BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Ridgewood Properties Group Ltd & Ors v Valero Energy Ltd [2013] EWHC 98 (Ch) (30 January 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2013/98.html Cite as: [2013] 1 Ch 525, [2013] EWHC 98 (Ch), [2013] 6 EG 105, [2013] 1 CH 525, [2013] WLR(D) 40, [2013] L &TR 20, [2013] 3 WLR 327, [2013] Ch 525 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [View ICLR summary: [2013] WLR(D) 40] [Buy ICLR report: [2013] 1 Ch 525] [Buy ICLR report: [2013] Ch 525] [Buy ICLR report: [2013] 3 WLR 327] [Help]
CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
____________________
RIDGEWOOD PROPERTIES GROUP LIMITED RIDGEWOOD (CLERKENWELL) LIMITED RIDGEWOOD (TOTTENHAM) LIMITED GOLDEN LIMITED HAMLET LIMITED REDWAY LIMITED |
Claimants |
|
- and - |
||
VALERO ENERGY LIMITED |
Defendant |
|
-and- |
||
PANNONE & PARTNERS (A Firm) |
Part 20 Defendant |
____________________
James Ayliffe QC (instructed by Clyde & Co LLP) for the Part 20 Defendant
Hearing dates: 10/11/12 and 15 October 2012
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mrs Justice Proudman :
The issue
(a) it was an implied term of the agreements that Texaco would not, save by mutual consent, dispose of the properties until the airspace agreements had been terminated;
(b) in selling the properties, Texaco put it out of its power to perform its obligations under the agreements;
(c) in so doing, Texaco repudiated the agreements;
(d) the claimants accepted the repudiation;
(e) the agreements thereby terminated and as a result the claimants have lost the substantial capital value of the interest to which they would have been entitled had the agreements been performed in accordance with their terms, or have alternatively wasted their expenditure.
(a) the implied term is much more limited in scope than that contended for by the claimants;
(b) there was no breach of the implied term as Texaco was able to perform the airspace agreements; the claimants were entitled to protect their interests by registration and Texaco took covenants from Somerfield and Azure to comply with the airspace agreements;
(c) Texaco did not repudiate the airspace agreements;
(d) the claimants in any event affirmed them;
(e) the claimants did not in any event accept the alleged repudiatory breach or notify such acceptance;
(f) in any event the claimants are time-barred since the relevant breach date is the date of the sale agreements, namely 28 April 2005, more than six years before commencement of proceedings. On this latter point the claimants' case is that the relevant date for limitation purposes is the date of completion, namely 21 June 2005, and the claim is not therefore time-barred.
The sale
"The Transferee covenants with the Transferor to observe and perform at all times hereafter the covenants restrictions and stipulations contained in or referred to in the Registers of Title Numbers referred to in the Schedule hereto so far as they are still subsisting and capable of taking effect and affect the properties and to indemnify the Transferor against all actions proceedings costs claims expenses and demands whatsoever in respect of any breach non-observance or non-performance of all or any of the covenants restrictions and stipulations."
Construction of the airspace agreements
"15. Restriction on assignment and severance.
15.1 This Agreement shall not be capable of assignment by the Developer other than to an Authorised Transferee."
"Authorised Transferee" is defined as an "Affiliate" of Ridgewood (broadly a subsidiary or other associated company) or such other entity as previously approved in writing by Texaco. There is no equivalent change or restriction in relation to Texaco. There are other provisions to the effect that Texaco should not be required to grant the building lease or transfer the property in parts to anyone other than Ridgewood.
"Where the context so admits the expressions "Texaco" and "the Developer" includes their personal representatives and "the Developer" shall include any permitted successors in title of the Developer."
Implied term
"It seems to me plain from the judgments delivered by the members of the Court of Appeal [in Fratelli] that they were all of opinion that a sale of the ship and the parting with the possession of it, even with a term imposing upon the purchaser the obligation of performing the charterparty, would have been a repudiation of the contract."
"The question of implication arises when the instrument does not expressly provide for what is to happen when some event occurs. The most usual inference in such a case is that nothing is to happen. If the parties had intended something to happen, the instrument would have said so. Otherwise, the express provisions of the instrument are to continue to operate undisturbed. If the event has caused loss to one or other of the parties, the loss lies where it falls."
Did the sale put it out of Texaco's power to perform?
Benefit and Burden
Landlord and Tenant (Covenants) Act 1995
"Where a tenancy granted on or after the date on which this Act comes into force is so granted in pursuance of an option granted before that date, the tenancy shall be regarded for the purposes of subsection (3) as granted in pursuance of an agreement entered into before that date (and accordingly not a new tenancy), whether or not the option was exercised before that date."
"If the 'contract for the sale…of an interest in land' was for the purposes of s. 2 (1) the agreement by which the option was granted, there is no difficulty…But the letter which exercised the option was of course signed only on behalf of the purchaser. If the contract was made by this document, it did not comply with section 2…
Apart from authority, it seems to me plain enough that section 2 was intended to apply to the agreement which created the option and not to the notice by which it was exercised. Section 2, which replaced section 40 of the Law of Property Act 1925, was intended to prevent disputes over whether the parties had entered into a binding agreement or over what terms they had agreed. It prescribes the formalities for recording their mutual consent. But only the grant of the option depends upon consent. The exercise of the option is a unilateral act….There seems no conceivable reason why the legislature should have required this additional formality."
Texaco procuring compliance by its transferees
- Texaco remained legally (as well as practically) able to bring about performance of the airspace agreements by compelling the transferees to comply with them.
- Texaco could have sought to agree with its transferees a transfer back of the relevant property as an alternative to the transferees complying with the obligations themselves. No compliance was required until the date for completion of the airspace agreements.
- Texaco could itself have granted a relevant lease to the claimants which would have taken effect as a tenancy by estoppel the reversion to which the transferees would have been bound to take.
"In the factual matrix [of Binions v. Evans [1972] Ch 359] it was necessary for the protection of the vendors to interpret the agreement between the vendors and the purchasers as conferring rights on the defendant as against the purchasers, and this was done through the medium, as Lord Denning MR put it, of imposing a constructive trust on the purchasers for the defendant's benefit.
By contrast, there are many cases in which land is expressly conveyed subject to possible incumbrances when there is no thought at all of conferring any fresh rights on third parties who may be entitled to the benefit of the incumbrances. The land is expressed to be sold subject to incumbrances to satisfy the vendor's duty to disclose all possible incumbrances known to him, and to protect the vendor against any possible claim by the purchaser if a third party establishes an overriding right to the benefit of the incumbrances against the purchaser. So, for instance, land may be contracted to be sold and may be expressed to be conveyed subject to the restrictive covenants contained in a conveyance some 60 or 90 years old. No one would suggest that by accepting such a form of contract or conveyance a purchaser is assuming a new liability in favour of third parties to observe the covenants if there was for any reason before the contract or conveyance no one who could make out a title as against the purchaser to the benefit of the covenants."
"observe and perform at all times hereafter the covenants restrictions and stipulations contained or referred to in the Registers of the Title Numbers referred to in the Schedule hereto so far as they are still subsisting and capable of taking effect and affect the properties and to indemnify the Transferor against all actions proceedings costs claims expenses and demands whatsoever in respect of any breach non-observance or non-performance of all or any of the covenants restrictions and stipulations"
"…what, under the circumstances and having regard to the relative position of the lessor and the original lessee after the assignment [and it was a strange case as the lessor was not concerned to enforce the covenants], is the true meaning and effect of the covenant contained in the assignment, because it is that covenant which is sued upon, and not the covenant in the original lease….it seems to me that, when you really consider what it is that in such a case the assignor is insisting upon, it is indemnity and indemnity alone. If I were to hold that the covenant is intended to require the assignee, as between himself and the original lessee, specifically to perform every covenant in the lease, I must go to this extent. I must say that it is quite immaterial whether the lessor objects, or whether he has even waived enforcing the covenant. In that view it is an independent covenant entered into by the assignee with the lessee, and I have nothing to do with anything else. Now it seems to me that I cannot so hold. I think the true object of the covenant entered into on the assignment of the lease is to indemnify and protect the original lessee against breaches of covenant contained in the lease under which he holds."
