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England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Lymington Marina Ltd v MacNamara & Ors [2006] EWHC 704 (Ch) (04 April 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2006/704.html Cite as: [2006] EWHC 704 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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Lymington Marina Limited |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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(1)Bingham Macnamara (2) John Macnamara (3) Rory Macnamara |
Defendants |
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Mr Michael Norman (instructed by Clive Sutton, Solicitor) for the Defendants
Hearing dates: 21 - 24 February 2006
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Patten :
"(a) the right to moor a yacht not exceeding fifty five feet in length overall or twenty feet in beam owned by the Licensee and nominated by him in writing to the Company not less than one month before exercising the rights hereby granted at such place within the Marina at Lymington Hampshire owned by the Company as the Company may from time to time indicate (b) the right to park not more than two private cars in such place or places as may from time to time be indicated by the Company adjacent to the Marina and (c) to use such lavatories showers and washing facilities as are to be provided adjacent to the Marina"
"the Company's premises or any yacht exercising the rights hereby granted for any commercial purposes including hiring embarkation of charter parties sale or demonstration of such yacht or hiring sale or demonstration of such cars without the prior written consent of the Company "
"The Licence which is in certain circumstances transferable, is obviously a valuable asset and the investment as a whole should be readily saleable if for any reason it is desired to dispose of it. Additionally the berth can be sublet with the consent of the Company."
"not to assign transfer charge or otherwise alienate this Licence or the rights hereby granted or any of them and will not part with possession or occupation or use or grant any licence in respect of the said rights or any of them or any part thereof
PROVIDED ALWAYS that the Licensee may:
(i) assign this Licence as a whole (but not any of the rights hereby granted separately) to an assignee approved by the Company which approval may be granted or withheld at the Company's absolute discretion or
(ii) authorise a third party to exercise all the rights hereby granted as a whole but not any of the rights hereby granted separately for a period of not less than one month and not more than twelve months PROVIDED ALWAYS that such third party shall first be approved by the Company or
(iii) serve on the Company three months' notice in writing calling on the Company to accept a surrender of this Licence and on the expiry of such notice the Company shall in exchange for such surrender pay to the Licensee the market value of the Licence at such date of surrender. The market value is to be decided in default of agreement between the parties by an independent expert to be appointed by the President for the time being of the Institute of Chartered Accountants in England and Wales acting as an expert and not as an arbitrator"
"that the Licensee will within four weeks after the date of every assignment or sub-licence leave the assignment or instrument of devolution with the Company for the purpose of registration."
(i) the need to maximise the potential use of the Berthon boatyard repair facilities by licensees of the Marina;
(ii) the desirability of maintaining what he describes as the exclusive club atmosphere of the Marina; and
(iii) the need to minimise or avoid the administrative burden which could be placed on LML were it to have to deal with numerous repeated requests by long-term licensees to sub-let their mooring rights.
Berthon
Social Ethos
Administrative Difficulties
The Dispute
"Finally, as members of the deceased family will be aware, it is the Board of Lymington Marina's policy to offer for sale for no commission any berth license which comes available to the first name on the waiting list, which is kept for potential purchasers and has been in existence for 25 years. I am sure the Board will be looking to adhere to their previously laid down strict policy."
"In this case the beneficiaries understand your clients' concern not to have a situation where the berth is effectively used in rotation by three people. In saying this they do not necessarily accept that the terms of the licence preclude this, because Clause 3(k)(ii) allows the licensee to authorise a third party to use the whole of the rights granted by the licence separately for a period of not less than one month and not more than 12 months with the proviso that only the third party, as opposed to the letting itself, should be approved by the company.
However, if it assists in an understanding of the respective parties' positions my clients are quite content that one of the beneficiaries shall continue to use the licence in the same way as the late Brian Macnamara, and any necessary adjustments between the beneficiaries can be made through the estate. "
"That being the case and taking into account your clients' currently expressed concerns, which I hope I have set out accurately, then Mr Bingham Macnamara would be the obvious person to apply for the assignment of the marina berth. In doing so he would be applying entirely on his own account and not in any way to share the benefit of the berth with either John or Rory Macnamara. However, in using the berth he would expect to be able to sublet the berth for reasonable periods during his normal and proper absences from the berth, such subletting to be to anyone of his choosing consistent with the good management of the marina including Rory and John Macnamara.
..
He would note that your client would object to and take action against any subletting of the berth which did not accord with the principles which have been set out above.
Until Bingham Macnamara was able to bring his boat back to the UK for an extended period he would wish to take advantage of the company subletting arrangement, which I have set out above."
LML was invited to agree to an assignment on the basis of the arrangements summarised in this letter.
" Mr Macnamara would intend to use the berth in the same way as any other licencee, namely for permanent mooring of his vessel subject to absences during short or extended periods of cruising. During those periods of absence he would anticipate using the subletting provisions of the licence and in doing so he would allow either of his brothers, or relatives or friends to occupy the berth on a normal sublet basis for shorter or longer periods.
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What can be said is that there would not be any sharing of the rights under the licence between the three brothers. Any use by persons other than Mr Bingham Macnamara would be on a casual and temporary basis and be entirely subsidiary to Mr Bingham Macnamara's use of the marina berth. There would then be no effective subdivision of the licence as feared by your client.
My proposal for the resolution of this matter is that these facts are clearly set out in the letter of application to the marina and the marina company grants the licence based on those broad facts. If the company at a future stage feels that the subletting requests to Mr John Macnamara or Rory Macnamara exceeds or goes beyond the principle set out in the letter of application then we would agree that it will be right for the company not to approve any subletting under the clause to those persons which did not comply with the spirit and intention set out in the letter of application.
That then leaves the issue of the use of the berth prior to Mr Macnamara returning. Whilst he would feel that your refusal to agree to a company subletting would be arbitrary and unnecessary he appreciates that is not a right to which he is entitled under the licence although he is entitled to normal subletting, whether or not his existing boat has returned for the longer or shorter "qualifying period"."
"When the boat returns Mr Macnamara would intend to use the berth in the same way as any other licensee, namely for permanent mooring of his vessel subject to absences during short or extended periods of cruising. During those periods of absence he would anticipate using the subletting provisions of the licence and in doing so he would allow either of his brothers, or relatives or friends to occupy the berth on a normal sublet basis for shorter or longer periods ..
.
What can be said is that there would not be any sharing of the rights under the licence between the three brothers. Any use by persons other than Mr Bingham Macnamara would be on a casual and temporary basis and be entirely subsidiary to Mr Bingham Macnamara's use of the marina berth. There would then be no effective subdivision of the licence as feared by you."
"2.3 It is not a pre-condition to the exercise of the rights under the Licence by a duly authorised third party in relation to a yacht owned by him that there should first have been nomination of a yacht by the Licensee and the allocation of a berth to the Licensee:
2.4 It is not a requirement of the Licence that use of the rights by a duly authorised third party should be ancillary to any principal use by the Licensee:
..
2.9 It is agreed that if the Licensee were to make a series of short-term sub-licences for reward, such would constitute use of the berth for a commercial purpose and would therefore be a breach of Clause 3(g):
2.10 Subject to para. 2.9 above, the charging of a rent or of a premium to a third party for a sub-licence would not constitute use of the Company's premises for a commercial purpose since the use of the premises would be by the third party not by the Licensee:
2.11 Subject to Clause 2.9 above, there are no constraints upon the number of times that the Licensee may authorise third parties nor upon the number of times that particular third parties may be authorised."
"Your Clients rights under the licence will be fully preserved, and any practical problems which emerge following the grant can be dealt with on a practical basis if and when they arise. At present they are being dealt with in theoretical terms in a complicated document. That document may well give as much grounds for dispute and litigation, as will the interpretation of the terms of the existing document, and I can see no real point to be gained in such a document.
Mr Bingham Macnamara, through me, has given a clear statement of the basis upon which he intends to exercise his rights under the licence when assigned to him. I would hope that would be a reasonable position, and if when he exercises his rights and he acts in a significantly different way, it would obviously be a point that you would be able to make in any action needed to be taken to enforce the licence. His view is that the licensing operated perfectly satisfactorily during the time it was used by his father for the last thirty years also and he cannot see that there is any need for the terms to be reinterpreted at this stage.
Your clients of course have their remedies in the event that you feel there is an improper use of the licence. Mr Macnamara does not anticipate using the licence in any way which will conflict with the concerns which you have expressed."
i) LML has an absolute discretion whether or not to approve a third party under clause 3(k)(ii). The only restriction is that it should act honestly and in good faith but subject to that, it may take into account its own interests. Its power of refusal is not confined to the personality and attributes of the third party under consideration;
ii) on its true construction, clause 3(k)(ii) does not authorise Bingham Macnamara to do what he indicated that he wished to do in his letter of 15 September 2003. Revolving exercises of the clause 3(k)(ii) power are outside the ambit of the sub-clause;
iii) Bingham Macnamara obtained consent to the assignment to him of the licence on the basis of representations that there would be no sharing of the licence and that any sub-licences would be temporary and ancillary to his own use of the mooring. What he now intends to do is fundamentally different. It is also outside the terms of clause 3(k)(ii).
The Construction of the Licence
i) the personal nature of the rights granted to the licensee;
ii) the fact that a sub-licensee is not in privity of contract or privity of estate with LML;
iii) the absolute nature of the discretion given to the licensor under clause 3(k)(i) and 3(k)(ii) and
iv) the fact that the licence was designed to give LML substantial control over the Marina and the mooring rights granted.
"It was conceded that the committee had a duty to inspect and consider any application submitted to them, to reach a decision themselves and not to delegate it to others, and to act honestly and in good faith and not for some improper or ulterior purpose. It was also accepted that, if the committee took into account irrelevant considerations or failed to take into account relevant considerations, or reached a perverse decision such that no reasonable committee could possibly reach, then their decision could be impugned, for it would be ultra vires. This, however, was not enough for the plaintiffs. They insisted that the committee must act reasonably and that they must give reasons for their decision, so that it could, if necessary, be challenged, when the court would adjudicate and decide, in the light of the evidence, whether those reasons were justified.
.
In my judgment, the mutual covenantors are equally bound by the decision of the committee, whether it be a decision to grant or refuse approval, and they are so bound, provided only that it is given honestly and in good faith and not for some improper purposes. Where the required consent is that of an individual who is free to consult his own interests exclusively, a provision that such consent must not be unreasonably refused is often included in order to prevent consent being withheld arbitrarily, or capriciously, or from improper motives. If that is the only effect of including such a provision, its implication in the present case is unnecessary "
"Where A and B contract with each other to confer a discretion on A, that does not render B subject to A's uninhibited whim. In my judgment the authorities show that not only must the discretion be exercised honestly and in good faith, but, having regard to the provisions of the contract by which it is conferred, it must not be exercised arbitrarily, capriciously or unreasonably."
The reference to "unreasonably" has been treated in subsequent cases as a reference to Wednesbury unreasonableness. In Paragon Finance plc v Nash [2002] 1 WLR 685 at p.701 Dyson LJ said that:
"In that case, the judge held the owner acted unreasonably in the sense that there was no material on which a reasonable owner could reasonably have exercised the discretion in the way that he did. Leggatt LJ (with whom the other two members of the court agreed) found that various factors called into question the owners' good faith and strongly suggested that their decision was arbitrary. He also upheld the judge's approach to the question of reasonableness. Thus the word "unreasonably" in the passage at p 404 must be understood in a sense analogous to unreasonably in the Wednesbury sense: Associated Provincial Picture Houses Ltd v Wednesbury Corpn [1948] 1 KB 223."
"I would therefore accept, as a general qualification, that any withholding of approval by reinsurers should take place in good faith after consideration of and on the basis of the facts giving rise to the particular claim and not with reference to considerations wholly extraneous to the subject matter of the particular reinsurance."
Duty to give reasons
Conclusions