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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 >> Glen International Ltd v Triplerose Ltd [2007] EWCA Civ 388 (23 March 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2007/388.html Cite as: [2007] EWCA Civ 388 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL
DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM WOOLWICH COUNTY COURT
(HER HONOUR JUDGE
WILLIAMS)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL | ||
B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE JACOB
and
MR JUSTICE
MUNBY
____________________
GLEN INTERNATIONAL
LIMITED |
Claimant / Respondent | |
- and - |
||
TRIPLEROSE LIMITED |
Defendant / Appellant |
____________________
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 A RADEVSKY (instructed by Messrs Lee & Kan)
appeared on behalf of the Respondent.
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Munby:
"Where a tenant is required or authorised to give any notice
…
the tenant may, unless he has been subsequently notified by the landlord of a different address in England and Wales for the purposes of this section, give the notice to the landlord –
(i) at the address last furnished to the tenant as the landlord's address for service in accordance with section 48 of that Act [of the Landlord and Tenant Act 1987] (notification of address for service of notices on landlord); or
(ii) if no such address has been furnished, at the address last furnished to the tenant at the landlord's address in accordance with section 47 of that Act (landlord's name and address to be contained in demands for rent)."
I need read in addition only section 48 of the 1987 Act which in material part provides:
"(1) A landlord of premises to which this Part applies shall by notice furnish the tenant with an address in England and Wales at which notices (including notices in proceedings) may be served on him by the tenant."
"... to explain how the arrears have arisen, where you have been sending your demands and why they have not been sent to our clients' care of Solicitors or this Office. As you clearly know, Glen International Limited is a Liberian company…"
Later on in that letter they advised the landlord's agents to:
"… please ensure that any copy of or all the demands are send [sic] care of this Office …"
The tenant's solicitors were not identified in that letter, save inferentially, it appearing at the foot of the letter that it had been copied to a firm called Bowling and Co.
"We act for Glen International Ltd, the lessee of Flat 3 at the above mentioned premises.
We understand you act as agents for our client's landlords, Triplerose Ltd. Please find enclosed a copy of a letter sent to Triplerose Ltd today and copies of the enclosures referred to.
We believe that you will be making all practical arrangements to enable the Schedule to be complied with and if you wish to liaise with our client's surveyors then please feel free to do so."
It is apparent from a letter written by Portner and Jaskel the same day to the landlord that the schedule referred to was a Schedule of Dilapidations. On that occasion Portner and Jaskel wrote to the landlord both at an address in Cleveland Street and also copying the letter to Middlesex House.
"We refer to our recent correspondence and have received a telephone call from Mr Sacks of Sheers & Partners who are apparently the accountants for your clients Triplerose Ltd.
Mr Sacks has asked us to address all future correspondence to 20 The Drive and we would be grateful if you would confirm that that is correct. Your notepaper suggests we should write to you at 17 Rostrevor Avenue."
That letter seemingly was also copied to the landlord, at what address does not appear.
"We refer to our letter of 8th September and once again you have not responded to the question put to you relating to the address to which correspondence should be sent. We are accordingly sending a copy of this letter to you at Rostrevor Avenue as well as to your clients at 20 The Drive."
And indeed at the foot of the letter there is an indication that copies were sent to 17 Rostrevor Avenue and also to the landlord at 20 The Drive.
"Thank you for your letter dated October 05 2004.
Regarding the schedule of works we shall furnish you with a copy of the specification as soon as the same has become available and thereafter attend to it in the correct manner.
Regarding the insurance, we replied to you in this respect on 2nd of September last and have consequently no idea to what you are now referring.
Regarding the correspondence address, please write to us at the address to be noted below:
17 Rostrevor Avenue
London
N15 6LA."
The landlord's case is that this letter, read in the context of the preceding correspondence, was a notification within the meaning of section 48 of the 1987 Act, such that it was no longer adequate, if proper notice was to be given by the tenant under the 1993 Act, for the tenant to write to the previous address, Middlesex House.
"The notice required by Section 48(1) is not very onerous. The tenant must be told of an address in England and Wales at which he may serve notices on the Landlord: no more, no less. Oral notification is insufficient: the notice must be in writing: see Rogan v Woodfield Building Services Limited (1995) 27 HLR 78*.
As Stuart Smith LJ observed at p88:
'What the section requires is that the tenant is told, so that he knows, the Landlord's name and address in England and Wales at which he can be served with notices. If the name and address is stated in the lease or tenancy agreement without limitation or qualification, it is a necessary implication that he…can be communicated with at that address and hence it is a place to which notices can be served. The section does not require that the notice shall state that it is the address at which notices can be served. The mischief at which the section was aimed was the problem created when the landlord's identity was not known and/or the tenant did not know of an address within the jurisdiction to which notices could be sent and proceedings served… provided the name and address is communicated to the tenant in writing, which it is if it is stated in the lease or the tenancy agreement, there is no need for a separate notice.'
Each member of the court agreed that the notice did not have to include words expressly stating that the address was one at which notices (including notices of proceedings) may be sent. Suggestions to the contrary based on Dallhold Estates (UK) Pty were rejected. Sir Ralph Gibson, who had given the leading judgment in Dallhold Estates explained in Rogan that Dallhold had not decided the question."
Mr Geoffrey Zelin on behalf of the landlord submits in reliance upon that and other authorities that it was not necessary for the letter of 18 October 2004 to state in terms that it was the address at which notices under either the 1987 or the 1993 Act might be served, so long as the letter was sufficient for a reasonable tenant to understand the purpose of the letter.
"had full authority to act for the defendant and to accept service of the notice".
Likewise, in Westway Homes Ltd v Moores and another [1991] EGLR 193 the decision was based upon a finding -- see per Dillon LJ page 196 -- that the agent had been instructed:
"… to deal with all matters relating to the improvement of his title, or the protection of the title by insurance, or anything else which would enable the property to be developed …"
Lord Justice Jacob:
Lord Justice Tuckey:
Order: Appeal dismissed.