BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Thomas v Ken Thomas Ltd [2006] EWCA Civ 1504 (09 October 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2006/1504.html Cite as: [2007] BusLR 429, [2006] EWCA Civ 1504, [2007] 1 EGLR 31, [2007] Bus LR 429 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Buy ICLR report: [2007] Bus LR 429] [Help]
IN THE COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM NORWICH COUNTY COURT
(HIS HONOUR JUDGE DARROCH)
Strand London, WC2 |
||
B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE JACOB
LORD JUSTICE NEUBERGER
____________________
THOMAS | CLAIMANT/APPELLANT | |
- v - | ||
KEN THOMAS LTD | DEFENDANT/RESPONDENT |
____________________
WordWave International Limited
A Merrill Communications Company
190 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7404 1400 Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
MR I RIDD (instructed by Frasers) appeared on behalf of the Respondent.
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
The facts
"With reference to our previous telephone conversation regarding the payment of the rent for the premises ... we are writing to inform you that Ken Thomas Ltd propose to make a payment of £19,583.00 on Tuesday 7th December 2004. This payment represents 50% of the rent for December 2004 including VAT. The balancing payment of £19,583.00 will be made on Tuesday 14th December 2004.
"However, with reference to the amount owed for the rent for November 2004, c£33,333.33, this will go into the CVA as an unsecured amount. In addition to the rent for November 2004, the amount outstanding for the VAT on the rent prior to 1 December 2004 will also go to the CVA as an unsecured amount. Any payment in relation to the above detailed amounts may constitute a preference under s239 of the Insolvency Act 1986 ...
"We anticipate that the CVA proposal will be circulated to all creditors within the next 21-28 days. If you are agreeable to a meeting in order to discuss this matter further please contact us in order to suggest a time and date which will be suitable to all parties."
"With reference to our telephone conversation earlier today we appreciate (and so do the directors of Ken Thomas Ltd) the opportunity to continue our dialogue in the New Year without any action being taken today to discuss and agree a payment structure which the company can afford to make, and you are agreeable to, with respect to the one month's rent that is due.
"We also take this opportunity to confirm that we have received an email from Mark Kirkman [a director of the company] stating that your bank should receive a payment of c9k today which is the first weekly payment of rent going forward, ie this payment will be in relation to rent for the first week in January 2005. The amount has been calculated by Mark by taking the annual rent figure and multiplying by 1/52. This payment has been paid by standing order, set out by Mark Kirkman."
Had the right to forfeit been waived?
1(a). The two payments made on 8 and 15 December 2004 were in respect of the rent due on 1 December 2004 (see the letter of 3 December 2004).
1(b). The four weekly payments made during January 2005 were paid in respect of the rent due on 1 January 2005 (see the letter of 31 December 2004)
2. Those payments were accepted by Mr Thomas and he is therefore bound by the terms of the two letters.
3. This means that the only rent outstanding, as at 1 February 2005 when the forfeiture proceedings were started, other than the VAT to which I have referred, was the rent due on 1 November 2004.
4. By accepting the payments in respect of the rent accruing due in December 2004 and January 2005 the landlord was unequivocally acknowledging the lease was in existence as at a) 1 December 2004 and b) 1 January 2005.
5. Accordingly, the landlord had waived his right to elect to forfeit the lease for the non-payment of rent due on 1 November 2004, which had arisen on 22 November 2004, 21 days after that rent fell due.
"It is not necessary that the landlord should intend to waive the right to forfeit. If, objectively, his act recognises the continued existence of the tenancy, a waiver will result in respect of his intention. Thus the acceptance of rent because of a clerical error will amount to a waiver, as will the receipt of rent 'without prejudice', or under protest. It is a question of fact whether the money is tendered and accepted as rent, but once it has been decided that money was tendered and accepted as rent, the question that the right to forfeit has been waived is a question of law."
"Where the rent was paid into the landlord's bank account despite his instruction to the bank not to receive it, and the landlord took no steps to repay it to the tenant, it was held that there was sufficient acceptance to amount to a waiver. But it is considered that where rent is paid directly into the landlord's bank account (eg by banker's order) it is not accepted if the landlord rejects the payment or repays it as quickly as circumstances permit. It is considered that save in exceptional circumstances the receipt by the landlord of a cheque for the rent which he does not present for payment does not amount to waiver."
