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[2020] NSWSC 850
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Frimont v Case [2020] NSWSC 850 (3 July 2020)
Last Updated: 3 July 2020
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Supreme Court
New South Wales
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Case Name:
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Frimont v Case
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Medium Neutral Citation:
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Hearing Date(s):
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23 June 2020
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Date of Orders:
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3 July 2020
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Decision Date:
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3 July 2020
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Jurisdiction:
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Common Law
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Before:
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Davies J
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Decision:
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(1) Without disturbing the occupancy of Mark Frimont, judgment for the
plaintiff for possession of the land known as 282 Blaxlands
Ridge Road,
Blaxlands Ridge, New South Wales, being the whole of the land comprised in
certificate of title folio identifier Lot
4 in Deposited Plan
751658. (2) Leave to the plaintiff to issue a writ of possession to
enforce the judgment of the Court. (3) The defendant is to pay the
plaintiff’s costs of the proceedings.
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Catchwords:
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LAND LAW – possession of land – where plaintiff is
administrator of estate and is seeking an order for possession –
where a
contract for the sale of the land is pending – deceased died intestate
– letters of administration taken out
but administrator later died –
land not transmitted to earlier administrator - where estate has been in limbo
unadminstered
for many years – deceased’s son remained in occupation
of property after deceased’s death - where defendant moved
into property
to care for deceased’s son – where deceased’s son died - where
defendant remained in occupation and
commenced to pay portion of property rates
– whether a residential tenancy agreement arose between deceased’s
son and
defendant – whether residential tenancy agreement could be implied
between defendant and unadministered estate - where defendant
continues to pay
rates after plaintiff appointed administrator - whether residential tenancy
agreement arose by implication –
whether estoppel arose from prior payment
of rates – where no evidence that plaintiff knew of payments –
plaintiff entitled
to possession LEASE AND TENANCIES –
residential tenancy agreements – where land owned by unadministered estate
- whether residential
tenancy agreement arose by reason of occupation of land by
defendant and payment of rates by him – whether subsequently appointed
administrator estopped from claiming no residential tenancy agreement existed
– where no evidence of acceptance by administrator
of payment of
rates
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Legislation Cited:
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Cases Cited:
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Category:
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Principal judgment
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Parties:
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Pamela Elizabeth Frimont (Plaintiff) Donald Bruce Case (Defendant)
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Representation:
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Counsel: D Currie (Plaintiff) J Trebeck
(Defendant)
Solicitors: Payne Ross & Co (Plaintiff) H Weller
(Defendant)
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File Number(s):
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2020/24814
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Publication Restriction:
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Nil
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JUDGMENT
- The
plaintiff, Pamela Frimont, seeks possession of land at 282 Blaxlands Ridge Road,
Blaxlands Ridge. The plaintiff is the administrator
of the estate of the late
Albert Bruce Case (“Albert”) who died intestate on 11 April 1968.
- The
defendant is a grandson of Albert, and he moved into the property in 2010 to
look after his uncle, Robert Albert Case (“Robert”),
a son of
Albert. Robert died on 17 January 2011 but the defendant and his wife continued
to live in the property.
- The
plaintiff obtained Letters of Administration of Albert’s estate on 29
March 2018. Previously, Albert’s son Kenneth
Bruce Case (the
defendant’s father) obtained Letters of Administration of Albert’s
estate on 18 June 1968, but by the
time of his death on 1 October 2003
Albert’s estate remained unadministered, and the land at Blaxland’s
Ridge had not
even been transmitted into his name as administrator. Thereafter,
Albert’s estate remained in limbo until the grant of Letters
of
Administration to the plaintiff on 29 March 2018. The land was transmitted to
her as administrator on 27 April 2018. The plaintiff
then arranged for two
written notices to be given to the defendant to vacate, the first in November
2018 and the second on 15 May
2019.
