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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 >> Bellcourt Estates Ltd v Adesina [2005] EWCA Civ 208 (18 February 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2005/208.html Cite as: [2005] EWCA Civ 208 |
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IN THE COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM SHOREDITCH COUNTY COURT
(HIS HONOUR JUDGE COTRAN)
Strand London, WC2 |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE LONGMORE
LORD JUSTICE WALL
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BELLCOURT ESTATES LIMITED | Claimant/Appellant | |
-v- | ||
VICTORIA ADESINA | Defendant/Respondent |
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(Computer-Aided Transcript of the Palantype Notes of
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MR FRED BANNING (SOLICITOR-ADVOCATE) (of Messrs Smithson Clarke, Newcastle upon Tyne NE1 1EW) appeared on behalf of the Appellant
MR THOMAS OXTON (instructed by Messrs Comptons Solicitors, London NW1 8AN) appeared on behalf of the Respondent
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Crown Copyright ©
"... which is I stressed that I want my money back. I no longer want to deal with the like of your person. I won't go into full narration of the conversation. I will leave that for when you take me to court ...."
She added that the matter was now with her solicitor.
"It seems that after the 7th November she tells me, and I accept, that she packed up and left. ... The position was that she leaves, she does not have any dealings with him but she does leave, and I suppose is waiting, as per her letter, for him to take her to court for whatever reason so that she can get her deposit back ... As I say, that was the last communication between them. She does leave but she does not formally tell him. ...
Looking at the other part, what he did. He did nothing unfortunately. He says the place was empty, he realised that. He says he did not go in but he was capable of going in, but he knew that she had packed up because there was no trading, it must have dawned on him that she had gone. He says that he did realise that it was not occupied but he did not acknowledge that she was not a tenant. He said he was too busy to do anything. Obviously this is his property, he must have been concerned that this place is empty, that he received a deposit from a lady who never took it up. One would have thought that the sensible thing to do was to take possession because he was entitled to exercise his right of re-entry because she did not pay the rent, she did not pay a penny piece. He did not do that, he just left it closed for months and months and months and months. He was asked: 'Why did you not do anything, Mr Teitelbaum?' 'Too busy' he answered."
"He tells me that by December he knew she was not there, he knew that the place was empty. Again he did not exercise his right to a peaceable re-entry. He was too busy, he says. He sits on it. On the 25th December he does not send another demand for rent, he does nothing, he is 'too busy'. And what seems to have activated him into acting is the dispute with the rates people because then he has to answer, and his answer was, 'She's the tenant.' With the greatest respect to him she was a would-be tenant who has gone, and it seems to me there is here overwhelming evidence, as there was in the case of London Borough of Brent v Sharma and Vyas, there is, in the words of that case, overwhelming evidence that both she and he were showing by their conduct, certainly by December, that the tenancy no longer existed, and I so hold.
In those circumstances I hold that she did in fact surrender occupation and possession some time in early December, and he accepted that by his conduct, certainly by the 25th December when the next rent was due under the agreement. We have a situation here, therefore, where by the act of both parties, as exemplified by the facts here, there was a deed under which she exercised her rights to decoration and preparation for a business. She made it quite clear that she no longer wants it and is at an end and she was not going to pay any more rent on or about the 7th November. He in turn knew that she had gone, that the place was empty, did not send any rent demands after she had gone, and I would say that both parties had known by mid December and before the 25th that this tenancy was at an end.
In those circumstances the main argument that has been advanced in this case is successful. I hold that this tenancy ceased by operation of law on or around mid December, and that knowledge was known to both parties and that therefore what is due here is the rent, because the first month's rent was agreed to be free, which is from the 25th September, paid in advance, or agreed to be paid until for that autumn. That is in the sum of £5,200."
"Abandonment of the premises by the tenant without more (even if rent is unpaid) is not a surrender, because the landlord may wish the tenant's liability to continue. Nor is the delivery of the key of the premises to the landlord enough by itself. Even if he accepts it, it must be shown that he did so with the intention of determining the tenancy ... and not merely because he had no alternative."
(1) adjusted their housing account so that rent was no longer debited to Miss Vyas;(2) served a notice to quit expiring as at one month from that date, in the knowledge that Miss Vyas was no longer in possession or occupation. The notice to quit was as a matter of fact ineffective because it had not been properly served, but the court held that it could be taken into account as part of the overall factual context;
(3) created several internal memoranda showing that Miss Vyas' tenancy had come to an end.
"The term 'surrender by operation of law' or 'implied surrender' (there being no distinction) is the expression used to describe all those cases where the law implies a surrender from unequivocal conduct of both parties which is inconsistent with the continuance of the existing tenancy."
"The bare fact that a tenant leaves premises at a time when he owes rent is certainly insufficient to enable a court to draw the inference that there has been a surrender."
In this case, by contrast, we need to have unequivocal acts on the part of the Landlord and they, unfortunately for Mrs Adesina, do not here exist.
"... as the law stands it is open to a landlord whose tenant has absconded both to protect the security of his premises and the state of their repair and yet maintain his rights for rent against that tenant until a fresh one is found and he then thinks fit to enforce the forfeiture. Whether in any individual case the landlord has done more than thus protect his interests is of course a question of fact in each case. The onus lies on the tenant to prove that more has been done and thus the lease terminated."
"The conduct of the parties must unequivocally amount to an acceptance that the tenancy has ended. There must either be relinquishment of possession and its acceptance by the landlord, or other conduct consistent only with the cesser of the tenancy, and the circumstances must be such as to render it inequitable for the tenant to dispute that the tenancy has ceased."
"... or such as to render it inequitable for the landlord to dispute that the tenancy has ceased."
"If it could be shown that a tenant had left owing a very substantial sum of money and had been absent for a substantial time, then an application by the landlord under Order 24 might well be sufficient for a court to regard the tenancy as surrendered by operation of law ..."
ORDER: Appeal allowed with costs, to be the subject of detailed assessment if not agreed; the order of the judge set aside, judgment entered in whatever sum is the correct sum; interest awarded at 5% above base rate on the judgment sum from 20th August.