Case
Case
[2011] UKSC 52
                                 On appeal from: [2010] EWCA Civ 811
JUDGMENT
before
JUDGMENT GIVEN ON
9 November 2011
       “[Mexfield] shall let and [Ms Berrisford] shall take the [premises]
       from 13 December 1993 and thereafter from month to month until
       determined as provided in this Agreement.”
3.     Clause 2 stipulated that the rent was to be payable weekly in advance, and
the fourth schedule stated that it was to be £89 per week, subject to annual increase
in accordance with the Retail Price Index plus 2%. Clause 2(4) stated that any
increase in rent was only to take effect after “[a]t least one month’s notice in
writing”.
                                       Page 2
5.    The only provisions of the Agreement which expressly provided for its
determination were clauses 5 and 6, which were in these terms:
                                      Page 3
do so, presumably because it is a forfeiture provision, and Ms Berrisford soon paid
off the rent arrears, so it would have been a foregone conclusion that she would
have obtained relief from forfeiture. Rather than relying on clause 6(a), what
Mexfield did was to serve a notice to quit on Mrs Berrisford on 11 February 2008,
expiring on 17 March 2008. Mexfield then brought proceedings for possession in
the County Court, arguing that, despite the apparent limited circumstances in
which, and the limited method by which, it could terminate the Agreement (sc.
under clause 6), it nonetheless was entitled to put an end to Ms Berrisford’s
tenancy by serving a notice to quit.
9.     The essence of Mexfield’s case was that the effect of a number of cases,
culminating in the decision of the House of Lords in Prudential Assurance Co Ltd
v London Residuary Body [1992] 2 AC 386, is that an arrangement such as that
embodied in the Agreement could not be a valid tenancy as a matter of law.
Accordingly, Mexfield contended, Ms Berrisford had become a periodic (either
weekly, because she paid a weekly rent, or monthly, because that was the parties’
apparent intention) tenant of the premises by virtue of the payment and acceptance
of rent since 1993, and, pursuant to well-established and unchallenged principles,
Mexfield was entitled to determine such a tenancy with at least one week’s (or one
month’s) notice in common law, but required to be at least four weeks’ notice by
the 1977 Act.
10.    At first instance, His Honour Judge Mitchell refused Mexfield’s application
for summary judgment. However, on appeal, Peter Smith J, and, on appeal from
him, the Court of Appeal, accepted, albeit reluctantly, Mexfield’s argument, and
made an order for possession – see [2009] EWHC 2392 Ch and [2010] EWCA Civ
811; [2011] 1 Ch 244. In the Court of Appeal, in three clear and illuminating
judgments, Mummery and Aikens LJJ considered that they were bound by
authority to make such an order, but Wilson LJ held that the contractual limitation
on Mexfield’s right to determine the Agreement was enforceable by Ms Berrisford.
                                       Page 4
Ms Berrisford’s primary claim that she has a subsisting tenancy
Can the landlord determine the Agreement by giving one month’s notice?
13.     The first point turns on the interpretation of the Agreement. At any rate at
first sight, it seems hard to quarrel with Mr Wonnacott’s contention that it
continues until either the tenant serves notice under clause 5 or the landlord can
and does exercise its rights under clause 6. After all, clause 1 provides that the
Agreement is to subsist “until determined as provided in this agreement”, and the
only provisions which deal with determination are clauses 5 and 6.
14.    However, on behalf of Mexfield, Mr Gaunt QC relies on the fact that clause
1 describes the tenancy as being “from month to month”, and says that this carries
with it a right in the landlord to determine the Agreement on one month’s notice.
This was not a point raised by Mexfield in the courts below, but it is a pure point
of law, and no prejudice could be caused to Ms Berrisford by the fact that it was
                                       Page 5
taken for the first time in this court. We therefore permitted Mexfield to argue that
it has the right to determine the Agreement on one month’s notice.
15.    Having now heard the argument, which was advanced in attractive and
well-modulated terms, I would reject it. Before considering the argument by
reference to the terms of the Agreement, it is, of course, necessary to consider
whether there is anything in the surrounding circumstances relevant to the
interpretation of the Agreement. Beyond the fact that Mexfield was a co-operative
housing association, of which Ms Berrisford was a member, and that the purpose
of the Agreement was to provide Ms Berrisford with a home (all of which is
anyway plain from the provisions of the Agreement), it does not appear to me that
there are any relevant facts, save that the mortgage rescue background tends to
support the notion that Ms Berrisford’s right of occupation was not intended to be
precarious. (There was some argument as to whether the Agreement was based on
guidance given by the Housing Corporation, and there was an application to
adduce further evidence in that connection. I consider that whether or not Mexfield
was following such guidance is irrelevant to any issue on this appeal. I would
therefore refuse the application, and will say no more about that aspect).
16.     Turning to the language of the Agreement, Mr Gaunt’s central point is that
the inclusion of the words “from month to month” mean that the Agreement was
intended to be a monthly tenancy, and that, effectively by definition, a monthly
tenancy can be determined by either side with one month’s notice. I accept that, in
the absence of any indication to the contrary, a tenancy granted “from month to
month” is a monthly tenancy, and that, again in the absence of any indication to
the contrary, a monthly tenancy may be determined by either party giving one
month’s notice to the other. For instance, as explained later in this judgment, it is
clear that parties to a monthly tenancy could agree on a bar for a specific period on
the right of a landlord to serve notice to quit, and they can also agree a longer (or
indeed a shorter) period of notice than the one month which would normally be
implied.
18.    In this case, it seems clear that the parties intended that the arrangement
created by the Agreement should only be determinable pursuant to clause 5 or
                                      Page 6
clause 6. As already mentioned, that seems to follow from the closing words of
clause 1. However, Mr Gaunt argues that, by virtue of the fact that a tenancy from
month to month is determinable by either party on one month’s notice by either
party, the Agreement impliedly provided for determination by Mexfield on a
month’s notice.
19.    That ingenious argument appears to me to suffer from several flaws. First,
such an implied right of determination does not naturally fall within the scope of
the natural meaning of the expression “determined as provided in this Agreement”.
Secondly, it would mean that clause 5 is redundant. Thirdly, it seems scarcely
consistent with the words “but ONLY” in clause 6. Fourthly, if Mexfield does
have the right to determine on one month’s notice, there seems to have been little
point in giving it the right to forfeit in clause 6. Finally, given the circumstances in
which the Agreement was entered into, it seems unlikely that Ms Berrisford’s
security was intended to be so tenuous as to be determinable by Mexfield on one
month’s notice at any time from the day the Agreement was made.
21.    However, it is right to add that, for reasons given later in this judgment, I do
not accept Mr Gaunt’s contention that, if the Agreement gave rise to a monthly
tenancy, it would have to be automatically determinable on one month’s notice by
either party.
22.    Accordingly, whether or not the Agreement gave rise to a monthly tenancy,
I consider that, as a matter of contractual interpretation, the effect of clauses 1, 5
and 6 is that that tenancy can only be determined by Ms Berrisford pursuant to
clause 5 or by Mexfield pursuant to clause 6, and in no other way (save
consensually, viz by surrender).
                                       Page 7
Is such an arrangement capable of being a tenancy as a matter of law?
23.    I turn to the second issue, namely whether an arrangement, which can only
come to an end by service of one month’s notice by the tenant, or by the landlord
invoking a right of determination on one or more of the grounds set out in clause 6,
is capable, as a matter of law, of being a tenancy in accordance with its terms. Mr
Wonnacott accepts that it is not so capable. His concession is supported both by
very old authority and by high modern authority.