- The
present proceedings were commenced on 24 January 2020. Shortly afterwards the
plaintiff as administrator entered into a contract
of sale to sell the land to a
company called Linder Property Projects Pty Ltd for $1.27 million. Because the
defendant was still
in occupation of the land, the contract contained special
condition 44 which gave an extended period, ultimately 18 months, to settle
the
sale with vacant possession.
- The
reason the land must be sold is that, since Albert’s death, a number of
beneficiaries of his intestate estate have themselves
died, and there are now
six persons entitled to share in Albert’s estate which, to all intents and
purposes, consists only
of the land at Blaxland’s Ridge. Those persons are
as follows:
1. The plaintiff, a daughter,
5/10ths
2. The defendant, a grandson, 1/10th
3. Robert Wayne Case, a
grandson, 1/10th
4. Patricia Dianne Jongkryg, a granddaughter, 1/10th
5. Sandra Lynette Case, a
granddaughter, 1/10th
6. Jennifer Marie Case, a granddaughter, 1/10th
- It
is not necessary to detail the position of each of the beneficiaries of
Albert’s will or who their beneficiaries were, whether
on intestacy or
pursuant to a will they made, when each of them has died. The entitlement which
I have set out is agreed between
the parties.
- Quite
apart from the need to administer an estate that has lain idle for 50 years,
there is the relatively pressing imperative of
the contract for the sale of the
land.
- The
principal issue between the parties is whether or not the defendant is entitled
to possession of the land by virtue of an arrangement
he claims to have made
with Robert when the defendant went into possession of the land or, as the
defendant puts it, an arrangement
with “the estate” following
Robert’s death on 17 January 2011, after which the defendant remained in
the residence
with his right to occupation unchallenged. The arrangement is said
to result in there being a residential tenancy agreement between
the estate and
the defendant.
- Section
13 of the Residential Tenancies Act 2010 (NSW) (“the
RTA”) relevantly provides:
13 Agreements that are residential tenancy agreements
(1) A residential tenancy agreement is an agreement under which a
person grants to another person for value a right of occupation of residential
premises for the purpose
of use as a residence.
(2) A residential tenancy agreement may be express or implied and may be oral or
in writing, or partly oral and partly in writing.
(3) An agreement may be a residential tenancy agreement for the purposes of this
Act even though –
(a) it does not grant a right of exclusive occupation,
or
(b) it grants the right to occupy residential premises together with the letting
of goods or the provision of services or facilities.
Note. See section 8 for agreements that are not covered by this Act.
Section 7 sets out premises not covered by this Act.
- The
“value” for the purposes of the RTA is said by the defendant to be
his contribution to the rates he paid on the property.
The defendant relies also
on an estoppel, asserting that upon the plaintiff acquiring the legal title to
the land, the estoppel was
"fed" with the result that the plaintiff is estopped
from denying that the estate is bound by the agreement from the beginning of
the
tenancy.
- A
great deal of evidence was filed on behalf of the defendant about the extent to
which he and his wife Peggy (who also lives on the
land), and other relatives,
worked on the land, and what he and Peggy did to assist Robert both before and
after they moved into
the property. Objection was taken to all of that evidence.
At the hearing, counsel for the defendant said that he did not read any
of it.
That was the correct approach, but the evidence should not have been put into
the affidavits in the first place. The case
never concerned working on the land.
The preparation of that evidence involved unnecessary costs.
- It
is important, first, to see how the defendant’s case is pleaded, then to
consider if the evidence led supports the case pleaded,
and then to determine if
the conclusions of law for which the defendant contends are made
out.
The pleading
- The
defendant, having said that Robert was in failing health, went on to
plead:
38. In about September, 2010, the Defendant, alternatively the
Defendant and his wife Peggy Lorraine Case, agreed to give up their
present
accommodation and move into the residence on the Land at that time occupied by
Robert Albert Case and provide domestic services
to Robert Albert Case.
Particulars
Conversation at the Residence in or about the date stated, between Robert Albert
Case and the Defendant and his wife Peggy Lorraine
Case (in which conversation
Plaintiff, the Plaintiff’s husband Walter Frimont and Robert Wayne Case
also participated).
39. Pursuant to the agreement referred to in the previous
paragraph, the Defendant and Peggy Lorraine Case moved from their then
current
residence and occupied the residence on the Land, and in accordance with their
agreement, provided domestic services including
cooking, cleaning, housekeeping
and personal assistance to Robert Albert Case until his death.
40. In the circumstances, there was a residential tenancy
agreement between Robert Albert Case as landlord and the Defendant
(alternatively,
the Defendant and Peggy Lorraine Case) as tenants.
...
43. Following the death of Robert Albert Case, in consideration
for remaining in occupation of the Residence, the Defendant and
his wife Peggy
paid half the rates and charges levied by Hawkesbury City Council in respect of
the Land, to the knowledge of the
Plaintiff.
44. The Defendant and his wife Peggy paid half the Council
rates and charges up to and including the 2017/2018 rating year, to
the
knowledge of the Plaintiff.
45. In the circumstances, there was a residential tenancy
agreement between the estate of Albert Bruce Case as landlord and the
Defendant
(alternatively, the Defendant and Peggy) as tenants of the Residence.
...
48. Following her appointment as administrator of the estate of
the late Albert Bruce Case, the Defendant and Peggy, to the knowledge
of the
Plaintiff continued to make payments towards half of the Council rates and
charges by various instalments, the last of which
was paid to Council on 20
August 2018 in the sum of $100, and the Plaintiff accepted the payments.
49. In the circumstances, there was a residential tenancy
agreement of the Residence between the Plaintiff as administrator of
the estate
of the late Albert Bruce Case as landlord and the defendant, alternatively, the
Defendant and Peggy, as tenant.
50. In the alternative, by the acceptance of half of the rates
as consideration for remaining in possession of the Residence and
remaining in
possession of the Residence for approximately eight years, the Plaintiff as
administrator encouraged the Defendant (alternatively,
the Defendant and Peggy)
to believe that they had a residential tenancy agreement, so they (sic) are
estopped from denying that there
was a residential tenancy agreement between the
Plaintiff as Administrator as landlord and the Defendant (alternatively, the
defendant
and Peggy) as tenant.
- The
defendant then goes on to plead that this Court has no jurisdiction by reason of
s 119 of the Residential Tenancies Act. Section 119
provides:
Prohibition on certain recovery proceedings in courts
A landlord or former landlord must not commence proceedings against a tenant or
former tenant of the landlord in the Supreme Court,
the District Court or the
Local Court to obtain recovery of possession of residential premises subject to
a residential tenancy agreement.
- In
the alternative, it is pleaded that the Defendant occupies the premises from
year to year, that such a tenancy is terminable on
one month’s notice
under s 127 of the Conveyancing Act 1919 (NSW), and that no such notice
has been given.
Submissions
- Mr
Trebeck of counsel for the defendant submitted that at the time the defendant
moved to the property he entered into “an arrangement”
with
“the major beneficiary of an estate” (being Robert) to provide
domestic services to him. Counsel submitted that
at that point there was a
residential tenancy agreement. He submitted that at the time Robert died, the
residential tenancy agreement
continued and has not been terminated. He
submitted that the death of the landlord does not mean that the residential
tenancy agreement
comes to an end. Counsel submitted that when the plaintiff
became the legal owner of the land, her “title was fed” as
an
estoppel. Counsel submitted that the estoppel commenced to operate at the time
of the arrangement because all of the relevant
beneficiaries of the estate
“submitted to or adopted or agreed with” the arrangement.
- The
matter was put on an alternative basis, that since the plaintiff became the
registered proprietor of the land, there was payment
of rent in accordance with
the agreement that had been made with Robert. Counsel submitted that a tenancy
at will came into operation
at that point and s 127 of the Conveyancing Act
operated to mean that there was a tenancy determinable by one month’s
notice in writing at any time. Counsel submitted further,
that if there's a 127 tenancy, then there must necessarily be, and if the 127 is
a dwelling house, a residence, then there must be
necessarily also be a
residential tenancy subject to the protection of the Residential Tenancies
Act.
Ultimately, Mr Trebeck abandoned any claim based on s
127 and a tenancy at will. He agreed that his case stood or fell on whether
he
could establish a residential tenancy agreement.
- Although
it was pleaded that the defendant’s purpose in moving to the house was to
look after Robert, it was not submitted that
the care given by the defendant to
Robert constituted the “value” for the purpose of s 13 of the RTA.
The only consideration suggested as “value” was the payment of some
of the rates.
The evidence
- The
evidence put forward by the defendant was left in a most unsatisfactory state,
particularly concerning the issue of “value”.
As I have indicated,
as a result of objections taken by counsel for the plaintiff, large portions of
the defendant’s affidavits
were not read. The result was that some
statements and events were left without context.
- The
defendant said in his affidavit sworn 19 May 2020 that at some unspecified time
after April 2004 when the defendant’s mother
died, he detected that
Robert’s health was going downhill. The defendant said that in September
2010 Robert told the defendant
and his wife Peggy that he was terminally ill.
Shortly afterwards he asked the defendant and Peggy to go up to the property.
What
was said at a meeting, which was also said to include the plaintiff and her
husband, was not in evidence because the defendant’s
counsel said that he
was not reading the paragraph which detailed what took place.
- The
defendant said that shortly after that meeting he and Peggy moved into the house
on the land. He said they continued to care for
Bob and worked the farm with the
help of their sons. He said that from shortly after the time he and Peggy moved
in, they paid one
half of the council rates each year, and continued to do so
until 2018 when the rates notices stopped coming to the post box. A similar
account of going to the property in 2010 and about the payment of the rates was
given by the defendant’s wife in an affidavit
sworn 19 May 2020.
- On
the other hand, both the plaintiff and her husband deny that they were ever at
such a meeting and deny that the plaintiff said
the things attributed to her.
- An
example of a statement being left without context occurs in the affidavit of
Robert Wayne Case of 15 May 2020. The only evidence
given by that witness is
that he could recall the plaintiff saying “It’s a good idea and Don
and Peggy can pay half the
rates. That will help Mark”. Even if I read
those parts of the affidavit which were not read in order to obtain the context,
being the meeting at Robert’s house, the evidence is not consistent with
the case pleaded. In the case pleaded, the first mention
of payment of rates is
“following the death of Robert”. However, it is pleaded that before
Robert’s death, and
on the defendant and Peggy moving into the house, a
residential tenancy agreement came into being, the consideration for which was
said to be the provision of domestic services to Robert.
- There
is nothing in the affidavit of Patricia Dianne Jongkryg which says anything
about the meeting. The affidavit simply says that
she was aware toward the end
of 2010 that Don and Peggy moved “into 282” when uncle Robert became
ill.
- Similarly,
the affidavit of Sandra Lynette Case says only:
6. In about September 2010, I saw that Don and Peggy had moved
in with Bob at 282 and were taking care of him.
- In
the affidavit of Peggy Lorraine Case, the deponent says only that when Bob
became very ill, they (she and the defendant) moved
into 282 after a meeting
with Bob, Pam, Wally, Robert, Don and her. No evidence is given about what
particular arrangements were
to be put in place.
- Jennifer
Marie Case in her affidavit of 26 May 2020 says only that she recalled that when
“uncle Bob” became ill, Donald
and Peggy moved into 282 Blaxlands
Ridge Road and they cared for him.
- There
is, therefore, no evidence about any agreement with anyone, or even an offer
from the defendant, to pay the rates. At its highest
for the defendant, there is
the statement deposed by Robert Wayne Case that the plaintiff said that
“Don and Peggy can pay
half the rates”, but the deponent does not
record any agreement by the defendant that he would do so. There is simply the
evidence
from the defendant that he did so.
- There
is a further difficulty about whether the plaintiff and her husband were present
at that meeting. Both the plaintiff and her
husband denied in their affidavits
that they attended the meeting alleged by the defendant and his wife, and both
denied that the
plaintiff ever said anything about them being able to help Mark
by paying half of the rates. Counsel for the defendant did not cross-examine
either the plaintiff or her husband concerning those denials. The matter was so
central to the defendant’s claims that, when
that absence of
cross-examination is coupled with the paucity of evidence on the
defendant’s side about the matter, I am not
prepared to find that the
plaintiff and her husband attended any such meeting. I accept the
plaintiff’s evidence and that of
her husband that they were not present
and that she did not say what it is alleged she
said.
Determination
- It
can be seen from the pleading that there are three different occasions when a
residential tenancy agreement is said to have come
into effect. The first was at
the end of 2010 when the defendant made the arrangement with Robert to move in
to the property. The
defendant does not submit that this was an agreement with
anyone other than Robert, but it is said to form the basis and context
for the
further residential tenancy agreement which came into effect after Robert died.
It is said also that this first agreement
has never come to an end, because the
death of the landlord does not result in a termination of the tenancy. The
second occasion
is when Robert died. The third occasion is when the plaintiff
became the Administrator or at least when the land was transmitted
to
her.
The first agreement – end of 2010
- There
are a number of difficulties associated with a conclusion that a residential
tenancy agreement came into being between Robert
and the defendant when the
Defendant and Peggy moved into the house. The first is that there is no
certainty about what care was
to be provided so that the care could be regarded
as constituting “value” for the purposes of s 13. For a lease at
common law to come into existence, there must be a term identifying the rent or
a mechanism for determining the rent:
Whitlock v Brew [1968] HCA 71; (1968) 118 CLR 445
at 456 and 460. Further, the party asserting that an agreement exists, must show
that there was an intention to create legal relations,
even although no
presumption exists that legal relations are not intended in a family
arrangement: Ermogenous v Greek Orthodox Community of S.A. Inc (2002) 209
CLR 95; [2002] HCA 8 at [26]. In my opinion, the evidence does not show that the
parties did intend to create legal relations. I note also that the claim was
not
put on the basis of some proprietary estoppel arising from promises by Robert in
return for which care was provided.
- If
I am in error in holding that there was no residential tenancy agreement between
Robert and the defendant, any such arrangement
was, at best, in the nature of a
sublease only. Robert was not the owner of the property. Indeed, on one view, he
was a trespasser
as far as the estate was concerned. However, even accepting
that he had a right to reside in the property and that the arrangement
with the
defendant amounted to a residential tenancy agreement, s 81(4) of the
Residential Tenancies Act applies. Section 81(4)(a)
provides:
81 Circumstances of termination of residential tenancies
...
(4) Other legal reasons for termination A residential tenancy agreement
terminates if any of the following occurs -
(a) a person having superior title (such as a head
landlord) to that of the landlord becomes entitled to possession of the
residential
premises,...
- Consequently,
any such agreement between Robert and the defendant terminated at the time the
plaintiff obtained Letters of Administration
on 29 March 2018 or at the latest
on 27 April 2018 when the land was transmitted to her.
The second
agreement – early 2011
- The
principal difficulty for the defendant in asserting that a residential tenancy
agreement came into effect in 2011 immediately
after Robert had died, is that
there was no “person” who could grant to the defendnat a right of
occupation of the premises.
Although Letters of Administration in Albert’s
estate had been taken out by Kenneth Bruce Case on 18 June 1968, Kenneth Bruce
Case had died on 1 October 2003. From that date until 29 March 2018 there was no
person in the position of a representative of the
estate. No one else had been
appointed administrator. As at 2010 the property was still registered in the
name of Albert Bruce Case.
Although under s 61 of the then Wills, Probate and
Administration Act 1898 (NSW) the real and personal estate of Albert Bruce
Case vested in the Public Trustee, that vesting was only “until probate,
or administration”. When Kenneth Bruce Case was appointed administrator
the estate vested in him although the transmission
was never recorded on the
title: see in that regard Spark v Neers [1971] 2 NSWLR 1 at 9. Until
Letters of Administration were obtained by the present plaintiff on 29 March
2018, the land remained registered in the
name of Albert Bruce Case and,
seemingly, vested in the estate of Kenneth Bruce Case.
- In
those circumstances there could not be an “agreement” under s 13(1)
because there was no person to enter into that
agreement with the defendant to
grant any right of occupation. Neither “the estate of Albert Bruce
Case” nor “the
estate of Kenneth Bruce Case” is a legal
person: GEL Custodians Pty Limited v The Estate of the late Geoffrey Francis
Wells [2013] NSWSC 973 at [64].
- There
is a further problem for the defendant. The “value” seemingly relied
upon to establish the residential tenancy agreement
with Robert disappeared on
his death. It is nowhere pleaded that it was a term of the arrangement with the
“estate” that
the defendant would pay half the rates or any rates.
The pleading is an assertion only that the defendant did so. The
“value”
in s 13 must form part of the agreement for the right to
occupy the premises. A unilateral decision by one party to undertake some
obligation voluntarily is not sufficient to satisfy s 13 unless, at least, that
obligation is accepted by the other party.
- Since
there was no representative of the estate in 2011, nothing that transpired at
that time resulted in the coming into existence
of a residential tenancy
agreement.
- Although
not pleaded, Mr Trebeck submitted (as noted earlier) that since all of the
beneficiaries of Albert’s estate in 2010
“submitted to or adopted or
agreed with” the arrangement, the estate was bound. First, no authority
was cited for this
proposition. Secondly, the evidence does not support it.
- At
the time the defendant moved to the property at the end of 2010, the respective
shares of the persons beneficially entitled to
the estate of Albert Bruce Case
were as follows:
1. Robert Albert Case, 5/9ths;
2. the plaintiff, 2/9ths; and
3. each of Donald Bruce Case, Robert Wayne Case, Sharon Fay
Case, Patricia Dianne Jongkryg, Sandra Lynette Case, and Jennifer Marie
Case,
3/81sts.
- The
plaintiff denied being at any meeting or agreeing to any arrangement whereby the
defendant would pay half the rates in return
for being allowed to live in the
property. I have already said that I accept that evidence. The defendant gives
no evidence of any
such arrangement. He says only that he did in fact pay half
of the rates. None of Patricia, Sandra or Jennifer gives any evidence
about it.
Sharon died in 2014, but none of the witnesses say that she was present when any
arrangement was made. Robert Wayne Case
asserts that the plaintiff said that the
defendant could pay half the rates, evidence I have rejected, but says nothing
about whether
he or anyone else agreed to that arrangement.
- A
further alternative way the matter was put by counsel for the defendant was that
the arrangement was made with Robert, who was the
major beneficiary of
Albert’s estate. It is not clear, however, that this arrangement was said
to be made by Robert on behalf
of the estate, or whether it is a reference to
the residential tenancy agreement pleaded between him and the defendant. If it
was
the former, although Robert was the major beneficiary of his father’s
estate as a result of devolutions by reason of his mother’s
will leaving
all her share to him, and from the intestacy in the estates of Kenneth Bruce
Case and Thelma June Case, Robert had no
interest, legal or equitable, in the
assets of Albert’s estate: Commissioner of Stamp Duties (Qld) v
Livingston (1964) 112 CLR 12 at 18-19. He could not enter into an agreement
on behalf of the estate.
The third agreement – after the
plaintiff became the Administrator
- The
third occasion when it is pleaded that a residential tenancy agreement arose was
when the plaintiff was appointed the Administrator
of Albert’s estate in
2018. The defendant said that he continued to make payment towards half of the
rates to the knowledge
of the plaintiff, and “the Plaintiff accepted the
payments”.
- Most
of the cross-examination of the plaintiff, her husband, the defendant and his
wife, was taken up with the issue of who paid what
amounts towards rates and
where they were paid. That evidence, assessed as a whole leads results in the
following findings:
(a) both the plaintiff and the
defendant paid portions of the rates between 2011 and 2018;
(b) the amounts paid by the plaintiff and the defendant on
each occasion were whatever each was able to afford at the time;
(c) some of the rates were also paid by the
plaintiff’s son Mark;
(d) the rates were often in arrears, leading to the issue of
summonses by the Council from time to time;
(e) the defendant did not prove that he paid half of the
rates;
(f) at various times between 2011 and 2018 the plaintiff
expected the defendant to make a contribution to the rates;
(g) the plaintiff rarely took rate notices with her when she
paid amounts towards the rates;
(h) receipts were not available for all of the amounts paid
by either party.
- The
plaintiff in her affidavit said that she paid all of the rates and levies on the
land, but later corrected that to say that she
paid half and Mark paid half. As
the evidence unfolded, especially when documents were obtained from the Council
showing when rates
were paid and by whom, it became clear that the defendant had
paid a proportion of the rates. The plaintiff said that she did not
know that
the defendant had paid any of the rates. When confronted with documents showing
that he had done so, she accepted that
he had. I had the impression from the way
she answered, that she was finding out for the first time by these questions
that the defendant
had paid some of the rates.
- As
noted above, the plaintiff did not usually take copies of rate notices when she
paid amounts for the rates. It was apparent from
her evidence that she had not
performed reconciliations which might have demonstrated that someone else was
also paying amount for
the rates. She was not cross-examined to suggest that she
had carried out reconciliations, nor to suggest that she did know the defendant
was paying them. I accept that the plaintiff did not know that the defendant was
paying the rates.
- Whilst
I accept the plaintiff’s evidence that she did not know that the defendant
paid any amounts towards the rates, I do not
accept her evidence that she did
not ask him to do so. While she may not have uttered those words, her husband
agreed that from time
to time when rate notices arrived they would deliver them
to the defendant so that he could pay the rates. The plaintiff said that
she
would talk to the defendant about the rates. It is difficult to understand what
there was to talk about, unless it involved discussion
of who would pay them or
contribute to them. Nevertheless, although she at least impliedly asked him to
do so and probably even expected
him to do so, she did not know he had done so.
That is likely to be because there appears to have been bad blood between them;
the
plaintiff’s husband said they did not speak for years.
- Although,
as I have indicated, the defendant does not prove that he paid half the rates, I
do not think anything turns on that. If
the payment of half the rates was part
of an agreement in return for which he was given a right of occupation, his
failure to pay
amounts totalling half would mean only that he was in breach of
that agreement. It would not, of itself, mean that there was no agreement
or
that he had not partly carried out any such obligation.
- While
I accept that, under s 13, a residential tenancy agreement may be implied, the
only matters relied upon here are the defendant’s
occupation of the
premises, and the fact that he paid amounts off the rates from time to
time.
- I
do not accept that those two factors mean that a residential tenancy agreement
should be implied. Not the least reason for that
is that nothing changed from
what had been occurring since 2011, notwithstanding that the plaintiff had
obtained Letters of Administration
on 29 March 2018. There is no evidence that
the plaintiff gave copies of the rate notices to the defendant after 29 March
2018 or
asked the defendant to pay them after that time. At best, for the
defendant, is the fact that he did in fact pay $100 for the rates
on 20 August
2018. There was no other evidence of amounts paid by the defendant after March
2018. I have already accepted that the
plaintiff did not know the defendant was
making payments. There was no acceptance by her of what he was in fact doing.
For an agreement
to be implied, there would need to be some act on the part of
the plaintiff from which an acceptance of what the defendant was doing
could be
inferred.
- The
defendant does not establish that a residential tenancy agreement came into
existence at or after 29 March 2018.
Estoppel
- The
estoppel claim is pleaded (at paragraph 50 of the Amended Defence) as being
based on acceptance by the plaintiff “as Administrator”
of the
defendant paying half the rates, and thereby her encouraging the defendant to
think that he had a residential tenancy agreement
between the defendant and the
plaintiff “as Administrator as landlord”. Such a pleading must refer
to a time after 29
March 2018 because only then did the plaintiff become
administrator. There was no evidence that the plaintiff accepted that the
defendant
paid the rates. On the contrary, I have found that the plaintiff did
not know that he had done so.
- The
estoppel claim was put differently in submissions. During oral submissions the
following exchange occurred (T 49):
TREBECK: When the plaintiff became the legal owner of the land, her title was
fed, I've pleaded it in the amended defence as an estoppel, and until she
became registered as proprietor, possibly when she became administrator
but I
think more correctly when she became registered as proprietor, then the
assumption of ownership, the fact of registration,
the fact of vesting of legal
ownership in the administrator fed the estoppel so as to preclude her from
denying that there had been an arrangement to which she was clearly
party, and everybody knew that there was this arrangement that they would
pay the rates.
...
HIS HONOUR: An estoppel could only exist if there was an arrangement between
Donald and/or Robert together and the estate on the
other hand, and no
arrangement was ever made with the estate to create an estoppel that could be
fed when somebody was appointed
to represent the estate.
TREBECK: The arrangement with the estate was an arrangement between all the
relevant beneficiaries of the estate. When they took
up possession Robert was, I
think, a five ninths beneficiary, the numbers are in the amended defence, all
the other people who had
an interest in the estate submitted to or adopted or
agreed with this arrangement. (emphasis
added)
(Although counsel referred to the plaintiff’s title
being fed, I think he meant to suggest that her coming into the title as
administrator fed the estoppel.)
- There
are a number of problems with this argument. First, there is no evidence that
the plaintiff was a party to the arrangement.
Only one of the defendant’s
witnesses says that the plaintiff suggested that the defendant could pay half
the rates, and I
have accepted the plaintiff’s evidence to the contrary.
No-one else says anything about such an agreement. Secondly, the evidence
does
not, as I have discussed, demonstrate that all the beneficiaries then entitled
to a share of Albert’s estate “submitted
to or adopted or agreed
with this arrangement”. Thirdly, the arrangement being spoken of is the
arrangement made between Robert
and the defendant. At best, that results in a
residential tenancy agreement with Robert but not the estate. If there was such
an
agreement s 81(4)(a) of the RTA operates on it from no later than when the
plaintiff as administrator demanded possession of the land on 9 November 2018,
7
December 2018 or 15 May 2019.
- The
defendant also relied in oral submissions expressly, and in the pleading
impliedly, on unconscionability. It was raised in oral
submissions in connection
with the assertion that all of the beneficiaries had agreed to the arrangement
of the defendant residing
on the land in return for payment of the rates.
Counsel submitted that it was unconscionable to renege on the deal.
- Considerations
of unconscionability do not arise here because the evidence does not demonstrate
any such arrangement. Further, the
defendant does not show that anyone
representing the estate (or even the plaintiff before she was Administrator)
made representations
or engaged in behaviour from which they were seeking to
withdraw. But in any event, even if they were, no unconscionability is involved
in that withdrawal. On the defendant’s case, he was entitled to live in
the property if he paid some of the rates. He has not
paid rates since August
2018. There is nothing unconscionable in that asserted arrangement being brought
to an end. Whether the plaintiff
is entitled to do so, by reason of whether a
residential tenancy exists, has been determined against the defendant, earlier
in this
judgment. There is no unconscionability that prevents that from
occurring.
- For
the above reasons, when the present proceedings were commenced there was no
residential tenancy agreement in place. The defendant
has no right to remain on
the land.
- I
make the following orders:
(1) Without disturbing the occupancy of
Mark Frimont, judgment for the plaintiff for possession of the land known as 282
Blaxlands
Ridge Road, Blaxlands Ridge, New South Wales, being the whole of the
land comprised in certificate of title folio identifier Lot
4 in Deposited Plan
751658.
(2) Leave to the plaintiff to issue a writ of possession to enforce the
judgment of the Court.
(3) The defendant is to pay the plaintiff’s costs of the
proceedings.
**********
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