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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Griffiths v WE & DT Cave Ltd [1998] EWCA Civ 1972 (04 December 1998) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/1998/1972.html Cite as: 78 P & CR 8, (1998) 78 P&CR 8, [1998] EWCA Civ 1972 |
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IN THE COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM BIRMINGHAM DISTRICT REGISTRY
(MR JUSTICE CHADWICK)
Strand London WC2 |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE ALDOUS
LORD JUSTICE HUTCHISON
____________________
SIMON GRIFFITHS | ||
and | ||
CLARE GRIFFITHS | ||
Plaintiffs | ||
- v - | ||
W E & D T CAVE LTD | ||
Defendants |
____________________
Smith Bernal Reporting Limited, 180 Fleet Street,
London EC4A 2HD
Tel: 0171 421 4040
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
MR J GAUNT QC (Instructed by Messrs Burges Salmon, Narrow Quay House, Narrow Quay, Bristol BS1 4AH) appeared on behalf of the Respondent
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Crown Copyright ©
"means the open market value of the Subject Land at the date of service of a Notice of Exercise of Option less the cost thereof to the Company including any cost of purchase of a ransom strip from M Hines Limited or payment or value given to it for the acquisition of a right of access and less the amount of any taxation to be borne by the Company on or by reference to a disposal or anticipated disposal of the Subject Land at the open market value and less the amount of any costs of acquisition development or disposal (which shall include a capital sum of £600,000 and such interest as the Company shall incur in borrowing that sum or if no such interest is paid or ascertainable interest at the rate of 2% above the base rate from time to time of Midland Bank Plc from 29th September 1988) and subject to the Agricultural Tenancy
Provided that in the event of the Net Profit failing to be assessed on or prior to a disposal of the Subject Land by the Company regard shall be had in assessing the open market value to the anticipated proceeds of disposal".
"at any time after the date of this Agreement if
(A) at that time the Company shall have ceased to enjoy the benefit of all or a substantial part of the War Department Tenancy for any reason other than a reason outside the Grantor's control or
(B) at that time the Grantor, or his personal representative, shall have transferred or purported to transfer his interest in the Subject Land otherwise than to the Grantor's wife or children; or
(C) at that time the Grantor shall have been adjudicated bankrupt; or
(D) the option has not already been exercised on the Expiry Date, within the three months of the Expiry Date."
"2.4 The price payable in respect of the subject land shall be:
2.4.1 In the case of an exercise in the circumstances described in clause 2.2.1, 16% of the net profit of the company in relation to the subject land; and
2.4.2 In the case of an exercise in the circumstances described in clause 2.2.2, 16% of the open market value of the subject land by reference to the existing agricultural use subject to the agricultural tenancy."
Clause 3 sets the way that the price is to be determined:
"3. The price determined in accordance with the provisions of clause 2 hereof shall be as agreed between the parties or in default of agreement fixed by a chartered surveyor to be agreed in writing between the parties . . . In so fixing such price, the surveyor shall have regard to all the circumstances of the situation, including the specific terms of this agreement, and his decision shall be final and binding on the parties hereto and he shall be acting as an expert and not as an arbitrator."
"(a) shall include additional value which the land may possess as a result of its potential for residential and/or industrial development; or
(b) shall be its value as agricultural land only."
Having set out the facts and the relevant parts of the agreement, the judge said this:
"The question, therefore, is whether the words 'by reference to the existing agricultural use', which appear in sub-clause 2.4.2, restrict the open market value which is to be ascertained upon valuation under that sub-clause to the value of the land on the basis that it can be used only for agriculture and will continue to be capable of use only for agriculture within the foreseeable future. If that had been the intention of the parties, it could readily have been achieved, either by referring to the 'existing use value' of the subject land, or by including the words 'by reference only to the existing agricultural use'. The parties have not chosen to express their intention in that way. It is necessary, therefore, to decide whether that intention should be attributed to them.
In my view, it should not be, for a number of reasons. First - and obviously - where (as here) there is a well-known and obvious formula ("existing user value") which the parties could use to express their intention, the Court should be cautious in attributing to the parties the intention which would flow from the use of that formula if they have chosen not to use it.
Secondly, the parties have indicated in clause 3 that, in fixing the price, the surveyor is to have regard to all the circumstances of the situation, including the specific terms of this agreement. If the surveyor is to have regard to all the circumstances of the situation, then he must have regard to the potential development value which is introduced, inter alia, by the adoption of the local plan. He must have regard to that circumstance unless there is a clear direction that he should not have regard to it.
Thirdly, to attribute to the parties the intention that a valuation under 2.4.2 is to be made by reference only to agricultural use is to attribute an intention to create an anomaly in certain circumstances which could arise under the agreement; that is to say:
(a) There is no reason why the parties should have intended that, if within the 10 year period, the land had attracted considerable hope value by reason, for example, of the adoption of the local plan and perhaps encouraging responses from the planning department following an application, the benefit of that hope value should not go to Mr Griffiths' estate in the event that he died, leaving his property to someone other than to his wife and children; or to his trustee in bankruptcy for the benefit of this creditors if he were become bankrupt. No reason has been suggested why the company or Mr Griffiths should be concerned that beneficiaries in his estate (other than his wife or children) or his creditors in a bankruptcy should not share in the true value of his interest in this land if actual planning permission had not been granted, but would share in the true value if actual planning permission had been granted. It seems to me entirely arbitrary that the right to share in the development value in those circumstances should depend on whether the relevant meeting of the local authority planning committee occurred in January 1996 or in March 1996.
(b) There is no reason in principle why, if planning permission were granted in March 1996 pursuant to an application which had already been approved in principle in January 1996, Mr Griffiths should be deprived of the whole benefit. Clearly, a planning permission in the hand may be worth more than a planning permission in the bush, but that does not lead to the conclusion that a planning permission in the bush should be treated as valueless.
Fourthly, the option agreement is granted for a nominal consideration in order to enable the company to recover the land conveyed on 21st February 1986 at a price to be fixed in the future. I can see no reason why the parties should have intended that the price to be fixed in the future should not be a true price for what was being transferred. If it were not to be a true price, then the effect of the agreement is that the company will be entitled, by the exercise of that option, to expropriate some part of the value of the interest which Mr Griffiths was to have in the land. That is, of course, a bargain which the parties can make; but, in circumstances where there seems to be no commercial reason for making it, one looks for clear language to have that effect. As I have indicated, these parties did not use the clear and obvious phrase which was available to them.
Fifthly, the effect of clause 7(b) is that, notwithstanding the grant of planning permission, the company could choose not to exercise the option; it could choose not to attempt to sell the land, but to develop the land itself. If that were the company's choice, then Mr Griffiths would share in the increased value of the land resulting from the development. There is, as it seems to me, no reason why the parties should have intended that that prospect should be capable of being taken from him by the exercise of an option during a three month window period from February to May of 1996; of being restored to him thereafter, if the option be not exercised with that in mind; but subject to being taken away again if he were to die without leaving a wife and children.
For those reasons, it seems to me that there is no sufficiently clear indication in sub- clause 2.4.2 that the parties intended that a valuation under that sub-clause should be made by reference only to existing agricultural use. Accordingly I should not hold that that was their intention."
The judge then went on to answer the question posed in the originating summons in favour of the Griffiths.
ORDER: Appeal dismissed with costs.