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Rye v Rye: HL 1962

Two brothers were in partneship in unequal shares, but acquired a property for use by the business which they held in equal shares. They agreed a parol yearly tenancy between themselves as owners and as partners. After one died his son took over his father’s shares, but fell out with his uncle who now sought possession of the property under the lease.
Held: The lease would have been valid but for the prohibition against the conveyance of property by persons to themselves. The section in the 1925 Act relaxed that prohibition only to a limited extent as was allowed by a literal reading. The son occupied his room on the basis of his interest in the freehold. The lease was not valid so as to allow possession to be ordered against him. The destruction of a tenancy when it is surrendered reflects the principle that a person cannot at the same time be both landlord and tenant of the same premises. ‘Nemo potest esse tenens et dominus’: two individuals cannot grant a lease to themselves.
Lord Denning: ‘I have come to the clear opinion that even under the 1925 Act a person cannot grant a tenancy to himself: for the simple reason that every tenancy is based upon an agreement between two persons and contains covenants expressed or implied by the one person with the other. Now, if a man cannot agree with himself and cannot covenant with himself, I do not see how he can grant a tenancy to himself. Is the tenancy to be good and the covenants bad? I do not think so. The one transaction cannot be split up in that way. The tenancy must stand or fall with the agreement on which it is founded and with the covenants contained in it: and as they fall, so does the tenancy. And what about a notice to quit? If A grants a tenancy to himself A, can he mutter a notice to quit to himself and expect the law to take any notice of it? . . . The truth is that they cannot grant a tenancy to themselves.’
Lord Radcliffe: ‘He could, of course, put land in trust for himself by conveying it to a nominee, and, I suppose, if there was any conceivable point in the operation, he could similarly demise land to a nominee.’
References: [1962] AC 496, [1962] 1 All ER 146
Judges: Lord Denning, Lord Radcliffe
Statutes: Law of Property Act 1925 72(3)
Jurisdiction: England and Wales
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Last Update: 27 November 2020; Ref: scu.190571 br>

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