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Supreme Court of Ireland: Crowley v Sheehan - Landlord and Tenant Ground Rents

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Filed February 18th, 2026
Detected March 20th, 2026
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Summary

The Supreme Court of Ireland issued a ruling on the costs of an appeal concerning the interpretation of the Landlord and Tenant (Ground Rents) Acts. The case involved a sub-lessee's right to purchase the fee simple, with the court addressing a significant shift in arguments presented by the parties during the appeal process.

What changed

This ruling from the Supreme Court of Ireland (IESC 16) addresses the costs associated with an appeal that stemmed from a dispute over the interpretation of Section 16(2)(f) of the Landlord and Tenant (Ground Rents) (No. 2) Act 1978. The core issue was whether a sub-lessee had the right to purchase the fee simple in a property, with the appeal court noting a significant and unusual change in the parties' arguments just before the hearing. Specifically, the respondents abandoned their submission that the section did not apply to residential leases, and the appellants conceded that a lease did not require a covenant to erect permanent buildings to be a qualifying lease.

The Court concluded that it was inappropriate to allow the appeal and set aside lower court judgments based on the parties' late change of arguments. The ruling emphasizes that parties cannot abandon points of public importance on which leave to appeal was granted and then advance new arguments at the final appellate stage, deeming such a practice unfair and inappropriate for litigation. This decision reinforces the principle of consistent argumentation throughout legal proceedings.

What to do next

  1. Review internal legal guidance on landlord and tenant ground rent legislation.
  2. Consult with legal counsel regarding the implications of the ruling on ongoing or future property transactions.

Source document (simplified)

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  Crowley & anor v Sheehan & ors (Approved) [2026] IESC 16 (18 February 2026)

URL: https://www.bailii.org/ie/cases/IESC/2026/2026IESC16.html
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[2026] IESC 16 | | |
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AN CH?IRT UACHTARACH

THE SUPREME COURT

S:AP:IE:2025:000028

[2026] IESC 16

O'Donnell C.J.

Dunne J.

Woulfe J.

Murray J.

Donnelly J.


IN THE MATTER OF SECTION 22(1) OF THE LANDLORD AND TENANT (GROUND RENTS) ACTS 1967 - 2019

AND IN THE MATTER OF PART II OF THE LANDLORD AND TENANT (GROUND RENTS) (NO.2) ACT 1978

AND IN THE MATTER OF AN APPLICATION BY RAYMOND CROWLEY AND ?CHARLES CROWLEY

AND IN THE MATTER OF PROPERTY SITUATE AT AND KNOWN AS 1B, "ANNEVILLE", COOLGARTEN PARK, MAGAZINE ROAD, IN THE CITY OF CORK


BETWEEN/

CHARLES CROWLEY AND RAYMOND CROWLEY

Respondents

AND

BARRY SHEEHAN AND ALL UNKNOWN AND UNASCERTAINED OWNER OR OWNERS

Appellants

AND

THE ATTORNEY GENERAL

Notice Party

Ruling of the Court delivered on the 18 th day of February 2026

  1. This ruling relates to the costs of this appeal following the delivery of judgment herein on the 5 th February, 2026 ([2026] IESC 6). It concerns an appeal on the interpretation and application of the restriction on a sub-lessee's right to purchase the fee simple in a property, as contained in s. 16(2)(f) of the Landlord and Tenant (Ground Rents) (No. 2) Act 1978 (the "1978 Act").

  2. The respondent sub-lessee was seeking to purchase the fee simple; the appellant head lessee opposed this on the grounds that the head lease is not a qualifying lease under the 1978 Act and thus contended that the respondent could not purchase the fee simple.? Following a hearing before the County Registrar, the respondents were granted permission to purchase the fee simple. This decision was upheld by the Circuit Court and, in turn, its decision was subsequently affirmed by Nolan J. in the High Court ([2024] IEHC 695).

  3. Leave to appeal to this Court was granted in the light of the finding by the High Court that s. 16(2)(f) was limited in its application to commercial leases. Just prior to the hearing, in a significant volte face, both parties resiled from arguments which they had relied on throughout the proceedings. In this respect, the respondents abandoned their submission that s. 16(2)(f) did not apply to residential leases and the appellants conceded that a lease did not have to contain a covenant to erect permanent buildings to be a qualifying lease under the 1978 Act.?

  4. Having considered the arguments of the parties, it was concluded that it would not be appropriate to allow the appeal and set aside the judgments of the lower courts. **** This would have the effect of allowing one party to change an argument that they had maintained throughout proceedings when they reach the final appellate court and thereby to achieve a successful outcome. It was noted that this would be extremely unfair to the other party and could never be an appropriate way to conduct litigation. It is not permissible for a party to obtain leave to appeal on a point of general public importance, abandon that point, and thereafter advance an argument which does not engage any issue of general public importance.

  5. The Court invited the parties to furnish submissions in relation to the issue of costs. The appellant has submitted that the appropriate order to make is no order for costs. It is suggested that while the ultimate decision of the Court favours the respondents, their interpretation of s. 16(2)(f) was not accepted. As pointed out previously, the respondents conceded immediately before the hearing that their interpretation of the section was not correct.

  6. The respondents have submitted that they have been "entirely successful" in their appeal. It is true that the order of the Court, in dismissing the appeal, favours the respondents. In the ordinary course of events, it would normally follow that they would be entitled to their costs. However, but for the fact that the High Court was persuaded by the respondents to conclude that s. 16(2)(f) only applied to commercial leases, a point they conceded before this Court was wrong, the appellant would not have obtained leave to appeal to this Court. The Court in its judgment expressed its unhappiness at the way in which this appeal came before the Court with both parties significantly changing their positions at the last minute.

  7. The Court has a discretion in relation to the question of costs. In this case, having regard to the unusual way in which this appeal was conducted by both parties, the Court is satisfied that no order for costs should be made in favour of the respondents.

  8. In those circumstances, the Court is satisfied that the normal rule that costs follow the event should not apply. Accordingly, although the appeal of the appellant has been dismissed, no order for costs in respect of the appeal should be made against the appellant.

?


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URL: https://www.bailii.org/ie/cases/IESC/2026/2026IESC16.html

Named provisions

SECTION 22(1) OF THE LANDLORD AND TENANT (GROUND RENTS) ACTS 1967 - 2019 PART II OF THE LANDLORD AND TENANT (GROUND RENTS) (NO.2) ACT 1978 s. 16(2)(f) of the Landlord and Tenant (Ground Rents) (No. 2) Act 1978

Source

Analysis generated by AI. Source diff and links are from the original.

Classification

Agency
GP
Filed
February 18th, 2026
Instrument
Enforcement
Legal weight
Binding
Stage
Final
Change scope
Minor
Document ID
[2026] IESC 16
Docket
S:AP:IE:2025:000028

Who this affects

Applies to
Legal professionals
Industry sector
5311 Real Estate
Activity scope
Property Transactions Leasehold Management
Geographic scope
Ireland IE

Taxonomy

Primary area
Real Estate
Operational domain
Legal
Topics
Property Law Leasehold Law

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