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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Lands Tribunal >> Minster Chalets Ltd v Irwin Park Residents Association [2001] EWLands LRX_28_2000 (22 April 2001) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWLands/2001/LRX_28_2000.html Cite as: [2001] EWLands LRX_28_2000 |
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[2001] EWLands LRX_28_2000 (22 April 2001)
LRX/28/2000
LANDS TRIBUNAL ACT 1949
SERVICE CHARGES – Landlord and Tenant Act 1985, s 19 – whether lease provided for service charges –whether landlord estopped from saying it did not so provide – tenants' association certificate of recognition under s 29 – whether refusal to cancel set up res judicata estoppel on service charges issue – held lease did not provide for service charges, no estoppel.
IN THE MATTER of an APPEAL against a DECISION of the
LEASEHOLD VALUATION TRIBUNAL for the SOUTHERN and
SOUTH EASTERN RENT ASSESSMENT PANEL
BETWEEN MINSTER CHALETS LIMITED Claimant
and
IRWIN PARK RESIDENTS ASSOCIATION Respondent
Re: Holiday Chalet Park,
Irwin Park,
The Broadway,
Minster
Sheerness
Kent
Before: The President
Sitting in public at 48/49 Chancery Lane, London WC2A 1JR
on 23 and 24 April 2001
The following cases are referred to in this decision:
R v Clowes (No.2) [1994] 2 All ER 316
Investors Compensation Scheme Ltd v West Bromwich Building Society [1998] 1 WLR 896
The Karen Oltmann [1976] 2 Lloyds Rep 708
Dickson v St Aubyn [1944] 1 All ER 470
City and Westminster Properties (1934) Ltd v Mudd [1959] 1 Ch 129
Hopgood v Brown [1955] 1 All ER 550
Bank Negara Indonesia v Hoalim (1973) 2 MLJ 3
Greaseley v Cook [1980] 1 WLR 1306
R v London Rent Assessment Panel, ex parte Trustees of Henry Smith's Charity Estate [1988]
1 EGLR 34
Lockyer v Ferryman (1877) App Cas 519
Carl-Zeiss Stiftung v Rayner & Keeler Ltd (No.2) [1967] AC 853
Re Racal Communications Ltd [1981] AC 374
Appearances: Guy Adams instructed by Tozers, solicitors of Exeter, for the appellant.
Stephen Jourdan instructed by Kent Law Clinic for the respondent.
DECISION
"1. In consideration of the site fees and covenants hereinafter reserved and contained and on the part of the Tenant to be paid observed and performed the Landlord hereby demises to the Tenant ALL THAT property known as:-
No.7 THE LILACS
situated on Irwin Park. (Title No.K503344) The Broadway, Minster-on-Sea. Sheerness in the County of Kent, together with the area of garden fronting the entrance door. Together with a full right of access to and from the Site and the neighbouring roads TO HOLD the same unto the Tenant for a term of lease of Twenty Years.
(Lease to be deemed to take effect from 1st day of January of the year of Signing the Lease) and expiring 20 years from that first day of January.
PAYING THEREFORE:-
(i) The yearly site fees of £853.60 + 17% VAT
payable yearly in advance. The first of such payments to be made or deemed to become due on the first day of January
One Thousand Nine Hundred and Ninety Two
and every subsequent annual site fee to become due and payable and recoverable in advance on the first day of January in every succeeding year.
(ii) By way of additional site fees during each (except the first) year of the said term such further sum (if any) as shall be determined (in default of agreement) from time to time by the Landlord's valuer (whose opinion shall be final and absolutely binding on the Tenant) as when aggregated with the said yearly site fees of £
shall amount to the fair site fees value of the Cottage Site for any of such years.
PROVIDED ALWAYS:
(a) That the Landlord shall give to the Tenant three months previous notice in writing of his intention to charge any such additional site fees and in the event of such notice being given the said additional site fees shall be payable yearly in advance on the first day of January in the year next following that in which the notice is given.
(b) That is, notice shall be given requiring payment of the said additional site fees as hereinbefore provided the same shall continue to be payable for the succeeding years of the term hereby granted until the giving of further notice by the Landlord varying the amount payable."
"3. THE Landlord hereby covenants with the Tenant:
(i) So far as is practical to keep or cause to be kept the grounds of Irwin Park in a clean and in proper condition.
(ii) That the Tenant paying the site fees reserved and observing the covenants and conditions on the part of the Tenant herein contained shall peaceably enjoy the demised premises without any interruption by the Landlord or any person lawfully claiming under the Landlord."
"Q. ARE THERE ANY EXTRA MONIES TO FIND?
A. Site fees – as the cottages are sold on leasehold an annual charge is raised for the general upkeep of the park and services supplied.
Insurances – The Park has a 'block' insurance. You will be billed annually for both the structure and the contents. The cost of the structure insurance is index-linked and therefore increases to keep up with the cost of rebuilding the property at current prices. Contents insurance (minimum value £6,000) is based on what each client requires.
Water and Sewerage Rates – again you will be billed annually but the charge made by us is considerably less than you would have to find if you were charged by the Southern Water Authority.
The above charges are included in our invoice to you which becomes payable on 1st January each year."
"These rules are made for the purpose of ensuring the comfort and well being of ALL TENANTS and for the harmony of tenants and management alike.
The management of IRWIN PARK reserve the right to amend these rules and conditions without notice.