"21.059: Rights to appropriate payments. Where several separate debts are due from the debtor to the creditor, the debtor may, when making a payment, appropriate the money paid to a particular debt or debts, and if the creditor accepts the payment so appropriated, he must apply it in the manner directed by the debtor; if, however, the debtor makes no appropriation when making the payment, the creditor may do so.
"21.060: Debtor's rights to appropriate. It is essential that an appropriation by the debtor should take the form of a communication, express or implied, to the creditor of the debtor's intention to appropriate the payment to a specific debt (or debts) so that the creditor may know that his rights of appropriation as creditor cannot arise. It is not essential that the debtor should expressly specify at the time of the payment, which debt or account intended the payment to be applied to. His intention may be collected from other circumstances showing that he intended at the time of the payment to appropriate to a specific debt or account. ....
"21.061: Creditors' right to appropriate. Where the debtor has not exercised his option, and the right to appropriate has therefore devolved upon the creditor, he may exercise it at any time "up to the very last moment" or until something happens which makes it inequitable for him to exercise it. [I omit the rest of the paragraph]."
"The payment, as I understand it, was on 8th December, but there was not, it seems to me an allocation at the time. It is more like an offer of acceptance case where the parties were bouncing terms backwards and forwards to each other. Mr Thomas made it very clear he did not accept the CVA, therefore he did not accept any such allocation as was proposed, therefore it is not possible to say that the rent has been allocated so as to leave the November rent in a vacuum.
"Having heard from Mr Thomas, having seen the correspondence, having considered that he is a businessmen with experience and clearly a wealthy man, owed large sums of money, I really do not think it plausible to say that he accepted the basis upon which the rent was being put forward. I therefore find there was no allocation at the time of payment and Mr Thomas' evidence, which was not in any way contradicted because I did not hear from Mr Campbell, but, of course, was challenge in cross-examination, is in fact correct."
To my mind, this analysis is flawed. It is inappropriate to treat bilateral contractual negotiations as akin to a unilateral right to appropriate.
The effect of the CVA on the right to forfeit
"(1). The meetings summoned under section 3 shall approve the proposed voluntary arrangement (with or without modifications).
…
"(3). A meeting, though summoned, shall not approve any proposal or modification which affects the right of a secured creditor of the company to enforce his security, except with the concurrence of the creditor concerned.
"(4). Subject as follows, a meeting though summoned shall not approve any proposal or modification under which-
(a) any preferential debt of the company is to be paid otherwise than in priority to such of its debts as are not preferential debts …
"However, the meeting may approve such a proposal or modification with the concurrence of the preferential creditor concerned."
"(1) This section applies when a decision approving a voluntary arrangement has effect under section 4A.
"(2) The approved … arrangement-
a) takes effect as if made by the company at the creditors' meeting, and
b) binds every person in accordance with the rules-
(i) was entitled to vote at that meeting (whether or not he was present or represented at it), or
(ii) would have been so entitled if he had had notice of it,
as if he were a party to the voluntary arrangement.
…"
"… was only intended to bind the creditors in their character of creditors, it did not affect proprietary rights such as those of the landlord to forfeit the lease".
A little later, at 50E-F, he observed:
"What the arrangement does is to bind the landlord to the creditor for the unpaid rent. To that extent is has indirectly an effect on the landlord's right to forfeit for non-payment of rent, apart for the arrangement the bankrupt would only have been relieved against forfeiture for non-payment of rent on condition that all the arrears were paid."
"While the terms of relief are a matter for the discretion of the judge to whom the application is made, it is unlikely that, after the landlord's right to arrears of rent has been extinguished and replaced by its rights in the arrangement, any condition of full repayment will be imposed before the bankrupt or an assignee could obtain relief. Mr Lewison submits that this would be unfair prejudice to the landlord. I do not agree. The right to forfeit for non-payment of rent is in order to provide the landlord with security for payment of that rent, whatever it may be. The effect of the arrangement is to modify the landlord's claim for the arrears of rent in the same way as the claims of other creditors. It does not appear to me to be unfair prejudice that after such modification the right to forfeit should only stand as security for recovery of the modified debt rather than the original one."
