[2023] UKSC 6
On appeal from: [2021] EWCA Civ 27
JUDGMENT
Aviva Investors Ground Rent GP Ltd and another (Respondents) v Williams and others (Appellants)
before
Lord Reed, President
Lord Briggs
Lord Kitchin
Lord Sales
Lord Richards
8 February 2023
Heard on 8 December 2022
Appellants
Philip Rainey KC
James Sandham
Robert Brown
(Instructed by Northover Litigation)
Respondents
Simon Allison
Brooke Lyne
(Instructed by Penningtons Manches Cooper LLP)
Intervener (The Property Institute) (written submissions only)
Justin Bates
Rupert Cohen
(Instructed by Property Management Legal Services Ltd)
LORD BRIGGS (with whom Lord Reed, Lord Kitchin, Lord Sales and Lord Richards agree):
The levying of service charges by landlords under leases of residential property in respect of their expenditure upon repairs and the provision of other services has for long been controversial. This is both because of its propensity to generate disproportionately expensive and time-consuming litigation and because of the tendency of some landlords to seek to minimise that risk by the imposition of contractual restrictions in residential leases upon what would otherwise have been the tenants’ rights to have disputes about service charges resolved in court, or in an appropriate tribunal. Section 27A of the Landlord and Tenant Act 1985 (the “1985 Act”) was an attempt by Parliament to alleviate what was perceived to be the unfair restriction of residential tenants’ access to justice inherent in such restrictions. This appeal raises the question just how far section 27A goes in restraining what would otherwise be the parties’ freedom of contract.
Section 27A was introduced by amendment into the 1985 Act by the Commonhold and Leasehold Reform Act 2002. It provides as follows:
Subsection (1) applies whether or not any payment has been made.
An application may also be made to the appropriate tribunal for a determination whether, if costs were incurred for services, repairs, maintenance, improvements, insurance or management of any specified description, a service charge would be payable for the costs and, if it would, as to—
(a) the person by whom it would be payable,
(b) the person to whom it would be payable,
(c) the amount which would be payable,
(d) the date at or by which it would be payable, and
(e) the manner in which it would be payable.
No application under subsection (1) or (3) may be made in respect of a matter which—
(a) has been agreed or admitted by the tenant,
(b) has been, or is to be, referred to arbitration pursuant to a post-dispute arbitration agreement to which the tenant is a party,
(c) has been the subject of determination by a court, or
(d) has been the subject of determination by an arbitral tribunal pursuant to a post-dispute arbitration agreement.
But the tenant is not to be taken to have agreed or admitted any matter by reason only of having made any payment.
An agreement by the tenant of a dwelling (other than a post-dispute arbitration agreement) is void in so far as it purports to provide for a determination—
(a) in a particular manner, or
(b) on particular evidence,
of any question which may be the subject of an application under subsection (1) or (3).
The jurisdiction conferred on the appropriate tribunal in respect of any matter by virtue of this section is in addition to any jurisdiction of a court in respect of the matter.”
“27A Liability to pay service charges: jurisdiction
An application may be made to the appropriate tribunal for a determination whether a service charge is payable and, if it is, as to—
(a) the person by whom it is payable,
(b) the person to whom it is payable,
(c) the amount which is payable,
(d) the date at or by which it is payable, and
(e) the manner in which it is payable.
In England the “appropriate tribunal” for the purposes of section 27A is now the First-tier Tribunal (Property Chamber) (“the FtT”) replacing the Leasehold Valuation Tribunal (“the LVT”) which remains the “appropriate tribunal” in Wales (see section 38 of the 1985 Act). Both tribunals are specialists in this field, and operate a limited costs-shifting regime under which tenants are not exposed to paying their landlord’s costs, providing they litigate reasonably.
The question on this appeal is how far (if at all) section 27A(6) cuts down a contractual provision in a lease that provides for the tenant to pay a fixed proportion of common costs “or such part as the landlord may otherwise reasonably determine”. The leases in question are leases of residential units within a building in Southsea, Hampshire by which the apportionment of the landlord’s service charge expenditure between the tenants in the building may be adjusted by the landlord. A sample of the relevant clause for flat 64 (which is in standard form for all the residential units save as to the stated percentages) reads as follows:
“your share of the insurance costs is 0.7135% or such part as the Landlord may otherwise reasonably determine;
your share of building services costs is 0.7135% or such part as the Landlord may otherwise reasonably determine; and
your share of estate services costs is 0.5427% or such part as the Landlord may otherwise reasonably determine.”
The insurance costs, the building services costs and the estate services costs together made up the whole of each residential tenant’s service charge liability. The numerically stated percentages were those imposed on the tenant of flat 64 at the commencement of the relevant lease, which was granted for a term of 125 years from 19 December 2008.
The particular service charge dispute leading to this appeal arose, in part, because the Respondent landlords demanded service charges on the basis of an apportionment different from (and, so far as the Appellants were concerned, higher than) the numerically stated percentages in the relevant leases. Mr Williams (the lessee of flat 64) and a number of his neighbouring lessees within the building claimed that the contractual entitlement of the landlords to determine an apportionment other than that numerically stated in the leases was rendered void by section 27A(6). They also claimed, in the alternative, that the re-apportionment imposed by the landlords was unreasonable.
Each of the courts below responded to this challenge in a different way. The FtT (Judge Agnew and Mr D Banfield FRICS) held that the landlords’ contractual power to re-apportion was not avoided in any way by section 27A(6) because it did not purport to prevent the lessee from challenging its reasonableness in the FtT. The reasonableness challenge failed, so that the re-apportionment was enforced. The Upper Tribunal (Lands Chamber) (Judge Elizabeth Cooke) held that the whole of the provision for reapportionment was void, so that the fixed percentages were immutable, unless and until the parties agreed otherwise. The Court of Appeal (Lewison, Males and Rose LJJ) held that the provision for re-apportionment was void to the extent that only the landlord could exercise it, but that either party to the relevant lease could apply to the FtT for a re-apportionment under section 27A(1).
All three of the courts below correctly regarded themselves as bound by the decision of the Court of Appeal in Oliver v Sheffield City Council [2017] EWCA Civ 225; [2017] 1 WLR 4473 in which, following Windermere Marina Village Ltd v Wild [2014] UKUT 163 (LC); [2014] L & TR 30 and Gater v Wellington Real EstateLtd [2014] UKUT 561 (LC); [2015] L & TR 19, I held (with the agreement of Longmore and Lewison LJJ) that a provision which gave contractually determinative effect to a discretionary decision of the landlord about service charges was avoided by section 27A(6) whether or not it provided expressly for the landlord’s decision to be final and binding. No submission to the contrary was (for understandable reasons) made in the courts below. But the correctness of those three decisions was squarely challenged by the Respondent landlords in the appeal to this court.
The question in issue is of course purely one of law, namely the construction of a statutory provision, on which an appellate court must form its own view. While it will generally accord respect to the analysis of a lower (and in particular specialist) court or tribunal, if not bound by an earlier decision it must consider the question for itself. The long acceptance of a particular construction by the sector of the community most affected by it (here landlords and tenants of residential property) may disincline an appellate court from departing from it, but in the present case only five years have elapsed since the Oliver decision and, as will appear, the present case may fairly be regarded as having tested the principle there laid down to destruction.
The central thrust of the Respondents’ submission to this court, by Simon Allison and Brooke Lyne, is that to treat every contractual power of a landlord to decide any question about the quantum of a service charge as void will in many cases (including this one) mean that the relevant lease contains no provision at all for the determination of the amount or timing of a service charge by anyone other than the FtT, even in the absence of any dispute. As Lewison LJ put it in the Court of Appeal, [2021] EWCA Civ 27; [2021] 1 WLR 2061, at para 39, (applying Oliver), the effect in the present case of section 27A(6) was that:
“the function of making that determination is […] transferred from the landlord to the FTT.”
That would, so it was submitted, lay upon the shoulders of the FtT the administrative burden of making a multitude of service charge related decisions on a regular basis in relation to countless leases, in sharp contrast with its usual adversarial, dispute-resolution function where, for example, a decision by the landlord is challenged on contractual or statutory grounds.
As with any question of statutory construction the answer depends upon reading the relevant words in their context, paying proper regard to their purpose, in this case to the mischief which the provision is designed to combat. In addition to looking at the whole of section 27A itself it is necessary to look a little wider at the statutory constraints upon the levying of service charges contained in the 1985 Act, which it may be supposed, at least, were intended to be given enhanced effect by section 27A.
Starting outside section 27A, the most important statutory constraint upon contractual obligations to pay service charges in the residential context is to be found in section 19, which limits relevant costs (forming the basis of a service charge) to costs reasonably incurred, and only for the provision of services or the carrying out of works to a reasonable standard. This was in the 1985 Act from its inception. So also was a requirement for landlords to consult tenants in relation to specified works, with restrictions on recoverability in default, although those have been re-modelled. Section 21 requires landlords to supply upon request summaries of relevant costs, with a right, on a default, for tenants to withhold payment of service charges demanded. Of earlier origin is the time limit on service charge demands (18 months from the incurring of the relevant costs) in section 20B, which was introduced in 1987.
Other parts of the statutory regime include the restriction on the contractual ability of landlords to add litigation costs to service charge costs and the requirement to give credit for grant-aided works: see sections 20C and 20A respectively. All these statutory constraints upon the recovery of service charges were introduced by amendment before section 27A. Alleged non-compliance by the landlord with any of them could give rise to questions about the amount of recoverable service charges.
Against that backdrop of detailed statutory control of the recovery of service charges from residential tenants, section 27A provides for a generously worded jurisdiction of the FtT to determine whether a service charge is payable (section 27A(1)) or would be payable if specified costs were incurred (section 27A(3)). Although there is detail about payability in terms of payer, payee, amount, timing and payment method, and in subsection (4) about when the FtT’s jurisdiction may not be invoked, nothing is said expressly about the principles which the FtT is to apply in determining payability. The natural assumption is that the FtT would decide by reference to common law principles of contractual liability, subject to the detailed scheme for statutory control laid down in the immediately preceding provisions of the 1985 Act.
It is common ground that section 27A(6) is, viewed as a whole, plainly an anti-avoidance provision, designed to prevent specified types of contractual provisions designed to oust or limit the jurisdiction of the FtT conferred by the main operative provisions of section 27A. The key words are:
“void in so far as it purports to provide for a determination […] of any question which may be the subject of an application under subsection (1) or (3).”
An application under subsection (1) will necessarily be about the payability of an actual (i.e. already demanded) service charge. Under section 27A(3) it will be about the payability of a prospective service charge (i.e. before the costs are incurred). Questions arising under such an application are, presumably, questions of contractual entitlement and statutory regulation. To the extent that they are regulated neither by contract nor by statute, such as management decisions which the landlord is contractually entitled to make, they would not appear to fall within “questions” which may be the subject of an application under section 27A(1) or (3).
Generally speaking, the making of a demand upon a tenant for payment of a service charge in a particular year will have required the landlord first to have made a number of discretionary management decisions. They will include what works to carry out or services to perform, with whom to contract for their provision and at what price, and how to apportion the aggregate costs among the tenants benefited by the works or services. To some extent the answers to those questions may be prescribed in the relevant leases, for example by way of a covenant by the landlord to provide a list of specified services, or by a fixed apportionment regime. But even the most rigid and detailed contractual regime is likely to leave important decisions to the discretion of the landlord, such as whether merely to repair or wholly to replace a defective roof over the building, with major consequences in terms of that year’s service charge. Usually the conferring of this discretion on the landlord will be implicit, in order to give the lease business efficacy. But sometimes it may be express, as in the power of the landlord to re-apportion which is the subject of this case. It may be little more than happenstance whether these discretions are conferred expressly or implicitly.
Speaking again generally (and this is a necessary predicate in construing a statutory provision applicable across a wide range of landlord and tenant relationships), the jurisdiction of the FtT under section 27A(1) to decide whether a service charge demand is payable will extend to the contractual and/or statutory legitimacy of these discretionary management decisions. Thus, where the service charge enables the landlord to recover its cost of performing its repairing obligations under the lease, the replacement of a roof may give rise to questions whether replacement fell within the landlord’s repairing obligation (or rather whether it was an improvement) and whether, if it was a repair, the costs incurred satisfied the statutory reasonableness test in section 19. But, leaving aside section 27A(6) for the moment, it would not be a part of the FtT’s task to make those discretionary decisions itself, let alone for the first time. It would be too late, on an application under section 27A(1), and there would be no warrant either contractually in the lease or in the statutory regulatory regime under the 1985 Act for it to do so. If the landlord’s discretionary decision in question was unaffected by the statutory regime and fell within the landlord’s contractual powers under the lease, then there might at the most be a jurisdiction to review it for rationality: see Braganza v BP Shipping Ltd [2015] UKSC 17; [2015] 1 WLR 1661.
On an application under section 27A(3) in relation to a prospective service charge the FtT might well be invited to exercise its jurisdiction before the landlord made the relevant discretionary management decisions, but the jurisdiction would not thereby be enlarged from that described above merely because of the timing. Ignoring section 27A(6) for the moment, the FtT would still be limited to ruling upon the contractual and statutory legitimacy of the landlord’s proposal, coupled with a Braganza rationality review if necessary, which is really an aspect of the testing of contractual legitimacy. And the landlord would have to furnish the FtT with a sufficiently detailed plan of its proposals (including the relevant discretionary management decisions) to enable the FtT to rule prospectively upon the lawfulness of the service charge demand if the proposed works were carried out: see Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea v Lessees of 1-124 Pond House [2015] UKUT 395 (LC); [2016] L & TR 10 at paras 66-67.
If those would be the limits of the jurisdiction conferred upon the FtT by section 27A(1) and (3) then the question arises whether section 27A(6) extends it. There is no doubt that a provision in a lease for determination of a discretionary management question by the landlord falls within at least the literal meaning of the phrase “in a particular manner” within limb (a) of section 27A(6). But the bigger issue is whether, by apparently making such provision void, subsection (6) throws upon the FtT jurisdiction to decide all discretionary management matters thus supposedly removed from the power of the landlord. The answer depends upon whether such discretionary management matters are “question[s] which may be the subject of an application under subsection (1) or (3)”.
In my judgment discretionary management decisions of this kind are not such “questions”. My reasons follow.
First, thus to construe section 27A(6) would be to give it the effect of greatly adding to the jurisdiction of the FtT conferred by subsections (1) and (3) as already described, namely a jurisdiction to review a proposed or demanded service charge for contractual and statutory legitimacy. It would confer an original jurisdiction on the FtT to determine the service charge, including making the necessary discretionary management decisions itself wherever under the relevant lease they were, expressly or by necessary implication, conferred upon the landlord. But it is not lightly to be assumed that an anti-avoidance provision of this kind is intended to operate so as actually to extend the jurisdiction which it is seeking to protect. Ordinarily it should be construed, if it sensibly can, as leaving the scope of the protected jurisdiction where it already is.
Nor does a natural reading of the language of subsection (6) have the effect of extending the jurisdiction of the FtT in this way. Read as a whole, it protects the jurisdiction of the FtT to decide questions already within its jurisdiction under subsections (1) and (3), nothing more or less. It is only if “void in so far as it purports to provide for a determination in a particular manner” is read in isolation from the proper meaning of the phrase beginning with “question” that its propensity to increase the FtT’s jurisdiction becomes arguable.
Secondly, the construction which (as the Court of Appeal described it) transfers the landlord’s discretionary management powers relating to service charges to the FtT produces the most bizarre and surely unintended results. If subsection (6) first renders void and then transfers to the FtT the landlord’s discretionary management powers, then it is hard to see how a landlord could ever safely incur relevant costs without first making an application to the FtT for clearance of proposed service charges under subsection (3). So many of the underlying discretionary decisions may suggest different answers to reasonable minds that the landlord could never incur costs and safely levy service charges because of the risk that the FtT, being completely free to do so on an application by one of many tenants affected by the charge, could make a different decision. In sharp contrast, under the construction that the FtT is limited to a review of the contractual and statutory lawfulness of the service charge demanded, reasonable and well-advised landlords would (and do) incur the costs and then make the service charge demands on the basis that the risk of losing in the FtT on an application under section 27A(1) by one or more tenants is manageable. There is, in short, all the difference for a landlord between facing a regime under which the FtT has freedom to make a completely different discretionary decision from that made by the landlord, and one where the jurisdiction of the FtT is limited to deciding whether the landlord acted in breach of contract or in contravention of the statutory scheme regulating residential service charges.