Repudiatory Breach: affirmation
"A middle ground. An innocent party, faced by a repudiatory breach, is …given a choice: he can either treat the contract as continuing ("affirmation" of the contract") or he can bring it to an end ("acceptance of the repudiation"). He must "elect" or choose between these options. Further, it is sometimes said that there is no other option open to the innocent party; that is to say, there is no "middle way" or "third choice". This is true in the sense that there is no
"…third choice, as a sort of via media, to affirm the contract and yet be absolved from tendering further performance unless and until [the breaching party] gives reasonable notice that he is once again able and willing to perform." (Fercometal SARL v. Mediterranean Shipping Co SA [1989] AC 788, 801.)
But the proposition that there is no middle way can be over-stated. There is a sense in which there is a middle way open to the innocent party in that he is given a period of time in which to make up his mind whether he is going to affirm the contract or terminate. This point was well-expressed by Rix LJ in Stocznia Gdanska SA v. Latvian Shipping Co (No 2) [2002] EWCA Civ 889 at [87] when he stated:
"In my judgment, there is of course a middle ground between acceptance of repudiation and affirmation of the contract, and that is the period when the innocent party is making up his mind what to do. If he does nothing for too long, there may come a time when the law will treat him as having affirmed. If he maintains the contract in being for the moment, while reserving his right to treat it as repudiated if his contract partner persists in his repudiation, then he has not yet elected. …"
The length of the period given to the innocent party in order to make up his mind will very much depend upon the facts of the case. The period may not be a long one because a party who does nothing for too long may be held to have affirmed the contract. The length of time will also depend upon the time at which the innocent party's obligations fall due for performance. A contract remains in force until it has been terminated for breach so that a contracting party who has not elected to terminate the contract remains bound to perform his obligations unless the effect of the other party's breach is to prevent performance of the innocent party's obligations becoming due.
Affirmation. Where the innocent party, being entitled to choose whether to treat the contract as continuing or to accept the repudiation and treat himself as discharged, elects to treat the contract as continuing, he is usually said to have "affirmed" the contract. He will not be held to have elected to affirm the contract unless, first, he has knowledge of the facts giving rise to the breach, and, secondly, he has knowledge of his legal right to choose, between the alternatives open to him…
Effect of affirmation. Where the innocent party, being entitled to treat himself as discharged by the other's breach, nevertheless elects to affirm the continued existence of the contract, he does not thereby necessarily relinquish his claim for damages for any loss sustained as a result of the breach. Further, he may insist on holding the other party to the bargain and continue to tender due performance on his part. [White and Carter (Councils) v. McGregor [1962] AC 413.]"
"…because, in the transfer of these sites to Somerfield, there was no express provision made for Somerfield to assume a direct contractual obligation to Ridgewood under the airspace options; the contractual burden of these options did not devolve on Somerfield. As a result we take the view that they do not bind Somerfield."
- A telephone attendance note from Mr Johnstone to GVA Grimley of 15 February 2006: "If we withdraw the appeal then we lose the option period extension".
- An email from the claimants' planning consultants to their architect dated 23 February 2006: "Can you confirm if you need to proceed with a revised scheme at this stage in light of the instruction to keep the existing appeal running as long as possible…"
- The fact that the claimants sent copies of planning applications to all relevant parties, manifesting an intention to notify them under the terms of the airspace agreements.
- In relation to Clerkenwell Road, although the claimants had failed to obtain Satisfactory Planning Permission by the option expiry date, Mr Lynch said in an email of 14 January 2006, "I do not want the application to be withdrawn; I want the application to be heard even if we are too late under the terms of our option. If planning is given it will confirm our losses against other parties."
- Again, in relation to Hove, where there was an invalid (because premature) appeal, the claimants' planning consultant recorded in an email of 1 March 2006, "Paul [Mr Lynch's son, also a consultant to Ridgewood] has instructed us to keep the appeal running."
Repudiatory breach: communication of acceptance
Limitation
Claim in damages for non-repudiatory breach of the airspace agreements
Conclusions
(1) No term should be implied into the airspace agreements prohibiting a sale of the sites by Texaco.
(2) Texaco did however put it out of its power to perform the airspace agreements by assigning the sites in the way that it did.
(3) Nevertheless the claimants consciously and deliberately affirmed the airspace agreements and cannot therefore rely on repudiatory breach.
(4) The claimants' action is not statute-barred.
(5) I am adjourning the claimants' claim for damages for breach for further argument.