YEO BROTHERS CO (PTE) LTD V. ATLAS
PROPERTIES (PTE) LTD
HIGH COURT [SINGAPORE]
ORIGINATING SUMMONS NO 1178 OF 1985
LAI KEW CHAI, J
23 SEPTEMBER 1987
Lai Kew Chai J
In 1982 the defendants, who were duly licensed housing developers under
the Housing Developers (Control and Licensing) Act (Cap. 130, 1985 Ed.)
(hereinafter referred to as "the Act"), were developing for sale a
residential condominium comprising two blocks of nine-storey apartments,
three blocks of four-storey apartments and two blocks of four-storey
maisonnettes with certain communal facilities. The condominium estate was
and is known as the "Goodluck Garden". Titles to the individual residential
units and the common property of the condominium were as in the ordinary way
to be issued under the Land Titles (Strata) Act (Cap. 158, 1985 Ed.). By an
agreement of sale and purchase dated September 21, 1982, which was in the
statutorily prescribed form, the plaintiffs agreed to purchase a flat on the
sixth storey "estimated to contain a floor area of 177.07 square metres
(1,906 square feet)". On March 13, 1986, the Chief Surveyor approved the
final survey plans of the condominium and the area of the flat was duly
determined to be 158 square metres. There was therefore a shortfall in area
of 19.07 square metres and the deficiency was 10.77%.
In September 1985, the defendants through their solicitors purported to
give notice under the agreement for sale and purchase to the plaintiffs to
complete the sale and purchase without offering compensation by way of an
abatement in the purchase price. The plaintiffs declined to complete without
an abatement in the price and they took out these originating summons for
the following reliefs:
"1. A Declaration That
(a) … (since abandoned)
(b) The tender by the defendant to the plaintiff of a
subsidiary strata certificate of title showing that the property as
comprised therein contains a floor area of 158 square metres is a breach
by the defendant of the agreement and the terms and conditions
thereunder and the defendant is not entitled to oblige the plaintiff to
complete the sale and purchase, alternatively the defendant shall be
entitled to do so only upon the defendant giving the plaintiff
(i) an abatement in the purchase price amounting to
$40,810.56 being compensation for the deficit in floor area such sum
to be deducted from the balance of the purchase monies which would
otherwise be payable to the defendant; and
(ii) a further abatement in the purchase price comprising a
sum of $2,522.80 and the further sum of $95.23 for every calendar
month from October 1, 1985 until the date of actual completion of the
sale and purchase being reimbursement of the interest incurred
alternatively lost by the plaintiff on the sum of $28,568.06, such
abatement sum to be deducted from the balance of the purchase price
monies which would otherwise be payable to the defendant."
It will therefore be noted that the declarations sought under paragraph
1(b) are in two parts which are sought in the alternative; namely, that the
defendants, as vendors, could not compel the plaintiffs, as purchasers, to
complete the purchase since the shortfall in the area is substantial which
in law and equity would disentitle the defendants to an order for specific
performance or, alternatively, the defendants could not ask for specific
performance without an offer of the compensation as stipulated if the
shortfall is not substantial.
It should also be noted, and I stress, that in these proceedings, there
is no suggestion that any misrepresentation, innocent or fraudulent, was
made by the defendants, their servants or agents. This is a case of
misdescription and the effect of this particular misdescription is
considered here, and no more. Misrepresentation, if asserted and borne out
by the facts in other cases, will of course entail very different
consequences in law.
Before I consider the submissions of learned counsel for both parties, I
will set out the factual matrix and the relevant terms of the agreement of
sale and purchase. In marketing the residential units, the defendants
advertised the sales in newspapers in both Chinese and English. The prices
of individual units were quoted in lump sums. Price lists were made
available to interested parties and these mentioned that the floor areas as
described were "approx. gross area per unit (sf)". There was no suggestion
that any unit within the condominium was to be sold on a per square foot or
per square metre basis.
On August 26, 1982 and in response to the advertisements of the
defendants, the plaintiffs obtained from the defendants, again in the
statutorily prescribed form, an option in writing to purchase at the price
of $378,937.00 a flat which was then under construction and was briefly
described as Unit No. 06-03, 6th storey, Plot 2, Goodluck Garden, Singapore
(which, as well as when built, is hereinafter referred to as "the flat").
The plaintiffs paid the booking fee which was 10% of the purchase price as
consideration for the option. The option was issued in accordance with the
statutory form pursuant to rule 10B(1) of The Housing Developers Rules 1976.
These 1976 Rules were revoked and replaced by The Housing Developers Rules
1985 with effect from January 4, 1985. The plaintiffs were also handed a
document headed "Purchaser Form" of the same date and, in the description of
the flat, it contained the statement "Estimated Floor Area: 1,906 sf."
The plaintiffs duly exercised the option and on September 21, 1982 a sale
and purchase agreement in Form B as statutorily prescribed under rule 11(1)
of The Housing Developers Rules 1976 was signed between the parties to these
proceedings for the sale and purchase of the flat.
The relevant clauses and provisions of the sale and purchase agreement
are as follows:
"Clause 1
1. The Vendor shall sell and the Purchaser shall purchase free from
encumbrances all that estate in perpetuity in part of the land comprising
the flat described in the First Schedule hereto (hereinafter
referred to as "the housing unit") to be comprised in a Subsidiary Strata
Certificate of Title under the provisions of the Land Titles (Strata) Act
(Cap. 277) being one of the strata units in the condominium project now
being erected or erected by the Vendor upon the land described in the
First Schedule hereto and known as GOODLUCK GARDEN (hereinafter known as
"the building project") subject to the following special conditions and to
the Singapore Law Society Conditions of Sale 1981 as far as the name are
applicable to a sale by private treaty and are not varied by or
inconsistent with the special conditions herein. (Emphasis added.)
… THE FIRST SCHEDULE ABOVE REFERRED TO
ALL THAT Flat on the 6th Storey of the Building known as Plot 2,
GOODLUCK GARDEN now being erected or erected on part of the land in the
District of Pandan in the Republic of Singapore estimated to contain a
floor area of 177.07 square metres (1906 square feet) being part of the
Government Resurvey Lot 1864 of Mukim V forming part of the land comprised
in a Statutory Grant No. 38771 which said housing unit is provisionally
known as Unit No. 06-03, Type A, 6th Storey, Plot 2, GOODLUCK GARDEN,
Singapore. (Interposed here.)
…
Clause 8
8.(1) The housing unit and the building project together with all the
common property thereto shall be constructed in a good and workmanlike
manner in accordance with the specifications described in the Second
Schedule hereto and in accordance with the plans approved by the Assistant
Director, or other Competent Authority, which specifications and plans
have been accepted and approved by the Purchaser as the Purchaser hereby
acknowledges.
(2) No changes thereto or deviations therefrom shall be made without
the consent of the Purchaser except as may be required by the Competent
Authority or the Local Authority, or such as may be certified by the
Vendor's architect as expedient or necessary.
(3) The Purchaser shall not be liable for the cost of such changes or
deviations and in the event that the changes or deviations involve the
substitution or use of cheaper materials or the omission of works
originally agreed to be carried out by the Vendor the Purchaser shall be
entitled to a corresponding reduction in the purchase price herein or to
damages in respect thereof."
Clause 11 of The Singapore Law Society's Conditions of Sale 1981, which
was incorporated in the sale and purchase agreement by reference, is also
relevant and it reads as follows:
"Mis-description
11. The property is believed and shall be taken to be correctly
described as to quantity and otherwise and is sold subject to all chief,
quit, and other rents and out-goings and to all incidents of tenure,
rights of way, and other rights and easements (if any) affecting the same
and if any error, mis-statement, or omission (not of a serious or vital
nature nor considerably affecting the value of the property) shall be
discovered in the Particulars Special Conditions or Contract the same
shall not annul the sale nor shall any compensation be allowed by or to
either party in respect thereof." (emphasis added).
In the agreement, there were provisions for the payment of instalments of
the purchase price in tandem with the progress of the construction of the
flat. As envisaged under the agreement, the plaintiffs, upon the physical
completion of the flat, took possession of it on or about January 22, 1985
before the legal completion of the sale and purchase.
On September 7, 1985, the solicitors of the defendants purported to give
notice to the plaintiffs requiring legal completion of the sale and purchase
under the agreement. As they refused to compensate the plaintiffs for the
shortfall, the completion did not take place and the plaintiffs instituted
these proceedings for the reliefs mentioned earlier.
I would now set out the position at common law and in equity, in respect
of an open contract for the sale of land, that is the position apart from a
contractual term such as clause 11 in the present agreement.
In law, one of the main duties of a vendor of property is to give a good
title as to the quantity of the property. A deficiency in the smallest
portion or interest in the subject matter of the sale is a breach of that
duty and entitles the purchaser, at common law, to annul the sale, whereupon
the purchaser is entitled to the return of all moneys paid plus the costs of
the investigation of title. But generally, because of the rule in Bain v
Fothergill (1874) LR 7 HL 158, the purchaser is not entitled to damages
for any loss of the bargain. However, equity intervened and had somewhat
ameliorated the rigours of the common law rule. If a misdescription is not
substantial, and is made innocently by the vendor, the vendor is entitled in
equity to obtain an order of specific performance on the condition, which a
court in exercise of its equitable jurisdiction imposes, that he compensates
the purchaser usually by an abatement of the purchase price. Justice is done
and the purchaser gets his bargain substantially.
On the other hand, where the misdescription is substantial, the vendor is
unable to enforce the contract at common law or equity, even with an
abatement of the purchase price: see Mr. Voumard's Sale of Land in
Victoria (1939) at pp. 195–200. In principle, this rule is sound for no
court can force a purchaser to accept any property which is substantially
different from the one he has contracted to purchase.
The effect of a misdescription in an open contract, quite apart from any
specific terms of a contract and so far as the principles are relevant to
these proceedings, is compendiously set out in Emmet on Title, 19th
Ed. para 4.022 as follows:
"(1) If the misdescription is substantial the vendor will be unable to
enforce the contract, even with an abatement of the price ( Flight v
Booth (1834) 1 Bing NC 370; see also Re Weston and Thomas's
Contract [1907] 1 Ch 244 — purchaser not compelled to accept personal
indemnity from vendor). A misdescription will be substantial if it is as
to a point '… so far affecting the subject matter of the contract that it
may be reasonably supposed that, but for such misdescription, the
purchaser might never have entered into the contract at all' (per Tindal
C.J. in Flight v. Booth, ante, at p.377). This is not simply a
question of value; Eve J. has said: 'A vendor could not fulfil a contract
to sell Whiteacre by conveying Blackacre, although he might prove to
demonstration that the value of the latter was largely in excess of the
value of the former. Value, no doubt, is an element to be taken into
account in determining whether an error in description is substantial or
material, but it is certainly not the only element, nor, in my opinion,
the dominant one' ( Lee v Rayson [1917] 1 Ch 613 at p 618). It
seems clear that the question whether a misdescription is substantial or
not is one of fact for the court to decide in the circumstances of each
particular case ( Watson v Burton [1957] 1 WLR 19). Thus although
in this case a forty per cent overstatement of the area sold was held to
be a substantial misdescription, a different decision as to a similar
overstatement had been reached in an earlier case where the purchaser had
apparently wanted what he saw without relying on the stated area for the
price that he would pay ( Re Fawcett & Holmes's Contract (1889) 42
ChD 15). In Dyer v Hargrave (1805) 10 Ves 505, on the sale of a
farm by auction, the particulars described the house as being in good
repair, the farm as being in a high state of cultivation, and all within a
ring fence; none of these descriptions was true but the vendor was
nonetheless held able to enforce the contract subject to compensation. In
McQueen v Farquhar (1805) 8 RR 212, on the sale of a large estate,
a purchaser was compelled to complete where the deficiency in description
was six acres; and similarly in Leslie v Tompson (1851) 20 LJ Ch
561, where the deficiency was ten acres. In these three cases, in other
words, the misdescription was held not to be substantial.
(2) If the misdescription is not substantial, then, provided that the
misdescription was made innocently, the vendor will be able to enforce the
contract, although subject to an abatement of the price by way of
compensation for the insubstantial deficiency ( Jacobs v Revell
[1900] 2 Ch 858). This is so even though the purchaser would prefer to
rescind ( Re Brewer and Hankin's Contract (1899) 80 LT 127)."
I have so far recited the position in law and equity where there is a
misdescription in an open agreement for the sale of land. The relevant
principle is that where the misdescription is substantial, which is in every
case a question of fact, the vendor is not entitled to a decree of specific
performance even if he offers a compensation, and, of course, in the instant
case, no compensation was offered at all.
It has now to be examined to see if the provisions of clause 11 alters
the respective rights at law and in equity of the parties to these
proceedings and to see if, as Mr. Pollock contends on behalf of the
defendants, clause 11 relieves the defendants to pay any compensation or if,
as Mr. Martin in his helpful written submissions contends, it does not.
Clauses drafted with the tenor and along the lines as the provisions of
clause 11 have been in use for many years. Their evident purposes were
principally (a) to take away the right of a purchaser to annul on the
slightest and most trifling misdescription; and (b) to take away the right
to compensation in equity (as clause 11 here was designed to do) in
situations where the misdescription was "not of a serious or vital nature
nor considerably affecting the value of the property". Put in another way,
clause 11 will not apply to relieve a vendor from the liability to an
annulment of the contract by a purchaser if the misdescription is (a) of a
serious/vital nature; and (b) one which considerably affects the value of
the property. These two criteria which take a misdescription outside the
ambit of clause 11 are, in effect, the same as the concept of a "substantial
misdescription".
The sole question, which is a question of fact for my determination, is
therefore whether the misdescription of 10.77% (in percentage terms) or
$40,810.56 plus $2,522.80 and the accruing interest (in money terms) as
elaborated in the second part of prayer 1(b) of the abovementioned relief is
so substantial that the answer to the first part of prayer 1(b) must
inevitably be in the affirmative.
The deficiency in both percentage and money terms in a purchase of the
type of accommodation in Singapore under consideration is by no means
something to sniff at. Literally, thousands of condominium flats like the
flat are developed and sold in Singapore. No housing developer can be
allowed to misdescribe the area to an extent which amounts to tens of
thousands of dollars which mean a lot to the ordinary purchaser of a roof
over his head. The purchase is of a condominium flat described to be of a
certain area in a particular locality. In such purchases, the floor area of
a flat is a matter of considerable importance. In all or nearly all such
purchases, purchasers work out the per square foot or, since we turned
metric, the per square metre price by the simple process of dividing the
purchase price with the floor area and the unit price is nearly always
compared with those of comparable properties, upon which, amongst others,
the decision to purchase or not to purchase is often made. The exact floor
area of a flat also determines the unit entitlement or share in the common
property of the condominium, including the share of the purchaser's tenancy
in common of the estate in the land upon which the buildings in the
condominium are erected. Any shortfall will permanently reduce that share.
The self-same share also, on the other hand, determines the amount the
purchaser has to pay for the monthly maintenance of the common parts of the
condominium. This burden is usually but not necessarily always reduced by a
shortfall in the floor area of a flat.
Mr. Pollock, in arguments, stresses that under clause 8 of the agreement
the defendants had agreed to build a flat of a certain specification and in
accordance with the plans which had been "accepted and approved by" the
plaintiffs as the plaintiffs in the agreement expressly in terms
acknowledged. He says the defendants had done precisely that and that there
was no suggestion to the contrary at all in this case. In these
circumstances, Mr. Pollock says that there is no misdescription as to assert
otherwise would mean that the defendants had agreed to build a flat of
177.07 square metres on the one hand and on the other hand to build a flat
according to the plans which would produce a flat with a floor area of 158
square metres. Mr. Pollock argues that as a matter of construction, the
court should accept that which is certain; that the court should not accept
that the defendants had agreed to carry out two irreconcilable obligations;
and that the plaintiffs as the purchasers should be fixed with constructive
notice of the 158 square metre area, seeing that they (the plaintiffs) had
agreed to clause 8 and accepted the plans.
In answer to these arguments, Mr. Martin points out that the context and
purpose of clause 8 had really nothing to do with the floor area but with
the specifications, layout, orientation and locus of the flat within the
building block. He stresses the "building element" and not the "estate
element" of the clause, for which attention was drawn to the case of
Chinachem Investment Co Ltd v Wong Lai-Ying & Ors Suit No 5 of 1978
dated August 4, 1978 (unreported). He lays stress on the operative words of
clause 8 which imposed a contractual duty on the defendants to build the
flat "in a good and workmanlike manner". Also, he submits that in practical
terms it was not envisaged by anyone that a purchaser had to be armed with
the necessary instruments and measure the squares, rombus, trapexiums and
other odd areas of a flat before a purchase is made. I accept the force of
these arguments and, in my judgment, it was never intended that clause 8 was
directed at the description of the floor area of the flat. For that, clause
1 and the First Schedule were designed to carry out that function.
I would now refer to the argument that a margin of error, arising out of
the inexactitude of measurements and survey, of about 3% to 4%, should be
allowed. Mr. Pollock says that the defendants had "estimated" the area,
i.e. had measured or calculated the area approximately, and in view of
the use of this word of approximation, this court should allow an error of
5% so that, in effect, there was a shortfall of only 5.77% which in
percentage and money terms must be less than substantial. In this regard,
the case of Owmist Pty Ltd v Twynam Pastoral Co Pty Ltd [1983] 3
NSWLR 196 has to be considered. By the agreement for sale, the vendor agreed
to sell a named property which was described, so far as the area was
concerned, as "having an area of approximately 3,832 acres (1,500.81
hectares) …" In fact, the area was 104 acres less than that described.
Parties agreed that the description, "approximately 3,832 acres", gave a
margin of up to 25 acres as a permissible deficiency. The issue identified
was this: "As a matter of principle is compensation to be assessed upon the
basis of 104 acres, or of 104 acres less 25 acres?" Helsham C.J. answered
that compensation, to be truly compensatory, must be calculated on the basis
of the total actual deficiency without reference to or reduction for any
permissible or agreed approximation of error or misdescription.
Helsham C.J. said at p. 197G–198D:
"It seems to me that, as a matter of principle, bearing in mind the
purpose of the condition and how it is worded, the approach adopted by Mr.
Butt is the more correct one, although it needs qualification. The purpose
of compensation is to recompense the purchaser for not getting the whole
of what he contracted to buy. 'Substantially, compensation is given for
some diminution or deterioration in the value of the property contracted
to be sold: the purchaser 'has not got the whole of what he contracted to
buy' …': per Starke J. in King v Poggioli (1923) 32 CLR 222 at 246.
In the present contract, as in most other cases of this kind, there is an
agreement to sell a certain property, a composite whole, having as part of
its description a reference to acreage (or whatever else it may be); there
is not, in such cases, an agreement to sell so many acres simpliciter,
whether approximately, more or less, or otherwise. A deficiency of acreage
in such a case (unless it is of such a nature that in the circumstances of
the case it provides a purchaser with other remedies) gives a purchaser a
compensatory right only; the qualification 'approximately' applied to this
part of the description of the property only decreases the ambit of the
purchaser's compensatory right; it allows a greater latitude to the vendor
before it can be said that he misdescribed his property, or was in error
as to its area. But once the ambit of this latitude has been passed, the
purchaser has his same right to compensation — i.e. the diminution
in value of the property contracted to be sold. The fact that he has not
received a property with an acreage that can be said to be properly
described as 'approximately' so many acres is merely the trigger that
releases a contractual right to compensation."
In my judgment, the same principle applies: the actual and total
deficiency (without any allowance for any margin of error) must be
looked at in considering the question whether it is substantial.
Taking all the circumstances into consideration, the deficiency in area
in this type of property is, in my judgment, substantial. Accordingly, the
answer to the first part of prayer 1(b) must be in the affirmative. If,
contrary to my finding of fact, the deficiency is not substantial, then
indisputably clause 11 of the agreement would relieve the defendants from
paying any compensation at all. In view of my decision, it follows logically
that a declaration in terms of the second part of prayer 1(b) should not be
made. There will be an order accordingly. The defendants are also ordered to
pay the costs of the plaintiffs.
I am not unmindful that my decision will cast upon the plaintiffs and
other purchasers like them the problem of electing whether to annul and call
off the agreement for the purchase of their flats or whether to negotiate
anew with the defendants with a view to accepting a compensation to be
freely agreed between the parties. The latter course was discussed in Watson
Burton (4). One of the problems, I imagine, is the fact that
purchasers such as the plaintiffs might, since taking physical possession of
their flats, have made improvements to their flats or have since settled
into them as their homes. This court has no power to rewrite contracts
between the parties and must leave them to act according to their best
interest and legal advice.
Before I part with this judgment, I should mention that the problems
encountered in this case will not arise in respect of an agreement for the
sale of a unit in a housing project which is governed by the Housing
Developers Rules 1985 which came into operation on January 4, 1985. In
respect of such a sale the agreement for sale will be in Form E as
prescribed by rule 12(2) of the 1985 Rules. The provisions of clause 19 of
the said Form of Agreement, which are entirely reproduced below, would
govern and resolve the difficulties raised in this case:
"19.(1) No error or mis-statement as to the description of the area of
the building unit shall annul the sale or entitle the Purchaser to be
discharged from the purchase.
(2) Any error or mis-statement as to the description of the area of the
building unit shall give the Purchaser an entitlement to an adjustment of
the purchase price in accordance with the provisions of this clause.
(3) If on completion of resurvey by the Government it is found that the
area of the building unit ascertained by such resurvey is less than the
area mentioned in the First Schedule hereto ('the scheduled area'), there
shall be an adjustment of the purchase price for the difference (if any)
in excess of three (3) per cent of the scheduled area calculated at the
rate the Purchaser paid for each square metre of the building unit.
(4) The Vendor shall not be entitled to any adjustment of the purchase
price if the area of the building unit ascertained by the Government
resurvey exceeds the scheduled area."
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