1. The Company insist that ALL COTTAGES MUST BE INSURED through the N.F.S.O. recommended insurance as used by IRWIN PARK MANAGEMENT.
2. All persons using IRWIN PARK do so at their own risk.
3. THE SPEED LIMIT IS 10 m.p.h. MAXIMUM and cars may only be driven around the road network of the park space. One car per Cottage will be allocated a corresponding number for a car parking space. Please park only in your own bay. All visitors to use the communal car park.
4. Your Cottage must be kept in a sound condition and kept clean and tidy…" and so on.
A number of the rules (including the requirement to keep the cottage in a sound condition and clean and tidy) were to the same effect as tenant's covenants in the lease. Others (like the speed limit) related to particular aspects of conduct, and had no equivalent in the lease. The lease said nothing about insurance.
"(1) In the following provisions of this Act 'service charge' means an amount payable by a tenant of a dwelling as part of or in addition to the rent –
(a) which is payable, directly or indirectly, for services, repairs, maintenance or insurance or the landlord's costs of management, and
(b) the whole or part of which varies or may vary according to the relevant costs.
(2) The relevant costs are the costs or estimated costs incurred or to be incurred by or on behalf of the landlord, or a superior landlord, in connection with the matters for which the service charge is payable.
(3) For this purpose –
(a) 'costs' includes overheads, and
(b) costs are relevant costs in relation to a service charge whether they are incurred, or to be incurred, in the period for which the service charge is payable or in an earlier or later period."
"(1) Relevant costs shall be taken into account in determining the amount of a service charge payable for a period –
(a) only to the extent that they are reasonably incurred, and
(b) where they are incurred on the provision of services or the carrying out of works, only if the services or works are of a reasonable standard;
and the amount payable shall be limited accordingly.
(2) Where a service charge is payable before the relevant costs are incurred, no greater amount than is reasonable is so payable, and after the relevant costs have been incurred any necessary adjustment shall be made by repayment, reduction or subsequent charges or otherwise.
(2A) A tenant by whom, or a landlord to whom, a service charge is alleged to be payable may apply to a leasehold valuation tribunal for a determination –
(a) whether costs incurred for services, repairs, maintenance, insurance or management were reasonably incurred,
(b) whether services or works for which costs were incurred are of a reasonable standard, or
(c) whether an amount payable before costs are incurred is reasonable.
(2B) An application may also be made to a leasehold valuation tribunal by a tenant by whom, or landlord to whom, a service charge may be payable for a determination –
(a) whether if costs were incurred for services, repairs, maintenance, insurance or management of any specified description they would be reasonable,
(b) whether services provided or works carried out to a particular specification would be of a reasonable standard, or
(c) what amount payable before costs are incurred would be reasonable.
(2C) No application under subsection (2A) or (2B) may be made in respect of a matter which –
(a) has been agreed or admitted by the tenant,
(b) under an arbitration agreement to which the tenant is a party is to be referred to arbitration, or
(c) has been the subject of determination by a court or arbitral tribunal.]
(3) An agreement by the tenant of a dwelling (other than an arbitration agreement is void in so far as it purports to provide for a determination in a particular manner, or on particular evidence, of any question –
(a) whether costs incurred for services, repairs, maintenance, insurance or management were reasonably incurred,
(b) whether services or works for which costs were incurred are of a reasonable standard, or
(c) whether an amount payable before costs are incurred is reasonable."
"If a contract contains words which in their context are fairly capable of bearing more than one meaning, and if it is alleged that the parties have in effect negotiated on an agreed basis that the words bore only one of two possible meanings, then it is permissible for the Court to examine the extrinsic evidence relied upon to see whether the parties have in fact used the words in question in one sense only, so that they have in effect given their own dictionary meaning to the words as a result of their common intention."
"The object of the rule of res judicata is always put upon two grounds – the one public policy, that it is in the interest of the State that there should be an end of litigation, and the other, the hardship on the individual that he should be vexed twice for the same cause."
"(1) A recognised tenants' association is an association of qualifying tenants (whether with or without other tenants) which is recognised for the purposes of the provisions of this Act relating to service, charges either –
(a) by notice in writing given by the landlord to the secretary of the association, or
(b) by a certificate of a member of the local rent assessment committee panel.
(2) A notice given under subsection (1)(a) may be withdrawn by the landlord by notice in writing given to the secretary of the association not less than six months before the date on which it is to be withdrawn.
(3) A certificate given under subsection (1)(b) may be cancelled by any member of the local rent assessment committee panel.
(4) In this section the 'local rent assessment committee panel' means the persons appointed by the Lord Chancellor under the Rent Act 1977 to the panel of persons to act as members of a rent assessment committee for the registration area in which the dwelling let to the qualifying tenants are situated, and for the purposes of this section a number of tenants are qualifying tenants if each of them may be required under the terms of his lease to contribute to the same costs by the payment of a service charge.
(5) The Secretary of State may by regulations specify –
(a) the procedure which is to be followed in connection with an application for, or for the cancellation of, a certificate under subsection (1)(b);
(b) the matters to which regard is to be had in giving or cancelling such a certificate;
(c) the duration of such a certificate; and
(d) any circumstances in which a certificate is not to be given under sub-section (1)(b).
It appears that no regulations have yet been made under subsection (5), which was in its present form substituted by the Landlord and Tenant Act 1987.
Dated 27 April 2001
George Bartlett QC, President