Case LawGhana
OSEI VRS INNOVA HOLDINGS LTD (J4/68/2023) [2025] GHASC 7 (11 February 2025)
Supreme Court of Ghana
11 February 2025
Judgment
INTHE SUPERIOR COURTOFJUDICATURE
IN THESUPREMECOURT
ACCRA–AD2025
CORAM: AMADUJSC (PRESIDING)
KULENDI JSC
GAEWU JSC
DARKOASARE JSC
ADJEI-FRIMPONGJSC
TH
11 FEBRUARY,2025
CIVILAPPEAL
NO: J4/68/2023
MRS AGNES GERTRUDEOSEI … PLAINTIFF/RESPONDENT/
APPELLANT/CROSS RESPONDENT
VRS
INNOVAHOLDINGS LTD … DEFENDANT/APPELLANT/
RESPONDENT/CROSSAPPELLANT
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JUDGMENT
KULENDI JSC:
INTRODUCTION:
1. We have before us an appeal against the judgment of the Court of Appeal, Accra,
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dated 21 June, 2018. This judgment overturned, in part, the judgment of the
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HighCourt dated the21 day of March, 2016.
2. Since both parties in this suit are cross-appellants, they shall be referred to by
theiroriginaldesignationsas PlaintiffandDefendant, respectively.
FACTS:
3. The present appeal arises from an action initiated by the Plaintiff through the
issuance of a Writ of summons, accompanied by a Statement of Claim, against
the Defendant. The suit was filed in the Registry of the High Court (Land
th rd
Division), Accra, on 17 September 2012 and subsequently amended on 23
March 2015.
4. The Plaintiff’s claim is premised on an alleged breach by the Defendant of an
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agreement dated 18 September 2008 between the parties. The Defendant is
alleged to have unlawfully demolished one of two properties situated on a
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portionof the leased land known asNo. 70 Volta Street, Airport Residential Area,
Accra, without the Plaintiff’s prior consent or authorisation. Following repeated
but unsuccessful attempts to have the Defendant remedy the situation, the
Plaintiffcommenced the actionin the HighCourt,seeking the following reliefs:
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1. An order for the forfeiture of the lease was executed on 18
September 2008 between the Plaintiff and the Defendant in respect
ofNo. 70Volta Street,AirportResidentialArea, Accra.
2. Recoveryof possessionof the saidproperty.
3. Damagesfor breachof covenant.
4. Special damages in the sum of US$500,000 representing the cost of
reconstructing a five-bedroom, one-storey building with amenities
equivalentto thedemolished structure.
5. Mesne profits from the date of service of the writ of summons until
thedate of delivery ofpossession
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5. TheDefendant, on the12 February 2013,fileditsdefence tothe presentsuit,
denyingthe allegations levelledagainst it. This Statement ofDefence was
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amendedon the 25 March 2015.
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PLAINTIFF’SCASE:
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6. According to the Plaintiff’s pleadings, on or around 3 August 1968, she
acquired her interest in the land, the subject matter of this appeal, pursuant to a
lease agreement with the Government of Ghana. The Plaintiff avers that
following her acquisition, she constructed a five-bedroom, one-storey building
with two garages and a two-bedroom outhouse on a portion of the land. It is the
Plaintiff’s case that sometime in 2005, she commenced the construction of a six-
storey building on the remaining portion of the land, which building was still
uncompletedat thetime of the transaction withthe Defendant.
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7. It is the Plaintiff’s case that by a tenancy agreement dated 18 September 2008,
she let the entire property, including both structures, to the Defendant for a term
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of twenty-five (25) years, commencing the 1 October, 2008, at a monthly rent of
Two Thousand United States Dollars (US$2,000.00). The Plaintiff contends that,
under the terms of the tenancy, the Defendant agreed to pay an advance sum of
One Hundred and Sixty-Eight Thousand Dollars (US$168,000.00) being the rent
for the first seven (7) years of the lease but only remitted One Hundred and Ten
Thousand United States Dollars (US$110,000.00), leaving an outstanding balance
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of Fifty-Eight Thousand United States Dollars (US$58,000.00) which remained
unpaid atthe commencement of thisaction, despiterepeated demands.
8. The Plaintiff further asserts that the tenancy was granted on an “as is” basis,
obligating the Defendant to renovate and remodel the properties at its own
expense to enhance their tenantability. However, the Plaintiff alleges that, in
breach of this covenant, the Defendant unlawfully demolished the five-bedroom,
one-storeybuilding in itsentirety.
9. According to the Plaintiff, she lived in the property, which was demolished for a
period; however, she moved out two years before work commenced on the
buildings. She claims that upon exiting the premises, she relocated to Kumasi
and was in Kumasi when she heard news from her sister that her five-bedroom
building had been razed down by the Defendant. Despite her objections and
multiple demands for the Defendant to restore the demolished structure, no
remedial action has been taken. She claims that for three years, she attempted
contacting theBoard Chairmanof theDefendant company,buttono avail.
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10.On 11 January 2012, the Plaintiff’s solicitors formally notified the Defendant of
this breach, demanding rectification, but the Defendant failed to comply.
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Consequently, the Plaintiff initiated the present action, seeking the above
enumeratedreliefs.
DEFENDANT’S CASE:
11.The Defendant, on the other hand, asserts that the property leased to it
comprised a dilapidated five-bedroom storey building with attendant garages
and outhouses and an uncompleted six-bedroom structure. The Defendant
maintains that by reason of the dilapidated and virtually uninhabitable condition
of the five-bedroom building, the parties agreed to the inclusion of a clausein the
lease requiring the Defendant to renovate and remodel the property at its own
expense to a more tenantable state than what prevailed as at the time of the
execution of the tenancy agreement. The Defendant contends that it fully
complied with the terms of the lease by undertaking renovations on the second
building, pulling down the first building and undertaking the construction of a
newbuilding in itsplace.
12.With respect to the alleged outstanding rent of US$58,000, the Defendant asserts
that payment was withheld at the Plaintiff’s instruction, as she directed the
Defendantto retainthe fundsandsubsequentlyrefused toacceptpayment.
