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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 >> Aldford House Freehold Ltd v Grosvenor (Mayfair) Estate & Anor [2019] EWCA Civ 1848 (01 November 2019) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2019/1848.html Cite as: [2020] 1 P & CR DG11, [2020] RVR 320, [2019] EWCA Civ 1848, [2020] 2 WLR 116, [2020] HLR 25, [2019] WLR(D) 602, [2020] L & TR 1, [2020] Ch 270 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES PROPERTY, TRUSTS AND PROBATE LIST (ChD)
Mr Justice Fancourt
HC-2017-002524
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE LEWISON
and
LORD JUSTICE DAVID RICHARDS
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ALDFORD HOUSE FREEHOLD LIMITED |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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(1) GROSVENOR (MAYFAIR) ESTATE (2) K GROUP HOLDINGS INC |
Respondents |
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1st Respondent did not appear and was not represented
MR STEPHEN JOURDAN QC & MR THOMAS JEFFERIES (instructed by Stephenson Harwood LLP) for the 2nd Respondent
Hearing dates : 22nd and 23rd October 2019
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Lewison:
Introduction
The initial notice
The building
"Accordingly, on the relevant date, the structural works on the sixth and seventh floor premises had long since been completed and they contained new raised floorboarding and suspended ceilings but no internal walls (other than the dividing wall), pipes, cables or other items of fit out. The two sets of premises on each floor (as identified in the new underleases) were separated from each other by the dividing wall and the locked pairs of access doors, which were designed to be opened to facilitate work to fit out the flats for occupation. Separate access to each of the intended new flats could be gained via the lifts and staircase in the northern or southern core of the Building."
"The original separate sets of premises (flats 60 and 70) were effectively demolished internally, amalgamated into newly-built space and then divided up. Each of flats 61, 62, 71 and 72 was a newly-constructed set of premises as a result of the works carried out on behalf of K Group between around 2008 and 2013."
What is a flat?
"dwelling" means any building or part of a building occupied or intended to be occupied as a separate dwelling;
"flat" means a separate set of premises (whether or not on the same floor)— (a) which forms part of a building, and (b) which is constructed or adapted for use for the purposes of a dwelling, and (c) either the whole or a material part of which lies above or below some other part of the building; …"
i) Was each of the areas comprised in the underleases of the sixth and seventh floors a "separate set of premises"; and if so
ii) Was each of those areas constructed or adapted for use for the purposes of a dwelling?
Separate set of premises
"In my opinion, the word 'separate' suggests both 'physically separate' or 'set apart' and 'single' or 'regarded as a unit'. The definition is concerned with the physical configuration of the premises. It was conceded by the appellants that the rooms which form part of the flat do not have to be contiguous. Many sets of chambers in the Inns of Court are physically divided by a common staircase and landing but they would, I think, be regarded as a single 'separate set of premises'. The question is one of fact and degree, and must largely be one of impression. The degree of proximity of any part of the premises which is not contiguous is likely to be decisive."
"I consider that each part of each of the floors, as separately demised on the relevant date, is a separate set of premises within the meaning of the definition of "flat". Each part of each floor was given its separate identity not just by being enclosed by external walls and a dividing wall, but was given functional identity (as well as a precisely defined extent) by the terms of the new underleases. Each demised area was separated from the other by the dividing wall with doors in it. The doors were kept locked. They were there for the purpose only of facilitating the fitting out of the flats at a later time. The doors were not there so that each demised area could be used together with the other demised area, only for passing through one flat into the other. It was intended that, after completion of the fit out, the doors would be removed and the dividing wall fully built. Each demised area was in my judgment a separate set of premises on the relevant date and held as such by different tenants under the terms of the new occupational underleases."
i) A partition screen was constructed on each balcony.
ii) Each of the two areas had its own separate front door leading off the common parts.
iii) Each of the two areas was separated by a dividing wall containing the large flat panel doors, which were kept locked and had no door handles.
Constructed for use for the purposes of a dwelling
"In my judgment, the statutory definition of "flat" in the 1993 Act is, like the definition of "house" in the 1967 Act, concerned with the purpose for which premises have been constructed or subsequently adapted. The relevant question is whether they have been constructed or adapted for use for the purposes of a dwelling or for use for some other purposes. If the latter, the separate set of premises so constructed or adapted is not a "flat". The test is not whether the separate set of premises has reached such an extent of fitting out, or remains in such good condition, that it can actually be used for living, eating and sleeping purposes on the relevant date…. Each of the four separate sets of premises in existence on the sixth and seventh floors have been constructed for use for residential purposes, even though their current condition precludes actual use for those purposes."
"Of course, if the sixth and seventh floors had not yet been constructed so as to create separate sets of premises, there could be no "flats" within the definition. But once the separate sets of premises exist and are let for residential purposes, they have been constructed for use for the purposes of a dwelling within the meaning of the definition even if they could not actually be used as such on the relevant date. It is the separate set of premises that needs to have been constructed, not an inhabitable dwelling."
"For purposes of this Part of this Act, "house" includes any building designed or adapted for living in and reasonably so called, notwithstanding that the building is not structurally detached, or was or is not solely designed or adapted for living in, or is divided horizontally into flats or maisonettes…"
"The fact that the property had become internally dilapidated and incapable of beneficial occupation (without the installation of floor boards, plastering, rewiring, replumbing and the like) does not detract from the fact that the property was "designed … for living in", when it was first built, and nothing that has happened subsequently has changed that."
"In my judgment, the words "designed or adapted for living in", as a matter of ordinary English, require one first to consider the property as it was initially built: for what purpose was it originally designed? That is the natural meaning of the word "designed", which is a past participle. One then goes on to consider whether work has subsequently been done to the property so that the original "design" has been changed: has it been adapted for another purpose, and if so what purpose? When asking either question, one is ultimately concerned to decide whether the purpose for which the property has been designed or adapted, was "for living in"."
"… I find myself drawn back to a reading which accords more closely to what I have suggested was in Lord Denning MR's mind in Ashbridge [1965] 1 WLR 1320, that is a simple way of defining the present identity or function of a building as a house, by reference to its current physical character, whether derived from its original design or from subsequent adaptation. Furthermore, I would not give any special weight in that context to the word "adapted". In ordinary language it means no more than "made suitable". It is true that the word is applied to the building, rather than its contents, so that a mere change of furniture is not enough. However, the word does not imply any particular degree of structural change."
"That interpretation does not of course call into question the actual decision in the Boss Holdings case…. The basis of the decision, as I understand it, was that the upper floors, which had been designed or last adapted for residential purposes, and had not been put to any other use, had not lost their identity as such, merely because at the material time they were disused and dilapidated. It was enough that the building was partially "adapted for living in", and it was unnecessary to look beyond that… That reasoning cannot be extended to a building in which the residential use has not merely ceased, but has been wholly replaced by a new, non-residential use."
"In most cases, parts of premises that are occupied or intended to be occupied for residential purposes within the meaning of section 4(1)(a)(i) will be so occupied (or intended to be occupied) because they are flats. However, that does not mean that only flats within the meaning of Part I of the Act can be intended to be so occupied. Had the draftsman of the Act intended the two matters to be synonymous he could and would have referred simply to "flats" in section 4(1)(a)(i). The essential distinction raised by section 4(1) is between residential space and non-residential space (excluding the common parts). Thus, it is not a surprising conclusion to reach that floors of a residential block that are being rebuilt as new flats but are not yet completed, such as to be capable of occupation, are nevertheless premises that are intended to be occupied for residential purposes, rather than floors occupied or intended to be occupied for non-residential purposes. The distinction between the separate tests has the following consequence where flats are in course of construction: the number of qualifying tenants in the building or part of a building is determined without counting any tenants of the intended flats, but in determining whether or not Chapter 1 of Part I applies to the self-contained building or part of a building at all such premises are treated as residential parts."
The authority point
"The directors may, by a resolution of directors, appoint any person … to be an … agent of the Company…"
"Any director which is a body corporate may appoint in writing any person its duly authorised representative for the purpose of representing it at meetings of the Board of Directors and the person so appointed shall be entitled to exercise the same powers on behalf of such body corporate as the body corporate could exercise if it were an individual director."
"The chairman informed the meeting that the Authorized Signatory list of Societe Generale Private Banking (Bahamas) Ltd will be accepted with immediate effect.
"On motion duly made, seconded and carried, it was: Resolved that the authorised signatories list of Societe Generale Private Banking (Bahamas) Ltd ('SGPBB') dated 19 June 2015 be confirmed as the Authorized Signatories of the Company until such time as the appointment is cancelled by further Resolution of the Directors and that all previous authorized signatory lists of the Company be and they are hereby cancelled with immediate effect."
"The following is the list of persons who are authorized to sign on behalf of Société Générale Private Banking (Bahamas) Ltd ('SGPBB'), either acting in its own capacity or in its capacity as trustee of third party account(s) with effect from 19 June 2015."
"All legal agreements must be signed by two (2) signatories of which one must be a category A signatory"
Other issues
Result
Lord Justice David Richards:
Lady Justice Rafferty: