BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Charlesworth, R (On the Application Of) v Crossrail Ltd [2019] EWCA Civ 1118 (03 July 2019) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2019/1118.html Cite as: [2019] EWCA Civ 1118 |
[New search] [Printable PDF version] [Help]
ON APPEAL FROM THE QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
The Honourable Mrs Justice Lang DBE
CO/3929/2017
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE LEWISON
and
LORD JUSTICE PETER JACKSON
____________________
THE QUEEN (on the application of) DANIEL CHARLESWORTH |
Appellant |
|
- and - |
||
CROSSRAIL LIMITED |
Respondent |
|
- and - |
||
BERKELEY FIFTY-FIVE LIMITED |
Interested Party |
____________________
MR TIMOTHY MOULD QC (instructed by Winckworth Sherwood LLP) for the Respondent
Hearing date : 27th June 2019
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Lewison:
Introduction
"5.2 Where only one expression of interest from a former owner or long leaseholder with a Qualifying Interest is made to acquire a site, that person will be given the opportunity to acquire the site at market value within the timescales set."
5.3 If there are competing bids for a site from former owners, it will be disposed of on the open market."
"The Rules apply to all land if it was acquired by or under threat of compulsion. A threat of compulsion will be assumed in the case of a voluntary sale if power to acquire the land compulsorily existed at the time unless the land was publicly or privately offered for sale immediately before the negotiations for acquisition."
"The public interest underlying this policy is obvious also. When land is compulsorily purchased the coercive power of the state is used to deprive a citizen of his property against his will. He is obliged to take its assessed value whether he wants to or not. This exercise is justified by the public intention to develop the land in the wider interests of the community of which the citizen is part. If, however, that intention is not for any reason fulfilled, and the land becomes available for disposal, common fairness demands that the former owner should have a preferential claim to buy back the land which he had been compelled to sell, provided he is able and willing to pay the full market price at the time of repurchase, that price reflecting the development potential of the land."
The facts
"There were a number of reasons for this. (1) The B55 Land was a very small part of the LDA Land that had been acquired by B55. (2) The part of the freehold title of the B55 land comprising the Land in Issue was subject to two 999 years' leases. (3) The B55 Land included an estate road of little or no value. (4) The transfer was subject to the terms of the B55 Transfer Agreement which provided for the grant of the lease for 150 years back to Berkeley Homes in respect of that part of the Station Box Land to the west of Arsenal Way upon satisfaction of the condition precedent, also for consideration of £1. The obligation to grant the lease thus stripped out a significant proportion of the value of the freehold interest in the B55 Land."
The issue
"[71] The B55 Transfer Agreement was negotiated on the basis that there were compulsory purchase powers in existence which would be exercised if the B55 Transfer did not take effect. The fact that land is acquired voluntarily, in the sense that an agreement is reached between the acquiring authority and the landowner, does not mean that the land is not acquired under the threat of compulsory purchase powers. Indeed paragraph 7 of the Crichel Down Rules 2004 expressly provides that, in the case of a voluntary sale where compulsory powers exist, the sale will be assumed to have taken place under a threat of compulsion.
[72] I accept the Defendant's submission that the exception in Rule 7 , where land was offered for sale before the negotiations for acquisition, is intended to cover the situation where the landowner has already placed his property on the market for sale before compulsory acquisition negotiations commenced, and so should not be allowed fortuitously to benefit from the Crichel Down Rules. That exception plainly does not apply here on the facts, where compulsory acquisition was imminent by 15 February 2011, when B55 sold the freehold to TfL.
[73] In my view, neither Rule 7 of the Crichel Down Rules, nor paragraph 3.1 of the C10 Policy, excludes from the scope of those schemes a person who has recently purchased a freehold interest in land, which was already under threat of compulsory acquisition, with a view to selling it to the acquiring authority. Nor do I consider that such a purchase and re-sale is contrary to the underlying purpose of the two schemes."
i) B55 had a wider interest in developing the land of which the land in issue was only a small part.
ii) Its parent company had positively lobbied for the construction of the station which, initially at least, Crossrail did not wish to construct.
iii) The very short span of time between B55's acquisition of the development site and the subsequent sale of the land in issue to TfL (two working days) leads to the inference that the developers and TfL acted in concert with a view to defeating what would otherwise have been Mr Charlesworth's entitlement to the right of first refusal. Moreover, the very short time span leads to the further inference that there must have been an offer to sell the land in issue to TfL before it itself acquired it.
iv) Although rule 7 of the Crichel Down rules says that it will be "assumed" that a voluntary sale was made under threat of compulsion where compulsory powers exist, an assumption of this kind can be displaced by contrary evidence.
v) The judge was wrong to equate a backcloth of compulsion and a sale made under threat of compulsion. The true reason for B55's acquisition and (almost) immediate sale to TfL was to protect B55 and to enhance the prospects of its successful redevelopment of Woolwich.
"The language used to set up a statutory hypothesis varies. The traditional form of words "shall be deemed" has generally given way to expressions such as "treated as", "regarded as" or "taken to be". Whatever form is used the effect is the same."
"The CD Rules apply to cases where the land in question has not materially changed in character. This Policy is designed to include sites which have so changed. It is not necessarily apparent that the policy considerations in the two cases will be identical. The interested parties here were the appellant, who had owned an individual flat, and other parties who had had interests in other individual parts of the site. None would be stepping back into a property of the character that he or it had previously owned. They would be getting the opportunity of commercial benefit from a potential new development of the whole site of an entirely different character. This is hardly the situation faced by the former owners of Crichel Down, whose erstwhile property gave rise to the principles now expressed in the CD Rules."
"The purpose of the proviso is, in my view, to exclude from the assumption of a threat of compulsion situations in which the landowner has, immediately prior to negotiations between him and the authority, taken active steps to dispose of his land. Disposal of the land is the end which he, independently of the existence or use of statutory powers, wishes to achieve. …The proviso envisages activity in relation to the land prior to the negotiations for acquisition between the owner and the authority, that activity being the land having been offered for sale immediately before those negotiations. Where, as here, the owner immediately prior to any relevant approach by the authority caused the land to be advertised for sale by auction, the proviso, in my view, applies and a threat of compulsion is not to be assumed." (Emphasis added)
Lord Justice Peter Jackson:
Lord Justice Patten: