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The Judicial Committee of the Privy Council Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> The Judicial Committee of the Privy Council Decisions >> Ramroop v Ishmael & Anor (Trinidad and Tobago) [2010] UKPC 14 (21 July 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKPC/2010/14.html Cite as: [2010] UKPC 14 |
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[2010] UKPC 14
Privy Council Appeal No 0114 of 2009
JUDGMENT
Rosalind Ramroop (also called Rosalind Sampson) v John Ishmael and Lall Heerasingh
From the Court of Appeal of the Republic of Trinidad and Tobago
before
Lord Rodger
Lord Walker
Lord Brown
Lord Kerr
Sir John Dyson SCJ
JUDGMENT DELIVERED BY
Lord Walker
on
21 July 2010
Heard on 29 June 2010
Appellant Sir Fenton Ramsahoye SC (Instructed by Bankside Law Limited) |
Respondent Not represented |
LORD WALKER:
"I accept that there were tenants of the "front" house during the period under consideration. [The judge gave detailed reasons for this conclusion and continued] Whether there were also "renters" in a "shed" at the back of the "front" house is immaterial. What is clear is that there were tenants in the front house, one of whom was Lystra Parfitt. These tenants remained at least until the death of Popo, who one month before her death collected rent from them. That is, up to June 1977 there were tenants in the "front" house paying rent to Popo, a joint owner of the premises and [predecessor] in title to Ishmael."
The text of the judgment reads "successor" but that must be a slip.
"In my analysis the Plaintiff and Sampson have most unsatisfactorily presented their case on the work they allegedly did on the premises. However, it is accepted that they did do some work. What is also clear however is that on the evidence, tested by the document produced by the Plaintiff, that no significant works were undertaken until 1985, though some may have been done in 1982. Symbolically, it is in 1980 that the Plaintiff's first bills for materials used on that property appear. This is symbolic because on the Plaintiff's evidence it was only in 1979 that Lystra Parfitt began to enjoy rent free accommodation at the Plaintiff's pleasure.
It seems therefore, on the totality of the evidence, it is likely that only sometime after 1979-1980 that the Plaintiff began enjoying and exercising exclusive occupation of the premises. On the Plaintiff's evidence, at that time the back house had been demolished by her: 'I broke down this house in 1979'.
On the evidence, on a balance of probability, and testing the oral evidence against the documentary evidence, and giving the Plaintiff and Sampson credit in spite of their unquestioned attempt to mislead this Court, this Court finds that the plaintiff has only demonstrated likely exclusive occupation from 1980, more probably from 1982-1985.
Taking the most favourable of these scenarios, 1979, the Plaintiff has not been in continuous, exclusive possession of the Marabella premises for sixteen years or more, as the ejectment summons was issued on the 2nd March, 1994 (upon a notice to quit, allegedly served on the 10th September, 1992).
In my opinion therefore, giving the Plaintiff the benefit of the most favourable evaluation of the evidence, her claim to a possessory title in the Marabella premises or any part thereof fails.
Though what follows is not exclusively determinative of this aspect of the case, in my opinion, I find that the Plaintiff, whether she was back and forth between 1950 and 1970, began occupying the downstairs portion of the "front" building as a tenant of Popo paying a monthly rent of thirty dollars ($30.00). I also accept that Ishmael obtained and served the Plaintiff with a notice to quit on the 10th September, 1992 and subsequently with an ejectment summons in 1994. I further accept that there was a shed at the back of the "front" house, and that the evidence of Dwarika on this is the most reliable. Both the Plaintiff and the Defendants had every reason to exaggerate its status – the Plaintiff to make it the locale of all the tenancies, the Defendant of none. I find, that even if this shed did have tenants, there were also tenants in the "front" and main building on the premises, and that Lystra Parfitt was one of these."
"Possession of a flat with a front door that can be locked is obviously different from possession of part of an unfenced moor or hillside."