"A voluntary arrangement may postpone, modify or extinguish the lessor's right as a creditor of the company to the reserved rent whether past or future … and excuse the company (whether original lessee or assignee) personally from performance. The voluntary arrangement in such a case by operation of law absolves the lessee from, or limits or postpones, his personal liability. Nonetheless (a) the voluntary arrangement cannot prejudice the lessor's right to forfeit the lease if the full rent reserve by the lease is not paid. This is implicit in the judgments in Doorbar v Alltime Securities Ltd (No 2) ... of Knox J [1995] 2 BCLC 513 at 527) and … of Gibson LJ 1996 ... 1 WLR 456 at 466, 467-8); and b) the covenants in the lease remain unchanged and the right of the lessor to enforce those covenants against third parties (including any assignee of the lease) are fully preserved.
"If the lessor's right to enforce his security is not to be affected by a voluntary arrangement save with the lessor's consent, upon forfeiture by the lessor the grant of relief should be on the same terms as those on which it would be granted if there was no voluntary arrangement, and therefore (in accordance with well-established principles) relief should only be granted on terms that all arrears of rent are paid. It is clearly the assumption upon which Doorbar v Alltime Securities was decided. With all respect, the suggestion by Hoffmann J to the contrary in Re Naeem ... cannot be correct."
"… to the conclusion that the somewhat anomalous situation arises that the landlord does have what one might think of as a hybrid status".
I agree with Mr Johnson that there is no statutory warrant for such a hybrid status, which would, as the judge said, be the effect of accepting Mr Ridd's argument.
The terms for relief from forfeiture.
"(1) This section has effect where a lessor is proceeding by action in a county court ... to enforce against a lessee a right of re-entry or forfeiture in respect of any land for non-payment of rent.
"(2) If the lessee pays into court [or to the lessor] not less than 5 clear days before the return day all the rent in arrear and the costs of the action, the action shall cease, and the lessee shall hold the land according to the lease without any new lease.
"(3) If-
(a) the action does not cease as under subsection (2); and
(b) the court at the trial is satisfied that the lessor is entitled to enforce the right of re-entry or forfeiture,
the court shall order possession of the land to be given to the lessor at the expiration of such period ... unless within that period the lessee pays into court [or to the lessor] all the rent in arrear and the costs of the action.
"… (5) If:
(a) within the period specified in the order ...
the lessee pays into court [or to the lessor]-
(i) all the rent in arrear; and
(ii) the costs of the action,
he shall hold the land according to the lease without any new lease.
…"
"I accept … that the effect of the relief against forfeiture given in the County Court is from start to finish statutory. But in construing the words of section 138 of the Act of 1984 it seems to me important not to lose sight of the purpose of the Act which was to grant relief against forfeiture and where there is to be found in the section wording which bears a close similarity to words which have been used to grant relief at law in the High Court it seems to me [that] the court should not resort to a literal construction of words which have been given a purposive interpretation in Acts granting similar relief unless driven to do so."
"In my view it is not straining the interpretation of the language to hold that all rent in arrears means the rent in arrears at the time when the court was making its order assumes that payment of that rent will result in the lease continuing for all purposes. Thus if the lease is not forfeit, the rent plus the amount claimed for use and occupation is the amount of "rent in arrear" and on condition that this amount is paid the court declares that the lease is not forfeit. In my view it was not Parliament's intention that the words used in section 138.3 should be construed to mean that the court could order payment only of the rent in arrear at the date of service of the summons as a condition of granting relief. The tenant granted relief, continues to hold 'the land according to the lease without any new lease'."
"If the tenant ... do, or shall at any time before the trial in such ejectment pay or tender to the lessor or landlord or pay into court ... all the rent and arrears, together with the costs then and in such case all further proceedings on the said ejectment shall cease and be discontinued."
It seems to me clear that the expression "all the rent and arrears" there referred to must be a reference to all the rent and arrears in respect of which the landlord could rely to effect a forfeiture. In this case, the expression would not therefore include the VAT in respect of which the right to forfeit had been waived. I also consider that this conclusion is consistent with the approach of the High Court as explained by the Court of Appeal in Gill v Lewis. In his submissions Mr Johnson rightly encapsulated the point when he said that the reference to "rent" in section 138(3) means rent which will result in the lease continuing.
Conclusion
Order: Appeal allowed.