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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Sharp & Anor, R (On the Application Of) v North Essex Magistrates Court [2017] EWCA Civ 1143 (31 July 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2017/1143.html Cite as: [2017] WLR(D) 538, [2017] WLR 3789, [2017] EWCA Civ 1143, [2017] 1 WLR 3789 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Mr Justice Haddon-Cave
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
VICE-PRESIDENT OF THE COURT OF APPEAL CIVIL DIVISION
LORD JUSTICE GROSS
and
LORD JUSTICE BRIGGS
____________________
The Queen on the application of Sharp and Another |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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North Essex Magistrates Court |
Respondent |
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- and - |
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Environment Agency |
Interested Party |
____________________
Daniel Kolinsky QC and Gwion Lewis (instructed by the Environment Agency) for the Respondent
Hearing dates : 29 June, 2017
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Gross :
INTRODUCTION
" It is another example of the inroad often made into individual rights in the interests of the wider community. In a modern civilised society, there must always be a delicate balance between the rights of the individual and the need of the community at large…. "
THE LEGISLATIVE FRAMEWORK
" (a) carry out flood risk management work within subsection (1D) (a) to (f) if Conditions 1 and 2 are satisfied;
….
(1A) Condition 1 is that the ….[EA] considers the work desirable having regard to the national flood and coastal erosion risk management strategies under sections 7 and 8 of the Flood and Water Management Act 2010.
(1B) Condition 2 is that the purpose of the work is to manage a flood risk …..from:
….
(b) a main river."
There was no dispute before us that Conditions 1 and 2 were satisfied.
" In this section 'flood risk management work' means anything done –
(a) to maintain existing works (including buildings or structures) including cleansing, repairing or otherwise maintaining the efficiency of an existing watercourse or drainage work;
(b) to operate existing works (such as sluicegates or pumps);
(c) to improve existing works (including buildings or structures) including anything done to deepen, widen, straighten or otherwise improve an existing watercourse, to remove or alter mill dams, weirs or other obstructions to watercourses, or to raise, widen or otherwise improve a drainage work;
(d) to construct or repair new works (including buildings, structures, watercourses, drainage works and machinery);
(e) for the purpose of maintaining or restoring natural processes;
(f) to monitor, investigate or survey a location or a natural process;
….."
" Nothing in subsections (1) to (3) above authorises any person to enter on the land of any person except for the purpose of maintaining existing works. "
" Where the …[EA]…. is proposing , for the purposes of, or in connection with, the carrying out of any of its functions –
(a) to carry out any engineering or building operations….
the …[EA]… may apply to either of the Ministers for an order under this section ('a compulsory works order'). "
S.168(4) confers power on the EA, without prejudice to s.154, to acquire compulsorily any land, including the creation of new rights and interests. This power is subject to the provisions of Schedule 19 to the WRA. Schedule 19, para. 4 contains provisions (akin to those applicable to compulsory purchase) for consideration of merits based objections, by way of a local inquiry.
" Any person designated in writing for the purpose by ….the [EA]….may enter any premises or vessel for the purpose of –
(a) determining whether, and if so in what manner, any power or duty conferred or imposed on …the [EA]…by virtue of any enactment to which this section applies….should be exercised or, as the case may be, performed; or
(b) exercising or performing any power or duty which is so conferred or imposed."
" (1) Where injury is sustained by any person by reason of the exercise by the ….[EA]….of any powers under section 165 (1) to (3) of this Act, the …[EA]…shall be liable to make full compensation to the injured party.
(2) In case of dispute, the amount of any compensation under sub-paragraph (1) above shall be determined by the Upper Tribunal."
THE FACTUAL HISTORY
" On 26 February 2013 Chelmsford City Council granted planning permission for the ….[CFAS]… for works to be carried out to implement….[it]… Flooding of various rivers in this part of the country is perceived to be an issue. The works in respect of which planning permission was granted included significant works on the claimants' land, in particular, the construction of an earth embankment of some 500 metres in length, 5.5 metres high, a concrete control structure with two sluice gates and various other ancillary features. The works are part of the CFAS scheme and include the rerouting of the River Wid which is prone …[to flooding]… Mr and Mrs Sharp complain that they will be deprived of some 3 hectares of their land as a result of these proposed works."
" The owner of the land is aggrieved that another course was not followed i.e., service of a compulsory purchase notice which would have entitled him to a public hearing. That is not …a ground for refusing to grant a warrant. ……
The point on section 165(6) is simply based on a misreading of the section. It simply prohibits entry for new work under that section. Section 172 is the relevant section for this application. "
THE JUDGMENT UNDER APPEAL
" Question 2: Whether based on the evidence and in light of the impact of the proposed works on the Applicant's land and farming operations, the District Judge was wrong to conclude that it is reasonable for the Environment Agency to seek to exercise powers under Section 172 of the Act to carry out the intended works and not its compulsory purchase powers under Section 154 of the Act and accordingly there are reasonable grounds for the grant of the Warrant….
