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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Suurpere v Nice & Anor [2011] EWHC 2003 (QB) (27 July 2011) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2011/2003.html Cite as: [2011] 32 EG 55, [2012] WLR 1224, [2011] 39 EG 110, [2012] 1 WLR 1224, [2011] EWHC 2003 (QB), [2012] L&TR 11, [2011] 3 EGLR 19 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
KARIN SUURPERE |
Appellant/ Claimant |
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- and - |
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CHRISTOPHER NICE PATRICIA NICE |
Respondents/ Defendants |
____________________
CHRISTOPHER NICE and PATRICIA NICE – IN PERSON
Hearing dates: 12 May 2011
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mrs Justice Cox :
The Relevant Facts
The Tenant's Deposit
The Judge's Decision on the Deposit
"Deposit ID: | 11387753 |
Rental property: | [a street] , GUILDFORD, SURREY |
Name of Lead Tenant: | Miss Karin Suurpere |
Agent/Landlord name: | Mr Christopher Nice |
Agent/Landlord address: | [a street], WOKING, SURREY |
Start date of tenancy: | 06 January 2009 |
Tenancy period: | 6 months |
Deposit amount: | £500.00 |
Date deposit received: | 06 January 2009" |
The Appeal
The Legal Framework
"213 Requirements relating to tenancy deposits
(1) Any tenancy deposit paid to a person in connection with a shorthold tenancy must, as from the time when it is received, be dealt with in accordance with an authorised scheme.
(2) No person may require the payment of a tenancy deposit in connection with a shorthold tenancy, which is not to be subject to the requirement in subsection (1).
(3) Where a landlord receives a tenancy deposit in connection with a shorthold tenancy, the initial requirements of an authorised scheme must be complied with by the landlord in relation to the deposit, within the period of 14 days beginning with the date on which it is received.
(4) For the purposes of this section 'the initial requirements' of an authorised scheme are such requirements imposed by the scheme as fall to be complied with by a landlord on receiving such a tenancy deposit.
(5) A landlord who has received such a tenancy deposit must give the tenant and any relevant person such information relating to-
(a) the authorised scheme applying to the deposit,
(b) compliance by the landlord with the initial requirements of the scheme in relation to the deposit, and
(c) the operation of provisions of this Chapter in relation to the deposit,
as may be prescribed.
(6) The information required by subsection (5) must be given to the tenant and any relevant person-
(a) in the prescribed form or in a form substantially to the same effect, and
(b) within the period of 14 days beginning with the date on which the deposit is received by the landlord.
(7) No person may, in connection with a shorthold tenancy, require a deposit which consists of property other than money.
(8) In subsection (7) 'deposit' means a transfer of property intended to be held (by the landlord or otherwise) as security for-
(a) the performance of any obligations of the tenant, or
(b) the discharge of any liability of his,
arising under or in connection with the tenancy.
(9) The provisions of this section apply despite any agreement to the contrary.
(10) In this section
'prescribed' means prescribed by an order made by the appropriate national authority;
'property' means moveable property;
'relevant person' means any person who, in accordance with arrangements made with the tenant, paid the deposit on behalf of the tenant.
214 Proceedings relating to tenancy deposits
(1) Where a tenancy deposit has been paid in connection with a shorthold tenancy, the tenant or any relevant person (as defined by section 213(10)) may make an application to a county court on the grounds-
(a) that the initial requirements of an authorised scheme (see section 213(4)) have not, or section 213(6)(a) has not, been complied with in relation to the deposit; or
(b) that he has been notified by the landlord that a particular authorised scheme applies to the deposit but has been unable to obtain confirmation from the scheme administrator that the deposit is being held in accordance with the scheme.
(2) Subsections (3) and (4) apply if on such an application the court-
(a) is satisfied that those requirements have not, or section 213(6)(a) has not, been complied with in relation to the deposit, or
(b) is not satisfied that the deposit is being held in accordance with an authorised scheme,
as the case may be.
(3) The court must, as it thinks fit, either
(a) order the person who appears to the court to be holding the deposit to repay it to the applicant, or
(b) order that person to pay the deposit into the designated account held by the scheme administrator under an authorised custodial scheme,
within the period of 14 days beginning with the date of the making of the order.
(4) The court must also order the landlord to pay to the applicant a sum of money equal to three times the amount of the deposit within the period of 14 days beginning with the date of the making of the order.
(5) Where any deposit given in connection with a shorthold tenancy could not be lawfully required as a result of section 213(7), the property in question is recoverable from the person holding it by the person by whom it was given as a deposit.
(6) In subsection (5) 'deposit' has the meaning given by section 213(8)."
