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England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> RHJ Ltd. v FT Patten (Holdings) Ltd & Anor [2007] EWHC 1655 (Ch) (13 July 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2007/1655.html Cite as: [2007] 44 EG 182, [2007] 3 EGLR 1, [2007] EWHC 1655 (Ch), [2007] 29 EG 143, [2007] 4 All ER 744, [2007] NPC 90, [2008] L & TR 7 |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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RHJ LIMITED |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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(1) FT PATTEN (HOLDINGS) LIMITED (2) FT PATTEN PROPERTIES (LIVERPOOL) LIMITED |
Defendants |
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Mr Andrew Francis (instructed by DLA Piper UK LLP) for the Defendants
Hearing date: 6 July 2007
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Lewison:
Introduction
The facts
i) Clause 2 which says:
"PROVIDED ALWAYS that nothing herein contained shall operate to grant by way of implication or otherwise any estate right or easement not hereby expressly granted or not hereafter expressly granted by the Lessor over or in respect of any land retained by or belonging to the Lessor …"
ii) Clause 5 (b) which contains a standard covenant for quiet enjoyment;
iii) Exception or reservation (h) in the First Schedule which is related to clause 3 of a deed of 14 February 1978. It excepts or reserves:
"all rights to the access of light or air from the said adjoining property known as Victoria House and Graeme House to any of the windows of the demised property"
iv) Exception or reservation (i) in the First Schedule which excepts or reserves:
"the full and free right to erect build rebuild and/or alter as they may think fit at any time and from time to time any buildings or bays or projections to buildings on any land adjoining the demised property and/or on the opposite sides of the adjoining streets and access ways"
The 1832 Act
"When the access and use of light to and for any dwelling house, workshop, or other building shall have been actually enjoyed therewith for the full period of 20 years without interruption, the right thereto shall be deemed absolute and indefeasible, any local usage or custom to the contrary notwithstanding, unless it shall appear that the same was enjoyed by some consent or agreement expressly made or given for that purpose by deed or writing."
Agreement or consent: the case-law
"Whether or not a document constitutes such a consent or agreement is a question of construction. In this context, care must be taken to distinguish between provisions designed to protect the servient owner by negativing the implication of a grant of an easement or the grant of analogous rights under the doctrine of non-derogation from grant or to establish by agreement the existing legal rights of the parties; and provisions designed to authorise the servient owner at a future date to carry out works or build as he pleases unrestricted by any easement of light in favour of the dominant land and notwithstanding any resultant injury to the light enjoyed. Provisions of the former character do not constitute either consents or agreements by the servient owner licensing or consenting to the future enjoyment of the access of light and accordingly do not prevent acquisition of light by prescription (see Mitchell v Cantrill (1887) 37 Ch D 36); but provisions of the latter character may be construed as consents or agreements permitting the enjoyment of light during the interim period and accordingly (as provided in Section 3) preclude any easement arising by prescription under the Act (see Willoughby v Eckstein [1937] Ch 167)."
"It is not an agreement given for the purpose of the enjoyment of the light, but it is simply an exception out of the grant made of appurtenances and rights, so as to prevent the lessee from urging as against the landlord or anybody claiming through him, before a right had been obtained under the statute, that the landlord could not derogate from his own grant either by his building or granting to anybody else a right to build so as to interfere with the Plaintiff's lights. That is the reasonable, and I think, the only meaning of this clause. It was in effect saying, "If I grant this house to you without protecting myself, you will say, if I build up any adjoining house, that is derogating from my own grant; and this clause is to prevent any such contention being made." But if independently of the grant the lessee has enjoyed the use of these windows for twenty years he will have the same right as against the adjoining lessee as against a stranger. There was certainly no case referred to in the argument to shew that such claim as is contended for by the Plaintiff exists. But he has the right simply by the effect and operation, not of the grant, but of the statute, and in my opinion he is entitled to enforce that."
"If you had an express proviso in the contract between the parties that, notwithstanding the grant to the Plaintiff, the landlord should be at liberty to build so as to interfere with his right, that would be another point, but that is not the express form of it, and in my opinion the fair and clear meaning of this clause, construing it without reference to the consequences to one party or the other, is not anything of that sort."
"The last words in the section mean that when you find an agreement under which the light is enjoyed you must look at that agreement and see what, if any, right to light is expressly given by it."
"that the lessors shall have power at any time, without obtaining any consent from or making any compensation to the lessee, his executors or assigns, to deal as they may think fit with any of the premises adjoining or near to the hereditaments hereby demised, and to erect or suffer to be erected on such adjoining or neighbouring premises any buildings whatsoever, whether such buildings shall or shall not affect or diminish the light or air which may now, or at any time during the term hereby granted, be enjoyed by the lessee…"
"full right to build to any height upon the land adjoining the land and premises hereby demised, notwithstanding such buildings may obstruct any light on the land hereby demised…"
"The question is whether the words I have just read operate as an agreement within the section or were only meant to negative the implied right which the lessee would otherwise have had of insisting that the lessor should not derogate from his own grant by building on the adjoining land."
"Whether the right to which the lessor lays claim by virtue of the qualifying words can really be described as a reservation I very much doubt, but the matter cannot be disposed of by criticism of this nature. One must find out the substance of the contract, and in my opinion the words must be construed as a grant by the lessee to the lessor of the full right to build on his adjoining land notwithstanding the resultant injury to the light of the demised premises."
"but without including any rights of light or other easements over other ground or premises and subject nevertheless to all rights and easements belonging to any adjacent property and subject to the adjacent buildings or any of them being at any time or times rebuilt or altered according to plans both as to height elevation extent and otherwise as shall or may be approved of by the ground landlord for the time being…"
"(a) the agreement must be by deed or writing, (b) it must be express, and (c) it must also have been entered into for the purpose referred to in the section."
"I think the principle to be deduced from these decisions is that in order to prevent the acquisition of a statutory right to light under the Prescription Act there must be an express written agreement under which the actual enjoyment of light by a lessee is permissive throughout the whole of the term created by the lease."
"The exception from the demise of any right to light over the last mentioned property seems to me to establish that there was an agreement between the lessor and lessee that the lessee was to have no absolute right to light under the lease. The exception is followed by these words: "Subject to the adjacent buildings or any of them being at any time or times rebuilt or altered according to plans as to height elevation extent and otherwise .... approved of by the ground landlord." Taken in conjunction with the exception they appear to me to constitute a grant by the lessee to the lessor of the right to build during the full term of the demise on the adjacent land including No. 15 Balfour Mews, notwithstanding the effect of such building on the light to No. 13 Balfour Mews; and to constitute, together with the exception from the demise of any right to light, an agreement by the lessee of No. 13 Balfour Mews that any enjoyment of light in respect of the premises demised to her was to be permissive only throughout the whole of the term."
"shall operate to prevent or restrict in any way the development of any land not comprised in this Lease"
"must be construed as granting to the lessee the rights of light attached to the building, only subject to the reservation of the right to develop other land not comprised in the lease, which is, in effect, a grant back by the lessee to the lessor of a right to build."
Conclusions