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 (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Winchester Park Ltd v Sehayek [2016] EWHC 1216 (QB) (26 May 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2016/1216.html Cite as: [2016] EWHC 1216 (QB) |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
____________________
Winchester Park Ltd |
Appellant |
|
- and - |
||
Sehayek |
Respondent |
____________________
Mr Daniel Dovar (instructed by Collyer Bristow) for the Respondent
Hearing dates: 18th May 2016
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Garnham :
Introduction
The Background
"1(a) The whole of the building common parts…
(d) The fixtures and equipment, fittings and the machinery in or forming part of the building common parts and the conducting media serving the building."
The Judgment
"3. … the Tribunal determined the issues arising between the parties as to the principle upon which the charges should be made and the practical outcome in respect of the various demands made over the years."
"8. … it was determined by the Tribunal that the amount of money owing by each Lessee in respect of electricity charges of the lighting of common parts and the running of the lifts was about, on the best estimates and calculations available to the Tribunal, £1,000 per annum. In fact the claim made by the Landlord was in the sum of £15,000 for electricity and clearly there was a very substantial disparity between the sums claimed and the sums found to be due…"
"9. … the matter has I am now told been substantially resolved as a result of the Tribunal hearing subject to one or two issues on actual calculations of sums due and owing… A careful analysis of that combined with a letter written by No 1 International, the Landlord's Agent, dated 25th June 2015 to which is appended a schedule, shows by looking at that Schedule, which again is drawn up by reference to the Statement of Account of 31st January 2015 whereby the Landlord's agent analysed the figures, that the sums due, by comparison to the dates of the Demands and the sums demanded as appearing in the 31st January statement, were far in excess of anything which could be owed by the Claimant to the Defendant or by Wayland to the Defendant."
"10. I am satisfied on the basis of that analysis which appears from the documents to which I have referred that at the date the application was issued for an injunction in June 2014 far from there being any sums due by the Claimant to the Defendant it was in fact the other way round and that the Claimant enjoyed a substantial credit on his and its account with regard to Service Charges. On that basis it seems to me that on any argument there cannot have been any failure on his part, the Tenant's part, to comply with his obligations under the terms of the Lease."
"12. The Claimant says that he, Mr Sehayek, obtained a substantial practical advantage out of making the application, namely, he got the lift works again, and really I do not think there can be any dispute about that; that is exactly what happened, and I am perfectly satisfied that had the application not been made then he and his family would have found themselves using the stairs rather than the lift."
The Competing Contentions
Discussion
Ground One
"Any decision relating to costs is primarily a matter for the discretion of the trial judge, which means that an appellate court should normally be very slow indeed to interfere with any decision on costs. However, while wide, the discretion must be exercised rationally and in accordance with certain generally accepted principles… If the trial judge departs from rationality or the correct principles then it is legitimate for an appellate court to interfere with his conclusion."
"should not recover his costs from the defendant, at least in the absence of some good reasons to the contrary. In particular it seems to me that there is no ground for refusing the claimant his costs simply on the ground that he was accorded such relief by the defendant's conceding it in a consent order, rather than by the court ordering it after a contested hearing."
"50. The outcome will normally be different in cases where the consent order does not involve the claimant getting all or substantially all, the relief which he has claimed. In such cases the courts will often decide to make no order for costs in his favour.
51. In many cases which are settled on terms which do not accord with the relief which the claimant has sought, the court will normally be unable to decide who has won, and therefore will not make any order for costs. However in some cases the court may be able to form a tolerably clear view without much effort." (emphasis added)
"the court orders otherwise, a claimant who discontinues is liable for the costs which a defendant against whom the claimant discontinues incurred on or before the date on which notice of discontinuance was served on the defendant." (38.6)
Ground Two
"there was a statutory right to challenge service charges… In the context of this lease, there was no right on the part of the landlord to withhold services in circumstances where there was a proper challenge to the level of those services, which stand out to be completely justified as matters turned out in the Tribunal."
"The proper approach for the court is set out in Foa (8th ed.) at page 119.
The question whether liability in respect of one covenant in a lease is contingent or not upon the performance of another is to be decided, not upon technical words, nor upon the relative position of the covenants in the case, but upon the intentions of the parties to be gathered from the whole instrument.
What was the true intention of the parties? Is this a condition precedent? In seeking the answer, it is in our judgment right to look at the state of the statutory provisions in June 1976; to look for guidance and indications from within the Deed itself; and to examine the possible consequences of each interpretation put forward.
We have already referred to section 91A(1) earlier in this judgment. Subsection (3) reads as follows:
'(3) The High Court or the county court, on the application of the landlord or tenant of a flat, may by order, in relation to any chargeable items specified in the order, declare:
(a) that they have or have not been provided to a reasonable standard; and
(b) that the amount alleged to be payable in respect of them is or is not reasonable,
and may direct the amount to be paid by the tenant in consequence of the declaration.'
It is clear from that section and in particular those parts which I have cited, that the statute envisages that there will be a number of items for which service charges will be made. Secondly, it is apparent that the service charges are to be 'recoverable' from the tenant and indeed in the last part of subsection (3) it is envisaged that the tenant will be directed by the county court to make payment to the landlord. Last, it is clear that the tenant is only liable to pay a reasonable amount for each item of service charged and that that item must be reasonable as to standard and as to cost. It is against this background that the lease was entered into.
…
Applying the tests which we have formulated above, looking at this matter from each of those aspects and looking at the whole scheme of the deed, as did Kay J, in our judgment it is abundantly clear that the parties to this deed did not intend that the words at the beginning of clause 6 should be a condition precedent.
It follows therefore that, with respect to the learned judge's view in a difficult case, we have reached the conclusion that the defendant is entitled to recover damages in respect of the breach of covenant by the plaintiffs to provide a good, sufficient and constant supply of hot water and an adequate supply of heating in the hot water radiators. Failing agreement between the parties, the case will have to go back for damages under this head to be assessed.
The appeal is allowed and the sums recoverable by the defendant and available for set-off will be as stated in the judgment."
Ground Three