2 types: Positive - requiring covenantor to do
something - some physical action or financial
outlay. ie build and maintain boundary
Negative -requiring covenantor not to do
something. ie don't use building for business
Acid test - HAYWOOD v BRUNSWICK PERMANENT
BENEFIT BUILDING SOCIETY - does the covenant require
the expenditure of money? Yes = positive; No = negative
Covenantor - person promising to observe the covenant
Servient tenement
Covenantee - person with the benefit of the covenant
Dominant tenement
Original covenantor liable to perform the covenant
until it ceases. Even if property sold on, still liable.
If original covenantor still owns property, remedy
would be specific performance or an injunction, if
they've moved on, remedy would be damages
Different rules in CL and equity. CL difficult to
enforce against covenantors successors so original
covenantor is vulnerable
In equity, negative covenants are more
easily enforced against successors
START WITH POSITION AT LAW
Step 1 - Proving the running of the benefit at CL
Benefit of both positive and negative covenants may
pass by either express or implied assignment
Deed may expressly transfer the benefit, but more often implied
Assumed that sale will include covenants.. Consider is
it useful for the land or a personal benefit? Covenant cannot be personal
4 Conditions: Covenant must touch and concern the land - either affect
the land as regards it mode of occupation or the value of the land
From SMITH & SNIPES HALL FARM LTD v RIVER
DOUGLAS CATCHMENT BOARD
X - must have been an intention that the benefit
of the covenant should run with the land. Can be express or implied under s78 LPA.
FEDERATED HOMES v MILL LODGE PROPERTIES LTD -
s78 given a wide interpretation, a covenant is deemed to run
with the land under s78 unless deed expresses otherwise!
X - The covenantee (benefitter) must have had a legal
estate in the dominant land
X - New owner must take a legal estate in that land
Step 2 - Prove running of burden at CL
AUSTERBERRY v OLDHAM
CORPORATION says that, at CL,
burden of covenant cannot run with the
land
Confirmed in RHONE v STEPHENS
Ways around the rule but in majority of
situations, exceptions won't help
The rule in HALZALL v BRIZELL - mutual benefit/burden rule
if land has benefit of an agreement, he cannot avoid the
associated burden of it. ie easement to use driveway
coupled with covenant to maintain it
Operation of a chain of indemnity covenants -
but if one person dies or is untraceable, chain
broken and original covenantor is still liable