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Avon Freeholds Ltd v Regent Court RTM Co Ltd

UPPER TRIBUNAL (LANDS CHAMBER)

UT Neutral citation number: [2013] UKUT 0213 (LC)

UTLC Case Number: LRX/61/2012

TRIBUNALS, COURTS AND ENFORCEMENT ACT 2007

LANDLORD AND TENANT anage giving of notice of invitation to participate

IN THE MATTER OF AN APPEAL AGAINST A DECISION

OF A LEASEHOLD VALUATION TRIBUNAL FOR THE

SOUTHERN RENT ASSESSMENT PANEL

BETWEEN AVON FREEHOLDS LIMITED Appellant

and

REGENT COURT RTM CO LIMITED Respondent

Re: Regent Court,

Regent Street,

Plymouth,

Devon

PL4 8BD

Before: The President, Sir Keith Lindblom

Sitting at 43-45 Bedford Square, London WC1B 3DN

on 17 April 2013

Mr Justin Bates, instructed by Conway & Co, solicitors for the appellant

Mrs Margarita Mossop, instructed by Mayfield Law Ltd, solicitors for the respondent

The following cases are referred to in this decision:

Plintal SA v 36-48A Edgwood Drive Co Ltd LRX/16/2007

Petch v Gurney [1994] 3 All E.R. 731

Howard v Bodington (1877) 2 P.D. 203

London and Clydeside Estates Ltd v Aberdeen DC [1980] 1 W.L.R. 182

R v Immigration Appeal Tribunal, ex parte Jeyeanthan [1999] 3 All E.R. 231

Brayhead (Ascot) Ltd v Berkshire CC [1964] 2 Q.B. 303

7 Strathray Gardens Ltd. v Pointstar Shipping & Finance Ltd. [2004] EWCA Civ 1669

R v Soneji [2006] 1 A.C. 340

Sinclair Gardens Investments (Kensington) Ltd v Oak Investments RTM Co. Ltd. (LRX/52/2004)

Sinclair Gardens Investments (Kensington) Ltd. v Poets Chase Freehold Co. Ltd. [2007] EWHC 1776 (Ch)

9 Cornwall Crescent London Ltd v Kensington and Chelsea Royal London Borough Council [2006] 1 W.L.R. 1186

Alleyn Court RTM Co Ltd v Abou-Hamdan [2012] UKUT 74 (LC)

DECISION

Introduction

  1. This is an appeal, by way of review, against the decision of the Leasehold Valuation Tribunal for the Southern Rent Assessment Panel (, sought a determination under section 84(3) of the 2002 Act that on the relevant date it was entitled to acquire the right to manage the building. The second application was made by the appellant, Avon Freeholds Ltd, seeking a determination under section 88 of the costs to be paid to it. The LVT decided that the respondent was entitled to acquire the right to manage.
  2. Permission to appeal has been granted on two grounds, which are:
  3. (1) that the LVT erred in its conclusion that the respondent because the requirement to serve a notice of invitation was directory, rather than mandatory, and the claim could survive if insufficient prejudice had been caused;

    and

    (2) that the LVT erred in concluding that the first claim notice served by the respondent was no bar to the service of the second claim notice.

  4. The LVT itself granted permission on the first ground, on 6 March 2012. Permission on the second ground was refused by the LVT, but was granted, on 18 May 2012, by the Tribunal (George Bartlett Q.C., President). In granting permission the Tribunal observed that it was likely that the appeal would fail, but that in view of the observations made in Plintal SA v 36-48A Edgwood Drive Co Ltd (LRX/16/2007) and the fact that permission to appeal had been given on the other ground, it was appropriate that permission should be granted on this ground, too.
  5. The facts

  6. The parties agreed a statement of facts and issues for the hearing of the appeal. From that document I take the following history as the factual basis for my decision.
  7. On 27 January 2011, the respondent gave notice inviting participation under section 78 of the 2002 Act to the non-participating qualifying tenants of the building. The respondent attempted to serve notices on all but three of the relevant registered owners of flats in the building. The three were Mr Bethell, Mr King and Mr Benoy. According to the proprietorship register shown on current office copy entries, each of them was the joint registered proprietor of his flat. However, all three had died by the time the notices were served. Their widows and joint owners were all members of the respondent as the RTM company when notice was given to the other tenants.
  8. For the registered non-participating owners of two of the flats, Ms Phyllis Cornforth and The Capital Appreciation Trust Limited (the tenants of flat 14) and Mr Alan Chapman and Mr Colin Chapman (the tenants of flat 16), the notice inviting participation was not given at their flats in Regent Court. Instead it was served elsewhere, at the addresses recorded on the Proprietorship Register at the Land Registry. When notice was given, Ms Cornforth was a member of the respondent.
  9. On 11 February 2011 the respondent issued a notice of claim, bearing that date, which stated at paragraph 5 that the landlord may respond to the notice by giving a counter-notice under section 84 of the 2002 Act
  10. The appellant gave a counter-notice dated 9 March 2011, in which it denied that the respondent was entitled to acquire the right to manage because
  11. On 17 March 2011 the respondent served a second notice of claim. The covering letter to this notice had a date stamp recording the date on which the appellant received the notice as 18 March 2011. The covering letter stated:
  12. st April 2011, with an Acquisition date of 21st July 2011.

