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Davies v Property &
Reversionary Investments Co Ltd [1929] 2 KB 222
Facts:
The plaintiff was a tenant of a flat of which
the defendants were the landlords.
Rent was in arrears and distress was levied by a
certificated bailiff and a notice of distress was
served on the plaintiff, which read
"Take notice that by virtue of an authority to
me given I have this day seized and distrained the
goods and chattels specified in the following
inventory, Sitting room [various articles - e.g.,
Carpet, 2 bookcases, sideboard] Bedroom [various
articles, e.g. four pictures, wardrobe and all
other goods upon the premises (unless specially
exempt) sufficient to satisfy the amount of this
distress and expenses."
Goods not specifically named in the notice but
coming within the concluding words of the notice
were sold. The plaintiff brought an action against
the defendants claiming damages for illegal
distress which was referred to an Official Referee
who held that the sale was illegal on the ground
that the above notice was insufficient. The
defendants appealed.
Judgment of Talbot J:
"The point raised in this action is that, so far
as relates to the goods not mentioned by name in
the notice, that tsale was illegal, because no
notice of distress, so far as those goods are
concerned, had been given to satisfy the
requirements of the Act of William and Mary. Of
course it is well known that that Act was passed in
the interest of landlords, to add to their
facilities for recovering rent by enabling them to
do that which, before the Act was passed; they
could not do - namely, sell goods taken in
distress. Before that Act, all the right they had
was to detain them as pledges, as the preamble
says, for enforcing the payment of the rent; and
the preamble goes on to add that "persons
distraining have little benefit thereby"; and it
was in order to give them more benefit that this
Act was passed. It enacts by section 2 that: "where
any goods or chattels shall be distrained for any
rent reserved and due upon any demise, lease, or
contract whatsoever, and the tenant or owner of the
goods so distrained shall not within five days next
after such distress taken, and notice thereof (with
the cause of such taking) left at the chief mansion
house," and so on.
Then: "after such distress and notice as
aforesaid, and expiration of the said five days,
the person distraining shall and may" - then
various formalities. Then: "cause the goods and
chattels so distrained to be appraised, " and after
such appraisement shall and may lawfully sell them
to the amount specified of the rent for which the
said goods and chattels shall be distrained, and
charges, and so on. It is obvious, therefore, that
it is a condition precedent to the right of the
landlord to avail himself of the indulgence given
by this statute, that he should have done what the
statute requires, the object of which is perfectly
plain - namely, that the goods shall not be sold
until the owner of the goods or the tenant of the
premises shall have had an opportunity of
replevying and giving proper security. The question
therefore is whether the notice which has been
given in this case, the material parts of which I
have read, is a notice of distress (the words of
the Act being "notice thereof") within the meaning
of the Act of Parliament. The learned Official
Referee has decided that as to goods which are only
covered, if they are covered at all, by the words
at the foot of the notice "and all other goods upon
the premises (unless specially exempt) sufficient
to satisfy the amount of this distress and
expenses, " this is not a good notice within the
statute of the goods taken, which is what the
statute requires it to be a notice of.
It is obvious that if this matter were being
decided afresh this is a question which might
permit of very considerable debate, and it might
well be said that there are two alternative
meanings which can he given to the statute:
firstly, that every article distrained and intended
to be sold or as to which the power of sale is
claimed or reserved, must he specified in the way
in which things are specified in a detailed
inventory. I gather from that that was so decided
at nisi prius (a trial under the old civil rules),
in two cases before the case of Wakenian v Lindsey,
to which I will come in a moment. That would be one
alternative. Of course that would be the most
complete and businesslike way of giving the tenant
or the owner of the goods, as the case might be,
exact notice of what goods of his, or what goods on
the premises in the case of the tenant, were in
peril.
The other alternative would be that it is not
necessary to give a detailed inventory or a
detailed description of anything, but that it is
enough to say: "1 have distrained all the goods on
the premises, and they will be sold if you do not
replevy them." That is a matter that has not been
argued and one which may arise some other time. It
might be said those are the two alternatives and
that one must adopt one or the other, and it is
obvious that there are arguments for and against
both, both on the actual wording of the statute
(perhaps the only thing that can be considered) and
on the convenience and reasonableness of the
matter.
The embarrassment which has been caused here is
that there are two cases in which this precise
point was dealt with, that is, the meaning of the
words "notice thereof" in the statute of William
and Mary. There are two cases in which the Courts -
both Courts of great authority - have had to
consider whether a notice very much resembling in
general form the notice in this case was a
sufficient compliance with the statute.
The cases are Wakeman v Lindsey and Kerby v
Harding. In Wakeman v Lindsey the action was, as it
is here, for an illegal sale of goods distrained,
and on the ground, as here, that the notice did not
cover the goods sold. The form of the notice is set
out in the report. After a very short inventory,
the whole of which was this: "Tap room, one clock
and weights, etc., etc.," it went on: "and any
other goods and effects that may be found in and
about the said premises"; then there is a comma,
for what it may be worth; then: "to pay the said
rent and expenses of this distress." The case was
tried by Erie J and it was submitted that the
notice was defective and legally no notice, and on
that point the learned judge is recorded to have
agreed with the counsel for the defendants, and to
have held that the notice was sufficient in law. As
has been pointed out in the argument which we have
heard from the learned counsel for the appellant,
it was assumed by the Court of Queens Bench, in
which the rule was moved and granted, that the
intention was to distrain everything on the
premises. But the Court evidently felt very great
difficulty about the case, and I should gather from
the judgments that it was new and surprising to
them that a notice in this form should be
adopted.
Patteson J,
"The wording of this form is extraordinary," and
"perhaps the fair interpretation may be, all that
are there; and, if in fact the broker, has taken
everything without exception, the practice may be
very bad and loose, but I cannot say that it
vitiates the sale." Coleridge J. is perhaps still
more doubtful about it. He says: "I have felt
doubt, and decide with reluctance." He says: "The
object of [the] statute Distress for Rent Act 1689
was that the party distrained upon should have
notice of what was taken," and he says that in his
opinion the language of the notice in that case was
not fair notice.
He goes on, as did Patteson J, to say that the
landlord distraining "may assume that the tenant
knows sufficiently what [the goods distrained] are,
and that to say "all" is enough. I do not feel
justified in laying down that, in such a case,
there must be a specification.". He decided with
very great hesitation and evidently with great
disapproval of the form which had been adopted.
Erle J, who had originally tried the case, gave
the last judgment, and he also expresses his
dislike of the form of words. He says: "There is
evil in the use of such forms; yet there may be
more if a landlord is held liable to an action for
the use of words somewhat too general, and if it is
rendered necessary that at the time of making a
distress every thing must be brought out for the
purpose of being described and numbered." Then his
final words are very material, I think, because
they illustrate or define the difference between
Wakeman v Lindsey and the case of Kerby v Harding.
He says: "The word "all" does give a description;
so far that, if all be more than is required, the
landlord is in peril for having taken too much." It
is, of course, perfectly true in a sense that the
word "all" does give a description; that is to say,
however tedious the process may he, if one says one
has taken all the goods on the premises, then it is
only a question of going through them one by one
and one finds exactly what has been distrained.
Then we come to the other case: Kerby v Harding.
It is upon this that the learned Official Referee
has decided the present case, and in his opinion -
and perhaps there are not many opinions on such a
point which are entitled to more weight - it is
indistinguishable from the case which is now before
the Court. That was an action, in substance, for
selling goods without a proper notice under the
statute. The words of the notice are not unlike the
words of the notice in Wakeman v Lindsey, but they
are different. They are general words after some
particular chattels enumerated and described -
namely, "and all other goods, chattels, and effects
on the said premises that may be required in order
to satisfy the above rent, together with all the
expenses."
This case was tried before Parke B. It is
needless for me to say anything about the authority
of Parke B. He had tried the case in the first
instance, and he also gave the considered judgment
of the Court upon the rule. What happened at the
trial was this. The defendant said that Wakeman v
Lindsey was an authority in favour of the
sufficiency of the notice and that it was precisely
in point; and so fine is the distinction between
the two cases that Parke B, upon that authority
being cited to him, ruled that the notice was
sufficient; and it was upon that ground that the
rule nisi for a new trial on the ground of
misdirection was obtained, the jury having found a
verdict for the defendant.
From the report on the argument, it appears that
the same points were discussed there as have been
discussed here. The learned counsel who appeared in
support of the rule had to deal, of course, with
Wakeman v Lindsey, and he said this: The case of
Wakeman v Lindsey, when examined, will be found
very distinguishable from the present. The notice
there included all the goods on the premises,
whilst the present notice leaves the particular
goods seized in uncertainty." That was the
argument, and that, in substance, is the ratio of
the decision given by the Court.
I pause for a moment to call attention to the
very great authority of Kerby v Harding, a decision
on the precise point which is raised in the present
appeal. We have the decision in Wakeman v Lindsey
on facts so similar that Parke B accepted that
judgment as decisive of the case before him. His
ruling was challenged before the Court of
Exchequer, of which Parke B, I gather, was
President, for the report does not say that the
Chief Baron was present - and he delivered the
judgment. Having heard this matter fully argued,
and of course there having been much more
opportunity of considering it than there had been
at nisi prius, he came to the conclusion that he
had been wrong in following the case of Wakeman v
Lindsey, and that that case was distinguishable
from the case then before the Court. One can hardly
imagine a stronger decision, because not only is
there the great authority of the Court of Exchequer
of 1851, but there is the fact that Parke B,
certainly one of the most learned and accurate
judges who ever sat in an English court, came to
the conclusion, on argument, that he had been wrong
in his direction at nisi prius, and gave judgment
making the rule absolute for a new trial. I think
the grounds upon which he did that are stated, as
they always are in Parke Bs judgments, with
perfect lucidity and freedom from ambiguity. He had
to deal there with the words which I have already
read: "and all other goods, chattels, and effects
on the said premises that may be required in order
to satisfy the above rent, together with all the
expenses."
I will read three or four passages from the
judgment which show, I think, perfectly clearly
what the decision was. Parke B says: "Upon
consideration, we think that the terms of this
notice are too vague, and do not point out any
certain goods, chattels, or effects, except those
which are before enumerated, which are the subject
of the distress." Then he calls attention to the
statute, and a little lower down he says: "It
appears to us the statute not only requires the
cause of taking to he mentioned, but also a notice
to he given "thereof," that is, of the distress
taken, which must include every thing taken." Then
he refers to the fact that before the statute no
notice at all was necessary, and he goes on: "This
statute clearly requires some notice of the taking;
and we think that, according to the reasonable
construction of the statute, the notice ought to
inform the tenant or the person whose effects are
taken, by expressing what are the goods taken, and
also what is the amount of rent in arrear. The
general description, "any other goods, chattels,
and effects on the premises, or in and about the
premises," according to the decision of the Queens
Bench, is sufficient."
That is, I think, a perfectly accurate
description of the decision in Wakeman v Lindsey.
Whether the Court were right or wrong in reading
the notice there as having that meaning is another
matter and quite unnecessary for us to consider
here, but it is quite clear that they decided that
it was a good notice because they construed the
notice as meaning that all the goods were taken;
and if it did mean that, then, in the words of Erle
J, the word "all" does itself give a description
which covers everything that is on the premises;
and that, Parke B says in Kerby v. Harding was the
decision in Wakeham v Lindsey. He continues: "But
this notice does not impound all the goods on the
premises, but only the goods, chattels, and effects
that may be required in order to satisfy the rent
mentioned in it. This notice leaves it uncertain
what goods are taken; and therefore we think that
it is not sufficient, and that the subsequent sale
of any of the articles not included by name in the
inventory itself is an illegal sale, for which the
defendants are responsible." Parke B meant that the
tenant or the owner of the goods would be unable to
put his hand on any particular chattel and say:
This is taken, or is not taken.
There is no doubt - it is sufficiently obvious
from the argument to which we have listened - that
these two cases leave the law in a somewhat
unfortunate and inconvenient condition; but if the
ordinary principles upon which cases are to he
weighed are to he observed it is impossible to see
how light can be more decisively obtained from a
decision than from the decision of Kerby v Harding.
Not only, as I have said, is it a case of the very
greatest authority, but it deals specifically with
Wakeman v Lindsey, which is compared with it, and
which appears on its face to be in conflict with
it, and states in perfectly clear terms what the
difference between them is.
In my opinion, it being quite clear that we
ought to follow Kerby v Harding, the only question
is whether it can be distinguished from the case
before us. Of course, unless the words are
absolutely the same, one can always suggest some
ground of distinction, but the question is whether
there is any real ground of distinction. The words
in Kerby v Harding are: "All other goods, chattels,
and effects on the said premises that may be
required in order to satisfy the above rent,
together with all the expenses." The words here
are: "And all other goods upon the premises (unless
specially exempt) sufficient to satisfy the amount
of this distress and expenses." The words are not
the same, but for my part I can see no distinction
in meaning between "all goods ... that may he
required in order to satisfy the above rent" and
"all goods upon the premises, sufficient to satisfy
the amount of this distress." They mean precisely
the same thing; and if it be true, as the Court of
Exchequer said, that the notice in Kerby v Harding
left it uncertain what goods were taken, so, in my
opinion, does the notice here.
I should like to add that the fact that the
learned Official Referee considered that the case
was absolutely indistinguishable from Kerby v
Harding adds greatly to the confidence which I feel
in coming to the same conclusion. In my opinion the
learned Official Referee was perfectly right. I
think I agree with every word of his judgment; I
certainly do so with the whole of the substance of
it, and the appeal must be dismissed with
costs.
Humphreys J:
"I concur, and 1 do so upon the ground stated in
the judgment of the learned referee, where he says:
"I confess, having considered the form of this
notice and the form and the reasoning in the case
of Kerby v Harding, as expressed in Parke Bs
judgment, I cannot differentiate the notice in this
case from the notice in that case."
If the decision in Kerby v Harding, which was a
considered decision of the full Court, consisting
of some of the most eminent judges who have graced
the Bench of England, is to be reconsidered, it
having been delivered in the year 1851, at least it
cannot be by this Court today. I entirely agree
with my Lord that we are bound to follow that case.
Therefore the only question that I think we are at
liberty to consider, in spite of the exceedingly
able argument of Mr Eddy, is: Is it possible to
distinguish the notice given in this case from the
terms of the notice which was decided to be a bad
notice in Kerby v Harding? My view of the two
cases, which are certainly the two most important
cases which have been referred to here, quite
shortly is this. In Wakeman v Lindsey it was
assumed that the person who distrained intended to
distrain upon all the goods that were upon the
premises, and as between the landlord and the
tenant the Court came to the conclusion, though
with considerable hesitation, that the expression,
"any other goods and effects that may be found in
and about the said premises, " was an indication
that all the goods which in fact were upon the
premises were then seized; and the Court held -
and, I think, this is the only decision in that
case - that if a notice states sufficiently clearly
that the seizure is a seizure of all the goods upon
the premises, it is not necessary to set out the
goods in detail in the form of an inventory or
otherwise. Then came the case of Kerby v Harding,
and the distinction which was drawn by Parke B in
his judgment and taken by all the judges who agreed
in that judgment, between the notice in that case
and the notice in Wakeman v Lindsey, consisted in
the introduction of four words in the notice in the
later case, Those four words are the words, "that
may be required," so that the notice read as being
a notice that there had been taken in distress "all
other goods, chattels, and effects on the said
premises" - so far it was clearly an intimation
that the distress extended to all the goods, but it
continued, "that may be required in order to
satisfy the above rent." The decision of Kerby v
Harding is a decision, as I read it, to the effect
that because of those words the notice in that case
was not a notice which made it sufficiently certain
what goods were taken; to use the language of the
judgment itself: This notice leaves it uncertain
what goods are taken; and therefore we think that
it is not sufficient."
In the present case it has been pointed out by
Mr. Eddy, and I was struck by his argument, that
the four words in the notice in Kerby v Harding are
not to be found. The material words of the present
notice are, "all other goods upon the premises
(unless specially exempt) sufficient to satisfy the
amount of this distress and expenses." I have
endeavoured to distinguish the words in this case
from the words in the notice in Kerby v Harding,
but, like my Lord, I have found myself unable to do
so.
The words, of course, are different, but the
language seems to me to be the same. I, therefore,
agree with the learned Official Referee that it is
impossible to distinguish Kerby v Harding from this
case."
Result
Inventories have a dual purpose.
Say what goods have been levied.
It must accompany a Regulation 15 Controlled Goods Agreement or goods be removed
Excluded from seizure:
Loose goods such as corn, unless in a cart
(this was altered by the Distress for Rent Act
1689 s.2)
Perishable produce such as fruit and
vegetables
Loose money (unless contained in a purse or
cash box) because the identical goods had to be
restored to the tenant.
Inventories must
Inform the debtor exactly what has been
levied, should he wish to challenge this or
apply for replevin and knows what should not be
disposed of or removed.
If goods not included on the inventory were
later to be removed, it enables the debtor to
take court action.
Protects the creditor by showing the items
against which the debt is now secured.
It guides a bailiff later sent to remove
what goods may lawfully be removed.
It enables a bailiff later sent to remove
whether or not there has been a
poundbreach.
Enables third party claimants to seized
goods to initiate third party claim action.
Tells other bailiffs the goods cannot be
impounded again.
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