The Notices of Termination
10 At law a lease may be determined for a forfeiture incurred either by a breach of a condition in the lease or for the breach of any covenant where the lease contains a proviso for re-entry for the breach of that covenant. If a lessor re-enters upon a forfeiture the same estate becomes revested in him/her as was vested in him/her at the time of granting the lease. The re-entry does not put an end to the lessee's liability for damages for breach of the lease.
11 A lessor's power to enforce a forfeiture is restricted. It is restricted by statute (eg s 146 of the Property Law Act) and relief from forfeiture may be granted, either under s 146(2) or by a court of equity on such terms, if any, as to costs, expenses, damages and compensation as the court thinks fit.
12 Section 146 relevantly provides:
(1) A right of re-entry or forfeiture under any proviso or stipulation in a lease or otherwise arising by operation of law for a breach of any covenant or condition in the lease, including a breach amounting to repudiation, shall not be enforceable, by action or otherwise, unless and until the lessor serves on the lessee a notice -
(a) specifying the particular breach complained of; and
(b) if the breach is capable of remedy, requiring the lessee to remedy the breach; and
(c) in any case, requiring the lessee to make compensation in money for the breach -
and the lessee fails, within a reasonable time thereafter, or the time not being less than fourteen days fixed by the lease to remedy the breach, if it is capable of remedy, and to make reasonable compensation in money, to the satisfaction of the lessor, for the breach.
(2) Where a lessor is proceeding, by action or otherwise, to enforce or has enforced without the aid of the Court or the County Court such a right of re-entry or forfeiture, the lessee may apply to the Court for relief; and the Court may grant or refuse relief, as the Court, having regard to the proceedings and conduct of the parties under the foregoing provisions of this section, and to all the other circumstances thinks fit; and in case of relief may grant it on such terms (if any) as to costs, expenses, damages, compensation, penalty or otherwise, including the granting of an injunction to restrain any like breach in the future, as the Court, in the circumstances of each case, thinks fit.
13 It is to be noted that the restriction imposed by s 146(1) on the right to forfeit a lease may require consideration of whether the breach is capable of remedy. If it is capable of remedy, a reasonable time (or 14 days if specified in the lease) must be allowed for the tenant to take the necessary steps. If it is not capable of remedy then, if a notice has to be given at all, 14 days is sufficient notice.
14 The lease of the Golden Fleece Hotel specifies 14 days as the time Tsourlinis Distributors must give Upday to remedy any breaches of the lease.
15 The first notice was served on 30 April 2010. It relied on the appointment of the receivers and administrators as the breach of lease which justified its termination. The notice is of no effect. Prior to NAB taking security over the assets of the Munday group it obtained the consent of Tsourlinis Distributors to mortgage the lease. The deed pursuant to which Tsourlinis Distributors granted that consent provides, among other things, that Tsourlinis Distributors will:
• Permit [NAB] to enter into possession of the lease premises for the purpose of exercising its rights under its Mortgage.
• Not treat the exercise by [NAB] of any of its rights and powers under the Mortgage as a default under the Lease on which the Lessor is entitled to rely to exercise any power or right under the Lease.
16 For its part NAB agreed that it:
• [W]ill notify the Lessor of its intention to enforce its Mortgage against the Lessee and provide the Lessor with a copy of any notice of default which it serves on the Lessee.
17 The effect of the deed is that Tsourlinis Distributors cannot rely on the appointment of receivers as giving rise to a right to terminate the lease. This is so notwithstanding that NAB did not, in breach of its promise, give prior notice of the appointment. The reason is that I do not treat Tsourlinis Distributors' promises as conditional upon NAB observing its promises: ie they are not inter-dependent provisions. If NAB breaches its promise (eg to notify the lessor of its intention to enforce the mortgage), it may be liable in damages for the breach. But its rights under the mortgage are not lost.
18 The deed does not expressly deal with the appointment of administrators. However, the administrators were appointed by NAB under s 436C of the Corporations Act 2001 (Cth). That section permits a chargee (eg a debenture holder) of a company's assets to appoint an administrator to the company. It is, therefore, by reason of its mortgage that NAB was able to act under s 436C. On a proper reading of the deed, the appointment of an administrator should be treated as an exercise by NAB of a "power or right" under the mortgage.
19 The second notice was served on 15 July 2010. For this notice Tsourlinis Distributors relied on the successful application by Upday to vary the liquor licence applicable to the demised premises. That application was made without Tsourlinis Distributors' consent. The licence had provided that the maximum capacity for the hotel was 752 persons. On 4 January 2010 Upday applied to Liquor Licensing Victoria to reduce the capacity to 352 persons. The application was approved on 16 January 2010. The second notice gave Upday 14 days within which to remedy the breach and make reasonable compensation. Upday wrote to Liquor Licensing Victoria requesting that the capacity be increased, but the application was not approved by the end of the 14 day period. Accordingly, Tsourlinis Distributors sent a letter advising that the lease was terminated.
20 Prior to the purported termination, namely on 6 July 2010, the receivers had sought Tsourlinis Distributors' consent to the variation of the liquor licence. Tsourlinis Distributors refused to give that consent.
21 Initially the receivers argued that the refusal by Tsourlinis Distributors to consent to the variation was unreasonable because (1) Upday had applied to Liquor Licensing Victoria to increase the capacity of the hotel and, (2) Tsourlinis Distributors would not suffer any loss as a result of the reduction in capacity. On this latter point the receivers tendered evidence from Mr Macey, a valuer. He said that given the current mix of trade, the reduced patron numbers would only become an issue if the first floor was refurbished to provide function accommodation (it was used for non-operational purposes at the time) and it would only be an issue during special one-off events. In addition, Mr Gray, the venue manager of the Golden Fleece, said that the hotel rarely accommodated more than 350 patrons. Finally, Mr Parsons, the administration manager of the Golden Fleece, deposed that he was confident that the liquor licence as varied would not result in any patrons being turned away and that a maximum of 350 patrons would have been an appropriate maximum patron number during his entire 15 years working at the Golden Fleece.
22 Whether or not the reduction in capacity had an adverse effect was contested. Mr Nash, a hospitality consultant and assistant manager of the Golden Fleece from 1994-6, deposed that to operate the business at its maximum profitability, he would have a maximum licence of at least 700 patrons to give the operator greater flexibility of the hotel and to minimise the chance of turning patrons away. Ms Freeman, a property valuer engaged by Tsourlinis Distributers, said that the reduced patronage could reasonably be expected to negatively impact on the earning capacity of the business.
23 In my view the reduced capacity at least limited the potential future use of the Golden Fleece, which would likely diminish the value of the business.
24 As events turned out, although well after the expiry of the 14 day notice period, Liquor Licensing Victoria increased the capacity of the hotel to 739 persons, the difference with the original capacity being 13 persons. It is common ground that the increase to near the former capacity means that Tsourlinis Distributors is now no worse off. Still, there was a breach of the lease which justified the service of the second notice.
25 The third notice was served on 12 August 2010. In addition to reliance upon the earlier breaches, this notice related to the failure by Upday to observe the repair and maintenance covenants in the lease. The notice had attached to it a schedule of defects: in all there were 48 alleged defects. The defects range from the absurdly trivial (eg beer stains on the carpet - remember this is a hotel where patrons are supposed to drink) to the more serious (eg damage to ceiling and light fittings including loose electrical wiring extending from the ceiling). Upday was given 14 days to remedy the defects and pay compensation.
26 The receivers dispute that some defects were the tenant's responsibility, contending they were the consequence of a problem with the roof drainage system, a structural deficiency. Nonetheless, the receivers attended to some, but not all the works, prior to the letter of termination which was served on 29 October 2010. At the trial, NAB undertook to have the remainder of the defects rectified by 23 December 2010.
27 The fourth notice was served on 29 October 2010. This notice was based on the failure by Upday to comply with cl 7.10 of the lease (the right of first refusal clause). Here the contention is that Upday, through the receivers, had formed the desire to dispose of the residue of the lease and, so, Upday was required to offer it to Tsourlinis Distributors.
