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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 >> Urban I (Blonk Street) Ltd v Ayres & Anor [2013] EWCA Civ 816 (05 July 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2013/816.html Cite as: [2014] 1 P & CR 1, [2013] EWCA Civ 816, [2013] WLR(D) 271, [2013] 3 EGLR 91, [2014] 1 WLR 756, [2014] WLR 756, [2013] BLR 505, [2013] 29 EG 105 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE CHANCERY DIVISION
LEEDS DISTRICT REGISTRY
HIS HONOUR JUDGE KAYE QC
ILS30568
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE UNDERHILL
and
LORD JUSTICE FLOYD
____________________
URBAN I (BLONK STREET) LIMITED |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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(1) SIMON MARTIN AYRES (2) NICOLA JANE AYRES |
Respondents |
____________________
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)
Mr Simon Ayres and Ms Nichola Lucas appeared in person
Hearing dates : 27 June 2013
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
The Chancellor (Sir Terence Etherton):
The Contract
"2.5 If the Seller is prevented from completing the building of the Apartment on the Property within a reasonable time after this Agreement because of:
2.5.1 strike or lockout of workmen;
2.5.2 inability (for whatever reason) to obtain building materials or labour;
2.5.3 accident or act of God;
2.5.4 bad weather; or
2.5.5 any other avoidable cause
then the Buyer will have no claim against the Seller. This Agreement shall not be cancelled nor shall the Buyer be entitled to compensation or damages resulting from a delay. The Seller will take all reasonable steps to prevent any delay arising."
"6.1.1 Completion date is twenty working days after the date of the contract but time is not of the essence of the contract unless a notice to complete is served."
"6.8 Notice to Complete
6.8.1 At any time on after completion date a party who is ready, able and willing to complete may give the other a notice to complete.
6.8.2 The parties are to complete the contract within ten working days of giving a notice to complete, excluding the day on which the notice is given. For this purpose, time is of the essence of the contract."
Events subsequent to the Contract
"A reasonable time for completing the property and taking the necessary steps to complete the sale expired by no later than the end of December 2008.
You were aware at that time that property values were falling and as a consequence of the delay it will now be very difficult if not impossible for our clients to obtain a satisfactory mortgage offer.
Our clients' former solicitors wrote for an explanation of the delay on 30 January 2009 and received a reply from your solicitors, Chadwick Lawrence LLP, dated 10 February 2009 (copy attached). In that letter, you blamed the delay on [the contractor], stating that the handover date in the building contract 'is and always has been 9 February 2009'.
On that basis, if we are wrong in contending for a completion date of December 2008, then the deemed date for completion is a reasonable time after 9 February 2009 to allow for compliance with the legal formalities.
In these circumstances, it is clear that completion has been unreasonably delayed, beyond the deemed completion date, and your clients are in repudiatory breach of the [Contract]. On behalf of our clients, we hereby give you notice that our cl
ients accept your breach as discharging the [Contract]. Accordingly, we are instructed to require repayment of our clients' deposit of £17,295, together with interest, within 14 days of the date of this letter."
The proceedings
The trial
"I am not convinced that there is, in fact, any dichotomy between the observations of Sargent LJ and Lord Templeman. It does not seem to me that Lord Templeman was going so far as to say that in no circumstances can delay be so unreasonable to give rise to an inference of repudiation. What he was saying, as I see it, is that, where time is not of the essence and there has been unreasonable delay, one cannot always infer that there has been a repudiation: one has to look at all the circumstances. However, that does not mean that delay alone cannot give rise to the inference of repudiation. There is nothing in Lord Templeman's reasoning or conclusion to negative the view that, in an appropriate case, delay can be so long that, because of the absence of any explanatory or mitigating circumstances, the right inference is that the delay amounts to a repudiation of the contract."
"I rely on the following overall factors in particular over and above the mere time lapse and the circumstances and evidence (including that of the experts) set out or referred to above (all of which I take into account):
- The overall time frame of 21/2 years for completion of the development, 6 months or so beyond the revised anticipated programmed completion date must be considered, but, as said, in its context.
- I accept that there was delay caused by the factors mentioned by Mr Barker. However, these were all built in to the reprogramming of the project and due allowance made. In any event they cannot solely explain the 124 day delay when the evidence of the contract and project meetings suggested no more than a 7 week delay due to flooding. Even if another 8 weeks is added to this (Mr Barker's factor of 6-8 weeks as normal), a delay of 14 weeks is nowhere near 124 days (17-18 weeks). By March 2009 (and certainly by September) the developers were even behind their own projected programme allowing for all the delays.
- I do not see why the contractors own financial circumstances (or lack of finance) or the delay caused (if any) by the failure to comply with planning conditions should be visited on the defendants. Clearly there was trouble but precisely what, and what was being done about it was not adduced in evidence in any detail.
- The purchasers including the defendants were told long after it had become apparent to the claimant it could not be adhered to, that December 2008 was the projected completion date, yet having arranged to market their house on the letting market, and to obtain a 90% mortgage to valuation (interest free), when the time came to obtain access for a valuation (entirely consistent with the date of anticipated completion, December 2008) they were repeatedly refused. As a result they lost their mortgage which expired as I find and accept on 31 December 2008 notwithstanding the terms of the earlier offer. The defendants kept the claimant informed of their mortgage and valuation position but the claimant's position was that other mortgage products were out there. However, they did not show me any evidence that the defendants could have obtained a satisfactory mortgage by these means. Moreover their evidence was that the defendants had tried and failed: they needed a 90% mortgage, values were falling, and interest only products were being taken off the market.
- Even before March 2009 the defendants were being told various dates for completion: in June 2008 it was anticipated completion would be in December 2008, in October it changed to February 2009, in December they were told completion was due "shortly", in the same month it became at least April, in January it was March/April, later the same month it was May 2009, in February it was "possibly … May". It would be enough in the circumstances to drive any reasonable person in the circumstances of the defendants to despair. I am not surprised they took the view the claimant was not fulfilling the Agreement. The letter they sent via their solicitors on [20] March 2009 reasonably and accurately, in my judgment, set out their position and with justification.
- Even after March, there were further unexplained delays of four months (April to July inclusive) before the project was completed."
The appeal: discussion
(1) It is necessary to distinguish between three types of contractual time provision. They are those which are conditions in the technical sense that any breach of them, however slight, is a repudiatory breach of contract which entitles the other party to terminate the contract immediately; those which are warranties in the technical sense that any breach of them, however serious, will only ever entitle the other party to damages and not to terminate the contract; and those which are so-called innominate terms, breach of which will only be a repudiation of the contract entitling the other party to terminate the contract if the breach deprives him or her of substantially the whole benefit which it was intended they should obtain from the contract or, in simpler language, which goes to the root of the contract: Hong Kong Fir Shipping Co. Ltd at 69 to 70. It is a matter to be determined on ordinary principles of contractual interpretation into which of those categories the term falls.
(2) Where a contract for the sale of land does not contain any specified date for completion, and subject to any contractual indication to the contrary, it is implied that completion will be within a reasonable time. There is no breach of contract until that that time has arrived: Behzadi at 12G-13A and 23E.
(3) The moment that the contractual date for completion has passed the contract-breaker who has delayed completing is liable in damages: Raineri.
(4) Where the contractual date for completion has passed the contract-breaker is still entitled to specific performance of the contract unless it would be inequitable to grant that relief: Stickney at 416, Seton v Slade.
(5) It would be inequitable for there to be a grant of specific performance to the contract-breaker if the parties have expressly stated in the contract that the contract can be terminated forthwith upon breach of the time provision or if it is to be implied from all the circumstances that they so intended: Parkin v Thorold at 66. Accordingly, if, on the proper interpretation of the contract, the time provision is a condition in the technical sense I have mentioned, it is difficult to imagine that the court would grant the contract breaker specific performance. I respectfully agree, in this regard, with the doubt expressed by Rix LJ in Samarenko at [64] as to whether equity, as a distinct species of legal principles, now has anything to add in the context of contractual terms of fundamental importance.
(6) Service of a valid written notice to complete after the contractual completion date has passed has the effect of bringing to an end the possibility of equity's intervention by the grant of specific performance to the contract-breaker. A valid notice is one which calls on the contract-breaker to perform within a reasonable period, specifying exactly what it is that party must do and what consequences will follow (that is to say, exercise of the right to terminate if he or she fails to do so): Re Olympia & York Canary Wharf Limited (No.2) [1993] BCC 159 at 169 C to F citing Behzadi at 12B to E. Statements in many of the cases and some textbooks that the service of a notice to complete makes time of the essence in equity are incorrect. Absent any relevant express provisions in the contract (as are to be found in the Standard Conditions, for example), it is contrary to all principle for one party to be able unilaterally to transform one type of contractual provision (namely, an innominate term or a warranty in the strict sense) into something different (a condition in the strict sense). Equity's role, in this context, always has been to relieve a contract-breaker against the strict legal rights of the other party, not to enhance them: Parkin v Thorold at 71, Behzadi at 12 and 24.
(7) Accordingly, absent any relevant express terms in the contract, where a completion notice has been served and expired following breach of a time provision which is an innominate term the question whether the other party can terminate the contract depends upon that party's ordinary legal rights. This depends upon two matters which, again, have often been confused in the case law. Firstly, the contract-breaker will have repudiated the contract, entitling the other party to terminate it, if and when the delay has been such as in all the circumstances to deprive the other party of substantially the whole benefit it was intended he or she should obtain from the contract, that is to say it has gone to the root of the contract. The delay may or may not have reached that point at the time that the notice to complete has expired: comp. Peregrine Systems Ltd v Steria Ltd [2005] EWCA Civ 239 at [15]. Secondly, the contract-breaker will have repudiated the contract, or as it is sometimes put, renounced the contract, entitling the other party to terminate it, if the contract-breaker has demonstrated an intention never to carry out the contract or, at any event, only to do so in a manner substantially inconsistent with his or her contractual obligations such as to deprive the other party of substantially the whole benefit which it was intended they should receive under the contract: Federal Commerce & Navigation Co Ltd. v Molena Alpha Inc. (The Nanfri) [1979] AC 757 at 778-779 (Lord Wilberforce citing passages from several other cases). The failure to comply with the notice to complete may be some evidence of that, but an intention to renounce must be determined in the light of the evidence as a whole: Eminence Property Developments Ltd v Heaney [2010] EWCA Civ 1168 at [61] to [64]. I agree with Lewison LJ's further thoughts on this aspect when, in Samarenko at [42], he resiled from his earlier position in Multi-Veste 226 BV v NI Summer Row Unitholder BV [2011] EWHC 2026 (Ch) at 201.
(8) Where, in the case of a time provision which is an innominate term, a completion notice has not been served on the contract-breaker, an award of specific performance will be available to the contract-breaker until such time as the grant of that remedy would be inequitable. It is difficult to see in principle why that would be any different to the time when the breach due to the delay is such as to go to the root of the contract.
"The consideration of whether there has been a breach of an obligation to perform within a reasonable time is not limited to what the parties contemplated or ought to have foreseen at the time of the contract. In my judgment, the correct interpretation of authorities such as Hick v. Raymond & Reid [1893] AC 22 is that adopted by His Honour Judge Richard Seymour QC in Astea (UK) Ltd v. Time Group Ltd [2003] EWHC 725, [2003] All ER (D) 212, where he said that the question whether a reasonable time has been exceeded is
"a broad consideration, with the benefit of hindsight, and viewed from the time at which one party contends that a reasonable time for performance has been exceeded, of what would, in all the circumstances which are by then known to have happened, have been a reasonable time for performance. That broad consideration is likely to include taking into account any estimate given by the performing party of how long it would take him to perform; whether that estimate has been exceeded and, if so, in what circumstances; whether the party for whose benefit the relevant obligation was to be performed needed to participate in the performance, actively, in the sense of collaborating in what was needed to be done, or passively, in the sense of being in a position to receive performance, or not at all; whether it was necessary for third parties to collaborate with the performing party in order to enable it to perform; and what exactly was the cause, or were the causes of the delay to performance. The list is not intended to be exhaustive. "
I do not seek to improve upon that formulation. It shows that, even if the contract had required Peregrine to complete the installation within a reasonable time, the fact that the parties had contemplated at an earlier stage that completion would be effected by a certain date would not necessarily mean that a failure to complete by that time would involve a breach of the obligation to complete within a reasonable time."
"There are three points which emerge from this. First, the task of the court is to look at the position as at the date of purported termination of the contract even in a case of actual rather than anticipatory breach. Second, in looking at the position at that date, the court must take into account any steps taken by the guilty party to remedy accrued breaches of contract. Third, the court must also take account of likely future events, judged by reference to objective facts as at the date of purported termination."
Conclusion
Lord Justice Underhill
Lord Justice Floyd