  13. On 18 March 2011 the respondent sent a letter to all leaseholders, in which it stated:
  14. The date for response to the claim with a Counter-Notice should have in fact been the 13th and not the 11th March 2011. We have therefore acknowledged that the original Claim Notice is not a valid notice and issued a fresh Claim Notice, as enclosed.

  15. By a counter-notice dated 18 April 2011, the appellant denied that the respondent was entitled to acquire the right to manage, for two reasons: first,
  16. On 16 June 2011 the respondent began proceedings before the LVT seeking a determination that it was entitled to acquire the right to manage.
  17. As to the alleged failure to serve a notice of invitation to participate, the LVT decided: first, that there was no requirement to serve a notice of invitation to participate on Mr Bethell, Mr King, or Mr Benoy (paragraphs 25 and 26 of the decision) and that in any event no prejudice had been caused by the failure to serve such a notice on them because in each case the surviving spouse was already a member of the respondent as the RTM company (paragraph 27); secondly, that there had been no requirement to serve one of the two non-participating tenants (the tenant of flat 14) as it was not necessary to serve both joint tenants individually and she had, in fact, applied on behalf of herself and her joint tenant to become a participating tenant (paragraph 30); and thirdly, as to the other non-participating tenants (the tenants of flat 16), the respondent as the RTM company had not shown that the notice of invitation to participate had been served (paragraph 35) but this failure was not such as to vitiate the right to manage process (paragraphs 31 to 37).
  18. As to the appellantsecond claim notice being given, as a valid notice (paragraph 48 of the LVT

The issues in the appeal

    1. There are two main issues in the appeal. They are:

  1. whether, despite the respondent having failed to show that a notice of invitation to participate was received by the tenants of flat 16, the LVT was right to hold that the provisions for the service of notice were directory, rather than mandatory, that the crucial question was whether there was any significant prejudice as a result of this failure, and, if so, whether the LVT was right to find that there was not such prejudice as to invalidate the right to manage process; and
  2. whether the LVT was right to find that the existence of the first claim notice did not prevent the second claim notice being lawfully served, and did not render that notice invalid and ineffective.

The statutory provisions

    1. Section 74(1) of the 2002 Act provides that the persons who are entitled to be members of a RTM company are
    2. A notice inviting participation is the first formal stage of a right to manage claim. Section 78 of the 2002 Act provides that all qualifying tenants who are not already members of the RTM company, or have not agreed to become members, must be given a notice inviting them to join the RTM company. Section 78(1) provides:

RTM company must give notice to each person who at the time when the notice is given

      1. is the qualifying tenant of a flat contained in the premises, but
      2. neither is nor has agreed to become a member of the RTM company.

Section 78(2) provides for the content of a notice of invitation to participate. A notice given under section 78 must

    1. Under section 78(3) the Secretary of State has prescribed the form and content of the notice of invitation in the Right to Manage (Prescribed Particulars and Forms) (England) Regulations 2010/825. Regulation 3 provides for additional matters to be included in a notice of invitation to participate. Regulation 3(2) requires that a notice of invitation to participate is to contain, in addition to the statements and information referred to in section 78(2)(a) to (c), further particulars, including a statement as to the responsibilities of the RTM company, if it acquires the right to manage, for Regulation 8 provides that notices of invitation to participate must be in the form set out in Schedule 1 to the regulations.
    2. Section 79(1) provides that a claim to acquire the right to manage any premises is made Section 79(2) provides that the claim notice may not be given unless each person required to be given a notice of invitation to participate has been given such a notice at least 14 days before Section 79(6) provides that the claim notice must be given to each person who on the relevant date is a the whole or any part of the premisesa manager appointed under Part 2 of the Landlord and Tenant Act 1987 Section 79(8) provides that a copy of the claim notice
    3. Section 80 stipulates the contents of the claim notice. Section 80(3) provides:

      1. the qualifying tenant of a flat contained in the premises, and
      2. a member of the RTM company,

and the address of his flat.

Section 80(6) provides that the claim notice

    1. Section 81, under the heading

(3) Where any premises have been specified in a claim notice, no subsequent claim notice which specifies

    1. the premises, or
    2. any premises containing or contained in the premises,

may be given so long as the earlier claim notice continues in force.

(4) Where a claim notice is given by a RTM company it continues in force from the relevant date until the right to manage is acquired by the company unless it has previously

    1. been withdrawn or deemed to be withdrawn by virtue of any provision of this Chapter, or
    2. ceased to have effect by reason of any other provision of this Chapter.

    1. Section 84 under the heading , in subsection (1), that a person who is given a claim notice by a RTM company under section 79(6) may give a
    2. Section 86 provides for the withdrawal of a claim notice by the giving of Section 87 provides for deemed withdrawal.
    3. Section 88 provides that a RTM company is liable for Section 89 provides for the liability of the RTM company and members of the RTM company for costs where a right to manage claim is withdrawn or ceases to have effect.
    4. Section 90, under the heading
    5. Section 111 of the 2002 Act provides for the form and service of notices under Chapter 1. It states:
    6. (1) Any notice under this Chapter

      (a) must be in writing, and

      (b) may be sent by post.

      (5) A company which is a RTM company in relation to premises may give a notice under this Chapter to a person who is the qualifying tenant of a flat contained in the premises at the flat unless it has been notified by the qualifying tenant of a different address in England and Wales at which he wishes to be given any such notice.

      Issue (1) the notice inviting participation

      Relevant jurisprudence

    7. In Petch v Gurney [1994] 3 All E.R. 731 Millet L.J. (as he then was) considered the consequences of a failure to comply with a statutory requirement that something He said (at p.736d-e) that He referred (at p.736j to p.737a) to the guiding principle stated by Lord Penzance in Howard v Bodington (1877) 2 P.D. 203 (at p.211) that in each case one
    8. The modern jurisprudence is consistent with that principle. In London and Clydeside Estates Ltd v Aberdeen D.C. [1979] 3 All E.R. 876 Lord Hailsham of St Marylebone L.C. said (at pp.882 and 883) that what the court has to decide is [at] one end [at] the other end
    9. In R v Immigration Appeal Tribunal, ex parte Jeyeanthan [1999] 3 All E.R. 231 (at p.237a-b) Lord Woolf M.R. emphasized the need to focus on the consequences of non-compliance. He said (at p.235c-e) that the approach of seeking to distinguish between requirements that are directory and those that are mandatory the important question of what the legislator should be judged to have intended should be the consequence of the non-compliance (at p.235d-f), (ibid.), (at p.235h-p.236b):
    10. between. In the majority of cases, whether the requirement is categorised as directory or mandatory, the tribunal before whom the defect is properly raised has the task of determining what are to be the consequences of failing to comply with the requirement in the context of all the facts and circumstances of the case in which the issue arises. In such a situation that tribunalBrayhead (Ascot) Ltd v Berkshire CC [1964] 1 All ER 149, [1964] 2 QB 303 applied by the House of Lords in London and Clydeside Estates Ltd v Aberdeen DC [1979] 3 All ER 876, [1980] 1 WLR 182).

      Having referred to the speech of Lord Hailsham in London and Clydeside Estates Ltd., Lord Woolf said (at p.238h-p.239c):

      Bearing in mind Lord Hailsham LCI suggest that the right approach is to regard the question of whether a requirement is directory or mandatory as only at most a first step. In the majority of cases there are other questions which have to be asked which are more likely to be of greater assistance than the application of the mandatory/directory test. The questions which are likely to arise are as follows: Is the statutory requirement fulfilled if there has been substantial compliance with the requirement and, if so, has there been substantial compliance in the case in issue even though there has not been strict compliance? (The substantial compliance question.). Is the non-compliance capable of being waived, and if so, has it, or can it and should it be waived in this particular case? (The discretionary question.)

      Which questions arise will depend upon the facts of the case and the nature of the particular requirement. The advantage of focusing on these questions is that they should avoid the unjust and unintended consequences which can flow from an approach solely dependant on dividing requirements into mandatory ones, which oust jurisdiction, or directory, which do not. If the result of non-compliance goes to jurisdiction it will be said jurisdiction cannot be conferred where it does not otherwise exist by consent or waiver.

    11. In 7 Strathray Gardens Ltd. v Pointstar Shipping & Finance Ltd. [2004] EWCA Civ 1669 Arden L.J. said (at paragraph 42 of her judgment) that the Howard v Bodington (at p.211):
    12. In such a case the statutory requirement can be treated as substantially complied with if the act is done in a manner which is not less satisfactory having regard to the purpose of the legislature in imposing the requirement.

      Arden L.J. went on to say (at paragraph 51) that she had

    13. In R. v Soneji [2006] 1 A.C. 340 Lord Steyn acknowledged (at p.350C) the emergence of
    14. In Sinclair Gardens Investments (Kensington) Ltd v Oak Investments RTM Co. Ltd. (LRX/52/2004) it was argued that a failure to observe the requirements of sections 78(1) and 79(2) of the 2002 Act could not be overlooked if there was no prejudice to the landlord, and that prejudice is only a factor to be taken into account if it is expressly mentioned in a statutory requirement. In that case a notice of invitation to participate had not been served on one of two joint tenants of a flat. The other joint tenant was herself a member of the RTM company. Her evidence was that the other joint tenant had been fully aware of the application and had subsequently applied to become a member of the RTM company. The LVT held that the failure to serve one joint tenant had not caused any prejudice to the landlord and that the RTM company was entitled to acquire the right to manage. In paragraph 7 of its decision on the appeal the Tribunal (George Bartlett Q.C., President) said that a failure to comply with a procedural requirement does not have the consequence of (in paragraph 10):
    15. Jeyeanthan, the LVT was entirely correct in approaching the question of the effect of the failure to comply with the statutory requirements in the way that it did. The purpose of requiring notice of invitation to participate to be served on a qualifying tenant who neither is nor has agreed to become a member of the RTM Company is clearly to ensure that the interest of that tenant is protected. Under section 79(8) a copy of the claim notice must be given to each person who on the relevant date is the qualifying tenant of a flat contained in the premises. The provisions are thus designed to ensure that every qualifying tenant has the opportunity to participate in the RTM Company and is informed that a claim notice has been made by the RTM Company. In determining the effect of the failure to comply with one or other of these requirements the principal question for the Tribunal will be whether the qualifying tenant has in practice [had] such awareness of the procedures as the statute intended him to have. The LVT considered this question and expressed itself as satisfied that [the tenant] was fully aware of the proceedings and that his omission had been inadvertent. It also concluded that the landlord had not been prejudiced in any way by the failure to serve a notice inviting participation, and, given the purpose of the section 79(8) requirement, it was undoubtedly correct to do so. The appeal must be dismissed.

      The LVT

    16. In paragraph 6 of its decision the LVT noted that for the registered non-participating proprietors of flats 14 and 16 the notice inviting participation had been served not at their flat but at that a failure to serve by the method set out in section 111(5) was (paragraph 31). It noted that section 111(5) does not provide the only way in which notice may be given. And it observed that this provision permissive, not mandatory would have been deemed to have been givenwent on to say (ibid.) that the deeming provision provides a simple, cheap and reliable means of proving service on a non-participating tenantdoes not exclude other methods of service, provided that the Applicant can prove service on the relevant non-participating tenants.
    17. The LVT then considered the respondent
    18. of title. Those addresses were not therefore given

      33. Whilst the Tribunal has some sympathy with the approach taken by the Applicant and can understand why it adopted that approach, it has in fact made life more difficult for itself. The legislation has made service quite simple, in that the Applicant need only give notice at the flat (in the absence of notification of an alternative address). If the tenant fails to provide an alternative address, then that may cause difficulties for the tenant, but the Applicant would be able to rely on s.111.

      34. The Applicant argued that it satisfied the proviso to s.111(5) in that the address given by the Land Registry entry is a notification by the respective tenants

      35. Not having complied with section 111(5), the burden remains on the Applicant to prove that the Notice Inviting Participation was given to each of the non-participating tenants by some other proper means. The certificate of posting is not evidence of that. It simply proves that the notices were posted to certain addresses where the tenant had at some stage in the past had a connection (it is of course possible that since registration the actual address for the tenant had changed). Evidence that this non-participating tenant had actually received the Notices Inviting Participation would have sufficed, but there was no such evidence before the Tribunal. The Tribunal noted that the list of members of the Applicant at the date of the claim notice did not suggest that this lessee had received the notice and decided to become a member. Accordingly the Tribunal does not consider that the Applicant has discharged the burden of establishing that the notice was given to the lessee of Flat [16 as corrected by the LVT in its correction certificate of 27 April 2012].

    19. Having described the position in that way, the LVT proceeded to consider the question of prejudice (in paragraphs 36 and 37 of its decision):
    20. are directive and not mandatory. Consideration must be given the question of prejudice. In this case, it is only in respect of one out of 41 qualifying tenants that there is no evidence of service. There cannot be any prejudice to the respondent in that regard. If anything, it would work to the respondent.

      37. The Tribunal was referred to its earlier decision of 5 December 2011 in relation to another block at Elim Court, Plymouth , where the RTM Company failed to prove that it had served a Notice Inviting Participation on 3 flats out of 40. This Tribunal considered that this was sufficient prejudice to find that the Applicant in that case was not entitled to acquire the Right to Manage. Here, the significant difference is that only one lessee was affected. Whilst the prejudice to this single lessee was not insignificant, the unchallenged evidence was that the flat has been left empty with no forwarding address for some time. It is also correct that

      Submissions for the appellant

    21. Mr Bates submitted:
    22. (1) The failure to serve the notice of invitation to participate on the tenants of flat 16 invalidated the entire right to manage process.

      (2) The requirement to serve the notice on all non-participating tenants serves at least three purposes: (i) it ensures that no tenant is excluded from the right to manage process; (ii) it enables a tenant to judge the level of support for the process among his fellow tenants, which is a significant benefit for him because members of the RTM company will be responsible for the costs of the process and the costs of running the RTM company itself; and (iii) the non-qualifying tenants are fully informed of their right to join the RTM company and of all the legal and practical consequences that will ensue if the right to manage claim succeeds.

      (3) In this case the LVT erred in its approach to prejudice .

