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LONDON BOROUGH OF CAMDEN |
Respondent |
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WordWave International Limited
A Merrill Communications Company
165 Fleet Street London EC4A 2DY
Tel No: 020 7404 1400 Fax No: 020 7404 1424
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
The Respondent did not attend and was not represented
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
"(1)The person who is liable to pay council tax in respect of any chargeable dwelling and any day is the person who falls within the first paragraph of subsection (2) below to apply, taking paragraph (a) of that subsection first, paragraph (b) next, and so on.
(2)A person falls within this subsection in relation to any chargeable dwelling and any day if, on that day—
(a)he is a resident of the dwelling and has a freehold interest in the whole or any part of it;
(b)he is such a resident and has a leasehold interest in the whole or any part of the dwelling which is not inferior to another such interest held by another such resident;
(c)he is both such a resident and a statutory or secure or introductory tenant of the whole or any part of the dwelling;
(d)he is such a resident and has a contractual licence to occupy the whole or any part of the dwelling;
(e)he is such a resident; or.
(f)he is the owner of the dwelling.
...
(5) In this Part, unless the context otherwise requires—
'owner', in relation to any dwelling, means the person as regards whom the following conditions are fulfilled—
(a)he has a material interest in the whole or any part of the dwelling; and.(b)at least part of the dwelling or, as the case may be, of the part concerned is not subject to a material interest inferior to his interest;...
(6) In this section— ...
'material interest' means a freehold interest or a leasehold interest which was granted for a term of six months or more."
1. After the lease expired a periodic monthly tenancy arose by implication from the payment and acceptance of rent.
2. That was a "leasehold interest" for the purposes of section 6(6) of the 1992 Act.
3. However, it was not a leasehold interest which was granted for a term of 6 months or more and was therefore not a "material interest" for the purposes of that provision.
4. If that was wrong and it was a material interest, the returning of the keys amounted to a surrender by operation of law.
1. The Tribunal erred in law when concluding that (i) Camden's monthly periodic tenancy was not a material interest in the Property; and (ii) there was a surrender by operation of law when Camden returned the keys on 5 June 2007.
2. The hearing was unfair to the appellant because (i) the Chairman of the Tribunal insisted that the appellant alter part of her case; (ii) the Tribunal introduced material that was not part of her case or Camden's case; and (iii) the Tribunal prevented the appellant from making submissions on what I will refer to as the jurisdiction issue.
3. The Tribunal's reasons were flawed because (i) they did not accurately reflect the evidence; and (ii) the reasons given in paragraph 61 were inadequate.
"51. In considering ownership for the purposes of Section 6 of the Act, liability therefore falls to be determined under Section 6(2)(f) of the 1992 Act: who was the owner of the flat within the meaning of that sub-section? This is defined by further sub-sections of Section 6, which so far as material provide:
'(5) In this Part, unless the context otherwise requires-
"owner", in relation to any dwelling, means the person as regards whom the following conditions are fulfilled-
(a) he has a material interest in the whole or any part of the dwelling; and
(b) at least part of the dwelling or, as the case may be, of the part concerned is not subject to a material interest inferior to his interest; "resident", in relation to any dwelling, means an individual who has attained the age of 18 years and has his sole or main residence in the dwelling.
(6) In this section-
...
"material interest means a freehold interest or a leasehold interest which was granted for a term of six months or more;
...
... '
"52. The Panel considers that the ultimate issue to be decided is whether the BA was a person having a 'material interest' from 5 June 2007. The BA accepts that it held over after the term of the lease expired until that date and concedes that it therefore had that material interest since the original leasehold interest had been granted for a term of six months or more. Ms MacAttram has disputed this in the past on the basis that she did not give her consent but she did accept rent at the rate due under the expired lease until January 2007.
"53. From paragraph 44 of A2, Ms MacAttram argues to the conclusion at paragraph 51:
'The lease entered into by the parties on 23 June 2003 came to an end on 22 June 2006 ... however another Lease on precisely the same terms as the original came into operation by law, it was the later agreement between the parties that remained in operation during the operative period'.
