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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom House of Lords Decisions >> City of London Corporation v Fell [1993] UKHL 11 (02 December 1993)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKHL/1993/11.html
Cite as: [1993] UKHL 11, [1994] 1 AC 458, [1994] AC 458

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JISCBAILII_CASE_PROPERTY

    Parliamentary Archives,
    HL/PO/JU/18/253

    The Mayor and Commonalty and Citizens of the City of London

    (Appellants)

    v.
    Fell and others (Respondents)

    JUDGMENT

    Die Jovis 2° Decembris 1993

    Upon Report from the Appellate Committee to whom was
    referred the Cause The Mayor and Commonalty and Citizens of the
    City of London against Fell and others, That the Committee had
    heard Counsel as well on Monday the 8th as on Tuesday the 9th
    days of November last upon the Petition and Appeal of the Mayor
    and Commonalty and Citizens of the City of London of P.O. Box
    270, Guildhall, London EC2P 2EJ, praying that the matter of the
    Order set forth in the Schedule thereto, namely an Order of Her
    Majesty's Court of Appeal of the 25th day of November 1992, might
    be reviewed before Her Majesty the Queen in Her Court of
    Parliament and that the said Order might be reversed, varied or
    altered or that the Petitioners might have such other relief in
    the premises as to Her Majesty the Queen in Her Court of
    Parliament might seem meet; as upon the case of John Arnold Fell
    lodged in answer to the said Appeal; and due consideration had
    this day of what was offered on either side in this Cause:

    It is Ordered and Adjudged, by the Lords Spiritual and
    Temporal in the Court of Parliament of Her Majesty the Queen
    assembled, That the said Order of Her Majesty's Court of Appeal
    of the 25th day of November 1992 complained of in the said Appeal
    be, and the same is hereby, Affirmed and that the said Petition
    and Appeal be, and the same is hereby, dismissed this House: And
    it is further Ordered. That the Appellants do pay or cause to be
    paid to the said Respondent the Costs incurred by him in respect
    of the said Appeal to this House, the amount thereof to be
    certified by the Clerk of the Parliaments if not agreed between
    the parties.

    Cler: Parliamentor:

    Judgment: 2 December 1993

    HOUSE OF LORDS

    MAYOR ETC. OF THE CITY OF LONDON
    (APPELLANTS)

    v.

    FELL AND OTHERS

    (RESPONDENTS)

    Lord Templeman
    Lord Goff of Chieveley
    Lord Jauncey of Tullichettle
    Lord Browne-Wilkinson
    Lord Mustill


    LORD TEMPLEMAN

    My Lords.

    By a Lease dated 15 July 1977 the appellant landlords, the Corporation
    of the City of London, granted to the respondent partners in Wilde Sapte &
    Co. premises in New Broad Street "to hold the premises . . . from 25 March
    1976 for the term of ten years . . . (hereinafter called 'the term')". The
    Lease contained 23 covenants by the tenant firm including a covenant to pay
    the rent. Those covenants were of course limited to the ten year period which
    constituted the term.

    In 1979 Wilde Sapte with the consent of the landlords assigned the
    Lease to Grovebell Group Ltd. By privity of contract and pursuant to the
    covenants contained in the Lease, Wilde Sapte remained liable to the landlords
    to pay the rent and perform and observe the tenant's covenants contained in
    the Lease during the remainder of the term. By privity of estate, Grovebell
    became liable to the landlords to pay the rent and to perform such of the other
    tenant's covenants contained in the Lease as touched and concerned the land.
    The contractual liability of Wilde Sapte was due to end on 24 March 1986
    upon the expiration by effluxion of time of the term granted by the Lease.
    However, Part II of the Landlord and Tenant Act 1954 then applied:

    "where the property comprised in the tenancy is or includes premises
    which are occupied by the tenant and are so occupied for the purposes

    - 1 -

    of a business carried on by him or for those and other purposes:" see
    section 23(1) of the Act of 1954.

    By section 69(1) of the Act of 1954 a tenancy is:

    "a tenancy created either immediately or derivatively out of the
    freehold, whether by lease or underlease, by an agreement for a lease
    or underlease or by a tenancy agreement ..."

    In the circumstances of the present case, the Act of 1954 operated to
    protect the occupying tenant, Grovebell Group Ltd., in respect of the tenancy,
    that is to say the term granted by the 1977 Lease. This was effected by
    section 24 of the Act of 1954 which, so far as material, provided as follows:

    "(1) A tenancy to which this part of this Act applies shall not come
    to an end unless terminated in accordance with the provisions of this
    Part of this Act: and, ... the tenant under such a tenancy may apply
    to the court for a new tenancy -

    1. if the landlord has given notice under section 25 of this
      Act to terminate the tenancy, or

    2. if the tenant has made a request for a new tenancy in
      accordance with section twenty-six of this Act.

