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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 >> Wilkinson & Ors v Kerdene Ltd [2013] EWCA Civ 44 (06 February 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2013/44.html Cite as: [2013] EWCA Civ 44 |
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(3) B2/2011/1410, (4) B2/2011/1411 (5) B2/2011/1415, (6) B2/2011/1417 (7) B2/2011/1418, (8) B2/2011/1440 |
ON APPEAL FROM THE BODMIN COUNTY COURT
HH Judge Vincent
8BJ00349
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LADY JUSTICE ARDEN
and
LORD JUSTICE PATTEN
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Alan Wilkinson David Bone and Mary Burrell Bone Peter Dyke Hancock Edward Thomas Russell Brian Douglas Rabey Simon Brockbank Morland Brian Turner and Carole Turner John Waiton and Virginia Sell |
Appellants/ Defendants |
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- and - |
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Kerdene Limited |
Respondent/ Claimant |
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WordWave International Limited
A Merrill Communications Company
165 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2DY
Tel No: 020 7404 1400, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Alan Johns (instructed by Shoosmiths LLP) for the Respondent
Hearing date : 20th November 2012
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Patten :
"3. The Purchaser further covenants with the Vendor that he will make payment to the Vendor as set out in part two of the Third Schedule hereto and further that he will include a covenant as set out therein in any future Conveyance of this land entered into between himself as vendor and the purchaser in such Conveyance.
4. The Vendor covenants with the Purchaser that it will maintain to a reasonable standard the roads drives car parks car parking spaces footpaths lawns pleasure grounds and other recreational facilities in the said Holiday Village and shall paint the external surfaces of the said bungalow in every third year and shall keep the foul sewer system and holding tank in good working order and emptied as and when required."
"(a) To use and enjoy and pass and repass with or without motor vehicles over and along the roads drives parking places and car parks laid out or to be laid out in the St Merryn Holiday Village.
(b) To pass and repass on foot only over the footpaths laid out or to be laid out in the said Holiday Village.
(c) To use and enjoy the lawns pleasure grounds and other recreational facilities laid out or to be laid out in the said Holiday Village.
(d) (i) To connect with drain into and use the drains sewers chambers and traps pipes wires and cables constructed or to be constructed on the said Estate and in the event of the Vendor failing to repair renew maintain and cleanse the same forthwith on such repair renewal maintenance and cleaning becoming necessary the right to enter on the adjoining and neighbouring land of the Vendor to effect such repair renewal maintenance and cleaning the Purchaser doing as little damage as possible in the exercise of this right and forthwith making good any damage done.
(ii) To enter upon the retained land of the Vendor for the purpose of carrying out repairs and renovations to the bungalow or the service pipes drains and wires thereto PROVIDED that the Purchaser shall give reasonable notice of his intention to exercise the said right and shall make good any damage caused thereby."
"(1) The Purchaser shall on the execution hereof pay to the Vendor the sum of £258.75 or a proportionate part plus value added tax thereon in respect of the period from the date hereof to the 1st day of October next for the purpose of maintaining the roads car parks pleasure grounds and other recreational facilities at the said Holiday Village.
(2) Thereafter he shall pay to the Vendor on or before the 1st day of October in each year such sum as shall be notified to him by the Vendor.
(3) This sum shall be computed by adding to the sum payable in the previous year such percentage increase as is indicated by the increase in the index of retail prices for the previous 12 months ending in the month of December.
(4) The Purchaser shall in any future Conveyance of the said land made between himself as vendor and a subsequent purchaser include a covenant in the terms set out at paragraphs (1) to (4) of this part of Schedule 3."
"The Purchaser shall on the execution hereof pay to the Vendor the sum of £258.75 together with Value Added Tax thereon or a proportionate part in respect of the period from the date hereof to the 30th day of September next for the purpose of carrying out the various matters referred to in clause 4 hereof."
(i) that the payment covenant was personal to the original covenantors;(ii) that, when read in conjunction with clause 4 of the conveyance, it formed an entire contract so that no payment at all was due unless and until all of the maintenance work was completed;
(iii) that the payment covenant was linked to the clause 4 obligation to repair rather than to the grant of rights under Schedule 1; and
(iv) that the defendants had no obligation to pay if and so far as they made no use of the rights granted under Schedule 1.