"54. The panel understands the law to be that where a tenant holds over after the expiry of the lease and pays, or expressly agrees to pay, any subsequent rent, at the previous yearly rate, a new tenancy may be created upon the same terms and conditions as those contained in the expired lease, so far as applicable to and not inconsistent with a yearly tenancy: see the judgement of Maugham J in Ladies Hosiery and Underwear v Parker [1930] 1 Ch 304. However, the rent under the expired lease in issue is, by schedule 1 part 2 payable monthly in advance at a weekly rent of £260 per week. Therefore, only a weekly or monthly tenancy should be presumed: Adler v Blackman [1953] 1 QB 146.
"55. Those two cases, as opposed to the principle they decide, were not referred to or considered during the hearing. Accordingly, on 18 February 2010, the Panel directed that the reports of those cases be sent to the parties with an invitation to make any submissions in writing. In response, the Tribunal has received and considered:
(a) A letter dated 4 March 2010 on behalf of the Head of Legal Services of the BA
(b) Two emails of 5 March 2010 from Ms MacAttram with attachments.
"56. The BA submits that a tenancy at will, not a new weekly periodic tenancy, arose after 5 June 2007.
"57. Ms MacAttram submits that the correct legal view is that the parties entered into a monthly periodic tenancy. This was the period when the rent, albeit at the rate of £260 per week, was payable. This is also consistent with the decision of the Court of Appeal in Church Commissioners for England v Meya [2006] EWCA Civ 821.
"58. The Panel accepts Ms MacAttram's submission in this regard, on the basis that the monthly periodic tenancy arose by implication if not express agreement.
"59. The Panel therefore decides that the council was holding over under a monthly tenancy of the flat upon the same terms and conditions as those contained in the expired lease, so far as applicable to and not inconsistent with a monthly tenancy.
"60. The next issue for decision is therefore whether that monthly tenancy was a 'material interest' within the meaning of section 6(6) of the 1992 Act. It is clearly not a freehold interest. The Panel's direction of 18 February 2010 also referred the parties to and invited submissions upon Section 1(1)(b) and section 205(1)(xxvii) of the Law of Property Act 1925 which appeared to be apt to the legal definition of 'leasehold interest' as they provide:
'1.(1) The only estates in land which are capable of subsisting or of being conveyed or created at law estates are:
(a) An estate in fee simple absolute in possession;
(b) A term of years absolute'.
and
'205(1)(xxvii) Term of years absolute means a term of years (taking effect either in possession or in reversion whether or not at a rent) with or without impeachment for waste, subject or not to another legal estate, and either certain or liable to determination by notice, re-entry operation of law, or by a provision for cesser on redemption, or in any other event (other than the dropping of a life, or the determination of a determinable life interest); but does not include any term of years determinable with life or lives or with the cesser of a determinable life interest, nor, if created after the commencement of this Act, a term of years which is not expressed to take effect in possession within twenty-one years after the creation thereof where required by this Act to take effect within that period; and in this definition the expression "term of years" includes a term for less than a year or for a year or years'.
In response:
(a) The BA accepted that a weekly tenancy might be a leasehold interest but maintained the argument that a tenancy at will, being no legal estate at all, had
been created.
(b) Ms MacAttram submitted that the arrangement after the end of the term of the lease can be construed as a lease (and thereby a leasehold interest).
The Panel considers that the monthly periodic tenancy which arose after the end of the lease was a leasehold interest because of the effect of Section 1(1)(b) and Section 205(1)(xxvii) of the Law and Property Act 1925. However it was not granted for a term of six months or more, it was a monthly periodic tenancy.
"61. In conclusion, on that basis, without going behind the concession made by the BA, it is the Panel's decision that Ms MacAttram did become liable for Council Tax from 5 June 2007 to the date when she accepts she became liable, 09 November 2008."
"The Lessor lets and the Council takes the unit, and chattels, with vacant possession together with the benefit of any rights and easements for a period of 3 years and paying the rent specified ... "
By Clause 5(25), the lessee covenanted:
"Upon expiry of the Lease period, to yield up vacant possession in a state and condition in accordance with the Council's obligations set out in this lease and to hand over all keys to the Premises and ensure that the Premises are secure against unauthorised entry."
It is to be noted that the lease makes no provision for, nor does it anticipate, any continuation beyond the 3 year term. The lessee is required to give up vacant possession on expiry of the 3 years.