24.    It seems to have been established for a long time that an agreement for an
uncertain term cannot be a tenancy in the sense of being a term of years. In Say v
Smith (1563) Plowd 269, 272, Anthony Brown J said that “every contract
sufficient to make a lease for years ought to have certainty in three limitations, viz
in the commencement of the term, in the continuance of it, and in the end of it …
and words in a lease, which don’t make this appear, are but babble.”
26.    Much more recently, in Lace v Chantler [1944] KB 368, the Court of
Appeal held that a purported letting “for the duration [of the Second World War]”
could not take effect as “a good tenancy for the duration of the war” as it was for
an uncertain term, and that it was consequently ineffective. This decision was
distinguished by a subsequent Court of Appeal in Ashburn Anstalt v Arnold [1989]
Ch 1, where it was held that a right to occupy premises until the owner gave one
quarter’s notice certifying he needed the premises for redevelopment created a
tenancy binding on third parties.
27.   Less than 20 years ago, the House of Lords approved and applied Lace
[1944] KB 368, and disapproved and overruled Ashburn [1989] Ch 1. In
                                       Page 8
Prudential [1992] 2 AC 386, land was sold in 1930 by the owner, Mr Nathan, to
the London County Council, who immediately leased it back to him at a weekly
rent until the land “is required by the council for the purposes of the widening of”
the road. The House of Lords held that this arrangement was incapable of creating
a tenancy, as it was for an uncertain, potentially perpetual, duration. Lord
Templeman (with whom the other members of the House of Lords agreed, albeit
with reluctance in most cases) said at [1992] 2 AC 386, 394F, that there had been
“500 years of judicial acceptance of the requirement that a term must be certain
applies to all leases and tenancy agreements”.
28.    The position with regard to periodic tenancies containing a fetter on the
right of either or both parties to serve a notice to quit seems to be much the same.
The concept of a periodic tenancy appears to have originated in a suggestion in
Burgh v Potkyn (1522) YB 14 Hen 8 f10 pl 6, but it does not seem to have been
accepted by the courts until the end of the 17th century, and then only on special
facts - see Taylor v Seed (1696) Comb 383. Accordingly, there is not the long
established learning which there is in relation to terms of uncertain duration.
29.    In Doe d Warner v Browne (1807) 8 East 165, an agreement provided that a
tenancy at £40 per annum would not be determined so long as the tenant paid the
rent and did not harm the landlord. At p 166, Lord Ellenborough CJ said in
argument that it would be “inconsistent with, and repugnant to” a “tenancy from
year to year” that “it should not be determinable at the pleasure of either party
giving the regular notice”. In his judgment on the following page, Lawrence J said
much the same thing, tantalisingly (as it appears to have been in an unreported
case) suggesting that Lord Mansfield had held otherwise, in a view which had
“been long exploded.”
31.    Despite what was said in Doe v Browne 8 East 165, the Court of Appeal in
Breams Property Investment Co Ltd v Stroulger [1948] 2 KB 1, 6 held that an
agreement by a landlord in a periodic tenancy not to serve notice to quit for three
years unless it required the premises for its own use was valid. In In re Midland
Railway Co’s Agreement, Charles Clay & Sons Ltd v British Railways Board
                                      Page 9
[1971] Ch 725, the Court of Appeal held that an agreement by a landlord not to
determine a half-yearly tenancy until the premises were needed for the purposes of
its undertaking was valid. The Court distinguished Lace [1944] KB 368 on the
ground that it did not concern a periodic tenancy, and derived assistance from
Breams [1948] 2 KB 1.
34.    If we accept that that is indeed the law, then, subject to the point to which I
next turn, the Agreement cannot take effect as a tenancy according to its terms. As
the judgment of Lady Hale demonstrates (and as indeed the disquiet expressed by
Lord Browne-Wilkinson and others in Prudential [1992] 2 AC 386 itself shows),
the law is not in a satisfactory state. There is no apparent practical justification for
holding that an agreement for a term of uncertain duration cannot give rise to a
tenancy, or that a fetter of uncertain duration on the right to serve a notice to quit is
invalid. There is therefore much to be said for changing the law, and overruling
what may be called the certainty requirement, which was affirmed in Prudential
[1992] 2 AC 386, on the ground that, in so far as it had any practical justification,
that justification has long since gone, and, in so far as it is based on principle, the
principle is not fundamental enough for the Supreme Court to be bound by it. It
may be added that Lady Hale’s Carrollian characterisation of the law on this topic
is reinforced by the fact that the common law accepted perpetually renewable
leases as valid: they have been converted into 2000-year terms by section 145 of
the Law of Property Act 1922.
                                        Page 10
35.    However, I would not support jettisoning the certainty requirement, at any
rate in this case. First, as the discussion earlier in this judgment shows, it does
appear that for many centuries it has been regarded as fundamental to the concept
of a term of years that it had a certain duration when it was created. It seems
logical that the subsequent development of a term from year to year (ie a periodic
tenancy) should carry with it a similar requirement, and the case law also seems to
support this.
36.     Secondly, the 1925 Act appears to support this conclusion. Having stated in
section 1(1) that only two estates can exist in land, a fee simple and a term of
years, it then defines a term of years in section 205(1)(xxvii) as meaning “a term of
years … either certain or liable to determination by notice [or] re-entry”; as Lord
Templeman said in Prudential [1992] 2 AC 386, 391B, this seems to underwrite
the established common law position. The notion that the 1925 Act assumed that
the certainty requirement existed appears to be supported by the terms of section
149(6). As explained more fully below, this provision effectively converts a life
tenancy into a determinable term of 90 years. A tenancy for life is a term of
uncertain duration, and it was a species of freehold estate prior to 1926, but, in the
light of section 1 of the 1925 Act, if it was to retain its status as a legal estate, it
could only be a term of years after that date. Presumably it was converted into a
90-year term because those responsible for drafting the 1925 Act thought it could
not be a term of years otherwise.
37.     Thirdly, the certainty requirement was confirmed only some 20 years ago
by the House of Lords. Fourthly, while not a very attractive point, there is the
concern expressed by Lord Browne-Wilkinson, namely that to change the law in
this field “might upset long established titles” – [1992] 2 AC 386, 397A. Fifthly, at
least where the purported grant is to an individual, as opposed to a company or
corporation, the arrangement does in fact give rise to a valid tenancy, as explained
below. Finally, it has been no part of either party’s case that the Agreement gave
rise to a valid tenancy according to its terms (if, as I have concluded, it has the
meaning for which Mr Wonnacott contends).
Would such a tenancy have been treated as a tenancy for life before 1926?
                                       Page 11
39.     There is much authority to support the proposition that, before the 1925 Act
came into force, an agreement for an uncertain term was treated as a tenancy for
the life of the tenant, determinable before the tenant’s death according to its terms.
In Bracton (op cit) vol 3, p 50 (f176b), it will be recalled that the grant of an
uncertain term was held to give rise to a “free tenement”, provided that the
formalities had been complied with. The nature of this free tenement would appear
to be a tenancy for the life of the grantee. That is clear from what was said in
Littleton on Tenures (1481/2) vol 2, section 382 namely:
41.    In Doe v Browne 8 East 165, 166-167, Lord Ellenborough CJ and Lawrence
J, both of whom rejected the contention that an agreement which was to continue
so long as the tenant paid the rent and did not harm the landlord’s business could
be a valid term of years, said that it could be “an estate for life”, but that it failed to
achieve this status because the necessary formalities had not been complied with.
Such formalities have now largely been done away with, and they normally only
require a written, signed document. As Lord Dyson’s reference to Joshua
Williams’s 1920 textbook shows, the perceived legal position right up to the time
of the 1925 property legislation was that terms of uncertain duration were
converted into determinable terms for life.
42.     On this basis, then it seems clear that, at least if the Agreement had been
entered into before 1 January 1926 (when the 1925 Act came into force), it would
have been treated by the court as being the grant of a tenancy to Ms Berrisford for
her life, subject to her right to determine pursuant to clause 5 and Mexfield’s right
to determine pursuant to clause 6.
                                        Page 12
43.    Mr Gaunt relies on more recent authorities to support a contention that an
agreement for an uncertain term was only regarded as creating a tenancy for life if,
on a fair reading of the agreement, that was what the parties to the agreement
intended. That does indeed seem to have been the approach of Sir George Jessel
MR in Kusel v Watson (1879) 11 Ch D 129, but that is of limited value as the
agreement in that case could not have created a tenancy for life, as it was created
by a lessee. However, Mr Gaunt’s contention gets rather more support from the
reasoning of the Court of Appeal in Zimbler v Abrahams [1903] 1 KB 577, 582
(per Vaughan Williams LJ) and 583 (per Stirling and Mathew LJJ).
44.     In my judgment, however, there are three answers to that contention. The
first is that the reasoning in Zimbler [1903] 1 KB 577 is not strictly inconsistent
with Mr Wonnacott’s analysis: if, as a matter of interpretation, the agreement in
that case did involve the grant of a tenancy for life, then there was no need to
invoke Mr Wonnacott’s analysis, but that does not mean that the analysis is wrong.
Secondly, if Zimbler [1903] 1 KB 577 did proceed on the assumption that an
agreement which purported to create a tenancy for an uncertain term could not
give rise to a tenancy for life unless it was the parties’ intention to do so, it was
wrong, as it would have been inconsistent with the authoritative dicta relied on by
Mr Wonnacott, in particular the clear statement in Littleton, vol 2, section 382. (I
also note that neither counsel in Zimbler [1903] 1 KB 577 relied on the point made
by Mr Gaunt: see pp 578-580). Thirdly, even if an agreement which creates an
uncertain term could only have resulted in a tenancy for the life of the tenant if that
was the intention of the parties, I consider that, on a true construction of the
Agreement, it was intended that Ms Berrisford enjoy the premises for life –
subject, of course, to determination pursuant to clauses 5 and 6. I have in mind in
particular clause 6(c), which will apply on Ms Berrisford’s death, the fact that her
interest is unassignable, and the fact that it was intended to ensure that she could
stay in her home.
45.    The next step in Mr Wonnacott’s argument is that, given that the
Agreement would have given rise to a tenancy for life prior to 1926, the effect of
section 149(6) of the 1925 Act (“section 149(6)”) is that the Agreement is now to
be treated as a term of 90 years determinable on the death of Ms Berrisford,
subject to the rights of determination in clauses 5 and 6.
                                       Page 13
       effect as a lease . . . or contract therefor, for a term of 90 years
       determinable after the death . . . of the original lessee . . . by at
       least one month’s notice in writing given to determine the same
       on one of the quarter days applicable to the tenancy…”
47.     As already mentioned, the 1925 Act began by limiting the number of
permissible legal estates in land to two, a fee simple and a term of years.
Accordingly, it was necessary for the statute to deal with interests, such as estates
for lives, which had previously been, but no longer were, valid legal estates. Hence
one of the reasons for section 149(6). However, it is clear from its terms that the
section was not merely concerned with preserving life interests which existed prior
to 1 January 1926: it also expressly applies to life interests granted thereafter.
Therefore, says Mr Wonnacott, the section converts an arrangement such as the
Agreement, which, according to the common law, is a life tenancy into a 90-year
term.
48.     The first argument which might be raised against this contention is that the
Agreement was not a “lease … for life”, merely a contract which would have been
treated by established case law as such a lease. I do not consider that can be right.
Apart from not being consistent with the wording of section 149(6), it would mean
that an agreement such as that described in Littleton section 382, which existed as
a continuing valid determinable life estate on the 1 January 1926, would have lost
its status as a legal estate, as it would not have been saved by section 149(6): that
cannot have been the legislature’s intention.
49.    Mr Gaunt contends that section 149(6) is concerned with tenancies which
automatically end with the tenant’s death, not with tenancies which can be
determined on the tenant’s death, and, in this case, the effect of clause 6(c) is that
the tenancy can be determined, not that it automatically determines, on the tenant’s
death. I accept that section 149(6) only applies to tenancies which automatically
determine on death, and I am prepared to assume that clause 6(c) can only be
invoked by service of a notice. However, the argument misses the point, because
the Agreement is (or would be in the absence of sections 1 and 149 of the 1925
Act) a tenancy for life, not because of the specific terms of, or circumstances
described in, clause 6(c), but because it is treated as such by a well-established
common law rule.
50.     It is also suggested that section 149(6) does not apply to arrangements such
as the Agreement which are determinable in circumstances other than the tenant’s
death – e.g. on the grounds set out in clause 6. I can see no reasons of principle for
accepting that contention, and it appears to me that there are strong practical
reasons for rejecting it. The common law rule that uncertain terms were treated as
life tenancies applied, almost by definition, to arrangements which determined in
                                      Page 14
other events, and it is hard, indeed impossible, to see why the rule should be
limited to cases where an event automatically determines the term, as opposed to
cases where an event entitles the landlord to serve notice to determine the term. In
each case, the term is uncertain. At least one of the reasons the common law
treated uncertain terms as tenancies for lives was, as I see it, to save arrangements
which would otherwise be invalidated for technical reasons, and I find it hard to
accept that the modern law requires the court to adopt a less benevolent approach
to saving contractual arrangements.
51.   I have read what Lord Walker has written about section 149(6) and Bass
Holdings Ltd v Lewis [1986] 2 EGLR 40, and respectfully agree with him.
52.    It is strongly pressed by Mr Gaunt that the conclusion that the Agreement
gives rise to a valid tenancy for 90 years determinable on the tenant’s death would
be inconsistent with high modern authority. In particular, he said that such a
conclusion would be contrary to the outcome in Lace [1944] KB 368, and
inconsistent with clear dicta of Lord Greene MR in that case and of Lord
Templeman in Prudential [1992] 2 AC 386. I accept the factual basis for that
argument, but do not agree with its suggested conclusion.
53.    The fact is that it was not argued in either of those two cases that the
arrangement involved would have created a life tenancy as a matter of common
law, and that, following section 149(6), such an arrangement would now give rise
to a 90-year term, determinable on the tenant’s death (and Mr Wonnacott was kind
enough to point out that such an argument would not have assisted, and may even
have harmed, the unsuccessful respondent’s case in Prudential [1992] 2 AC 386).
Some of the statements about the law by Lord Greene and Lord Templeman can
now be seen to be extravagant or inaccurately wide, but it is only fair to them to
repeat that this was, at least in part, because the tenancy for life argument was not
raised before them.
54.    For the reasons given, I accept Mr Wonnacott’s case that (i) the
arrangement contained in the Agreement could only be determined in accordance
with clauses 5 and 6, and not otherwise, (ii) such an arrangement cannot take effect
as a tenancy in accordance with its terms, but (iii) by virtue of well-established
common law rules and section 149(6), the arrangement is a tenancy for a term of
90 years determinable on the tenant’s death by one month’s notice from the
landlord, and determinable in accordance with its terms, i.e. pursuant to clauses 5
and 6.
                                      Page 15
55.     I indicated earlier in this judgment that this conclusion would apply
irrespective of whether the purported tenancy created by the Agreement was
simply for an indeterminate term or was a periodic tenancy with a fetter on the
landlord’s right to determine. There is no difficulty if the former is the right
analysis. If the latter is correct, then there is a monthly tenancy which the landlord
is unable to determine unless he can rely on one or more of the grounds in clause
6. In Breams [1948] 2 KB 1, the Court concluded that a periodic tenancy with a
fetter on the landlord’s right to determine for three years was valid. It seems to me
that the term thereby created was equivalent to a fixed term of three years (subject
to a restricted right of determination in the landlord and an unrestricted right of
determination by the tenant) followed by a periodic tenancy.
56.    Accordingly a periodic tenancy with an invalid fetter on the landlord’s right
to determine should be treated in the same way as a tenancy for a fixed, if
indeterminate, term. That seems to me to be justified in principle, logical in theory,
and it ensures the law in this area is the same for all types of tenancy, whether or
not periodic in nature (which was, I think, part of the reasoning in Prudential
[1992] 2 AC 386). On that basis, even if the tenancy created by the Agreement was
a monthly tenancy with an objectionable fetter, it seems to me that it would have
been treated as a life estate under the old law (subject to the right to determine in
accordance with the terms of the fetter), and so would now be a tenancy for 90
years.
57.    Ms Berrisford is still alive, and it is common ground that she has not served
notice under clause 5 and that Mexfield is not relying on clause 6. In those
circumstances, it follows that Ms Berrisford retains her tenancy of the premises
and that Mexfield is not entitled to possession.
59.     However, having heard full submissions on those two arguments, I incline
fairly strongly to the view that, if Ms Berisford had failed in establishing that she
had a subsisting tenancy of the premises, she would nonetheless have defeated
                                       Page 16
Mexfield’s claim for possession on the ground that she is entitled to enforce her
contractual rights.
60.    If the Agreement does not create a tenancy for technical reasons, namely
because it purports to create an uncertain term, it is hard to see why, as a matter of
principle, it should not be capable of taking effect as a contract, enforceable as
between the parties personally, albeit not capable of binding their respective
successors, as no interest in land or other proprietary interest would subsist.
61.    The argument to the contrary rests in part on authority and in part on
principle. So far as authority is concerned, the point at issue was specifically
addressed and rejected by Lord Greene in Lace [1944] KB 368, 371-372 in these
terms:
So, too, in Prudential [1992] 2 AC 386, it appears that Lord Templeman treated as
void a fetter for an indefinite period on the right of the landlord under a periodic
tenancy to serve a notice to quit.
62.     It does not seem to me that the observations of Lord Greene, although they
are strongly expressed views of a highly reputable judge, can withstand principled
analysis. As Lord Templeman made clear in Street [1985] AC 809, while the
parties’ rights and obligations are primarily determined by what they have agreed,
the legal characterisation of those rights is ultimately a matter of law. If the
Agreement is incapable of giving rise to a tenancy for some old and technical rule
of property law, I do not see why, as a matter of principle, that should render the
Agreement invalid as a matter of contract.
63.    The fact that the parties may have thought they were creating a tenancy is
no reason for not holding that they have agreed a contractual licence any more than
in Street [1985] AC 809, the fact that the parties clearly intended to create a
licence precluded the court from holding that they had, as a matter of law, created
a tenancy. So, too, as Mr Wonnacott points out, in Milmo v Carreras [1946] KB
306, the Court of Appeal (led by Lord Greene) held that what was plainly stated
                                      Page 17
and understood by the parties to be an underlease operated as an assignment of the
lease as a matter of law, because the duration of the purported underlease equalled
or exceeded that of the lease.
65.     It has been suggested (although not in argument before us) that the notion
that the Agreement could give rise to a contractual licence if it cannot be a tenancy
is somehow inconsistent with the reasoning of the House of Lords in Bruton v
London & Quadrant Housing Trust [2000] 1 AC 406. In that case, Lord Hoffmann
said that an agreement can give rise to a tenancy even if it does not create “an
estate or other proprietary interest which may be binding upon third parties”: p
415. That statement was made in circumstances where a housing trust, which had
been granted a licence by a local authority to use a block of flats, agreed that a Mr
Bruton could occupy one of the flats. The point being made by Lord Hoffmann
was that the fact that the trust was only a licensee, and therefore could not grant a
tenancy binding on its licensor, did not prevent the agreement with Mr Bruton
amounting to a tenancy as between him and the trust. The tenancy would thus have
been binding as such not only on Mr Bruton and the trust, but also on any assignee
of Mr Bruton or the trust. Bruton [2000] 1 AC 406 was about relativity of title
which is the traditional bedrock of English land law. Lord Hoffmann’s
observations in that connection have no bearing on a case where the nature of the
agreement is such that it cannot, as a matter of law, be a tenancy even as between
the parties.
66.    If the Agreement cannot give rise to a tenancy, then, if it is not a contractual
licence, the only right that Ms Berrisford could claim would be that of a periodic
tenant on the terms of the written Agreement in so far as they are consistent with a
periodic tenancy, because she has been in possession purportedly under the
Agreement, paying a weekly rent to Mexfield. It is worth briefly considering why
she would be a periodic tenant on this basis, not least because it is Mexfield’s
contention that this is the right analysis.
                                       Page 18
67.     It would be because the law will infer a contract on these terms from the
actions of the parties, namely the terms they purported to agree in the Agreement,
and Ms Berrisford’s enjoyment of possession and payment of rent. But the
ultimate basis for inferring a tenancy (and its terms) is the same as the basis for
inferring any contract (and its terms) between two parties, namely what a
reasonable observer, knowing what they have communicated to each other,
considers that they are likely to have intended. Given that no question of statutory
protection could arise, it seems to me far less likely that the parties would have
intended a weekly tenancy determinable at any time on one month’s notice than a
licence which could only be determined pursuant to clauses 5 and 6.
68.    Since writing this, I have read what Lord Mance and Lord Clarke have
written in connection with this point, and I respectfully agree with them. It is also
interesting to read Lord Hope’s judgment, which demonstrates that the Scottish
courts have also encountered difficulty when grappling with interests of uncertain
duration, and seem to have come up with a similar answer.
Conclusion
LORD HOPE
71.    For the reasons given by Lord Neuberger, with which I entirely and
respectfully agree, I too would allow this appeal. I wish to add just a few words
about the position in Scotland, as there are significant differences between the way
English and Scots law treat agreements of the kind that are in issue in this case.
                                       Page 19
72.     The first difference relates to the status of Mexfield as compared with the
status that a similar body has in Scotland. It is a fully mutual housing association
within the meaning of section 1(2) of the Housing Associations Act 1985 and
section 5(2) of the Housing Act 1985. It cannot create an assured tenancy in
England: section 1(2) of and paragraph 12(1)(d) of Schedule 1 to the Housing Act
1988. Nor can it create a secure tenancy there, because it is registered under the
Industrial and Provident Societies Act 1965. A housing association is not a
landlord for the purpose of creating a protected or statutory tenancy: Rent Act
1977, sections 15(1) and 15(3). So its members have no statutory protection except
that which is given to them by the Protection from Eviction Act 1977.
73.    In Scotland a fully mutual co-operative housing association which meets the
conditions for registration set out in sections 58 and 59 of the Housing (Scotland)
Act 2001 is eligible for registration as a social landlord under Part 2 of that Act.
Mexfield would meet these criteria if it was providing housing services in
Scotland, as they extend to bodies established for the purpose of providing houses
for occupation by members of that body where the rules restrict membership to
persons entitled to occupy a house provided by that body: section 58(2)(b). It is the
normal practice for eligible bodies to apply for registration. There were 211
registered social landlords in Scotland in 2011: see the annual report of the
Scottish Housing Regulator. Where the landlord is a registered social landlord
which is a co-operative housing association and the tenant is a member of the
association the tenancy is a Scottish secure tenancy: section 11(1)(d). The
Protection from Eviction Act 1977 does not extend to Scotland: section 13(3). But
Ms Berrisford would have had statutory security of tenure if the house which she is
occupying under the Occupancy Agreement was in Scotland and her landlord had
been registered under the 2001 Act.
74.    The other difference relates to the way the common law treats such
agreements if statutory security of tenure is not available. The starting point in
Scots law is that a lease is a contract which gives the tenant a personal right to the
subjects: Gordon, Scottish Land Law, 3rd ed (2009), vol 1, para 18-136. A right of
that kind is capable of being created simply by agreement between the parties. The
original parties to the contract are free to regulate the arrangements that are to
apply between themselves as they wish. They will be held to the terms of their
contract so long as the original proprietor of the premises retains ownership of the
property and the original tenant remains in occupation of it.
75.    The situation becomes more complicated where the ownership of the
premises passes to someone else. In that event the tenant will need to have
acquired a real, or proprietary, right if he wishes to enforce his exclusive right to
remain there against the new owner. The circumstances in which the lease will
confer on the tenant a real right were set out in the Leases Act 1449, which
remains in force: Gordon, para 18-137. To obtain the benefit of the statute, which
                                      Page 20
refers to the takers of the lands having “terms and years thereof”, there must be a
term when it is to come to an end. The lease must be for a definite duration, such
as a number of years or the lifetime of the grantor or the grantee: Hunter on
Landlord and Tenant, 4th ed (1876), vol 1, p 461. A real right may also be obtained
by registering the lease in the Land Register of Scotland if it is to endure for 20
years or more under the Registration of Leases (Scotland) Act 1857, as amended
by the Land Tenure Reform (Scotland) Act 1974, section 18 and Schedule 6. But
the grant of a lease which could extend to more than 20 years is prohibited in the
case of property which is to be used as or as part of a private dwelling-house: 1974
Act, section 8(1).
76.    In Carruthers v Irvine 1717 Mor 15195 the period for which the lease was
granted was expressed by the words “perpetually and continually as long as the
grass groweth up and the water runneth down”. The grantor died and his heir
sought to remove the tenant on the ground that the lease did not say when it was to
come to an end. His claim failed because the court found that “by the meaning of
[the] parties the contract was intended to be a perpetual right to the tenant and his
successors”. This did not meet the requirements of the 1449 Act, and it was
admitted that the tenant would not have been able to enjoy that right in a question
with a singular successor of the grantor: see Hunter, p 462. But the personal right
against the heir under the contract was not affected. In Crighton v Lord Air 1631
Mor 11182 the grant was to the tenant and his heirs and successors for five years
and after that a further five years and then five years for ever. The argument that
the lease was a nullity because it did not say when it was to come to an end was
repelled. It was noted that the grantor might have objected on this ground in
question with a singular successor of the grantee. But it was held that he could not
do so in a question with the grantee’s heirs, as he had bound himself by the words
of the grant never to remove the grantee’s heirs.
77.      These cases show that as between the original parties a lease may be
granted for an indefinite period: Rankine, The Law of Leases in Scotland, 3rd ed
(1916), p 115; Gordon, para 18-11. The grantee will obtain security of tenure in a
question with singular successors of the landlord if the lease sets out the term when
it is to come to an end. If no term of endurance at all is specified in the agreement,
or it is for an uncertain term or it is potentially perpetual, it will not meet the
requirements of the Act. But this does not mean that effect cannot be given to the
personal obligation. If the issue arises as between the original parties to the
agreement and the agreement does not provide for this, a term after which either
party can bring it to an end will be implied by law. In Redpath v White 1737 Mor
15196 there was no such term, but the court accepted the argument that it was open
to it to fix the time of endurance. The starting point is that a lease of that kind is
regarded as good for one year only. But if there are words in the lease which show
that it was the intention of the parties that it should continue for more than one
year, the court will select the minimum period that the words admit of: Erskine,
                                      Page 21
Principles of the Law of Scotland, 21st ed (1911), II, vi, 10; Rankine, p 115. As
there were clauses in the lease which showed that it was intended to last for more
than a year, the court in Redpath substituted a period of two years.
78.    Where the term of the lease expires and the grantee remains in occupation
without the parties having entered into a new agreement its terms are prolonged
from year to year, or a shorter period if that is what the lease indicates, under tacit
relocation: Rankine, p 602; Gordon, para 18.25. Once it is under tacit relocation it
is open to either party to bring the tenancy to an end by notice to quit. The right to
do so is implied by law, so any term of the contract which is inconsistent with tacit
relocation is prima facie unenforceable: Gloag on Contract, 2nd ed (1929), p 733.
But tacit relocation is excluded as between the original parties to the lease if the
parties make a bargain as to the terms on which the tenant is to stay on in
occupation of the premises: Buchanan v Harris & Sheldon (1900) 2 F 935, 939,
per Lord Adam. It has also been held to be excluded if the parties to the lease
provide expressly by their contract that tacit relocation is not to apply to it:
MacDougall v Guidi 1992 SCLR 167; see also Stair Memorial Encyclopaedia,
Landlord and Tenant, para 364.
79.     Applying these various points to this case, clause 1 of the Occupancy
Agreement states that it will continue from month to month until determined as
provided in the agreement. This is an indefinite period, so the agreement is not
capable of conferring on the tenant a real right under the Leases Act 1449. But
there would be no need in Scots law for the court to imply any period in place of
what is provided for in clause 1. This is because the dispute in this case is between
the original parties to the agreement and because the circumstances in which it
may be brought to an end are sufficiently set out in the contract. I agree with Lord
Neuberger’s analysis of what, as a matter of contractual interpretation, is its effect:
see para 22, above. Clause 5 provides that the agreement is determinable by the
member on giving the Association one month’s notice in writing. Clause 6
provides that it may be brought to an end by the Association but only in the
circumstances that that clause sets out. The possibility of the Association bringing
the agreement to an end by serving one month’s notice in writing is excluded by
the terms of the agreement. The question whether Ms Berrisford’s agreement with
Mexfield, which has now endured for more than 20 years, has the effect of
excluding the implied right of the landlord to terminate under the rules relating to
tacit relocation is not easy to answer. But, as she would have had security of tenure
under the statute, it is not one that would need to be addressed if her landlord had
been registered under the 2001 Act.
80.    I have to confess that I have found it difficult to understand why English
law finds it so difficult to hold that, if an agreement of this kind cannot for
technical reasons take effect as a tenancy, it can be regarded as binding on the
parties simply by force of contract. I appreciate the problems that would need to be
                                       Page 22
faced if it was necessary for the agreement to have proprietary effect, which it
would if the dispute had not been between the original contracting parties. As it is,
however, the essence of the dispute between the parties in this case seems to me to
be about the effect of the contract which they entered into. One might have
expected it to be capable of being solved by applying the ordinary principles of the
law of contract without having to resolve questions about the effect of the
agreement on the parties’ proprietary interests or what the agreement is to be
called. But I entirely understand that the contrary view is supported by a very
substantial body of authority. It can by no means be lightly brushed aside, and I am
persuaded that, for all the reasons that Lord Neuberger gives, it would not be
appropriate for us to consider changing the law as to what constitutes what English
law will hold to be a tenancy, at least in this case.
81.     I also wonder whether the time has not now come for the legislative fetter
which prevents mutual housing associations from granting protected or statutory
tenancies in England and Wales to be removed, so that they are placed on the same
footing as other providers of social housing as in Scotland. The reason that was
given by the Minister of State in the Department of the Environment, the Earl of
Caithness, for introducing an amendment to the Bill which became the Housing
Act 1988 that provided that a fully mutual housing association cannot create an
assured tenancy was that a statutory regime designed to regulate the relationship
between landlord and tenant had little relevance in a situation “where, as is the
nature of a co-operative, the interests of landlord and tenants as a whole are in
effect indivisible”: Hansard (HL Debates), 3 November 1988, vol 501, col 395.
That statement was repeated in the House of Commons by the Parliamentary
Under Secretary of State, David Trippier, when the Lords amendment was
approved: Hansard (HC Debates), 9 November 1988, vol 140, col 337. The facts
of this case suggest that, as least so far as Mexfield is concerned, that happy state
of affairs no longer exists. The assumption on which that measure was put through
Parliament seems now to rest on doubtful foundations, as financial pressures may
cause the parties’ interests to diverge to the detriment of the residential occupier.
That is not something that this court can deal with. But I suggest that it might be
considered in any future programme for the reform of housing law.
LORD WALKER
83.     The case was concerned with a standard-form tenancy agreement made
between a brewery company and the licensee of a public house in Deptford. The
tenancy was for three years and then continued as a tenancy from year to year,
subject to provisions for termination set out in a schedule. Para 1 allowed the
landlord to terminate the tenancy on six months’ notice. Para 4 provided that if the
tenant died during the term the landlord could terminate the tenancy on 14 days’
notice, or three months if the tenant left a widow. This shorter notice was no doubt
thought appropriate because of the exigencies of the on-licensed trade. The brief
report does not state what notice the tenant had to give, but it seems inconceivable
that that was not covered in another paragraph of the schedule. The issue was
whether section 149(6) applied to the tenancy. Nourse LJ gave the main judgment,
with which Glidewell LJ and Sir John Donaldson MR agreed. The court upheld the
first-instance decision of Hoffmann J that section 149(6) did not apply.
84.     “Determinable” can, in the vocabulary of the law, have either of the
meanings mentioned at the beginning of this judgment. The three reasons given by
Nourse LJ for preferring the narrower meaning are to my mind convincing. But I
think there is a more powerful reason based not on the language of section 149(6)
but on its purpose. It was intended to enable a commercial lease for life to exist as
a legal estate under the new regime introduced by the Law of Property Act 1925. It
was not intended to apply to leases or tenancies which did not need that sort of
helping hand. Mr Lewis’s tenancy in Bass was well able to stand on its own feet as
a legal estate without being converted into a term of 90 years determinable by
notice after Mr Lewis’s death while still licensee of the public house. That point is,
I think, reflected in the short concurring judgment of Sir John Donaldson MR.
85.   Lord Neuberger did not find it necessary to refer to Bass for reasons
mentioned in para 47 of his judgment. I agree with his reasoning, and also with
what Lord Neuberger goes on to say in para 48. Even if section 149(6) were
supposed to have applied to the tenancy in Bass, there would be no good reason to
make a fundamental change in its commercial effect by disregarding the landlord’s
wider power to terminate on six months’ notice.
LADY HALE
87.     Periodic tenancies obviously pose something of a puzzle if the law insists
that the maximum term of any leasehold estate be certain. The rule was invented
long before periodic tenancies were invented and it has always been a problem
how the rule is to apply to them. In one sense the term is certain, as it comes to an
end when the week, the month, the quarter or the year for which it has been
granted comes to an end. But that is not the practical reality, as the law assumes a
re-letting (or the extension of the term) at the end of each period, unless one or
other of the parties gives notice to quit. So the actual maximum term is completely
uncertain. But the theory is that, as long as each party is free to give that notice
whenever they want, the legal maximum remains certain. Uncertainty is introduced
if either party is forbidden to give that notice except in circumstances which may
never arise. Then no-one knows how long the term may last and indeed it may last
for ever.
89.    However, in In re Midland Railway Co’s Agreement, Charles Clay & Sons
Ltd v British Railways Board [1971] Ch 725, a strong Court of Appeal, in a
reserved judgment of the Court, went much further and upheld a term in a half-
yearly tenancy which prohibited the landlords from serving notice to quit unless
they required the property for their own undertaking. The Court accepted that the
                                      Page 25
maximum term of a single term of years had to be certain before the lease took
effect. Thus a letting “for the duration of the war”, as in Lace v Chantler [1944]
KB 368, was invalid. This rule was so long established that it was now “too late to
inquire why this aspect of the particular estate was considered essential to its
existence or to question the doctrine”: [1971] Ch 725, 731-732. But it could be
easily circumvented by granting a lease for (say) 90 years, terminable earlier than
that should the uncertain event happen. So the rule “has an air of artificiality, of
remoteness from practical considerations”: p 732. (Had Mr Wonnacott been
around then forcibly to remind their Lordships that in fact such a lease to an
individual was treated at common law as a lease for life, provided that the
necessary formalities were complied with, and had therefore been converted by
section 149(6) of the Law of Property Act 1925 into a lease for 90 years, their
Lordships might have expressed themselves even more strongly.) In any event,
they held that the rule only applied to an attempt to grant a lease or tenancy for a
single and uncertain period. It was not repugnant to the nature of a periodic
tenancy to place a curb on the landlord’s power to determine it, unless perhaps
there was an attempt to prevent the landlord from ever doing so. They could not
see any distinction between this case and the curb of limited duration in Breams
Property.
90.     In Ashburn Anstalt v Arnold [1989] Ch 1, the Court of Appeal went even
further and upheld as a tenancy a grant of what was described as a licence to
occupy premises rent free which the landlords could only determine if they
certified that they were ready immediately at the end of the quarter’s notice period
to demolish and redevelop the property. The Court considered that the vice of
uncertainty was that neither party knew where they stood and the court did not
know what to enforce. In this case there would be no doubt about whether the
determining event had occurred. The parties should be held to their agreement
even though this might not be a periodical tenancy as in the Midland Railway case.
91.    Both the Midland Railway and Ashburn Anstalt cases were overruled by the
House of Lords in Prudential Assurance Co Ltd v London Residuary Body [1992]
2 AC 386. There Mr Nathan had sold a strip of land between his shop and the road
to the London County Council, which had let it back to him at a weekly rent, by an
agreement which provided that the “tenancy shall continue until the . . . land is
required by the council for the purposes of the widening of” the highway. His
successors in title sought to enforce this restriction against the county council’s
successors in title and the House of Lords held that they could not do so. It is
understandable that the House of Lords should have taken the view that this was in
effect a single term of uncertain, indeed potentially perpetual, duration and thus
incompatible with the long-established rule of the common law against terms of
uncertain duration. It is understandable that the House should have taken the same
view of the Ashburn Anstalt case and overruled it. It was, as it seems to me,
unnecessary for them to hold that a similar curb in an otherwise conventional
                                     Page 26
periodical tenancy was similarly repugnant and thus to overrule Midland Railway
but this is what they did.
92.     Their Lordships were not invited to consider the argument which Mr
Wonnacott has advanced in this case. This is not surprising, as it would have done
the company which had bought the land from Mr Nathan no good. Mr Nathan was
almost certainly already dead (and companies cannot have a lease for their own
lives). Indeed, Mr Wonnacott’s argument does not appear previously to have been
made in a case which concerns what would otherwise bear all the hallmarks of a
periodic tenancy with a curb on the landlord’s power to determine it.
93.     So we have now reached a position which is curiouser and curiouser. There
is a rule against uncertainty which applies both to single terms of uncertain
duration and to periodic tenancies with a curb on the power of either party to serve
a notice to quit unless and until uncertain events occur. But this rule does not
matter if the tenant is an individual, because the common law would have
automatically turned the uncertain term into a tenancy for life, provided that the
necessary formalities were complied with, before the Law of Property Act 1925. A
tenancy for life was permissible at common law, although of course it was quite
uncertain when the event would happen, but it was certain that it would. I suppose
at the time of the hundred years’ war there was uncertainty both as to the “when”
and the “whether” it would ever end. Be that as it may, a tenancy for life is
converted into a 90 year lease by the 1925 Act.
95.    It is even more bizarre that, had the “tenancy for life” analysis not been
available, the conclusion might have been, not that this was a contractual tenancy
enforceable as such as between the original parties, but that it was a contractual
licence, also enforceable as such between the original parties. This, as I understand
                                      Page 27
it, is the difference between English and Scots law. I do not understand that it
makes any difference to the result.
96.    As will be apparent, I entirely agree with the reasoning and conclusions
reached by Lord Neuberger on the first question: does Ms Berrisford have a
subsisting tenancy? For that reason, I do not think it necessary to express an
opinion on the alternative case in contract. But it seems to me obvious that the
consequence of our having reached the conclusions which we have on the first
issue is to make the reconsideration of the decision in Prudential, whether by this
Court or by Parliament, a matter of some urgency. As former Law Commissioner
Stuart Bridge has argued ([2010] Conv 492, 497):
      “If the parties to a periodic tenancy know where they stand, in the
      sense that the contract between them is sufficiently certain, then that
      should be enough. If a landlord, in this case a fully mutual housing
      association, decides that its tenants should be entitled to remain in
      possession unless and until they fall into arrears with their rent or
      break other provisions contained in the tenancy agreement, it is
      difficult to see what policy objectives are being furthered in denying
      the tenant the rights that the agreement seeks to create.”
Quite so.
LORD MANCE
97.    I too agree with Lord Neuberger’s comprehensive judgment, including his
tribute to Mr Wonnacott’s exposition of the law. For the present, I (like Lord
Neuberger: paras 33-35) proceed on the basis that an essential characteristic of a
contractual tenancy is lacking if the contract provides for a series of periods
indefinitely renewable unless and until some future event occurs which may never
occur.
98.    The decision in this appeal is therefore that the present Agreement between
the parties, being for a term uncertain at inception, would have been treated until
1925 as involving the grant of a tenancy for Ms Berrisford’s life, and falls now,
under the Law of Property Act 1925, section 149(6), to be treated as a tenancy for
a term of 90 years determinable on Ms Berrisford’s death.
99.   But for this conclusion, the Court would have had to consider the effect of
an Agreement which was on its face for an uncertain term, but incapable in law of
                                     Page 28
taking effect as such. Mr Gaunt QC for Mexfield submits that such an Agreement
must take effect as a tenancy, but of a wholly different kind to any which the
parties intended, in that it would be terminable at any time by Mexfield on a
month’s notice. There is in my opinion neither attraction in nor need to accept that
submission.
100. The Agreement was to run “from month to month until determined as
provided in this Agreement” – an obvious reference to clauses 5 and 6, containing
the parties’ agreement on the only permissible methods of contractual
determination. To treat the Agreement as one under which Mexfield could
terminate at the end of any month on a month’s notice would undermine an
evidently fundamental element in the parties’ contract. I agree with Lord Clarke
that ordinary principles of construction govern the Agreement’s true construction.
I note that Lord Hobhouse made a similar point in relation to the agreement, held
to be a tenancy, in Bruton v London & Quadrant Housing Trust [2000] 1 AC 406,
417; he cited in that connection Reardon-Smith Line Ltd v Yngvar Hansen-Tangen
(The “Diana Prosperity”) [1976] 1 WLR 989 - a precursor, famous in commercial
law, of the Investors Compensation and Mannai Investment cases.
See Bruton v London & Quadrant Housing Trust [2000] 1 AC 406, 413E, per Lord
Hoffmann. Only in “special circumstances” (not here relevant) will an agreement
having these characteristics not involve a tenancy: see Street v Mountford, p 822B
and Bruton, pp 410E, 411C-412B, 414-B-G and 417A-B.
                                      Page 29
was not a tenancy, it can only involve a licence. Its terms precluded the giving by
Mexfield of notice to terminate, except in circumstances falling within clause 6 of
the Agreement.
103. To force the contract into the category of tenancy, by rewriting its essential
terms to provide for a periodic monthly tenancy terminable on a month’s notice,
would be to substitute for the Agreement that the parties have made a wholly
different contract. It would be to treat the first two of the three characteristics of a
tenancy mentioned above as sufficient by themselves and as displacing any need to
satisfy the third. It would be to insist on terminology (such as the Agreement’s
references to letting and taking possession “from month to month” and “this
Tenancy”) over substance (the parties’ express limitation of the right to terminate
and the consequent absence of an essential characteristic of a tenancy).
104. Like Lord Neuberger (para 69), I reserve my view on the position upon the
hypothesis of a contract constituting a tenancy, but which was both subject to
provisions restricting termination for an uncertain period and not capable of being
treated as a tenancy for life at common law or a tenancy for 90 years under section
149(6) of the 1925 Act. In the light of what I have already said and on the law as it
stands, this is an impossible hypothesis, since such a contract could not give rise to
what the law would regard as a tenancy; it could however take effect between the
parties according to its terms, although it would not have proprietary effect as
against third parties: see paras 101-102 above. Parties can normally contract as
they will, either inter se or indeed with third parties.
LORD CLARKE
105. I agree that this appeal should be allowed. It seems remarkable to me that it
is necessary to decide this appeal in 2011 by reference to jurisprudence developed
over the centuries to the effect that an agreement for an uncertain term was treated
as a tenancy for the life of the tenant, determinable before the tenant’s death
according to its terms. It is a mystery to me why in 2011 the position of a tenant
who is a human being and a tenant which is a company should in this respect be
different. There is in my opinion much to be said for the view that the certainty
rule should now be abandoned. However, I agree with Lord Neuberger that it is
not necessary to abandon it for the purposes of deciding this appeal.
106. I can understand why in this appeal Mexfield sought to abandon its
concession that, on the true construction of the contract, which is called “the
Agreement”, it could not serve a notice to quit under the contract and that the only
way the contract could come to an end was by Ms Berrisford serving a notice
                                       Page 30
under clause 5 or by Mexfield exercising its rights under clause 6. One might have
thought that, if the contract was not brought to an end in one of those ways it
would continue, at least as a contract which governed the rights and obligations of
the parties to it. Moreover, it would do so even if, by some quirk of the law, the
parties had failed to create a tenancy. It was thus of some importance for Mexfield
to abandon its concession.
107. As I see it, the ordinary principles governing the true construction of a
contract apply to tenancy agreements and leases. The principles have been
discussed in many cases, notably of course, as Lord Neuberger MR said in Pink
Floyd Music Ltd v EMI Records Ltd [2010] EWCA Civ 1429, para 17, by Lord
Hoffmann in Mannai Investment Co Ltd v Eagle Star Life Assurance Co Ltd
[1997] AC 749, passim, in Investors Compensation Scheme Ltd v West Bromwich
Building Society [1998] 1 WLR 896, 912F-913G and in Chartbrook Ltd v
Persimmon Homes Ltd [2009] AC 1101, paras 21-26. I agree with Lord Neuberger
(also at para 17) that those cases show that the ultimate aim of interpreting a
provision in a contract is to determine what the parties meant by the language
used, which involves ascertaining what a reasonable person would have
understood the parties to have meant. As Lord Hoffmann made clear in the first of
the principles he summarised in the Investors Compensation Scheme case at p
912H, the relevant reasonable person is one who has all the background
knowledge which would reasonably have been available to the parties in the
situation in which they were at the time of the contract.
108. Here the language used is simple and straightforward. I agree with Lord
Neuberger for the reasons he has given that the contract makes it clear that the two
ways in which the contract could be brought to an end under the contract were
those described in clauses 5 and 6. Since the contract has not been brought to an
end in either of those ways, it must, at any rate for the purposes of the law of
contract, remain on foot. Even if the contract somehow failed to create a tenancy
so that Mrs Berrisford does not have an estate in the property, there is in my
opinion no principle of the law of contract which prevents the terms of the contract
having effect as between the parties to it.
109. In this regard I agree with the views of Lord Neuberger expressed at paras
57 to 64 above. Ms Berrisford has been living in the property for a considerable
time and, except for a short period referred to by Lord Neuberger at para 7, has
been paying rent at the rate provided for in the contract. It would to my mind be
bizarre for the law to imply or infer a contract between the parties to the effect that
there was a periodic tenancy between them at the contractual rate. That would
mean that Mexfield can bring the contract to an end by giving one month’s notice
to quit. I see no basis for such an inference or implication. It would be contrary to
the express terms of the agreement, namely that the only way that Mexfield can
determine it is under clause 6. There is no need for any process of implication or
                                       Page 31
inference because the parties have expressly agreed the position. In particular, Ms
Berrisford at no time agreed that Mexfield could give her a month’s notice to quit.
If, as a matter of law, the parties have created a licence and not a tenancy, so be it.
110. I appreciate that the point just discussed is Ms Berrisford’s alternative case
and is discussed as such by Lord Neuberger. I take it first because it seems to me
to be of critical importance to ascertain the contractual position between the
parties. It follows that, as I see it, even if the contract does not create a tenancy, it
creates rights and obligations between the parties, so that in an appropriate case Ms
Berrisford could in principle obtain an injunction against Mexfield for a threatened
breach of contract. In the meantime the contract remains on foot.
111. On the question whether there is a valid tenancy between the parties, with
some misgiving I shall assume that Mr Wonnacott’s concession that the contract is
not capable, as a matter of law, of creating a tenancy in accordance with its terms
because it is an agreement for an uncertain term is correct. However, I agree with
Lord Neuberger for the reasons he gives at paras 36 to 42 that, at any rate before
1926, the arrangement between the parties would have been treated as a tenancy or
lease for life, determinable before her death in accordance with its terms. I further
agree with him (at paras 43 to 54) that the effect of section 149(6) of the Law of
Property Act, which applies to arrangements made before and after the 1925 Act
came into force, is that the lease for life is converted to a lease or contract for a
term of 90 years determinable on Ms Berrisford’s death.
112. For these reasons, which are essentially the same as those given by Lord
Neuberger, I agree with him that the appeal should be allowed. I am pleased to be
able to arrive at this conclusion because any other conclusion would be contrary to
the agreement freely entered into by the parties and, in particular, would be most
unjust to Ms Berrisford.
LORD DYSON
113. I agree that this appeal should be allowed for the reasons stated by Lord
Neuberger in his comprehensive judgment. My views can be summarised quite
shortly. The starting point must be the true construction of the Agreement applying
ordinary principles of contractual interpretation. In this respect, an agreement
which purports to create a tenancy agreement is no different from any other
agreement. For the reasons given by Lord Neuberger, I have no hesitation in
concluding that, as a matter of construction, the Agreement provides that Mexfield
can only determine it on one of the grounds specified in clause 6: it cannot
determine it by simply serving one month’s notice to quit.
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114. The next point is that there is nothing in the general law of contract which
makes such an agreement void or unenforceable according to its terms. But this is
not an ordinary contract. On its face, it purports to be a tenancy agreement ie an
agreement which purports to grant an interest in land. It is notorious that the law of
landlord and tenant is highly technical, not least because its development has been
affected by rules of law of ancient origin. It is, therefore, necessary to turn to the
law of landlord and tenant to see whether the fact that the Agreement purports to
create a tenancy determinable by Mexfield, but only on the grounds specified in
clause 6, requires a different approach to be adopted to the ascertainment of its
meaning and effect.
115. As Lord Neuberger explains (paras 24 to 33), it seems to have been long
established that an agreement for an uncertain term cannot be a tenancy in the
sense of being a term of years; and a fetter on a right to serve a notice to determine
a periodic tenancy is ineffective if the fetter is of uncertain duration. Such a fetter
is “repugnant” to a periodic tenancy: see Doe d Warner v Browne (1807) 8 East
165, 166. As Lord Browne-Wilkinson said in Prudential Assurance Co Ltd v
London Residuary Body [1992] 2 AC 386, 396, this “bizarre” outcome results from
an application of “an ancient and technical rule of law” for the genesis of which
there is no satisfactory rationale and for which there is no apparent useful purpose.
Despite the concern expressed by Lord Browne-Wilkinson that to depart from a
rule relating to land law which has been established for many centuries might
upset long established titles, there is much to be said in favour of getting rid of the
rule. But I think that, rather than the court introducing a change to such a
fundamental tenet of the law of landlord and tenant, it would be better if this were
done by Parliament after full consultation of interested parties of the kind that is
routinely undertaken by the Law Commission.
118. The effect of section 149(6) of the 1925 Act was to convert such a tenancy
into a term for 90 years, subject to earlier termination in accordance with its terms.
It follows that the Agreement is such a tenancy and all the terms of clause 6 apply
with full force and effect. Mexfield cannot terminate the Agreement by serving a
notice to quit as if this were a simple monthly tenancy without more.
119. This is a just result which plainly accords with the intention of the parties.
But it may legitimately be said that it is not satisfactory in the 21st century to have
to adopt this chain of reasoning in order to arrive at such a result. It is highly
technical. There should be no need to have to resort to such reasoning in order to
arrive at the result which the parties intended. That is why the radical solution of
doing away with the uncertainty rule altogether is so attractive. There is the further
point that the section 149(6) route to the right result can only be followed where
the purported tenant is an individual and not a corporate entity. To treat an
individual and a corporate entity differently in this respect can only be explained
on historical grounds. The explanation may lie in the realms of history, but that
hardly provides a compelling justification for maintaining the distinction today.
120. To conclude, in my view the answer to this appeal lies in the law of
landlord and tenant and the appeal must be allowed. I do not find it necessary to
address the alternative arguments advanced by Mr Wonnacott. I would, however,
go so far as to say that, like Lord Neuberger (paras 57 to 62), I am strongly
attracted by the submission that, if by reason of the uncertainty argument the
Agreement did not create a tenancy, then it was enforceable as a contract
according to its terms like any other contract.
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