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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 >> British Malleable Iron Company Ltd v Revelan (Iom) Ltd. & Anor (2) [2013] EWHC 1954 (Ch) (16 July 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2013/1954.html Cite as: [2013] EWHC 1954 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
BIRMINGHAM DISTRICT REGISTRY
Bull Street, Birmingham B4 6DS |
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B e f o r e :
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British Malleable Iron Company Ltd |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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Revelan (IOM) Ltd (1) Revelan Properties (IOM) Ltd (2) |
Defendants |
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Martin Hutchings QC (instructed by DLA Piper UK LLP) for the Defendants
Hearing dates: 11 June 2013
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Crown Copyright ©
HHJ David Cooke:
i) the rights granted ("the Rights") were set out in schedule 3, including:
"... the right for the Grantee and its successors in title and those authorised by it or them in common with the Owner and other persons having the same right to ... pass with or without vehicles over and along [Vernon Road] to and from the public highway known as New John Street at all times to gain access to and egress from [Acorn Park]"
ii) Clause 2.2(c) provided that the rights were granted:
" only for so long as [Acorn Park] is used for the purposes of industrial units or for such other purpose as the Owner shall consent to[,] such consent not be unreasonably withheld where the proposed use will not result in an increase in traffic above that which would be produced where [Acorn Park] is used for the purposes permitted by the Planning Permission "
iii) Schedule 4 set out covenants given by the Grantee, including the obligation to carry out "the Required Improvements" and:
"4. Not to cause any nuisance or disturbance to the Owner or occupiers of [Vernon Road], or of any neighbouring land, or to any other person entitled to the Rights in common with the Grantee…
9. Keep the Gates closed (other than for access and egress) between the hours of 18.00-06.30 Monday-Friday (inclusive) and at all times on Saturdays, Sundays and public bank holidays (such hours and days being subject to change at any time by the Owner upon written notice to the Grantee)
10. Not allow [Vernon Road] to be used by (1) commercial vehicles of more than 44 tonnes laden (2) tracked vehicles of any weight or (3) cranes of any weight without the prior written consent of the Owner such consent not to be unreasonably withheld or delayed. "
iv) The "Required Improvements " were defined as:
" 1. Creating a new access from [Vernon Road] in compliance with planning permission number PO6/1191… as applicable at the date hereof ("the Planning Permission")
2. Installing new fully functional electronically operated Darfen cantilever sliding security gates between the points marked A and B on the Plan which shall include two separate intercoms to remote operators for each of the Owner and Grantee and security cameras…" [these being the "Gates"]
v) Clause 6 contained an indemnity as follows:
" the Grantee covenants with the Owner on behalf of itself and its successors in title for the benefit of [Vernon Road] to keep the Owner indemnified at all times from and against any Losses suffered by the Owner in the exercise of the Rights which shall for the avoidance of doubt include any Losses suffered by the Owner as a result of any breach of the provisions of the Planning Permission. "
vi) By clause 14 any rights the defendants previously had over Vernon Road pursuant to the 1971 Deed were extinguished. That deed had provided for a right of way (Tab 19) in favour of what was referred to as "the second property". That was defined by reference to a plan which is not included in the bundle, but I assume that it included all or at least part of what is now Acorn Park. The terms of the right of way were expressed very widely and without any restriction as to the use to which the grantee's land was put as follows:
"... at all times hereafter by day or night to pass and repass over and upon Vernon Road aforesaid … with or without vehicles of any description for all purposes in connection with the use and enjoyment of the second property but not for any other purpose whatsoever. "
"128 There is, in fact, no conflict between this approach and the principles established in Investors Compensation Scheme. For the question is: what weight would the reasonable person with all the background knowledge of the parties attribute to background material which did not appear on the face of the charge itself? All this was elegantly explained by Campbell JA in Phoenix Commercial Enterprises Pty Ltd v City of Canada Bay Council [2010] NSWCA 64 (§ 151):
"However, the way those principles come to be applied to a particular contract can be affected by aspects of the contract such as whether it is assignable, whether it will endure for a longer time rather than a shorter time, and whether the provision that is in question is one to which indefeasibility attaches by virtue of the contract being embodied in an instrument that is registered on a Torrens title register. All these are matters that would be taken into account by the reasonable person seeking to understand what the words of the document conveyed. That is because the reasonable person seeking to understand what the words convey would understand that the meaning of the words of the document does not change with time or with the identity of the person who happens to be seeking to understand the document. That reasonable person would therefore understand that the sort of background knowledge that is able to be used as an aid to construction, has to be background knowledge that is accessible to all the people who it is reasonably foreseeable might, in the future, need to construe the document."
129. In Attorney General of Belize v Belize Telecom Ltd Lord Hoffmann himself said of an earlier decision of the Court of Appeal discussing a company's articles of association:
"Because the articles are required to be registered, addressed to anyone who wishes to inspect them, the admissible background for the purposes of construction must be limited to what any reader would reasonably be supposed to know. It cannot include extrinsic facts which were known only to some of the people involved in the formation of the company."
130. In my judgment this is the key to the present case. The reasonable reader's background knowledge would, of course, include the knowledge that the charge would be registered in a publicly accessible register upon which third parties might be expected to rely. In other words a publicly registered document is addressed to anyone who wishes to inspect it. His knowledge would include the knowledge that in so far as documents or copy documents were retained by the registrar they were to be taken as containing all material terms, and that a person inspecting the register could not call for originals. The reasonable reader would also understand that the parties had a choice about what they put into the public domain and what they kept private. He would conclude that matters which the parties chose to keep private should not influence the parts of the bargain that they chose to make public. There is, in my judgment, a real difference between allowing the physical features of the land in question to influence the interpretation of a transfer or conveyance (which we do) and allowing the terms of collateral documents to do the same (which we should not). Land is (almost) invariably registered with general boundaries only, so the register is not conclusive about the precise boundaries of what is transferred. Moreover, physical features are, after all, capable of being seen by anyone contemplating dealing with the land and who takes the trouble to inspect. But a third party contemplating dealing with the land has no access to collateral documents."