Question 3: Whether the District Judge was wrong to conclude that Section 165 and 172 of the Act give the Environment Agency powers to carry out new works, in the form of the works proposed in this matter, in light of the provisions of Section 165(6) of the Act…. "
" They directly related to the problems caused by the fact that (i) Chelmsford lies at the junction of these three rivers: the Wid, the Cam and the Chelmer; (ii) …there had been significant flooding in the past… (iii) in the Environment Agency's opinion, it was imperative that these flood risk managements works on the claimant's land and other land were put in place without further delay… "
" There is nothing in the legislation to suggest that the Environment Agency are bound to issue compulsory purchase orders or, indeed, compulsory works orders in connection with any particular type of work. Sections 154, 165 and 168 are each permissive and use the word 'may' and are not interdependent. The fact that the scale of the works in the present case may be larger than some others is irrelevant. Mr Edwards had no answer to the point that if the works in question were very minor, but nevertheless deprived the landowner of the use of the tiny parcel of land that would not make any difference in principle to his central submission that the Environment Agency was always bound to issue a compulsory purchase order. "
" …. Mr Edwards began his submissions with a peroration about fundamental principles, common law, and the fact that the common law is astute to ensure that there should be no deprivation of a person's land without both clear legislative language and compensation and that this was, he submitted, a 'disturbing case'. It is not. It is a fairly straightforward and prosaic example of a government agency going about the lawful exercise of its powers in fulfilment of its important duties. The legislation in this case is crystal clear. Mr and Mrs Sharp have a right to compensation under schedule 21 for any damage that they will suffer….. It is the Environment Agency's important role to anticipate and seek to ameliorate the risk of flooding. That is why they are given such wide powers, in particular under section 165 and 172…."
DISCUSSION
i) S.165 (1D) (b) ("operate existing works") was to be treated as akin to maintenance and thus within the ambit of the power of entry furnished by s.165(6).
ii) S.165 (1D) (c) ("improve existing works") was not within the ambit of maintenance, so that the EA would require a CPO or CWO if it wished to enter on a landowners' property without consent for this purpose.
iii) S.165 (1D) (f) ("monitor, investigate or survey") was covered by the specific power of entry furnished under s.172 (2), namely to "carry out such inspections, measurements and tests".
i) First, it yields a very untidy solution, not at all foreshadowed in either s.165 (1)(a) or s.165 (6). S. 165(1)(a) deals apparently straightforwardly with all of sub-sections (1D) (a) – (f). S. 165 (6) singles out only the maintenance of existing works for separate treatment. By contrast, Mr Edwards is now contending for a variety of approaches for the individual sub-sections within s.165 (1D); that seems unlikely and indeed opportunistic.
ii) Secondly, this construction would require different meanings to be given to the same language in the two places where that language appears in the same section. Thus, in sub-sections (1D)(a) and (b), "maintain existing works" must presumably have a different meaning from "operate existing works". The natural meaning of s. 165(6) is that it permits entry only for "maintaining existing works", i.e., language which applies only to sub-section (1D) (a). However, if Mr Edwards is right, then "maintaining existing works" in s.165(6) must have a broader meaning than "maintain existing works" in sub-section (1D)(a) and must extend to "operate existing works" within sub-section (1D)(b). Unless driven to it, I would be reluctant to accede to such a construction.
iii) Thirdly, as to improving existing works (sub-section (1D)(c)), this argument requires the EA to be obliged, not simply entitled, to utilise its CPO or CWO powers. While the argument at least recognises that improving existing works is something different from maintaining existing works (and to such extent is stronger than the submissions advanced orally before us), its deployment here serves to beg the question.
iv) Fourthly, this treatment of sub-section (1D) (f) ("monitor, investigate or survey") as falling under s.172 (2) involves both the equating of different statutory language and a recognition that s.172 is available to confer a power of entry on the EA in respect of an activity where entry is otherwise precluded by s.165(6). As it seems to me, the difference in language between s. 172(1) and s.172(2), does not justify the different treatment accorded to these sub-sections by Mr Edwards – not least given the linkage between the two sub-sections contained in the closing words of s.172(2) with its reference to the purposes mentioned in s.172(1).
i) First, all the various formulations of Mr Edwards' submissions suffer from the weaknesses already outlined.
ii) Secondly, I am not persuaded that the permissive language of ss. 154 and 168 is to be converted into obligatory language requiring the EA to use its CPO or CWO powers in the case of new works. I am unable to accept Mr Edwards' submission that this renders the CPO or CWO powers otiose. They are available for use, in a proper case, when the EA decides to deploy them. By contrast, if Mr Edwards' submission was well-founded then, at the least, the EA would be significantly circumscribed in the performance of its powers of flood risk management work.
iii) Thirdly, as highlighted by the Judge (at [23] of the judgment), the Appellants' case means that any new works – no matter how minor – provided only that they deprived landowners of the smallest parcel of land, would oblige the EA to proceed by way of its CPO or CWO powers. Such an outcome appears improbable and casts further doubt on the Appellants' proposed construction.
iv) Fourthly, the natural construction of s.172 of the WRA is that it confers an independent and general power of entry. Nothing said by the Appellants has persuaded me otherwise. Put another way, I am not persuaded that s.165(6) supplies a sufficient hook on which to attach a restriction to the statutory language.
v) Fifthly, I acknowledge that this conclusion constrains the ability of those affected to challenge the merits – as distinct from the legality – of the EA's proposals and process. This consideration does not dissuade me, both because I am satisfied that that is the balance struck by the legislature and because, in any event, there remains opportunity for challenge on public law grounds, albeit not an open-ended challenge on the merits.
OVERALL CONCLUSIONS
Lord Justice Briggs:
Lady Justice Gloster: