Covenants Flashcards
What is a covenant?
A type of contract in which the covenantor makes a promise to a convenantee to do, an affirmative covenant, or not to do some action, negative covenant.
Freehold Covenant
A promise made in a deed.
Leasehold Covenant
An agreement between a landlord and a tenant.
Implied Covenant
Implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing - general presumption.
What is voluntary waste?
Wilful destruction or carrying away of something attached to the property.
Must show that the waste was caused by an affirmative act of the tenant.
Such waste might occur if a life tenant chops down all the trees on the occupied land and sells them for timber.
Permissive Waste
An injury caused by an omission, rather than an affirmative act, on the part of the tenant.
Such waste might occur if a tenant permits a house to fall into disrepair by not making reasonable maintenance repairs.
Do normal contract rules apply?
Yes - must be legal.
Does the benefit of the covenant run with the land?
Yes it can at common law.
Test:
Established in Smith and Snipes Hall Farm Ltd v River Douglas Catchment Board [1949]
- It must touch and concern the land.
Test established in P&A Swift Investments v
Combined English Stores Group [1989]
-Must benefit covenantee whist they owned the
land.
-Covenant must affect the land itself.
-Cannot be expressed as personal.
-Can include payment as long as it is concerned
to the land. - Parties must have intended to benefit to run.
- Covenant must be attached to a legal estate.
Webb v Russell
Do burdens run at common law?
No.
Austerberry v Corporation of Oldham (1885):
Obligation to make up a road and keep it in good repair could not pass to a successor.
Re-affirmed by the House of Lords in Rhone v Stephens [1994].
Do burdens run at equity?
Yes they can.
Tulk v Moxhay Test:
- It must be substantially negative.
- Is there an expense incurred?
- Can they comply by doing absolutely nothing?
- Annexed to the land.
- Touch & concern test of common law.
- Plots proximate
- At the time of creation, the covenantee must have owned the land which was to benefit.
- Intended the benefit to run.
- Must be on the registered, otherwise unenforceable.
Is wording important?
Yes.
It is possible for someone to take benefit of a covenant who was not party to the deed. S.56 of LPA 1925.
Re Ecclesiastical Commissioners for Englands Conveyance [1936] Ch 430:
The effect of S.56 was that a person expressed in the conveyance to be one for whose benefit the covenant was made, was to be regarded as an original convenantee, even though he was not a party to the deed.
Amsprop Trading Ltd v Harris Distribution Ltd [1997]
Neuberger J disagreed. Only on specific wording can this be accomplished.
Express Annexation
Words of the covenant should show that the original parties intended the benefit to run;
- Expressly state that the covenant has been made for the ‘benefit of the named land’ - Rogers v Hosegood [1900]
- Estate owner.
Implied Annexation
The court can identify the benefited land by looking at the circumstances and facts which indicate with reasonable certainty the land which is to be benefited, the benefit will thereafter run with the land.
Building Schemes
Originally 4 rules established in Elliston v Reacher [1908] - Guidance.
- Common Vendor
- Before selling vendor must have laid out all the plots.
- Same restrictions must be imposed and must be clear that those plots will be benefited.
- Purchaser must be aware.
Intention of the parties to create a building scheme is the most important factor.
Benefits of Building Schemes
- The burden of positive covenants can run.
- Purchasers of plots within a scheme are enabled to enforce covenants, regardless of when they entered into a scheme.
- Equity will ensure the benefit will run without the need for compliance with formalities.