      (4) This case is distinguishable on its facts from Sinclair Gardens Investments v Oak Investments RTM Co. Ltd. The Chapmans, as tenants of flat 16, have never had notice of the right to manage process. They have suffered significant prejudice. They have been denied the opportunity to join the respondent as the RTM company at the earliest stage. They have thus lost the opportunity to influence the running of the RTM claim and this litigation; to persuade the RTM company to open negotiations with the landlord as to what functions to contract back to the landlord; to decide who to appoint as managing agent. This prejudice is decisive. Those lost opportunities can never be restored. The Chapmans disadvantage as tenants is of a different kind to the prejudice suffered by the respondent as the RTM company. If its claim is invalid, a RTM company can simply begin the process afresh by serving a new notice of invitation to participate.

      (5) There was also prejudice to the appellant as landlord as a result of the tenants of flat 16 not being served. All members of a RTM company are jointly and severally liable for the landlord

      (6) The approach adopted by the LVT creates uncertainty, and a licence to exclude leaseholders from the RTM process, contrary to the purpose of the statutory scheme. If a failure to serve a single qualifying tenant does not give rise to prejudice enough to invalidate the process, how many tenants would have to be affected in this way for the conclusion to be different? Would it be two, three, or what number?

      Submissions for the respondent

    23. Mrs Mossop submitted:
    24. (1) It would be quite wrong for the Tribunal to hold that the entire right to manage process should be undone in these circumstances.

      (2) The LVT adopted the right approach in considering what prejudice had arisen as a result of the respondent Its understanding and application of the relevant statutory provisions were in line with the approach endorsed by the Tribunal in Sinclair Gardens Investments v Oak Investments RTM Co. Ltd. Its conclusions in paragraphs 31 to 37 of its decision are well founded. It analysed the statutory provisions correctly. It was right to conclude that it did not have to find that a failure to give a notice of invitation to participate to all non-participating tenants would be fatal if no prejudice was caused. It was right to regard the provisions of section 111(5) as permissive, not mandatory. And it was right to exercise its judgment on the question of prejudice in the way that it did. The conclusion it expressed in paragraph 37 of its decision did not negate the whole right to manage process

      (3) Had the LVT gone on to ask the questions recommended by Lord Woolf in Jeyeanthan, it would clearly have concluded that there was substantial compliance with section 78. Though the respondent had failed to serve the tenants of flat 16 by the method permitted in section 111, it did send notices to them and the other non-participating tenants at addresses elsewhere. The consequences of this were not significant. There was no outrageous or flagrant defiance of the law. This was near the London & Clydeside Estates. The Chapmans did not suffer any substantial prejudice by the failure to send the notice to their flat. To deny the respondent the right to manage in these circumstances would be disproportionate and draconian. Parliament cannot have intended that a failure of this kind would invalidate a claim to acquire the right to manage if enough tenants were members of the RTM company when the claim notice was served.

      (4) The purpose of section 78 is to provide information to tenants who are not members of the RTM company and to invite their participation; it is not to protect the landlord. Here, however, it is the appellant as landlord who has taken the point about service as a means of obstructing the right to manage process, contrary to the will of a clear majority of tenants in the building who support it.

      Discussion

    25. I cannot accept the appellant presented though it was by Mr Bates.
    26. That conclusion does not depend on the statutory provisions for inviting tenants to participate in a right to manage process being categorized as directory rather than mandatory. I understood Mr Bates to concede that, at least in part, those provisions are directory, since they allow some latitude in the giving of notice. That concession seems to me to be correct. But in any case the right approach here, I believe, is to consider whether the statutory provisions have been substantially complied with, and whether such prejudice has been caused as to undermine the right to manage process as a whole.
    27. The relevant jurisprudence is clear.
    28. In the light of that jurisprudence I agree entirely with the observations made by the Tribunal in Sinclair Gardens Investments v Oak Investments RTM Co. Ltd., rejecting (at paragraph 7) the submission that prejudice may only be taken into account if it is referred to in a statutory requirement. In that case the Tribunal concentrated on the practical purpose of the statutory provisions. The purpose, as the Tribunal said (at paragraph 10), is to ensure that the interests of the tenant are protected. The Tribunal must ask itself
    29. In this case the LVT concluded (in paragraph 36 of its decision) that the statutory provisions were ctive and not mandatoryaccepted that service at the address given on the Proprietorship Register at the Land Registry does not constitute service at a different address notified to the RTM company by the tenant (paragraph 34). As it said, notification of an alternative address would have required
    30. The LVT considered the consequences of non-compliance with the statutory provisions both from the perspective of the tenants and from that of the appellant as landlord.
    31. As to prejudice to the tenants, the basic facts are clear. The Chapmans were not personally served with the relevant notices. Nor were notices sent or delivered to their flat in Regent Court (flat 16). Instead, notice was sent to the addresses recorded for them on the Proprietorship Register at the Land Registry. In its evidence to the LVT the respondent said that flat 16 had been empty for some time, and that the Chapmans had not provided any forwarding address (paragraph 32 of the LVTseems not to have been challenged (paragraph 37). It appears that flat 16 was not the Chapmans And there seems to have been no evidence before the LVT that they wanted to become a member of the RTM company or to participate in the arrangements proposed.
    32. The LVT said there was the RTM company, and would therefore not have the chance to take part in the right to manage arrangements (at paragraph 36). Against that prejudice the LVT weighed the fact that the failure to give notice of invitation to participate in the manner permitted by section 111(5) concerned only the absentee tenants of a single flat in a building in which there were, in total, 41 qualifying tenants. The LVT gave significant weight to this. It had taken a similar approach in the case of Elim Court in Plymouth (paragraph 37). In that case the number of flats whose tenants the RTM company had failed to serve was three, in a total of 40, and the LVT had seen this as amounting to
    33. The number of tenants who have not had notice in accordance with the statutory provisions may be relevant when considering the question of prejudice, both to landlord and to tenant. But in my view it is unlikely to be a decisive factor when prejudice to tenants is being assessed. Nor could I accept that the degree of prejudice to individual tenants can be established simply by striking a balance between the interests of those who were given notice in accordance with section 111 and who clearly did want to participate in the management arrangements, and the interests of those who were not given notice in that way and who may or may not have wished to take part.
    34. What one ought to do, I believe, is to ascertain shown. There may be others in which the tenants of several flats are not served but there is, nevertheless, no such prejudice, and the integrity of the process has not been impaired. Each case will turn on its own particular facts.
    35. The consequences of a failure to comply with the statutory provisions must be considered in the context of what Parliament plainly sought to achieve by those provisions. In section 111(5) of the 2002 Act Parliament embraced the concept of a deemed giving of notice. A qualifying tenant can be treated as having been validly given a notice of invitation to participate even when he has not had actual notice of it. Inherent in the statutory provisions for giving such notices is the possibility that one or more of the qualifying tenants will not know that a right to manage process has begun. Even if notice is given at another address notified by the tenant, this in itself is no guarantee of his becoming aware of the process.
    36. On the facts before the LVT I think it could reasonably conclude that no substantial or lasting prejudice to the Chapmans as tenants of flat 16 flowed from the respondenta notice of invitation to participate.
    37. There is no complaint about the form or content of the respondentany forwarding arrangements he has chosen to put in place. Besides, the Chapmans did not lose, once and for all, their chance to take part in the management arrangements. As the LVT said (in paragraph 37 of its decision), a qualifying tenant is entitled to become a member of a RTM company at any time, in accordance with section 74(1)(a).
    38. Mr Bates submitted that there was irremediable prejudice to the Chapmans because they were not included in the right to manage process, and that the prejudice they suffered was quite different from any prejudice suffered by the respondent as the RTM company.
    39. I see no force in those submissions. The consequences for the Chapmans cannot be gauged in the abstract. They were non-resident tenants, who had, it seems, shown no interest in the management of Regent Court. Because they were absentee tenants the giving of notice at their flat, in accordance with the statutory provisions, would probably have been ineffective. And I see nothing to indicate that they sustained any significant prejudice as a result of the notice being given elsewhere.
    40. As to prejudice to the appellant as landlord, one must remember, as Mrs Mossop submitted, that the statutory provisions for the giving of notice to tenants were not designed to protect landlords, nor to aid them in opposing a right to manage process
    41. The LVT concluded (at paragraph 36) that the effect of non-compliance with the notice requirements might actually be a benefit to the appellant, because pro tem have greater voting rights
    42. Mr Bates submitted that there was prejudice to the appellant as landlord because all members of a RTM company are jointly and severally liable for the landlord (under sections 88 and 89 of the 2002 Act). The more qualifying tenants there are in the RTM company, the better it is for the landlord when seeking to recover his costs. I do not think there is anything in that submission. After all, as I have said, there is no evidence that the tenants of flat 16 would have wished to become members of the respondent. So Mr Batesis really no more than conjecture.
    43. As Mrs Mossop submitted, Parliament cannot have intended that in circumstances such as these the whole of the right to manage process will be defeated by the RTM company failing to comply fully with the provisions for giving notice of invitation to participate. On different facts a different conclusion might be right. But in this case the respondent). In my view Mrs Mossop was right to submit that there has been Jeyeanthan premises.
    44. I therefore reject this ground of the appeal.
    45. Issue (2) the two claim notices

      Relevant jurisprudence

    46. In Sinclair Gardens Investments (Kensington) Ltd. v Poets Chase Freehold Co. Ltd. [2007] EWHC 1776 (Ch) Morgan J. referred (at paragraph 53) to the general principle that if a mandatory statutory provision requires the giving of notice in a particular form and if a purported notice fails to comply with that provision, the notice will normally have no legal effect. In that case a notice that ought to have complied with section 13(3) of the Leasehold Reform, Housing and Urban Development Act 1993 (was not valid. There was nothing to prevent the tenants accepting that they had failed to serve a valid notice. The prohibition on a subsequent notice contained in section 13(8) did not apply since the first notice was not a notice under section 13 and therefore was not in force. Because the notice was not effective and was not in force it did not have to be withdrawn. Section 13(9) did not preclude the tenants from serving a second and valid notice when they did. This analysis reflected Auld L.J.9 Cornwall Crescent London Ltd v Kensington and Chelsea Royal London Borough Council [2006] 1 W.L.R. 1186 (at pp.1189 and 1190).
    47. The same approach was followed by the Tribunal (H.H.J. Walden-Smith) in Alleyn Court RTM Co. Ltd. v Abou-Hamdan [2012] UKUT 74 (LC). Before coming to the issues in the appeal, the Tribunal dealt with a matter it did not have to decide:

t that if the Respondent is found not to be competent to serve a counter-notice then the LVT (and by extension the Tribunal) could not declare that the Appellant had acquired the right to manage under the 2002 Act as the LVT2002 Act. In which case, he argues, the issue of entitlement to acquire the right to manage under the 2002 Act would fall to be adjudicated by the High Court under its inherent jurisdiction.

