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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> 7 Strathray Gardens Ltd. v Pointstar Shipping & Finance Ltd & Anor [2004] EWCA Civ 1669 (15 December 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2004/1669.html Cite as: [2005] 1 EGLR 53, [2004] EWCA Civ 1669, [2005] HLR 20, [2005] 07 EG 144, [2005] 1 EG 95 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM CENTRAL LONDON
COUNTY COURT
(His Honour Judge Cooke)
(CHY03219)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LADY JUSTICE ARDEN
and
LORD JUSTICE JACOB
____________________
7 Strathray Gardens Ltd |
Respondent |
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- and - |
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Pointstar Shipping & Finance Ltd Ultratown Ltd |
Appellant |
____________________
Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited, 190 Fleet Street
London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7421 4040, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Anthony Radevsky (instructed by Wallace & Partners) for the Respondent
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lady Justice Arden:
The statutory provisions
"(1) The reversioner in respect of the specified premises shall give a counter-notice under this section to the nominee purchaser by the date specified in the initial notice in pursuance of section 13(3)(g)."
"(a) state which (if any) of the proposals contained in the initial notice are accepted by the reversioner and which (if any) of those proposals are not so accepted, and specify-
(i) in relation to any proposal which is not so accepted, the reversioner's counter-proposal, and
(ii) any additional leaseback proposals by the reversioner;
(b) if (in a case where any property specified in the initial notice under section 13(3)(a)(ii) is property falling within section 1(3)(b)) any such counter-proposal relates to the grant of rights or the disposal of any freehold interest in pursuance of section 1(4), specify-
(i) the nature of those rights and the property over which it is proposed to grant them, or
(ii) the property in respect of which it is proposed to dispose of any such interest,
as the case may be;
(c) state which interests (if any) the nominee purchaser is to be required to acquire in accordance with subsection (4) below;
(d) state which rights (if any) [any] relevant landlord, desires to retain-
(i) over any property in which he has any interest which is included in the proposed acquisition by the nominee purchaser, or
(ii) over any property in which he has any interest which the nominee purchaser is to be required to acquire in accordance with subsection (4) below,
on the grounds that the rights are necessary for the proper management or maintenance of property in which he is to retain a freehold or leasehold interest; and
(e) include a description of any provisions which the reversioner or any other relevant landlord considers should be included in any conveyance to the nominee purchaser in accordance with section 34 and schedule 7.
(4) The nominee purchaser may be required to acquire on behalf of the participating tenants the interest in any property of any relevant landlord, if the property-
(a) would for all practical purposes cease to be of use and benefit to him, or
(b) would cease to be capable of being reasonably managed or maintained by him,
in the event of his interest in the specified premises or (as the case may be) in any other property being acquired by the nominee purchaser under this Chapter.
…
(6) Every counter-notice must specify an address in England and Wales at which notices may be given to the reversioner under this Chapter …"
"(1) Where the initial notice has been given in accordance with section 13 but -
(a) the reversioner has failed to give the nominee purchaser a counter-notice in accordance with section 21(1), or
(b) if required to give the nominee purchaser a further counter-notice by or by virtue of section 22(3) or section 23(5) or (6), the reversioner has failed to comply with that requirement.
the court may, on the application of the nominee purchaser, make an order determining the terms on which he is to acquire, in accordance with the proposals contained in the initial notice, such interests and rights as are specified in it under section 13(3)."
"(6) The Secretary of State may by regulations prescribe:-
(a) the form of any notice required or authorised to be given under this Part; and
(b) the particulars which any such notice must contain (whether in addition to, or in substitution for, any particulars required by virtue of any provision of this Part)."
"(1) Any power of the Secretary of State to make orders or regulations under this Part –
(a) may be so exercised as to make different provision for different cases or descriptions of cases, including different provision for different areas; and
(b) includes power to make such procedural, incidental, supplementary and transitional provision as may appear to the Secretary of State necessary or expedient.
(2) Any power of the Secretary of State to make orders or regulations under this Part shall be exercisable by statutory instrument which (except in the case of regulations making only such provision as is mentioned in section 99(6)) shall be subject to annulment in pursuance of a resolution of either House of Parliament."
"Citation, commencement and extent
1. (1) These Regulations may be cited as the Leasehold Reform (Collective Enfranchisement) (Counter-notices) (England) Regulations 2002 and shall come into force on 10 April 2003.
2. These Regulations extend to England only.
Interpretation
3. In these Regulations-
'the 1993 Act' means the Leasehold Reform, Housing and Urban Development Act 1993;
'the specified premises' has the same meaning as in section 13(12)(a) of the 1993 Act.
Additional content of reversioner's counter-notice
4. A counter-notice given under section 21 (reversioner's counter-notice) of the 1993 Act shall contain (in addition to the particulars required by that section) a statement as to whether or not the specified premises are within the area of a scheme approved as an estate management scheme under section 70.
Application
5. These Regulations shall apply to counter-notices given under section 21 on or after the date these Regulations come into force.
Signed by authority of the First Secretary of State
Tony McNulty
Parliamentary Under Secretary of State, Office of the Deputy Prime Minister
20 December 2002
EXPLANATORY NOTE
(This note is not part of the Order)
A person who receives a notice for a claim for collective enfranchisement made under Part I of the Leasehold Reform Housing and Urban Development Act 1993 must respond by giving a counter-notice admitting or opposing the claim. These Regulations prescribe a requirement, in addition to those specified in section 21 of the Act, as regards the contents of the counter-notice.
These Regulations only apply to counter-notices given on or after the date these Regulations come into force.
Notes
[1] 1993 c.28. The Secretary of State can exercise the power under this section only in relation to England; see article 2 of, and schedule 1 to, the National Assembly for Wales (Transfer of Functions) Order 1999 (S.I. 1999/672)."
(1) references to Wales are substituted for references to England,
(2) the regulations are made in English and Welsh, and
(3) the word "shall" in the key paragraph, paragraph 4, is replaced by the imperative word "must": see Leasehold Reform (Collective Enfranchisement) (Counter-Notices) (Wales) Regulations 2003 (W139).
Background to the 2002 regulations
"12. Estate management schemes are an important part of leasehold enfranchisement and go back as regards leasehold houses only to the Leasehold Reform Act of 1967. Now under the 1993 Act, schemes apply both to houses and to Chapter 1 acquisitions; 1967 schemes have to be approved by the court; schemes under the present Act go to the LVT. Their purpose is reasonably obvious: the landlord of a leasehold estate generally manages it with common systems of covenants, both positive and negative, designed to further the good management of the estate as a whole. It represents a local form both of servicing and of planning control. By way of a simple example, the landlord of an estate where the appearance of the premises is homogenous will want to keep things that way if he can. Where (as in the areas round this court) there are groups of buildings uniformly of cream stucco, it would be a disaster if one or two enfranchised buildings were to be painted pink or purple! Such schemes of course extend to many matters beyond mere appearance, and knowledge of them with their provisions can be of significance to an acquiring tenant or group of tenants. They are registered as local land charges.
13. It would appear from the consultation paper that preceded the 2002 regulations, that concern had been expressed about the failure of the notice provision to disclose, at least at the notice stage, the existence of such schemes. It is useful, perhaps, just to see what the consultation paper said. In para.3 the part headed "Background", it is said:
'The government believes the landlord's notice does not currently provide sufficient information to leaseholders, and representations have been made by leaseholders which have been voiced in Parliament supporting this view, in particular from leaseholders of houses. We therefore believe that the landlord's notice will be of greater benefit to leaseholders if it includes two additional pieces of information. These relate to the existence of any estate management scheme and in the case of houses [something else which in the event did not happen] provided leaseholders with this additional information should help them reach a more informed decision with regard to further proceedings'
Then it set out how estate management schemes work, and it ended at the end of para.4 with the words:-
'We feel the leaseholder should be made aware of this at an early stage in the enfranchisement process.'
It was following the consultation, no doubt as a result of advice he received, that the Secretary of State made the regulations that he did."
The judgment below
"39. … It seems to me first of all, picking up from what I have said a few paragraphs ago, that the whole fasciculus of [section 21(3)] b) – (e) is intended to give tenants as clear a picture as possible of what landlords are trying to require, and at least in one case at (c) be able to insist on and will be arguing for. Tenants can then make their mind up how to proceed. The object as I see it is to get the whole potential bargain together in one place and one time and indeed to inhibit other matters from being brought in later. To do this properly, landlords and conveyancing solicitors will have a lot of work to do, and the statutory two months may not be a minute too long. In short, this to my mind is the answer to the question – what is it for?
40. If one paused there, I would have thought it was almost unarguable that (b) – (e) were mandatory. They are all essential to the formulation and ultimate bargain, and to leave any of them out falsifies the whole. It would be difficult and inaccurate to describe any of them as machinery, much less as merely supportive. It may be useful to compare them with the requirement in a section 21 notice in sub-section 6, that there be an address for notices which to my mind seems exactly the sort of thing likely to be directory on machinery. In fact a rather good example of the sort of thing likely to be machinery, it does not go with the transaction at all, it simply facilitates business. It would be extraordinary if a failure to give that address invalidated the notice.
41. To my mind the key to it is really this: the paragraph 4 statement is not in truth a free-standing matter. Mr Dutton has very much addressed me on the basis of one looks at it, says this is a small piece of information with defects of the requirements whose omission does not really matter, just perhaps like the sub-section 6 address. But I prefer Mr Radevsky's analysis that one has to look at it as forming part of the (b) – (e) fasciculus and impacting upon it. I accept that knowledge of whether or not there is a scheme [is] important as it affects such matters as (d) rights retained by landlords, putting it simply if there is a scheme such provision will effectively be non-negotiable, something tenants need to know early so they can evaluate their position. To my mind, this is strongly in favour of the provision being mandatory, it goes to the transaction, part of the machinery for affecting it.
42. My conclusions, from the reasons I have sought to give, are that this is a mandatory requirement which the landlords failed to meet. The section 21 notice is accordingly invalid."
Counsels' submissions
Conclusions
"16. … [Burman v Mount Cook Land Ltd] concerned a requirement under the Leasehold Reform, Housing and Urban Development Act 1993, for the landlord to serve a counter-notice saying whether or not the right to a new lease was admitted and, if so, which of the tenants' proposals were acceptable. The notice in question did not contain such a statement. The judge had upheld the notice on the basis that 'a reasonable tenant' would not have been misled. That decision was reversed in this court. Chadwick LJ , giving the leading judgment said that the answer could only be found by construing the statutory language in the context of the statutory scheme. Having reviewed the complex statutory requirements in detail he concluded that the landlords' counter-notice was 'integral' to the proper working of the statutory scheme, and the failure to comply with the statutory requirements was fatal to its validity."
"The question whether strict compliance with a statutory requirement is necessary has arisen again and again in the cases. The question is not whether the requirement should be complied with; of course it should: the question is what consequences should attend a failure to comply. The difficulty arises from the common practice of the legislature of stating that something 'shall' be done (which means that it 'must' be done) without stating what are to be the consequences if it is not done. The court has dealt with the problem by devising a distinction between those requirements which are said to be 'mandatory' (or 'imperative' or 'obligatory') and those which are said to be merely 'directory' (a curious use of the word which in this context is taken as equivalent to 'permissive'). Where the requirement is mandatory, it must be strictly complied with; failure to comply invalidates everything that follows. Where it is merely directory, it should still be complied with, and there may be sanctions for disobedience; but failure to comply does not invalidate what follows.
The principles upon which this question should be decided are well established. The court must attempt to discern the legislative intention. In Liverpool Borough Bank v Turner (1861) 30 CJ Ch 379 at 380 Lord Campbell LC said:
'No universal rule can be laid down for the construction of statutes, as to whether mandatory enactments shall be considered directory only or obligatory, with an implied nullification for disobedience. It is the duty of courts of justice to try to get at the real intention of the legislature, by carefully attending to the whole scope of the statute to be construed.'
In a well-known passage of his judgment in Howard v Bodington (1877) 2 PD 203 at 211 Lord Penzance said:-
'I believe, as far as any rule is concerned, you cannot safely go further than that in each case you must look to the subject-matter; consider the importance of the provision that has been disregarded, and the relation of that provision to the general object intended to be secured by the Act; and upon a review of the case in that aspect decide whether the matter is what is called imperative or only directory.'
…
Where statute requires an act to be done in a particular manner, it may be possible to regard the requirement that the act be done as mandatory but the requirement that it be done in a particular manner as merely directory. In such a case the statutory requirement can be treated as substantially complied with if the act is done in a manner which is not less satisfactory having regard to the purpose of the legislature in imposing the requirement."
Jacob LJ :
Ward LJ :
ORDER: Appeal allowed. Order as agreed by parties save the claimant to pay defendant's costs incurred in Court of Appeal and below to be subject to detailed assessment if not agreed. Permission to appeal was refused.