    (2) The last foregoing subsection shall not prevent the coming to
    an end of a tenancy by notice to quit given by the tenant, by surrender
    or forfeiture, or by the forfeiture of a superior tenancy, ..."

    The term granted by the 1977 Lease did not come to an end on 24
    March 1986 under the Lease but was continued under the Act. The term
    continued until 23 January 1987 when the liquidator of an insolvent Grovebell
    surrendered the term. There was then owing rent and outgoings amounting
    to £33,460.64 in respect of the period between 25 March 1986 and 22 January
    1987.

    In these proceedings the landlords seek to recover the sum of £33,460
    from Wilde Sapte. The Deputy High Court judge Desmond Perrett Q.C. and
    the Court of Appeal (Nourse and Evans L.JJ. and Sir Michael Kerr) held that
    the landlords were not entitled to recover and the landlords now appeal.

    Wilde Sapte are not contractually bound to pay the landlords any rent
    for the period after 24 March 1986 because Wilde Sapte only contracted to
    pay rent until that date. If Wilde Sapte are liable to the landlords after that
    date, that liability must have been imposed by the Act of 1954. That Act does
    not expressly impose any liability on anybody except the landlords and the
    occupying tenant. There is no reason why any liability on Wilde Sapte should

    - 2 -

    be implied. The Act was intended and expressed to protect occupying tenants
    against their landlords not to impose liability on former tenants who ceased to
    have any interest in the property before or after the Act of 1954. Mr. Arden,
    who appeared for the landlords, attempted to wring some comfort out of the
    words of the 1977 Lease, the language of the Act of 1954 and finally divers
    sentences snatched like straws from passages in judgments which had nothing
    to do with the Act of 1954 or were useless for present purposes. His gallant
    attempts failed.

    Mr. Arden relied on the following propositions. The Lease contained
    covenants by the original tenant Wilde Sapte. As assignee of the Lease,
    Grovebell was bound to perform and observe those covenants. If the
    covenants ceased to be enforceable against the original tenant, they could not
    be enforced against the assignee. The Act of 1954 would not therefore work
    unless the statutory continuation of the term granted by the Lease also
    continued the liability of the original tenant under the covenants. The Lease,
    he said, must be underpinned, whatever that expression means, by the original
    tenant's covenants. I can find nothing in principle or authority to support the
    proposition that if the covenants of a lease cannot be enforced against the
    original tenant they cannot be enforced against the assignee. If, after an
    assignment, a landlord expressly released the original tenant from his
    covenants, the residue of the term granted by the lease would remain vested
    in the assignee and the assignee would be obliged to observe and perform
    those covenants which ran with the term, or, as it is usually put, ran with the
    land, just as he would be liable before the release. Similarly, if an original
    tenant were a corporation which was dissolved during the term, the residue of
    the term would remain vested in the assignee who would remain liable to
    observe and perform the covenants.

    At common law, after an assignment, the benefit of a covenant by the
    original landlord which touches and concerns the land runs with the term
    granted by the lease. The burden of a covenant by the original tenant which
    touches and concerns the land also runs with the term; see Spencer's, case
    (1583) 5 Co. Rep. 16(a).

    By statute, the benefit of a covenant by the original tenant which
    touches and concerns the land runs with the reversion. Section 141 of the
    Law of Property Act 1925 replacing section 1 of the Grantees of Reversions
    Act 1540 (32 Hen. 8 c.34), section 10 of the Conveyancing Act 1881 and
    section 2 of the Conveyancing Act 1911 provides that:

    (1) "Rent reserved by a lease, and the benefit of every covenant or
    provision therein contained, having reference to the subject matter
    thereof, and on the lessee's part to be observed or performed, and
    every condition of re-entry and other condition therein contained, shall
    be annexed and incident to and shall go with the reversionary estate in
    the land . . . immediately expectant on the term granted by the lease

    - 3 -

    By statute, the burden of a covenant by the original landlord which
    touches and concerns the land also runs with the reversion. Section 142 of the
    Law of Property Act 1925 reproducing section 2 of the Act of 1540 and
    section 11 of the Conveyancing Act 1881 provides that:

    "(1) The obligation under a condition or of a covenant entered into
    by a lessor with reference to the subject matter of the lease shall, if
    and as far as the lessor has power to bind the reversionary estate
    immediately expectant on the term granted by the lease, be annexed
    and incident to and shall go with that reversionary estate . . . and may
    be taken advantage of and enforced by the person in whom the term
    is from time to time vested . . . and ... the obligation aforesaid may
    be taken advantage of and enforced against any person so entitled."

    The principle that the benefit and burden of covenants in a lease which
    touch and concern the land run with the term and with the reversion is
    necessary for the effective operation of the law of landlord and tenant.
    Common law. and statute following the common law, recognise two forms of
    legal estate in land, a fee simple absolute in possession and a term of years
    absolute: see section 1 of the Law of Property Act 1925. Common law, and
    statute following the common law, were faced with the problem of rendering
    effective the obligations under a lease which might endure for a period of 999
    years or more beyond the control of any covenantor. The solution was to
    annex to the term and the reversion the benefit and burden of covenants which
    touch and concern the land. The covenants having been annexed, every legal
    owner of the term granted by the lease and every legal owner of the reversion
    from time to time holds his estate with the benefit of and subject to the
    covenants which touch and concern the land. The system of leasehold tenure
    requires that the obligations in the lease shall be enforceable throughout the
    term, whether those obligations are affirmative or negative. The owner of a
    reversion must be able to enforce the positive covenants to pay rent and keep
    in repair against an assignee who in turn must be able to enforce any positive
    covenants entered into by the original landlord. Common law retained the
    ancient rule that the burden of a covenant does not run with the land of the
    covenantor except in the case of a lease, but even that rule was radically
    modified by equity so far as negative covenants were concerned; see Tulk v.
    Moxhay
    (1848) 2 Ph. 774.

    The effect of common law and statute on a lease is to create rights and
    obligations which are independent of the parallel rights and obligations of the
    original human covenantor who and whose heirs may fail or the parallel rights
    and obligations of a corporate covenantor which may be dissolved. Common
    law and statute achieve that effect by annexing those rights and obligations so
    far as they touch and concern the land to the term and to the reversion.
    Nourse L.J. neatly summarised the position when he said in an impeccable
    judgment at [1993] 2 W.L.R. p. 716:-

    - 4 -

    "The contractual obligations which touch and concern the land having
    become imprinted on the estate, the tenancy is capable of existence as
    a species of property independently of the contract."

    The common law did not release the original tenant from liability for
    breaches of covenant committed after an assignment because of the sacred
    character of covenant in English law. I understand that Scots law releases the
    original tenant once he has been replaced by a permitted or accepted assignee.
    This only means that the fortunate English landlord has two remedies after an
    assignment, namely his remedy against the assignee and his remedy against
    the original tenant. It does not follow that if the liability of the original tenant
    is released or otherwise disappears then the term granted by the lease will
    disappear or that the assignee will cease to be liable on the covenants.

    As between landlord and assignee the landlord cannot enforce a
    covenant against the assignee because the assignee does not covenant. The
    landlord enforces against the assignee the provisions of a covenant entered into
    by the original tenant, being provisions which touch and concern the land,
    because those provisions are annexed by the lease to the term demised by the
    lease. The assignee is not liable for a breach of covenant committed after the
    assignee has himself in turn assigned the lease because once he has assigned
    over he has ceased to be the owner of the term to which the covenants are
    annexed.

    Covenants are introduced on the creation of a lease but are not
    necessary to sustain a lease. Upon an assignment of a lease, the provisions
    of the covenants by the original tenant continue to attach to the term because
    those provisions touch and concern the land and not because there continues
    to exist an original tenant who has ceased to own any interest in the demised
    land but remains liable in contract to fulfil the promises he made under
    covenant. Mr. Arden's submission confuses contract with status, a distinction
    fundamental to the English system of leasehold tenure of land. The only
    object and effect of this submission is that it would enable the Corporation of
    the City of London to compel Wilde Sapte to pay £33,460.64 which Wilde
    Sapte never covenanted to pay in respect of an estate in land which Wilde
    Sapte never enjoyed. I would dismiss this appeal with costs.

    LORD GOFF OF CHIEVELEY

    My Lords,

    I have the advantage of reading in draft the speech prepared by my
    noble and learned friend Lord Templeman. For the reasons he gives, I too,
    would dismiss this appeal.

    - 5 -


    LORD JAUNCEY OF TULLICHETTLE

    My Lords,

    I have had the advantage of reading in draft the speech by my noble
    and learned friend, Lord Templeman. For the reasons he gives I too would
    dismiss this appeal.

    LORD BROWNE-WILKINSON

    My Lords.

    For the reasons given by my noble and learned friend Lord Templeman
    I too would dismiss this appeal.

    LORD MUSTILL

    My Lords.

    For the reasons given by my noble and learned friend Lord Templeman
    I too would dismiss this appeal.

    -6-


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