    1. I cannot say that I agree with this proposition as section 90 of the 2002 Act provides the date which is the acquisition date where a RTM company acquires the right to manage any premises. It provides that where there is no dispute about entitlement, the acquisition date is the date specified in the claim notice under section 80 (7) and that there is no dispute about entitlement if no counter-notice is given under section 84 (see section 90(3)(b) and section 84(2)(a)).
    2. In any event, I was informed by both Counsel at the commencement of the hearing that it was not a matter that I need concern myself with.

    1. In that case the RTM company had recognized that its claim notice was invalid because copies had not been given to any of the qualifying tenants in accordance with the provisions of section 79(8) of the 2002 Act (paragraph 35 of the TribunalThere was nothing that could be interpreted as a withdrawal of the first claim notice under the provisions of section 79 until an e-mail was sent by the RTM company In the decisions of the court in 9 Cornwall Crescent and Sinclair Gardens Investments v Poets Chase the Tribunal found support for the proposition that an invalid notice does not need to be withdrawn. The relevant provisions of the 1993 Act differed from those of the 2002 Act, in that, under the 1993 Act, if a notice is withdrawn a year had to pass before another notice could be served, whereas under the 2002 Act there was no such prohibition against the service of a further notice once the first is withdrawn (paragraph 40). In the TribunalIt held (in paragraph 44):
    2. The critical question, therefore, was whether the first claim notice was valid. The Tribunal held, on the facts, that it was.

    3. In Plintal SA, the Tribunal (George Bartlett Q.C., President) held that a claim notice which failed to comply with section 80 was not invalid and a nullity, but, rather, had a continuing validity unless and until the LVT held otherwise. The Tribunal said (at paragraph 14):
    4. [given] to party X purporting to be a claim notice was not a claim notice at all. Thus I see no difficulty in reading section 88(1), where it refers to

      The LVT

    5. In paragraph 42 of its decision, the LVT said that it had to consider whether the first claim notice, Plintal SA.
    6. In paragraphs 44 to 48 of its decision the LVT said:

Plintal. As it has effect, it was therefore in force. They submitted that there was no limitation under section 81(4) as to what the notice had to be in effect in relation to.

    1. The Applicant seeks to distinguish Plintal on the basis that that was a claim based on estoppel and the quote referred to above was obiter. Instead it relies on Sinclair Gardens v Poets Chase in which Morgan J determined that in the case of a notice under the Leasehold Reform[,] Housing and Urban Development Act 1993, a finding that it was invalid meant that a second notice could be served.
    2. The Tribunal notes that Section 13(8) and (11) of the 1993 Act are virtually identical to sections 81(3) and (4) of the 2002 Act.
    3. The Respondents sought to distinguish this case on the basis that there are material differences between the two pieces of legislation and the effect of the notices in each. It was said that the notice under the 2002 Act has effect in the absence of any counter notice, whilst the 1993 Act requires further intervention before being effective. The Tribunal was not persuaded that there was any material difference in this respect and was more persuaded by the closeness in language between the two sections.
    4. The Tribunal considers that the first notice was no bar to the [second] under section 81(3). Firstly it finds the decision in Sinclair Gardens to be more persuasive and more directly on point. Secondly, it considers that although it might be said that an invalid claim notice has an effect, in that it can trigger costs under section 88, that effect is only temporal in time and does not continue. For example if a notice was given and then withdrawn it would not continue to have force, but would still entitle a landlord [to] costs under section 88. The fact that there is an outstanding costs issue because of what has happened in the past, it does not mean that the notice continues in force. The Tribunal considers that the term

In paragraphs 49 and 50 of its decision the LVT rejected the respondentargument that the first claim notice was withdrawn under section 86 by its letter of 17 March 2011. There is no cross-appeal against that part of the LVTdecision.

Submissions for the appellant

    1. Mr Bates submitted:
    2. (1) A claim notice must be withdrawn before a second notice is served. In this case the first notice was not withdrawn. Therefore, the second notice served by the respondent was of no effect.