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13.Regarding the structure which was pulled down, the Defendant claims that the
Plaintiff, through an intermediary, George Kofi Frimpong, expressly encouraged
it to raze down the building and construct a new one in its place. According to
the Defendant, this act amounted merely to a ‘remodelling’ of the building and
not a demolishing of the same. Subsequently at trial, however, the Respondent
conceded that their actions amounted to demolishing the property but argued
that said act of demolition fell within the scope of activities permitted under the
Defendant’s obligation to ‘remodel and renovate’ the premises. Accordingly, the
Defendant maintains that the Plaintiff’s claims are without merit, as she
expressly consented to the demolition under the lease’s “remodel” clause to
make room forthe constructionof anew building.
14.The Defendant further contended that, given the commercial nature of the lease
arrangement, the Plaintiff continued to reside on and benefit from the property
untilthe Defendant waspreparedtoproceed withthe demolition.The Defendant
argued at trial that the renovations and remodelling undertaken on the property
have substantially enhanced the value of the property without prejudicing the
Plaintiff’s reversionary interest. The Defendant, through its Board Chairman,
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maintained that the 2 building, the uncompleted six (6) bedroom building, was
at the 40% completion stage at the time when it executed the lease with the
Plaintiff.
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JUDGMENT OFTHE HIGHCOURT:
15.After considering the evidence presented by both parties and their witnesses, the
trial court established that, contrary to the Defendant’s claims, it had indeed
demolished the 5-bedroom building on the land. The Court determined that this
demolition did not qualify as "remodelling" under the terms of the agreement or,
indeed, the Rents Act, 1963 (Act 220). Consequently, the trial court concluded
that the Defendant had unlawfully demolished the first building without the
Plaintiff’s consent. As a result, the trial court entered judgment in favour of the
Plaintiff and found that the Defendant had, by his actions, forfeited the tenancy
agreement between the parties. Subsequently, the court ordered that the
Defendant surrenders possession of the property within six months of the
judgment.
16.Additionally, the High Court awarded the Plaintiff general damages of Thirty
Thousand (GH¢30,000.00) for breach of the covenants in the tenancy agreement,
special damages of Five Hundred Thousand United States Dollars
(US$500,000.00) as compensation for the cost of replacing the demolished First
Building, mesne profits with applicable interest, and costs of Fifty Thousand
GhanaCedis (GH¢50,000.00).
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JUDGMENT OFTHE COURTOFAPPEAL:
17.Following an appeal by the Defendant, the Court of Appeal, by a majority
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decision of 2-1, dated 21 June 2018, upheld the Appellant’s appeal in part. The
Court determined that the tenancy agreement, which incorporated covenants for
renovation and remodelling with the purpose of subletting, went beyond a
simple tenancy agreement and took on the characteristics of a
tenancy/construction/investmentcontract.
18.In addition, the Court upheld the trial judge’s finding that the property was not
dilapidated and rejected the Defendants’ claim that one of the buildings was to
bedemolished because it was inastate of disrepair. Instead, the Court concluded
that the property was in a tenantable state, and any renovation or remodelling
was aimed at making it even more tenantable. The Court relied on the Plaintiff’s
testimony regarding the maintenance and periodic renovations undertaken
during her occupation of the property. It held that since the Defendant was the
one asserting that the building was dilapidated, the burden of proof lay on them,
a duty which, in the estimation of the Court of Appeal, it had failed to discharge.
Furthermore, the Court found that the Defendant's witness, George Kofi
Frimpong (DW1), was inconsistent in his testimony regarding whether the
buildingwas merely old oractually dilapidated.
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19.In resolving whether or not the duty to ‘remodel and renovate’ under the
tenancy agreement encapsulated an option to demolish the structure, the Court
below referred to dictionary definitions of “renovate” and “remodel,”
emphasizing that while “remodel” allowed for significant modifications, it did
not necessarily imply demolition. The Court also cited Section 36 of the Rent Act,
which explicitly states that “remodelling” does not include demolition and
reconstruction.
20.The point of divergence between the High Court and Court of Appeal came
under the discussion of the suitable reliefs for the Plaintiff by reason of the
breaches of the Defendant. The Court of Appeal found that the trial court erred
in awarding $500,000 in special damages when the Bill of Quantities tendered by
the Plaintiff had valued the reconstruction of the property at One Million Four
Hundred and Eighty-Seven Thousand Seven Hundred and Sixty-seven Ghana
Cedis Seventy-Three pesewas (GHS 1,487,767.73). Consequently, the Court of
Appeal revised the award accordingly while reducing the cost awarded from
Fifty Thousand Ghana Cedis (GHS 50,000) to Thirty Thousand Ghana Cedis
(GHS30,000.00).
21.Additionally, the Court of Appeal determined that the trial court had incorrectly
treated the lease purely as a tenancy agreement when it actually contained
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elements of a construction contract. As a result of the nuanced nature of this
agreement, the Court of Appeal took the view that the principles of forfeiture
ought not have been strictly applicable, and the Defendant’s tenancy should not
have been forfeited. The Court held that since the Defendant had invested
substantial resources in the second building, justice would be better served by
awarding damages rather than forfeiting the lease. Consequently, it set aside the
orders forforfeitureand mesneprofits.
22.In her dissent, Torkornoo JA (as she then was) argued that the term "remodel"
should include reconstruction, as defined in Black’s Law Dictionary and the
Cambridge English Dictionary. She found that the Defendant had sufficiently
proven that the parties had agreed, both before and after signing the tenancy
agreement, thatdemolition was partof theremodelling process.
23.Furthermore, she reasoned that the parole evidence rule under Section 177 of the
Evidence Act did not bar extrinsic evidence that clarified or expanded, rather
than contradicted, the original contract. The learned judge concluded that the
Plaintiff’s acceptance of rent despite the Defendant’s breaches amounted to a
waiver, and rather than forfeiting the lease, the Court should have ordered the
Defendant to rebuild the demolished structure in its original shape while
permittingmodifications forcommercialuse.
Page 11of 46
GROUNDSOF APPEAL:
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24.Per a notice of Appeal filed on 18 September 2018, the Plaintiff lodged an
appeal against the decision of the Court of Appeal, setting aside the order of the
HighCourt forfeitingthe leasebetweenthe parties.
25.ThePlaintiff’sAppeal was brought onthe following grounds:
i. Having affirmed the finding by the High Court that the Defendant was
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in breach of the lease dated 12 September 2008 by demolishing the
Plaintiff's building, the learned judges of the Court of Appeal were
wrong in law when they reversed the decision of the High Court
forfeitingthe leasemadebetween thePlaintiffandthe Defendant.
ii. The decision of the learned judges of the Court of Appeal to reverse
the decision of the High Court forfeiting the lease made between the
Plaintiff and the Defendant is not supportable by the evidence on
record andallthe circumstances of thecase.
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26.Similarly, the Defendant, on the 17 of January 2019, filed their notice of appeal
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pursuanttoleave of theCourt of Appeal dated 16 January 2019.
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27.The appeal was brought specifically against the portion of the judgment that
held that the Defendant was entitled to the award of special damages in the sum
of GHS 1,487,767.73 and the part of the judgment which affirmed the award of
GHS 30,000Ghana cedis asgeneraldamages.
28.This cross-appeal wasbroughton the following grounds:
i. The Court erred in awarding special damages in the sum of GHS
1,487,767.73 in favour of the Plaintiff when the Plaintiff, from the
record, hadfailed toprovesame.
ii. The general damages awarded to the Plaintiff, in regard to all the
circumstances, areexcessiveandunjustifiable.
ANALYSIS:
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29.The case of Dowuona VI vrs. Barclays Bank Ghana Ltd [2023] GHASC 88 (19
July 2023) reiterates the tone for the duty incumbent on us when exercising our
jurisdiction as a second appellate Court. In the said case, the venerable Ackah-
Yensu JSC.said asfollows:
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“The well-established rule of law is that an appeal is by way of rehearing,
and an appellate court is therefore entitled to look at the entire evidence
on record and come to conclusions on both the facts and the law. This
position has been stated in a long line of decisions of this Court such as
Tuakwa v Bosom [2001-2002] SCGLR 61; Oppong v Anarfi [2011] 1
SCGLR 556; Dexter Johnson v The Republic, Opare Yeboah & Others v
Barclays Bank Ghana Ltd. [2011] 1 SCGLR 330; and, Agyewaa v P & T
Corporation[2007-2008] SCGLR 985.”
30.Consistent with this rehearing jurisdiction, we have taken the pains to evaluate
the entirety of the record before us in juxtaposition with the judgement of the
Court of Appeal. We shall commence our discussions with an evaluation of the
factual findings of theCourt of Appeal.
31.Firstly, the Court of Appeal found that despite the designation agreement as a
Tenancy Agreement, it transcended the nature or scope of a mere tenancy
agreement and took on the characteristics of a
tenancy/construction/investment contract by reason of the obligation on the
partof the Defendant to‘remodelandrenovate’ the buildings.
32.Further, the Court of Appeal suggested that there was equally an obligation on
the part of the Defendant to pay the Plaintiff the sum of Fifty Thousand United
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States Dollars ($50,000.00) for the work that the Plaintiff had conducted on the
uncompleted six-bedroom building. Consequently, the Court of Appeal
concluded that the agreement was not a formal tenancy agreement and,
therefore, ought not to have been treated strictly with principles relating to a
tenancy agreement.
33.With due deference to the Court below, we are of the considered view that the
learned justices may have been rather overly pedantic in the import to be
placed on the requirement of the Defendant to renovate and remodel the
premises. While we concede that the obligation to remodel the premises was
uncommon in most tenancy agreements, this addition did not in any way
change the fundamental flavour or character of the agreement from a tenancy
arrangement. In fact, the Defendant, through its Board Chairman, admitted at
trial that the Plaintiff had heavily reduced the rental rate by reason of his
added obligation to remodel and renovate the premises. Again, there was no
admission on the part of the Defendant of any obligation to pay the Plaintiff
the sum of US$50,000.00 for the expenses she had incurred in respect of the six
(6) bedroom structure. On the contrary, when the Defendant was confronted
with this allegation, he outrightly denied it, stating that ‘the agreement spoke
foritself’.
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34.We find that these nuances notwithstanding, the agreement was still
fundamentally a tenancy agreement and, therefore, was amenable to the
principles and rules that governed the regime of tenancy agreements. The
document which formed the foundation of the instant dispute is captioned and
described plainly as a ‘Tenancy Agreement’ between Mrs. Agnes Gertrude
Osei of the one part and Innova Holdings of the other part. In this deed, the
parties are clearly designated as Landlady and tenant, respectively, referable to
the designations adopted by the parties in a tenancy agreement. Additionally,
the agreement included clear terms, stipulating the monthly rent to be charged
by the Land Lady and a corresponding obligation on her part to yield the
rentedpremises forthe benefitof the tenant.
35.The terms of the tenancy, which included an auxiliary and/or peripheral
obligation of the tenant to renovate and remodel the premises, could not
therefore, derogate from the fundamental essence of the contract as a tenancy
agreement into an ‘investment or construction agreement’ devoid or removed
from thelegal rules,laws andprinciples regulating atenancy agreement.
36.In the circumstances, we hold that that instant agreement was, in fact, a
tenancy agreement and was, therefore, regulated by the terms of the Rent Act
andrelatedlaws.
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37.On thatscore, section36of the RentAct (Act220)clearly prescribedthat:
“remodelling” in respect to premises does not include the demolition of
the premises and the construction on the land on which the premises were
situated of new premises, and cognate expressions shall be construed
accordingly.
38.We wholly agree with the conclusions of the Court of Appeal with regard to
the meaning and scope of the term ‘remodelling and renovation’ and the fact
that this obligation did not and could not have encapsulated an option to
demolish the five-bedroom building. From the outset, it is clear that within the
context of the Rents Act, 1962 (Act 220), which regulates tenancy agreements
like that implicated in the instant case, the use of the term remodelling did not
contemplate an opening for the Defendant to demolish the building at his
discretion andreconstructother apartments.
39.Furthermore, in one breath, the Defendant argued that its action amounted
only to a remodelling of the premises and not a demolition of the same;
however, in another breath, it conceded that it had, in fact, demolished the
building but argued that he had been spurred on the by the Plaintiff and her
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intermediary, George Frimpong, to demolish the property. This paltering
position fundamentallyundermined the strengthof the Defendant’scase.
40.It is clear from the evidence of both the Defendant and his witness, Mr. George
Frimpong (DW1), that at the time of executing the tenancy agreement, the
parties did not contemplate the duty to remodel and renovate as being
inclusive of an option to demolish the property. During the examination-in-
chief of Mr. George Frimpong, who the Defendant presented as his first
witness, he gave evidence which suggested that the duty to ‘remodel’ related
more with respect to the second six-bedroom building, which was incomplete
as at the time of the execution of the agreement, not the five-bedroom building
which was razed down. He recounted the sequence of the work they carried
out onthe Plaintiff’spremises asfollows:
“The outer house was not a complete building in terms of structural
elements. There were no fittings on the ground floor and the stairs leading
to the first floor was about 85%; the main floor was about 95% complete
that was the state, so we did the remodelling for that particular thing, we
changed the layout and everything and worked on the main first floor
whiles we were doing all these works she was in the main house.”
(emphasissupplied)
Page 18of 46
41.Similarly, contrary to the Defendant’s position, his witness, in his examination-
in-chief, devoid of the pressure and confrontation of cross-examination,
admitted that the issue of demolition was raised for the very first time after the
execution of the contract when, according to him, the Plaintiff sought his
intervention to suggest to the Defendant that the five-bedroom building be
razed down and another constructed in its place. This sequence, as delivered
by the Defendant’s own witness, was diametrically opposed to the Defendant’s
case that the duty to demolish was captured within the covenant to ‘remodel
andrenovate’.
42.The exchange between the Defendant’s witness and the Plaintiff’s lawyer,
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under cross-examination on 14 July 2015, best epitomises the clear deviation
from the case of the Defendant. For the purpose of emphasis, portions of this
exchange areset outbelow:
“Q: Readparagraph C
A: "that the tenant is hereby given the consent and approval to
renovate and remodel the two properties to a more tenantable state
than what prevails presently and could sublet the said properties
whichconcernishereby given."
Page 19of 46
Q: TheDefendant was torenovateandremodel?
A: Yes, my Lord.
Q: Thedemolition of astructureis thebreakingdown of the structure.
A: Yes, my Lord.
Q: To renovate and remodel is to do some works on the structure to a
person's taste.
A: Yes, my Lord.
Q: So, the demolition of a structure is not the same as renovation and
remodelling.
A: Thatistrue, myLord.
Q: The agreement between the Plaintiff and the Defendant gave the
consentof the Plaintifftothe Defendantto renovateandremodel.
A: Yes, my Lord.
Q: The agreement did not give the consent of the Plaintiff to the
Defendantto demolishthe structure.
A: Yes, ithas not beengiven.
...
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Q: You told thisCourt that the Plaintiff, outside of this agreement, told
theDefendant todemolish her structure?
A: MyLord,that istrue
...
Q: Yesterday, again, you said to this Court that the Plaintiff told you
outside Exhibit “A” that the Defendant should demolish her
structure.
A: Yes, Idid.”
43.It is settled legal principle, in the evaluation of evidence that whenever the
testimony of a party on a crucial issue was in conflict with the testimony of his
own witness on that issue (as in the case of the Defendant in the instant case) it
was not open to a trial court to gloss over such a conflict and make a specific
finding on that issue in favour of the party whose case contained the
conflicting evidence on the issue. See the cases of ATADI v. LEADZEKPO
[1981] GLR 218, CA; ALHAJI ISSAH BUKAR, GBETOR NAA (DECEASED)
AND NAA MUMUNI SAAKA, SING NAA (DEC’D), KULK-PONG, SING
NAA. V. MAHAMA BAYONG OF SUYIRI – WA AND 3 OTHERS (NO.
J2/1/2013 dated 21st May, 2013); GORDON TANNO KWACHIE V. S. K.
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AMADZO AND AKUA BRONYA (NO: H1/20/2015 dated 10th February,
2015.
44.The Defendant, on the other hand, gave evidence through its Board Chairman
in the person of Mr. Alex Asiedu; in his evidence, he admitted that the
conversation on demolishing was broached after the conclusion of the
agreement and after a re-examination of the building. In his examination-in-
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chief on the30 July2015,hesaid asfollows:
“In the course of one of our renovation works for GT Bank at the Labone
branch. We came in contact with one Mr. George Frimpong - DW1 who
had that time was working with Mrs. Baaba Bandah. Upon seeing the
work that we had done at the Labone branch, he approached us the
Defendant that he has an aunt by the name of Mrs. Agnes Osei – the
Plaintiff who had property at Number 17 Volta Road Airport residential
area in Accra and that she was looking for someone to take over the
property to do a complete remodelling and renovation. I went to the site
to take a look at the building. There were two structures on the land; one
was about 40% complete and the 2nd one was in a very dilapidated
condition. Pursuant to this, we had a discussion with her after going back
and forth, we finally agreed to enter into an agreement which intended to
lease the two properties on the piece of land to the Defendant for a period
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of 25 years certain. Upon re-examination of the building, it was made very
clear to her that we will go ahead at our own expense to complete the one
that was 40% completed. Additionally, we would move ahead to totally
remodel and renovate the 2nd one, which was in a very bad state;
structurally, the building was weak. She agreed that the building could be
demolished and requested that we put three (3) three-bedroom units on
thatpieceof land, towhich Iwentbackto herandsaid it willbe too.”
45.Until this rather startling admission in the examination in chief of the
Defendant, it had strenuously resisted any attempt to brand its clear action as a
demolition of the property. Indeed, it pleaded specifically in its Statement of
Defence that it had not demolished the property but had only remodelled it,
pursuant to its obligations under the tenancy agreement. In the witness box,
however, the Defendant had effectively changed its tune, now testifying that
the decision to demolish the property was reached after the tenancy agreement
hadbeen brokeredandagreed.
46.Upon abandoning the ill-fated attempt to suggest that the agreement in its
original sense admitted of the option of demolition under the duty to renovate,
the Defendant then sought to urge the position that the Plaintiff had, in fact,
convinced it, outside the scope of the agreement, to demolish the property and
construct another in its place. On this score, the Defendant was further unable
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to discharge the burden of proving this allegation. In any case, such extraneous
oral evidence contradicted the documented agreement of the parties, and
consequently,the documentary evidenceof the parties wouldtakeprecedence.
47.The parole evidence rule was particularly essential in this regard as it must
operate to debar the Defendant from seeking to adduce extrinsic evidence to
add to, vary or contradict the terms of the tenancy agreement, which for all
intents and purposes constitutedthesole repository oftheterms ofthe contract.
Specific reference is made in this regard to section 177 of the Evidence Act,
whichprovidesas follows:
“Except as otherwise provided by the rules of equity, terms set forth in a
writing intended by the party or parties to the writing as a final
expression of intention or agreement with respect to those terms may not
be contradicted by evidence of a prior declaration of intention, of a prior
agreement or a contemporaneous oral agreement or declaration of
intention,but maybe explained orsupplemented,
(a) by evidence of consistent additional terms unless the Court
finds the writing to have also been intended as a complete and
exclusive statement of the terms of the intention or agreement, but
awill and aregistered writing conveying immovableproperty shall
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be deemed to be a complete and exclusive statement of the terms of
theintention of agreement; and
(b) by a course of dealing or usage of trade or by course of
performance.”
48.We find this attempt by the Defendant to argue the existence of a subsequent
extrinsic agreement by the parties, which flew in the face of the express terms
of the tenancy agreement, to be an afterthought, which is uncorroborated and
unsubstantiated by any evidence on record. We endorse the finding of the
Court of Appeal that the Defendant unilaterally and arbitrarily demolished the
five-bedroomhouse of thePlaintiffwithout recourse toher.
49.As we have observed earlier, the point of departure between the judgment of
the Court of Appeal and the Trial High Court pertained to the nature and
scope of the reliefs that the Plaintiff was entitled to by reason of the egregious
actions of the Defendant. The trial court took the view that the actions of the
Defendant constituted fundamental breaches of key terms of the agreement
andtherebyconstituted valid grounds forthe forfeitureofthe tenancy.
50.On its part, the Court of Appeal, motivated by its predicate position that the
fundamental character of the agreement had been changed from a tenancy
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agreement to a tenancy/construction/investment agreement, found that the
strict principles covering forfeiture of tenancy agreements ought not to have
been applied, given the largely commercial character and flavour of the
agreement.
51.As we have previously indicated, we are unpersuaded by the Court of
Appeal’sview on themetamorphosis of theagreement, primarilyon account of
the nuanced obligationtorenovateand remodel.
52.On the issue of forfeiture, the Eleventh Edition of the Black’s Law Dictionary,
defines the phenomenonas:
“The loss of a right, privilege, or property because of a crime, breach of
obligation, or neglect of duty. The title is instantaneously transferred to
another,suchasthe government, acorporation,oraprivateperson”.
53.Section 17 of the Rents Act, 1963 (Act 220), which is instructive on the topic of
forfeiture,providesthat:
(1) Subject to subsection (2) of section 25 and to section 28, an order
against a tenant for the recovery of the possession of, or for the
ejectment from, any premises shall not be made or given by the Rent
Magistrate or any other judge of a court of competent jurisdiction in
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accordance with any other enactment except (b) where an obligation
of the tenancy, other than that specified in paragraph (a) (rent), so far
as that obligation is consistent with this Act, has been broken or not
performed;
54.Similarly,section29of the ConveyancingDecree sheds useful lighton the topic:
(1) A right of re-entry or forfeiture under any provision in a lease for a
breach of any covenant, condition or agreement in the lease shall not be
enforceable,by action orotherwise,until—
(a)the lessor serveson the lessee anotice:
(i)specifying the particular breachcomplainedof;
(ii) if the breach is capable of remedy, requiring the lessee to
remedythe breach;and
(iii) (except where the breach consists of a non-payment of
rent) requiring the lessee to make reasonable compensation
inmoney forthe breach;and
(b) the lessee has knowledge of the fact that such notice has been
served;
Page 27of 46
and the lessee fails, within a reasonable time thereafter, to remedy
the breach, if it is capable of remedy and (except where the breach
consists of a non-payment of rent) to make reasonable
compensation in money, to the satisfaction of the lessor, for the
breach.
55.In the recent decision of this Court in the case of Royal Investment Company
st
Vrs Quarcoopome and Another (66 of 2021) [2021] GHASC 104 (1 December
2021),the erudite AmegatcherJSC.opined as follows:
“On the other hand, where there was a breach of a covenant there could
not be forfeiture unless there was an express provision for re-entry in the
lease based on the breach of the said covenant. This position was
advanced by Ollennu J (as he then was) in the case of BASSIL v SAID
RAAD & SONS (1958) 3 WALR 231 as follows: “Now at common law,
there can be no forfeiture for breach of covenant under a lease unless there
isan expressprovisioninthe lease forre-entry”.
56.Instructively, the tenancy agreement provided expressly for re-entry and
forfeiture of the said tenancy in the event of the non-payment of rent and/or
the breach of a covenant within the tenancy. The said provision was set out as
follows:
Page 28of 46
“ If the rent hereby reserved or any part thereof shall be in arrears and
unpaid for one calendar month after the same has become due and
payable, the Landlord shall give the Tenant (14) fourteen days’ notice to
pay the said rent or in the event of a breach of any of the covenants of this
agreement on the part of the Tenant herein contained, the Landlord may
after giving three months’ notice of her intention so to do, re-enter the
premises and thereupon this demise shall absolutely determine but
without prejudice to the rights and remedies of either party against the
otherfor any antecedent breachof any of thecovenants herein contained.”
th
57.It is significant to note that on 11 January 2012, Counsel for the Plaintiff wrote
to the Defendant company formally notifying the company of their unlawful
and unilateral demolition of the five-bedroom building on the land. Further,
the letter demanded that the Defendant immediately restore the building,
failing which the Plaintiff would take necessary action to forfeit the tenancy
agreement.
nd
58.We find that the Defendant’s demolition of the 2 Property, which was
undertaken without the consent of the Plaintiff, constituted a fundamental
derogation from the expressed agreement of the parties. Indeed, this singular
Page 29of 46
act on the part of the Defendant equally breached the covenant incumbent on
the Defendant to remodel or renovate the premises. Additionally, the
demolition of the premises contravened the covenant that the Defendant was
required to keep the interior of the premises in good and substantial repair and
condition. Again, the Defendant, in the demolition of the property, breached
the covenantnotto cause damageto the property.
59.We find that the Defendant’s infractions against the tenancy agreement indeed
entitle the Plaintiff to a forfeiture of the Defendant’s tenancy. The Court of
Appeal had, in an attempt to temper justice with mercy, sought to leverage the
considerable financialinvestment the Defendant had expended on the property
to ground a suo moto application for relief against forfeiture under section 30
of theConveyancing Decree, 1973(NRCD175).
60.With respect to the learned justices of the Court below however, we are of the
considered view that the Defendant’s investment on the Plaintiff’s land cannot
serve as a bar to the forfeiture of the tenancy. At the time the Defendant chose
to unlawfully demolish the Plaintiff’s structures, it was fully aware of the
substantial investment it had made on the land and the potential consequences
of its actions. Despite this knowledge, the Defendant brazenly proceeded to
raze down the Plaintiff’s building, knowingly exposing himself to the risk of
forfeiture.
Page 30of 46
61.Having wilfully engaged in conduct that directly violated the terms of the
tenancy, the Defendant cannot now seek refuge under its own investment to
shield itself from the consequences of its breach. To allow such a defence
would be to permit a party to benefit from his own wrongful actions,
undermining the fundamental principles of contractual enforcement and
accountability. In consequence of the forgoing, we hereby restore order of the
HighCourt forfeitingthe Defendant’s tenancy agreement withthe Plaintiff.
62.The Defendant has taken issue with the Court of Appeal’s decision to award
special damages to the tune of One Million Four Hundred and Eighty-Seven
Thousand Seven Hundred and Sixty-Seven Ghana Cedis Seventy-Three
pesewas (GHS 1,487,767.73). It argues that special damages, in its strict sense
must be awarded in respect of the properly quantifiable and proven loss
incurred by the Plaintiff andnone other. According to the Defendant, the bill of
quantities tendered by the Plaintiff at trial, was not a valuation of the property
which had been demolished, but the cost of putting up the structure that had
beendemolished.
63.Halsbury’s Laws of England (3rd ed.), Vol. 11, p. 218, defines special damages
as compensation for special damage which is not presumed by law to be the
Page 31of 46
natural and probable or direct consequence of the act or omission complained
of but which does in fact result in the circumstances of the particular case and
of theinjured party’sclaim tobecompensated.
64.Similarly, in thelandmark caseof Stroms Bruks Aktie Bolagv. Hutchison [1905]
A.C. 515at525-526,H.L.(S.C.) LordMacnaghten said:
“... Special damages’ ... are such as the law will not infer from the nature
of the act. They do not follow in ordinary course. They are exceptional in
their character, and, therefore, they must be claimed specially and proved
strictly.”
65.In our view, the essence of a claim for special damages lies in the fundamental
principle that the party seeking such damages must establish, with credible
evidence, the fact of the occurrence of the loss and the degree of damage
experienced as a result of the loss. It would be both absurd and a grave
miscarriage of justice for us to endorse the argument of the Defendant that,
despite the Plaintiff having incontrovertibly proven the demolition of her
building, the appropriate measure of special damages should be limited to the
historical cost of constructing the property rather than the current cost of
rebuildingit.
Page 32of 46
66.Special damages are intended to place the injured party in the position they
would have been in but for the wrongful act, and in this case, that necessarily
entails awarding the Plaintiff the amount required to reconstruct the
demolished structure, not merely the outdated sum originally expended on its
development. In the circumstances we shall uphold the Court of Appeals
award of special damages to the tune of One Million Four Hundred and
Eighty-Seven Thousand Seven Hundred and Sixty-Seven Ghana Cedis
Seventy-Three pesewas (GHS 1,487,767.73), all other orders by the Court of
Appeal areequally upheld.
67. In consequence of our foregoingreasoning and by aunanimous decision of the
Court, theAppeal succeeds in parton the followingterms:
st
1. We restore the order of the High Court dated the 21 day of March, 2016
declaring the tenancy betweenthe partiesforfeited.
2. The Defendant is ordered to deliver vacant possession of the subject
matter property tothe Plaintiffwithin 30days from today.
3. We affirm the order of the Court of Appeal in the award of special
damages of the GHS 1,487,767.73 in favour of the Plaintiff together with
Page 33of 46
simple interest from the date of judgment of the Court of Appeal that is
st
21 June, 2018.
4. We further affirm the award of the general damages by the Court of
Appeal assessed inthe formof GHS 30,000.00.
5. We award costs in the sum of GHS 50,000.00 in favour of the Plaintiff
against the Defendant.
(SGD.) E.YONNYKULENDI
(JUSTICE OFTHE SUPREMECOURT)
(SGD.) IO. TANKOAMADU
(JUSTICE OFTHE SUPREMECOURT)
(SGD.) E.Y.GAEWU
(JUSTICE OFTHE SUPREMECOURT)
(SGD.) Y. DARKOASARE
(JUSTICE OFTHE SUPREMECOURT)
Page 34of 46
CONCURRING OPINION
ADJEI-FRIMPONG,JSC:
MyLords I agree withthe reasoning andconclusions of my nobleand respected brother
Kulendi, JSC in the lead judgment. With respect to the learned Justices of the Court of
Appeal, the grounds they advanced to grant relief against forfeiture in favour of the
Defendant were not well founded in law. That is to say, the circumstances of the case
whichtheyso readilyreferred tocouldnot justify the grantof relief. The reasons forthis
position have been sufficiently articulated in the speech of my brother. I decline to
rehearsethem inthis discourse.
I however desire to make a brief observation on the law regarding application for relief
against forfeiture under Section 30 of the now repealed Conveyancing Act, 1973 (NRCD
175). I am of the view that the approach of the learned justices in granting relief when
no application was made for it should not be left without a comment. I am concerned
that even though the entire NRCD 175 which was the law applicable at the time has
been repealed by the Land Act, 2020 (Act 1036), the provisions in Section 30 of the
repealed law have been re-enacted under Section 58of the Land Act, 2020.The potential
Page 35of 46
re-occurrence of the controversy in the future should move this court to clarify the law
inthis area.
In their judgment, the learned Justices of the Court took the position that the Court
could grant relief against forfeiture under Section 30 of the NRCD 175 (and impliedly
Section 58 of Act 1036) without any application given the circumstances of the case and
on the basisthat the Court hadan inherent equitablejurisdiction to make thegrant. This
ishowI understoodthem as saying whenthey held:
“In the discharge of its duties, the High Court has jurisdiction at both law and
equity. When a cause of action for forfeiture accrues, the court has an inherent
jurisdiction to grant the equitable relief from forfeiture, see: Mensah v. Grant
(1955)14 WACA 726. Although S.29 of the Conveyancing Act, gives a right for
forfeiture for a breach of covenant in a lease, S.30 provides for relief from
forfeiture upon an application by the tenant where in the circumstances, the
court finds it just to do so. In the present instance, although there was no
application for such by the appellant, it seems to me, that by reason of the
peculiar circumstances of this case, being that this was more than a simple
tenancy under which considerable sum of money was expended by the appellant
to do construction of Building No.2 coupled with the damages both special and
general, that have been awarded against the appellant, the appellant ought to be
granted such relief from forfeiture. Thus, the order of forfeiture made by the
Page 36of 46
learned trial judge cannot be made to stand and is hereby set aside.” [478-479
ROA]
Before us, Learned Counsel for the Plaintiff argues (at least in part), that in the absence
of an application in terms of Section 30, the Court of Appeal could not exercise an
inherent equitable jurisdiction to grant relief against forfeiture. He contends that the
Defendant not applying for relief, it was erroneous for the Court of Appeal to suo motu
grant relief.
Counsel refers to the provisions in Section 30(1) and (2) of the Conveyancing Act on
“Relief against re-entry and forfeiture” which regulate the grant of relief and how to
apply for it. The application may either be made in the lessor’s action or in any action
brought for that purpose by the party applying. He contends that as neither of the two
methods prescribed by the provisions, was present in this case, the Court of Appeal
erred in granting relief. He relies on the principle that where a statute had provided a
procedureforobtaining aremedy,that procedureapplies. ASCHKAR VKARAMcited.
Further, Counsel points out that the case of MENSAH VRS GRANT [1955]14 WACA
726 which the Court of Appeal relied upon to grant relief was decided on the authority
of the English case of BARROW VRS ISAAC & SONS [1891]1 QB 417. That decision was
rooted in the exercise of equitable jurisdiction to grant relief against forfeiture on
grounds of limited cases of fraud, mistake, accident or surprise. The erstwhile equitable
Page 37of 46
jurisdiction has now been replaced by statutory jurisdiction, in our case by the
provisions in Section 30(1) and (2) of the Conveyancing Act. This therefore makes the
decision in MENSAH V GRANT less applicable. Therefore, the grant of relief by the
exercise of equitable jurisdiction especially when it was not applied for was erroneous.
But even if the case still bears any authority, the grant could have been on the basis of
fraud,mistake, accidentor surprisenone of whichgroundwas present inthiscase.
Now,the repealedSection30of NRCD175provided as follows:
“30. (1) Where a lessor is proceeding by an action or otherwise to enforce a right
of re-entry or forfeiture under any provision in a lease, or for non-payment of
rent, the lessee of the property and also a sub-lessee of the property comprised in
the lease or any part thereof may, either in the lessor’s action (if any) or in any
action broughtby suchperson forthat purpose, apply tothecourt forrelief.
(2) Subject to sub-section (1) of section 29, where the lessee applies to the court
for relief, the court may grant or refuse relief as it thinks fit having regard to the
proceedings and conduct of the parties and to all the other circumstances; and
relief when granted may be upon such terms, if any as to costs, expenses,
damages, compensation, penalty or otherwise, including the granting of an
injunction to restrain any similar breach in the future, as the court in the
circumstances of eachcase thinksfit.
Page 38of 46
(3) Where a sub-lessee applies to the court for relief, the court may make order
vesting, for the whole term of the lease or any less term, the property comprised
in the lease or any part thereof in that sub-lessee upon such conditions as to
execution of any deed or other document, payment of rent, costs, expenses,
damages, compensation, giving security or otherwise as the court in the
circumstances of each case may think fit; but in no case shall any such sub-lessee
beentitled torequirea leasetobegranted to himfor any longer termthan hehad
under theoriginal sub-lease.”
These provisions have been re-enacted by Section 58 of the Land Act (Act 1036). The
law-maker deployed the same words in the re-enactment. For reason of economy, I
shall notset out theprovisions ofthe new law.
The provisions under Section 30 were not any different from what pertains in the
English law which is captured in the following commentary from Halsbury’s laws of
England:
“Where a lessor is proceeding, by an action or otherwise, to enforce the right of
re-entry or forfeiture, the lessee, may, in the lessor’s action, if any, or in any
action brought by himself, apply to the court for relief. The right to apply for
relief is available in the High Court or a county court. Where a landlord claims
Page 39of 46
possession in the High Court and seeks final judgment, the tenant’s right to relief
is a true equitable defence and counterclaim for such relief or which
unconditional leave to defence should be given… If the landlord is proceeding
by action, the tenant may apply in the landlord’s action; otherwise, the tenant
may himself bring an action and apply for relief but relief cannot be granted to
th
jointtenants unlessbothapply for it.”Vol.27(1), 4 edition,para, 516,p.485.
Pertinent, it is, to note that the jurisdiction under Section 30 was not an equitable one. It
was statutory although of equitable origin. The requirement to apply might have been
procedural in character. But it was a procedure brought upon by a statute. And
therefore, even if the Court retained its inherent equitable jurisdiction to grant relief, a
tenant must apply forit. The law has not prescribed the form anapplication shouldtake.
It however indicated the path to use. In the words of the learned A.K.P Kludze in his
invaluabletreatise:
“There are two ways in which the tenant may apply for relief against forfeiture
under Section 30 of the Decree. If the Landlord commences proceedings in court
for an order of ejectment or forfeiture against the tenant, the tenant may
counterclaim for relief against forfeiture. If the Landlord does not institute legal
proceedings but seeks peaceful re-entry for forfeiture, or if the tenant is
apprehensive that the landlord may commence legal proceedings, the tenant
Page 40of 46
may institute action as plaintiff claiming relief against forfeiture.” [Ghana Law of
Landlord andTenant,2017edition, page261]
In the few cases known on the subject there was some form of application by the tenant
to seek relief even if not in a formal counterclaim. One such case which ended up in this
Court is BOSTON & ANOR VRS KHEMLAND BROTHERS & ORS [1964] GLR 277. The
Court in that case did not insist on a formal counterclaim, nonetheless there was an
application for relief. Apaloo JSC (as he then was) delivering the decision of the Court
onthe issue,opined:
“I do not doubt that there might be cases in which it would be wrong for a court
to grant reliefs which are not sought by way of counterclaim, but in my
judgment, this is not one of those cases. The only substantial issue which was
debated before the trial court was whether or not this was a fit case for the court
in the exercise of its equitable jurisdiction to grant relief against forfeiture. The
co-defendants pleaded and tookthe position that they were entitledto suchrelief.
This the plaintiffs controverted and, in the result, were unsuccessful. Counsel for
the plaintiffs has not sought to suggest that the omission of a formal
counterclaim worked any injustice on the appellants and he expressly disclaimed
any suggestion that he was taken by surprise at the grant of this relief. Had the
learned trial judge declined to grant relief on the only ground that this was not
sought by a formal counterclaim, he would have erred by determining this case
Page 41of 46
on the form and shutting his eyes to the substance of the matter. I do not think it
is necessary for me to repeat the trite expression that equity looks to the
substance rather than the form. In my judgment, the learned trial judge was
entitled to grant relief against forfeiture when in substance there was a
counterclaimalthough notso formally asserted.”
I am mindful that the KHEMLAND case was decided long before the NRCD 175 was
enacted. If not, the Court might have spoken more decisively given the clear statutory
intervention and the language of Section 30. In any event, nothing in the decision
suggeststhatthe need for anapplicationwas excused.
Elsewhere, there are many decisions which were based on the inherent equitable
jurisdiction of the Court nonetheless, relief against forfeiture was granted on a form of
application. The Privy Council in the case of LAM KEE YING SDN BHD VRS LAM
SHES TONG & ANOR [1974]3 ALL ER 137 was dealing with a forfeiture issue under
Section 237 of the Malaysian National Land Code the provisions of which being in pari
materiawithSection 30wereas follows:
“(1) Any lessee, sub-lessee or tenant against whom any person or body is
proceeding to enforce a forfeiture may apply to the Court for relief against
forfeiture and the Court—(a) may grant or refuse relief as it thinks fit, having
regard to all the circumstances of the case (including, if the case is one to which
Page 42of 46
the provisions of section 235 applied, the proceedings and conduct of the parties
under that section); and (b) if it grants relief, may do so on such terms as it thinks
fit.
(2) The provisions of sub-section (1) shall have effect notwithstanding, any
provisiontothe contraryin thelease,sub-lease ortenancy in question.”
ThePrivyCouncil observedasfollows:
“On behalf of the appellant, it was objected that the Federal Court has no
jurisdiction to grant relief because no application had been made by the
respondents for relief as required by the section. It is perfectly true that the
respondents’ pleadings did not contain any application for relief and that no
application was made to the judge at the trial. However, an application for relief
was made to the Federal Court and although Counsel did not expressly refer to s
237 of the National Land Code the judges understood the application as referring
torelief under that section. The power given by the sectionis to grant relief on an
application made by (inter alios) a lessee against whom any person is proceeding
to enforce a forfeiture. The application made in the present case, although
informal,answeredthat description.”
Page 43of 46
In ABBEY NATIONAL BS VRS MAY BEECH LTD [1984]3 ALL ER 262 the mortgagee
of a lease which had been forfeited by the lessor applied for relief against forfeiture
under Section 146(4) of the Law of the Property Act, 1925 which had the following
provision:
“(4) Where a lessor is proceeding by action or otherwise to enforce a right of re-
entry or forfeiture under any covenant, proviso or stipulation in a lease, or for
non-payment of rent, the court may, on application by any person claiming as
under-lessee any estate or interest in the property comprised in the lease or any
part thereof, either in the lessor’s action (if any) or in any action brought by such
person for that purpose, make an order vesting,for the whole term of the lease or
any less term, the property comprised in the lease or any part thereof in any
person entitled as under-lessee to any estate or interest in such property upon
such conditions as to execution of any deed or other document, payment of rent,
costs, expenses, damages, compensation, giving security, or otherwise, as the
court in the circumstances of each case may think fit, but in no case shall any
such under-lessee be entitled to require a lease to be granted to him for any
longer termthanhehadunder theoriginalsub-lease.”
The Court in exercise of its inherent equitable jurisdiction granted relief to the
mortgageebutuponan application.Theholding appearingin the headnotestates:
Page 44of 46
“On its true construction, s 146(4) of the 1925 Act did not displace the court’s
inherent equitable jurisdiction to grant relief to a person claiming as under-lessee
where the lessee failed to pay a sum (other than rent) due under the lease. It
followed that although it was too late for the court to grant the mortgagee relief
under s. 146(4), the court could, and would grant relief in the exercise of its
equitablejurisdiction.” Seealso GRAY VSRBONSALL[1904]1 KB 601.
The MENSAH VRS GRANT case on which the learned Justices of the court below relied
to grant relief suo motu, with respect to them, never excused application because the
court was exercising an inherent equitable jurisdiction. Indeed, it was a case which the
Plaintiff actually commenced, to purposely, seek relief against forfeiture. It was
therefore erroneous on the part of the learned justices to grant relief under Section 30 of
NRCD175without anapplicationon the authorityof the case.
The need to satisfy the statutory requirement of an application under the section is to
ensure that an applicant demonstrates sufficient factual and legal grounds to enable the
Court considerwhetheror notrelief oughttobe granted andifso, onwhat terms.I shall
reiterate that the jurisdiction is now statutory although equitable in origin and the
statute has prescribed the mode of its invocation which I think must be followed. In my
judgment, where the legislature steps in with a particular legislation on a particular
subject,effectmust begiven tothatlegislation.
Page 45of 46
(SGD.) R. ADJEI-FRIMPONG
(JUSTICE OFTHE SUPREMECOURT)
COUNSEL
KIZITOBEYUO ESQ.WITHIRIS AGGREY ORLEANS ESQ.FOR THE
PLAINTIFF/RESPONDENT/APPELLANT
RICHMONDNUMBOSAAKA ESQ.WITHNANA BOAKYE MENSAHBONSU ESQ.
FOR DEFENDANT/APPELLANT/RESPONDENT
Page 46of 46
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