28 In my view, the trigger to the operation of cl 7.10 is not, as Tsourlinis Distributors would have it, the subjective desire by the tenant to dispose of the residue of the lease. (Here I am assuming in Tsourlinis Distributors' favour that the intention of the receivers to dispose of the lease is to be attributed to Upday rather than NAB) More is required. What is necessary is a desire to sell the residue on particular terms and conditions, including price, which an actual "bona fide purchaser" is willing to accept. In the absence of an actual bona fide purchaser, Upday is not in a position to offer the residue to Tsourlinis Distributors on the "same" terms as are acceptable to a bona fide purchaser. The notion that the clause comes into operation at the moment the tenant says to itself "I want to sell" is simply unworkable and, in any event, not what was intended.
29 I find support for my conclusion in several cases including Re Sedgefield Steeplechase Co (1927) Ltd [2000] 2 BCLC 212; Scotto v Petch [2001] BCC 889; Tiffany Investments Ltd v Bircham & Co Nominees (No 2) Ltd [2004] 2 P & CR 144.
30 There is another way Tsourlinis Distributors puts its case. As it is quite complex, it is best if I take it from the submissions of Mr Lucarelli QC who with Mr Williams appeared for Tsourlinis Distributors. It runs like this. The combined operation of cls 7.10 and 10.7 provides for a two-stage process when an assignment is contemplated by the tenant. First the tenant must comply with cl 7.10 (ie it must give Tsourlinis Distributors a right of first refusal). If the landlord accepts the offer, cl 10 is not invoked as the landlord acquires the residue. If the landlord does not accept the offer then the provisions of cl 10 must be complied with (ie Upday must procure Tsourlinis Distributors' consent to an assignment). This reading of the lease, so the argument goes, prevents a "de facto" or "back door" assignment where instead of the tenant disposing of the residue of the lease the owners of the shares in the tenant dispose of them.
31 As to the argument about the construction and effect of cl 7.10 and cl 10.7 it is, in my view, clear that cl 7.10 does not prevent a shareholder of the tenant disposing of its shares without the tenant first having offered the residue of the term to the landlord. Clause 10.7 is confined in its operation to assignments and subletting, the subject of cl 10. That is, it does not operate outside that clause. A similar conclusion was reached by Goldberg J in Kawasaki (Australia) Pty Ltd v ARC Strang Pty Ltd (2008) 247 ALR 333, 344-5 for reasons that I could adopt. Nor, more importantly, does the lease prevent a change in the beneficial ownership of a trust that is the true "owner" of the demised premises. If there can be a change in the beneficial ownership of the trust without triggering cl 7.10, it is difficult to see why a change in shareholding should have a different effect. The result is that the sale to the MRC does not constitute a breach of the lease. Thus, the fourth notice is of no effect.
32 As sometimes happens in litigation, a case is made in running. That is what happened here. On the third day of the trial, the receivers produced heads of agreement dated 17 August 2009 between Upday and Dominion Hotel Group (Vic) Pty Ltd. The heads of agreement record that on that day (ie 17 August 2009) Upday agreed to sell to Dominion Hotel Group the Golden Fleece Hotel, together with all of the plant and equipment used in the hotel business, for $7.5 million. A deposit of $100,000 was paid. The balance of the deposit ($275,000) was due on the exchange of formal contracts.
33 The heads of agreement had several conditions. One was that the purchaser have ten business days within which to complete "a due diligence" investigation. Dominion Hotel Group requested an extension of the due diligence period, which was refused by the solicitors for the Munday group. As a consequence the sale did not proceed.
34 As Mr Peters SC, who with Mr Senathirajah appeared for the receivers, fairly acknowledged, Upday should have, but did not, offer to sell the residue of the term to Tsourlinis Distributors upon the terms set out in the heads of agreement. Unsurprisingly, immediately following the production of the heads of agreement, Tsourlinis Distributors served the fifth notice, relying on the failure by Upday to offer the premises to it on those terms and conditions. In view of the sale of the hotel to MRC, Upday had no intention of offering to sell the hotel to Tsourlinis Distributors in the terms set out in the heads of agreement or at all. In other words, it remained in breach and had no intention of rectifying the breach.