"The County Court Judge has fallen into the error of confusing an acceptance of rent after a notice to quit with an acceptance of rent after notice that forfeiture has been incurred. It has always been held that, if a landlord seeks to recover possession of property on the ground of a breach of covenant which entitles him to claim a forfeiture, acceptance of rent therefore waives the forfeiture, for the reason that the landlord, where liability to forfeiture has arisen, has the option of saying whether he will treat the breach of covenant as incurring a forfeiture or whether he will not. The breach makes the lease voidable; it does not make it void. It has always been held that if a landlord accepts rent after notice of forfeiture he thereby acknowledges that the lease is continuing.
With regard to the payment of rent after a notice to quit, however, that has never been the law: if a notice to quit has been given in respect of a periodic tenancy such as a yearly tenancy, the result is to bring the tenancy to the end just as effectually as if there had been a term which had expired. Therefore, when a landlord has brought a tenancy to an end by means of a notice to quit, a payment of rent after that date will only operate in favour of the tenant if it can be shown that the parties intended that there should be a new tenancy. A new tenancy must be created."
"There frequently is an actual demise from year to year so long as both parties please ... the true nature of such a tenancy is that it is a lease for two years certain, and that every year after it is a springing interest arising upon the first contract and parcel of it, so that if the lessee occupies for a number of years, these years by computation from time past, makes an entire lease for so many years, and after the commencement of each new year it becomes an entire lease certain for the years past and also for the year so entered on, and that it is not a re-letting at the commencement of the third and subsequent years. We think this is the true nature of a tenancy from year to year created by express words, and that there is not in contemplation of law a recommencing or re-letting at the beginning of each year."
"62. Given that the parties have focussed on the issue of when the material interest of the BA ended by reference to delivery of keys and in case the Panel's decision as above is found to be incorrect in law, the Panel also decides, for the purposes of Council Tax liability only, that:
(a) there was an implied surrender, by operation of law of whatever leasehold Interest the BA had within the meaning of 'material interest' in Section 6 of the 1992 Act when its copy of the keys to the flat which both parties knew had been unoccupied and unused since an inspection on 23 November 2006, were returned to Ms MacAttram and
(b) once this had taken place, bringing such leasehold interest to an end, by 5 June 2007, when the BA sent a letter to Ms~MacAttram with its set of keys to the flat. The Panel finds that this letter was
(c) received by Ms MacAttram shortly after that date, not least because it is the only explanation available for the reference to 'June 2007' in the letter from her solicitors dated 19 December 2007.
"63. The Panel noted that Ms MacAttram had waived legal professional privilege concerning the letter from her solicitors dated 19 December 2007 and produced an amended and annotated draft which she prepared for her solicitor between 11 December 2007 and 19 December 2007. She says her solicitor, who was young and inexperienced, ignored those instructions and sent the letter as originally drafted, including the statement that the lease continued '...until the Council eventually brought it to an end in June 2007'. The position of the solicitors is not known and the letter of 19 December 2007 was not corrected. The original, deleted, instructions can, in the view of the Panel, only have come from Ms MacAttram. The e-mails of instructions to her solicitor dated 12 December 2007 and 17 December 2007 which was provided by Ms MacAttram on 5 March 2010 do not alter this assessment."
"15. Of course, a tenant does not have to give notice if his landlord agrees to accept with immediate effect the tenant's offer to surrender his statutory periodic tenancy, and if the tenant delivers back to the landlord the keys of the dwelling house which was the subject matter of the tenancy, that, dependent on the circumstance, may amount to an offer to surrender which the landlord is then free to accept or reject.
16. As to what happened on 10th September 1998 when the keys were put through Mrs Laine's letter box, the judge said:
'So there was, therefore, a surrender on that day.'
17. In terms of everyday speech that observation of the judge is understandable, but legally the dropping in of the keys cannot have constituted more than an offer to surrender which the landlords were free to accept or reject. It seems clear that there was no express acceptance of the offer so as to terminate the tenancy with immediate effect. The landlords seem to have regarded the dropping in of the keys as informal notice to quit or an offer to terminate. They seem to have agreed to terminate the tenancy at the end of the minimum period for which a proper notice could have been given ... "
"Our client considers that the lease continued because of the Council's failure to comply with Clause 5(25) [of the lease] until the Council eventually brought it to an end in June 2007. Our client therefore seeks to recover rent due from the period from January 2007 until June 2007."