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England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> McClelland v Elvin & Ors [2017] EWHC 2795 (QB) (08 November 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2017/2795.html Cite as: [2017] EWHC 2795 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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Garry McClelland |
Claimant/Applicant |
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- and - |
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David Elvin | First Defendant/Respondent | |
- and - | ||
Damien Elvin | Second Defendant/Respondent | |
- and - | ||
Dimitrov Lipchek |
Third Defendant |
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Robin Howard (instructed by Holmes & Hills Solicitors) for the Second Defendant/Respondent
The Third Defendant did not appear and was not represented
Hearing dates: 18th October 2017
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Turner :
INTRODUCTION
THE BACKGROUND
THE LAY OF THE LAND
"Moulsham St is a long narrow street in central Chelmsford, home to many cafes and small businesses. No 154 is on the street itself; at present it comprises a beauty salon on the ground floor with a flat above. Behind it, accessible by a narrow foot passage from the street, is a courtyard now called Boudicca Mews; on the other side a similar passage leads to a large public car park. Most of the Mews now consists of small modern townhouses, but immediately behind No 154 are two older two-storey buildings, probably Victorian. The one nearer the street is larger, originally a single house three windows across. The one further away is smaller but appears originally to have been two little semi-detached houses with separate doors. At some time in the past the owners of the larger building appear to have taken over the adjacent ground floor room of the smaller one and "knocked through".
As they now stand following the renumbering of the properties in 2006, the remaining part of the smaller building (half the ground floor and all the first floor including a flying freehold) is known as No 8. The ground floor and basement of the larger building (together with the rest of the smaller building) is No 9, and the first floor (together with stairs and an access door at ground floor level) is No 10. At the material time in 2000 to 2002, No 9 had two entrances, one next to No 10's and one at the other end by No 8. Subsequently the entrance next to No 10 has been removed."
THE HISTORY OF THE CLAIMANT'S CLAIM
"2.1 The Defendant's primary case is that it is not strictly necessary for them to prove that they have paper title to these properties in order to resist the Claimants claim to No.9…
2.2 As a matter of law this is no doubt correct."
"We are not sure who is the owner of this property. Mr David Elvin has attended on site claiming either he is the owner or represents the owner (could be owned by one of his family)."
ADVERSE POSSESSION
WHO WAS TELLING THE TRUTH?
THE JUDGE'S TASK
"82. A judge's task is not easy. One does often have to spend time absorbing arguments advanced by the parties which in the event turn out not to be central to the decision-making process.
83. However, judges should bear in mind that the primary function of a first instance judgment is to find facts and identify the crucial legal points and to advance reasons for deciding them in a particular way. The longer a judgment is and the more issues with which it deals the greater the likelihood that: (i) the losing party, the Court of Appeal and any future readers of the judgment will not be able to identify the crucial matters which swayed the judge; (ii) the judgment will contain something with which the unsuccessful party can legitimately take issue and attempt to launch an appeal; (iii) citation of the judgment in future cases will lengthen the hearing of those future cases because time will be taken sorting out the precise status of the judicial observation in question; (iv) reading the judgment will occupy a considerable amount of the time of legal advisers to other parties in future cases who again will have to sort out the status of the judicial observation in question. All this adds to the cost of obtaining legal advice.
84. Our system of full judgments has many advantages but one must also be conscious of the disadvantages."
"5.11 The decisive consideration, in choosing between the parties on these issues, is my finding that the Elvins were in fact at all material times the owners of No 9 and the freehold, but not (until 2009) of No 10. This being so, C cannot be telling the truth when he says that he only had two encounters with David Elvin at the premises, one before and one after the flood, on each of which occasions Mr Elvin said that he owned the upstairs, and on the second of which he said he was not the freeholder. There is no conceivable reason why Mr Elvin should have told C the opposite of the truth on these occasions. It is clear from the Joscelyne Chase letter that in mid-2001 David Elvin was visiting the premises and claiming to own the ground floor. It is equally clear that it was Lowthers who effectively owned the upstairs, and who dealt with C on that basis after the flood. If Mr Elvin met and spoke to C at the premises in 2005, it must have been on the basis that Mr Elvin knew himself to be the freeholder and knew that he had not sold or leased the ground floor to anyone else. Unless C was his tenant or licensee, Mr Elvin must have known or believed him to be a trespasser or squatter, but neither party suggests that they spoke on that basis.
5.12 On the balance of probabilities, it is considerably more likely that Mr Elvin admitted C to the ground floor by agreement, and took rent from him, as he had previously done with other commercial tenants there, than that he allowed him to enter as a squatter and to remain there without objection for many years. I conclude that the Defendants' account of events is substantially more persuasive than the Claimant's, and I find that it is true that C first entered the ground floor after December 2001, and on the basis of an oral tenancy agreement pursuant to which he paid rent for several years.
5.13 It is obviously surprising in those circumstances that when C ceased paying rent the Ds took so few steps to recover the rent, and none to obtain possession, until after the police raid in 2013. They gave two reasons for this; firstly that in the aftermath of the flood C had ceased trading, and secondly that since Damien was a friend of C's son he did not wish to take action against C. I also note that, as Mr Patterson told his solicitor and as I can well accept, C is a "somewhat intimidating" man with whom a local businessman might not wish to quarrel. (When the Defendants did recover possession via the police in 2013, their first step was to install an apparently formidable bailiff to secure the premises.) The Defendants' failure to take action earlier is a point against them; but it is not strong enough to overturn the positive case, based on their long ownership of and involvement with these premises, which has led me to decide these issues in their favour."
CONCLUSION
"The judge was aware that there were faults and gaps in the defendant's proof of title. This was what gave the claimant scope to dispute it… But none of the points made on the evidence (at trial, and thoroughly developed in the claimant's skeleton argument for this appeal) is explained by any theory better than the conclusions reached by the judge."