      (2) The Tribunal in Alleyn Court was given on 7 March 2012. That decision is directly relevant to this ground of this appeal. The Tribunal is not bound by its own previous decision and can depart from it if satisfied that it is wrong. The decision in Alleyn Court is wrong. The court Sinclair Gardens Investments v Poets Chase concerned a different statutory scheme, relating to collective enfranchisement. If no counter-notice is served under the 1993 Act there will still be a hearing before a judge to determine whether the nominee purchaser is entitled to acquire the freehold. Under the 2002 Act, there is no such safeguard. Unless a counter-notice is served, the RTM company automatically acquires the right to manage the premises. There is no scope for either the LVT or the High Court to hear an argument that the claim notice was invalid (see Alleyn Court at paragraphs 8 and 9). In Plintal SA, the Tribunal held that a claim notice that did not comply with section 80 of the 2002 Act was not invalid and a nullity, but, had a continuing validity until the LVT determined otherwise. Unlike Sinclair Gardens Investments v Poets Chase, the decision in Plintal SA is concerned with the 2002 Act and should be followed here. That decision does not appear to have been referred to in argument in Alleyn Court.

      Submissions for the respondent

    3. Mrs Mossop submitted:
    4. (1) The LVT correctly construed the relevant statutory provisions in the light of the relevant jurisprudence, including Sinclair Gardens Investments v Poets Chase, and applied those provisions properly to the facts of this case.

      (2) There is no inconsistency between the decision in Plintal SA and Morgan J. Sinclair Gardens Investments v Poets Chase. Although a notice is invalid, and no longer in force or effective as a notice, its existence cannot be denied as though it had never existed at all.

      (3) In this case the invalidity of the first claim notice was not in dispute. It could still be referred to as a claim notice, albeit an ineffective one for example, for the purpose of costs. The LVT acknowledged this in paragraph 48 of its decision.

      (4) This ground of the appeal is therefore misconceived.

      Discussion

    5. In my view Mrs Mossopare sound.
    6. The situation in this case seems analogous to the circumstances in Alleyn Court. In my view that case was correctly decided, and the Tribunal.
    7. Before the LVT the parties agreed that the first claim notice in this case was invalid (paragraphs 9 and 10 of the LVT. So, as the LVT observed (in paragraph 42), the question here was whether, despite its invalidity, the first claim notice
    8. The LVT was aware of and considered both the TribunalPlintal SA (in paragraph 43) and Morgan J.judgment in Sinclair Gardens Investments v Poets Chase (in paragraph 45). And in my view, as Mrs Mossop submitted, the LVT was clearly right to tackle the question of the validity of the second claim notice in the way it did, applying the approach indicated by Morgan J. It saw the close similarity between the provisions of section 13(8) and (11) of the 1993 Act and those of section 81(3) and (4) of the 2002 Act. Indeed, it noted that those provisions are in
    9. There is, I think, nothing in the TribunalPlintal SA to undermine the LVTin this case. In Plintal SA the Tribunal held that, even if a notice was invalid and therefore no longer effective as a notice, its continuing existence as a matter of fact could not be denied. It could not be treated as if it had never been given. Despite its being invalid and ineffective, it could still be referred to as a claim notice The LVT clearly understood this concept. In paragraph 48 of its decision it said that although an invalid claim notice could be seen as having effect in that it could trigger an award of costs under section 88, this effect was such a notice is not, in substance, effective. It has no continuing force as a notice. As the LVT said (ibid.), if a notice was given and then withdrawn it would not have continuing force, though it could generate an entitlement to costs under section 88. The idea of a notice being (ibid.), must mean that it has a
    10. I cannot accept Mr BatesAlleyn Court.
    11. Mr Bates argued that that decision was wrong, stressing the differences between the statutory scheme under the 1993 Act and the provisions of the 2002 Act with which this case is concerned, and suggesting that Plintal SA demonstrates an approach that ought to be followed here, in preference to that taken by the court in Sinclair Gardens Investments v Poets Chase.
    12. In my view, those submissions are not cogent. I see no inconsistency between the decisions in Plintal SA and Sinclair Gardens Investments v Poets Chase. Those two cases raised different questions. And the decisions in them are not inconsistent with each other in the essential reasoning on which the outcome was based. In Plintal SA the Tribunal was not concerned with a question of the kind it had to grapple with in Alleyn Court. The reasoning in Alleyn Court, in my view, does not conflict with the jurisprudence in, and referred to in, Sinclair Gardens Investments v Poets Chase, or with the TribunalPlintal SA.
    13. In this case the first claim notice clearly was invalid. Given that invalidity a second claim notice on 17 March 2011. In my view, therefore, the LVT
    14. The observations made by the Tribunal in paragraphs 8 and 9 of its decision in Alleyn Court do not help Mr BatesAlleyn Court. It did not have to a question that I have to resolve. In my view, however, one must read section 90 of the 2002 Act as assuming a valid claim notice under section 80 and, in the circumstances envisaged in section 90(3)(b), a valid counter-notice under section 84. Parliament cannot have intended that a right to manage could be acquired on the basis of notices that were inherently unlawful, or that there should be no remedy to prevent that result.
    15. This second ground of the appeal therefore fails.
    16. Conclusion

    17. For the reasons I have given this appeal must be dismissed.

Dated: 5 July 2013

Sir Keith Lindblom, President

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