"2. Prescribed information relating to tenancy deposits
(1) The following is prescribed information for the purposes of section 213(5) of the Housing Act 2004 ('the Act')-
(a) the name, address, telephone number, e-mail address and any fax number of the scheme administrator of the authorised tenancy deposit scheme applying to the deposit;
(b) any information contained in a leaflet supplied by the scheme administrator to the landlord which explains the operation of the provisions contained in sections 212 to 215 of, and Schedule 10 to, the Act;
(c) the procedures that apply under the scheme by which an amount in respect of a deposit may be paid or repaid to the tenant at the end of the shorthold tenancy ('the tenancy');
(d) the procedures that apply under the scheme where either the landlord or the tenant is not contactable at the end of the tenancy;
(e) the procedures that apply under the scheme where the landlord and the tenant dispute the amount to be paid or repaid to the tenant in respect of the deposit;
(f) the facilities available under the scheme for enabling a dispute relating to the deposit to be resolved without recourse to litigation; and
(g) the following information in connection with the tenancy in respect of which the deposit has been paid-
(i) the amount of the deposit paid;
(ii) the address of the property to which the tenancy relates;
(iii) the name, address, telephone number, and any e-mail address or fax number of the landlord;
(iv) the name, address, telephone number, and any e-mail address or fax number of the tenant, including such details that should be used by the landlord or scheme administrator for the purpose of contacting the tenant at the end of the tenancy;
(v) the name, address, telephone number and any e-mail address or fax number of any relevant person;
(vi) the circumstances when all or part of the deposit may be retained by the landlord, by reference to the terms of the tenancy; and
(vii) confirmation (in the form of a certificate signed by the landlord) that-
(aa) the information he provides under this sub-paragraph is accurate to the best of his knowledge and belief; and
(bb) he has given the tenant the opportunity to sign any document containing the information provided by the landlord under this article by way of confirmation that the information is accurate to the best of his knowledge and belief."
"37. Section 214(1)(a) entitles the tenant to apply to the court in a case in which `the initial requirements of an authorised scheme (see section 213(4))) have not, or section 213(6)(a) has not, been complied with in relation to the deposit; ...'. In the case of both alternatives the focus is, apparently deliberately, not on whether there was compliance within the 14-day period but on whether there has been compliance at all. Had the time for compliance been in section 214's sights, 'the initial requirements' reference would have been to section 213(3) rather than to 213(4); and the notification reference would have been either to section 213(6)(b), or else to section 213(6) as a whole, rather than simply to section 213(6)(a). Exactly the same points can be made in relation to the language of section 214(2)(a) in which the reference to `those requirements' is plainly a reference back to the first limb of section 214(1)(a); and in which there is a repeat reference to section 213(6)(a)."
"40. That interpretation of the legislation means that late, but nevertheless due, compliance by the landlord with his dual obligations under section 213(3) and (6) will furnish him with a complete defence to any claim by the tenant under section 214. Such interpretation appears to me to be not only firmly supported by what I would regard as the carefully chosen statutory language, it is also a properly precise, or strict, one to apply to legislation such as section 214 that is manifestly penal in intent. Moreover, it is an interpretation that is consistent with the purpose of the legislation. That purpose is to achieve the due protection of deposits paid by tenants, ideally within the 14-day period but, if not, then later. It cannot be its purpose to punish landlords who may for example, for innocent reasons, be just a day late in securing such protection.
41. The other question raised by the arguments is whether (as Judge Ellis held and Mr Hutchings and Mr Manning submitted) the landlord has until the hearing of the tenant's section 214 application to comply with his section 213 `initial requirements' and notification requirements. If he has until then to remedy any prior section 213 default, and does so, it must follow that the tenant's section 214 application will fail although no-one suggested that in such a case the tenant would not ordinarily be entitled to recover from the landlord the costs of his claim. The contrary case advanced by Mr Bowen, was that the cut off point for section 213 compliance is not the hearing date but the issue of the tenant's section 214 claim or counterclaim. The theory is presumably that at that point the tenant's cause of action under section 214 has accrued and cannot be defeated by the landlord's subsequent compliance with his section 213 obligations by the time of the hearing. It would, it is said, be unjust if the claim could be so defeated and the tenant then left with at most a right to a probably less than full indemnity for his costs from the landlord.
42. I agree with Judge Ellis, Mr Hutchings and Mr Manning that the date of the hearing is the relevant date and do not accept Mr Bowen's contrary argument. First, there is in my view nothing in the legislation that points to any date earlier than the date of the hearing date. On the contrary, the use of the present tense -`is satisfied' - in section 214(2)(a) appears to me to support the case for the hearing date; and, consistently with that (albeit in relation to the different breach with which it is concerned), I consider that section 214(2)(b) shows unambiguously that the relevant date for its own purposes is the hearing date. If that is the relevant date for section 214(2)(b) purposes, would be odd if it were not also the relevant one for section 214(2)(a) purposes."
Discussion and Conclusion
(1) To pay an amount representing the deposit into a designated account, which is then held by the scheme administrator until it falls to be repaid, in whole or in part, to the landlord or tenant; or
(2) To keep the deposit, but to have its return protected by insurance cover maintained by the scheme administrator.
"… a party's position as 'the landlord' or 'the tenant' for the purposes of these provisions crystallises when a deposit is paid in connection with shorthold tenancy. Thereafter, 'the landlord' (i.e. the person receiving the deposit paid in connection with a shorthold tenancy) continues to be 'the landlord' for the purposes of the statute whether the tenancy has been determined or not and remains under a continuing obligation to comply with the initial requirements of the scheme and to provide the prescribed information. Moreover, it remains the case that the landlord will still be subject to sanction if he has not complied with the initial requirements of the scheme or provided the prescribed information by the time of hearing of the section 214(4) application (following Tiensia). I recognise this has the considerable disadvantage that the landlord might then not protect the deposit during the tenancy itself as I have indicated; but at least then he can be pursued thereafter by 'the tenant' and subject to sanction in the event he is unable … to protect the deposit appropriately before the hearing. … "
"37. The point is not an easy one but I have come to the conclusion that the power of the Court to make an order under s.214(3) and (4) is no longer exercisable once the tenancy has come to an end. Although s.213 makes it unlawful for a landlord to require the payment of a deposit which is not to be dealt with in accordance with an authorised scheme and requires the landlord within 14 days of receipt of a deposit to comply with the initial requirements of such a scheme, it is important to note that no criminal penalty is imposed for non-compliance with these provisions. Instead, they are made enforceable at the option of the tenant under s.214. It is entirely a matter for him as to whether he chooses to take advantage of the provisions in s.213 which were created for his benefit.
38. The answer therefore to the argument that the construction of s.214 contended for by Gladehurst will encourage landlords not to comply with their legal obligations under s.213 is the same as applies to any breach by a landlord of its covenants or other obligations under the lease. The tenant always has it within his hands to secure their enforcement by the taking of proceedings. That is the remedy prescribed by s.214 of the Act and it is up to the tenant to make use of it.
39. Looked at in this way it is entirely understandable if some temporal limits apply to the exercise of the right of enforcement under s.214. The initial requirements of an authorised scheme are, as Mr Gannon submitted, matters to be dealt with at the inception of the lease and not later than the expiry of the term. Section 214(1), as interpreted in Tiensia, speaks in terms of these requirements not yet having been complied with and therefore carries the strong implication that the default can still be remedied. This impression is confirmed by s.214(3) which requires the Court either to order the repayment of the deposit to the applicant or to order the landlord to pay it into an authorised scheme. For the Court to have a genuine discretion to exercise both alternatives must be available. On the facts of this case, neither was. Although Judge Cryan treated the £618 as part of the deposit retained by Gladehurst, it was artificial to do so. The tenants had agreed to Galdehurst retaining the £618 pending the prosecution of their claim for its return which it was for them to pursue and make out. The retention was therefore consensual.
40. The issue raised by the landlord has also to be resolved in a case where the landlord has returned the entirety of the deposit on the termination of the lease. Mr Gannon accepted that if this were the case then no s.214 claim could be made. Section 214 envisages that it must still be open to the Court to make both a s.214(3) and a s.214(4) order. Where this is not the case neither applies.
41. But that argument would mean that a defaulting landlord who nevertheless was scrupulous in dealing with the deposit at the end of the lease would be in a worse position with a defaulting tenant than he would be with a tenant who observed his own covenants to the letter. If the landlord was able to refund the deposit in its entirety he would escape the consequences of s.214(4) but not if he had legitimate grounds for retaining part of it to pay for repairs.
42. Anomalies of this kind are avoided by reading s.214(1)(a) as meaning that the initial requirements of an authorised scheme have not been but are still capable of being complied with. This is consistent with the decision in Tiensia and is the only meaning which ties in with the two alternatives in s.214(3) continuing to be available. In practice, this means that the grounds for a s.214 application will cease to exist once the lease expires and no order under either s.214(3) or (4) can therefore be made after that date. From that moment on the application will cease to be 'such an application' as is described in s.214(2)."
"http://www.depositprotection.com/documents/prescribed-information-template.pdf"
A copy of the template was attached to the note. It is unclear whether this template would have been available to the Respondents in 2009, when the Appellant's deposit was placed with the scheme administrator, but in the circumstances it clearly deserves wider dissemination.