"I am not prepared to recognise the "pure principle" that any party deriving any benefit from a conveyance must accept any burden in the same conveyance. Sir Robert Megarry V.-C. relied on the decision of Upjohn J. in Halsall v. Brizell [1957] Ch. 169. In that case the defendant's predecessor in title had been granted the right to use the estate roads and sewers and had covenanted to pay a due proportion for the maintenance of these facilities. It was held that the defendant could not exercise the rights without paying his costs of ensuring that they could be exercised. Conditions can be attached to the exercise of a power in express terms or by implication. Halsall v. Brizell was just such a case and I have no difficulty in wholeheartedly agreeing with the decision. It does not follow that any condition can be rendered enforceable by attaching it to a right nor does it follow that every burden imposed by a conveyance may be enforced by depriving the covenantor's successor in title of every benefit which he enjoyed thereunder. The condition must be relevant to the exercise of the right. In Halsall v. Brizell there were reciprocal benefits and burdens enjoyed by the users of the roads and sewers. In the present case clause 2 of the 1960 conveyance imposes reciprocal benefits and burdens of support but clause 3 which imposed an obligation to repair the roof is an independent provision. In Halsall v. Brizell the defendant could, at least in theory, choose between enjoying the right and paying his proportion of the cost or alternatively giving up the right and saving his money. In the present case the owners of Walford House could not in theory or in practice be deprived of the benefit of the mutual rights of support if they failed to repair the roof."
"Mr Elliott for the Defendants contends that the charging covenant correlates with the obligation on the owner of the common parts to maintain under Clause 4. He says that it does not correlate with the rights such as the right to use the access road. If he is correct about that then the Claimant would fail not least because the obligation to maintain is not enforceable as such by a successor in title to an original purchaser and does not represent an entitlement as of right. Mr Elliott also says that because the charging covenant provides for a fixed sum covering all the maintenance obligations and cannot be broken down and apportioned between the corresponding rights there is no correlation with the benefit the Defendants have chosen to take, namely to use the access road only.
I cannot accept these contentions. In my judgment the benefit that falls to be considered is, without doubt, the legal right contained within the First Schedule including the right to use the access road. In my judgment the relevance or correlation falls to be considered as between those rights and the Clause 3 charging provision. What needs to be established is, as I have mentioned, a relevance or correlation. What does not have to be established is that the two provisions coincide. The fact that the burden in the shape of the payment provided for is not divided between the rights could, in theory, represent a separate potential problem but it does not undermine the proposition that the charging provision is relevant to and correlates with the right to use the access road."
"11. I found in clear terms that on form A the benefit was the legal rights contained including the right to use the access road. The relevance or correlation that is required by for example the decisions in Rhone v Stephens and Thamesmead v Allotey, both cited in my original judgment, was found by me to be borne to or with the charging provision in the deed representing the burden assumed by a successor in title who made the choice of taking the benefit. I specifically rejected the argument advanced on behalf of the Watkins, first that the charging covenant correlated with the obligation on the owner to maintain as opposed to the rights to use the access road, for example. Second, that there could be no correlation because the maintenance charge was not divisible between the corresponding rights and in particular referable to particular benefits that a purchaser chose to take.
12. Now I just want to consider the way in which the form B conveyance differs. The only material differences that I have been able to discern are that in each conveyance, each type of conveyance, the payment covenant refers to an obligation to make payment as set out in the third schedule. In form A this is referred to in the charging clause as a maintenance charge. In form B the charging covenant does not say that but instead within its third schedule it refers to the payment being made for the purpose of carrying out various matters referred to in clause 4 and clause 4 is explicitly a maintenance covenant. The difference lies in what is expressed as being the purpose of the payment. In form A it does not include the painting of the bungalow but in form B it does. Notwithstanding that each type of conveyance contains a covenant by the vendor to carry out that painting.
…..
14. Fundamental to the three applications before me is what I regard as the applicants' misunderstanding of this point. They are each quite correct that the charges are expressly for the purpose of maintenance. This is true of part A and part B, both. They have in my judgment muddled the question of purpose with the issues of correlation and relevance. Mr Hancock filed a three-page skeleton argument and by way of evidence copies of invoices from Kerdene to him. His argument was framed in five broad points or parts, as he termed them. First, he contended that the invoices were for services not rights, and he had no knowledge that Kerdene was claiming for rights and not maintenance. In this point in my judgment he again misunderstands the case. Kerdene has never asserted that the charges were for the rights. I have determined that the charging covenant bears relevance to the rights which is a quite different matter.
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16. Thirdly, he complains that Kerdene are in serious breach of the maintenance covenant which again, on the analysis that I gave within the trial, misses the point. The fourth argument is a repeat of the first and fails for the same reason. The fifth point is in fact the only one which falls within the permission that the Court of Appeal gave because it turns on the wording of the form B conveyance and contends that the charging covenant which encompasses schedule 3(ii) correlates with the maintenance covenant because payment is expressed within the schedule to be for the purpose of carrying out the matters set out in the maintenance covenant. Mr Hancock suggests that this proves that the charging covenant correlates with the maintenance covenant. In my judgment it does not. It did not in the form A case and the differences in wording between the two forms of conveyance do not undermine that proposition. Indeed it is quite clear in each that the payments are indeed maintenance charges."
"If the defendants did not desire to take the benefit of this deed, for the reasons I have given, they could not be under any liability to pay the obligations thereunder. But, of course, they do desire to take the benefit of this deed. They have no right to use the sewers which are vested in the plaintiffs, and I cannot see that they have any right, apart from the deed, to use the roads of the park which lead to their particular house, No. 22, Salisbury Road. The defendants cannot rely on any way of necessity or on any right by prescription, for the simple reason that when the house was originally sold in 1931 to their predecessor in title he took the house on the terms of the deed of 1851 which contractually bound him to contribute a proper proportion of the expenses of maintaining the roads and sewers, and so forth, as a condition of being entitled to make use of those roads and sewers. Therefore, it seems to me that the defendants here cannot, if they desire to use this house, as they do, take advantage of the trusts concerning the user of the roads contained in the deed and the other benefits created by it without undertaking the obligations thereunder. Upon that principle it seems to me that they are bound by this deed, if they desire to take its benefits."
"The reasoning of Lord Templeman suggests that there are two requirements for the enforceability of a positive covenant against a successor in title to the covenantor. The first is that the condition of discharging the burden must be relevant to the exercise of the rights that enable the benefit to be obtained. In Rhone v Stephens the mutual obligation of support was unrelated to and independent of the covenant to maintain the roof. The second is that the successors in title must have the opportunity to choose whether to take the benefit or, having taken it, to renounce it, even if only in theory, and thereby to escape the burden and that the successors in title can be deprived of the benefit if they fail to assume the burden. On both those grounds Halsall v Brizell was distinguished. Although Lord Templeman expressed his wholehearted agreement with Upjohn J's decision, Lord Templeman's description of that decision was limited to the defendant being unable to exercise the rights to use the estate roads and to use the sewers without paying his costs of ensuring that they could be exercised. Nothing was expressly said about the cost of maintaining the sea wall or promenade and it is a little difficult to see how, consistently with Lord Templeman's reasoning and, in particular, the second requirement for the enforceability of a positive covenant, the cost of maintaining the sea wall would fall within the relevant principle.
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Mr Routley submits that the judge was wrong in law in holding that a positive covenant can be enforced against the assignee of the covenantor only where the burden of that covenant is a condition attached expressly or by implication to the exercise of a reciprocal right granted by the covenantee. He says that the judge should have held that such a covenant was enforceable against such a person where the burden of the covenant was a condition attached expressly or by implication to the enjoyment of a reciprocal benefit granted or provided by the covenantee, either contained in the same deed or as part of the same agreement or arrangement. In developing this argument, Mr Routley submitted that where the burden of a positive covenant is conditional upon a reciprocal or a relevant benefit, it will be enforced. He pointed out that this is not restricted to the benefit of rights granted by a deed. That is true. An oral agreement or arrangement will suffice, as was held in ER Ives Investment Ltd v High [1967] 2 QB 379. But that is irrelevant, as here the plaintiff has only the transfer on which it can rely. Mr Routley also pointed out that the benefits need not be expressly related to a corresponding burden, but can be related by implication. That is not in dispute. He drew attention to the fact that Lord Templeman did not use the language of benefit throughout, but also referred to rights and power. He submitted that this meant that Lord Templeman was deliberately distinguishing a right or power, upon which a positive covenant might be made conditional, from the benefit of a covenant. This led him to submit that the communal areas could be used or enjoyed without the defendant walking on them and that their mere existence was sufficient to confer a relevant benefit. Mr Routley pointed to the judge's comment on the importance of the provision of services by the plaintiff to the character and atmosphere of Thamesmead and the advantage to the owners of properties therein that the value of their properties would be maintained by the continued provision of such services.
I have no hesitation in rejecting this argument. Mr Routley seems to me to read far more into Lord Templeman's words than could possibly have been intended. Lord Templeman was plainly seeking to restrict, not enlarge, the scope of the exception from the rule that positive covenants affecting freehold land are not directly enforceable except against the original covenantor. Lord Templeman treated Halsall v Brizell as a case where the right to use the estate roads and sewers was conditional on a payment of a due proportion of the maintenance expenses for those facilities. While agreeing with the decision, Lord Templeman made clear that for a burden to be enforceable it must be relevant to the benefit. He said that simply to attach a right to a condition for payment would not render that condition enforceable. Similarly, it is not possible to enforce every burden in a conveyance by depriving the covenantor's successors in title of every benefit that he enjoyed under the conveyance. There must be a correlation between the burden and the benefit that the successor has chosen to take. Lord Templeman plainly rejected the notion that taking a benefit under a conveyance was sufficient to make every burden of the conveyance enforceable. Further, there is no authority to suggest that any benefit obtained by a successor in title, once the property has been transferred to him, to enable the enforcement of a burden under the conveyance is sufficient, even if that benefit was not conferred as of right by the conveyance. In my judgment, it cannot be sufficient that the taking of an incidental benefit should enable the enforcement of a burden against a person who has not himself covenanted to undertake the particular burden. Lord Templeman's reference to rights and power suggests that the successor in title must be able as of right to obtain the relevant benefit. I have already pointed out that, not only is there no right conferred on the defendant by the 1988 transfer to use the communal areas, but also the plaintiff has no obligation to maintain those areas."
Lady Justice Arden :
Lord Justice Rix :