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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 >> The University of London v Cornerstone Telecommunications Infrastructure Limited [2019] EWCA Civ 2075 (26 November 2019) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2019/2075.html Cite as: [2019] WLR(D) 651, [2020] 1 WLR 2124, [2019] EWCA Civ 2075, [2020] 1 P & CR 18, [2020] WLR 2124, [2020] RVR 248 |
[New search] [Printable PDF version] [View ICLR summary: [2019] WLR(D) 651] [Buy ICLR report: [2020] 1 WLR 2124] [Help]
ON APPEAL FROM THE UPPER TRIBUNAL (LANDS CHAMBER)
Mr Martin Rodger QC, Deputy Chamber President
TCR/56/2018
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE LEWISON
and
LORD JUSTICE ARNOLD
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THE UNIVERSITY OF LONDON |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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CORNERSTONE TELECOMMUNICATIONS INFRASTRUCTURE LIMITED |
Respondent |
____________________
MR JONATHAN SEITLER QC & MR OLIVER RADLEY-GARDNER (instructed by DAC Beachcroft LLP) for the Respondent
Hearing date : 12th November 2019
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Crown Copyright ©
Sir Terence Etherton MR, Lord Justice Lewison and Lord Justice Arnold:
The issues
The facts
"… for the avoidance of doubt, [Cornerstone] seeks the conferral of Code Rights to access the site for survey purposes only, although it reserves rights to seek the conferral of additional Code Rights should the land prove fit for purpose."
Background to the Code
"[2] Until the enactment of the Code, an operator of electronic communications equipment was entitled to acquire rights under Schedule 2 to the Telecommunications Act 1984. There was wide dissatisfaction with that code for a number of reasons. First, it was complex and extremely difficult to understand. Second, it was outdated. Third, there was evidence of concern that it was making the rollout of electronic communications equipment more difficult. These three features were noted by the Law Commission in its report (The Electronic Communications Code Law Com Report 336 paras 1.9 to 1.11). Both in its consultation paper and in its final report the Law Commission took the view that reform could not be achieved simply by amendment. Instead, it took the view that:
"… the advantages of this review will only be felt if the revised Code is drafted from a "clean sheet of paper"; there is no point in merely amending the 2003 Code."
[3] It was part of the government's strategy to achieve widespread coverage of the country by imposing obligations on operators by way of licence conditions. The government also intended to reform the electronic communications code to help operators to extend their networks, to make mast-sharing easier and infrastructure deployment and maintenance cheaper. Following the Law Commission's report, the code now in force was introduced by the Digital Economy Act 2017, which inserted section 106 and Schedule 3A to the Communications Act 2003."
The statutory framework
"a right for the statutory purposes—
(a) to install electronic communications apparatus on, under or over the land,
(b) to keep installed electronic communications apparatus which is on, under or over the land,
(c) to inspect, maintain, adjust, alter, repair, upgrade or operate electronic communications apparatus which is on, under or over the land,
(d) to carry out any works on the land for or in connection with the installation of electronic communications apparatus on, under or over the land or elsewhere,
(e) to carry out any works on the land for or in connection with the maintenance, adjustment, alteration, repair, upgrading or operation of electronic communications apparatus which is on, under or over the land or elsewhere,
(f) to enter the land to inspect, maintain, adjust, alter, repair, upgrade or operate any electronic communications apparatus which is on, under or over the land or elsewhere,
(g) to connect to a power supply,
(h) to interfere with or obstruct a means of access to or from the land (whether or not any electronic communications apparatus is on, under or over the land), or
(i) to lop or cut back, or require another person to lop or cut back, any tree or other vegetation that interferes or will or may interfere with electronic communications apparatus."
"(2) The operator may give the relevant person a notice in writing—
(a) setting out the code right, and all of the other terms of the agreement that the operator seeks, and
(b) stating that the operator seeks the person's agreement to those terms.
(3) The operator may apply to the court for an order under this paragraph if—
(a) the relevant person does not, before the end of 28 days beginning with the day on which the notice is given, agree to confer or be otherwise bound by the code right, or
(b) at any time after the notice is given, the relevant person gives notice in writing to the operator that the person does not agree to confer or be otherwise bound by the code right.
(4) An order under this paragraph is one which imposes on the operator and the relevant person an agreement between them which—
(a) confers the code right on the operator, or
(b) provides for the code right to bind the relevant person."
"(1) Subject to sub-paragraph (5), the court may make an order under paragraph 20 if (and only if) the court thinks that both of the following conditions are met.
(2) The first condition is that the prejudice caused to the relevant person by the order is capable of being adequately compensated by money.
(3) The second condition is that the public benefit likely to result from the making of the order outweighs the prejudice to the relevant person.
(4) In deciding whether the second condition is met, the court must have regard to the public interest in access to a choice of high quality electronic communications services.
(5) The court may not make an order under paragraph 20 if it thinks that the relevant person intends to redevelop all or part of the land to which the code right would relate, or any neighbouring land, and could not reasonably do so if the order were made."
"(1) An operator may apply to the court for an order which imposes on the operator and a person, on an interim basis, an agreement between them which—
(a) confers a code right on the operator, or
(b) provides for a code right to bind that person.
(2) An order under this paragraph imposes an agreement on the operator and a person on an interim basis if it provides for them to be bound by the agreement—
(a) for the period specified in the order, or
(b) until the occurrence of an event specified in the order.
(3) The court may make an order under this paragraph if (and only if) the operator has given the person mentioned in sub-paragraph (1) a notice which complies with paragraph 20(2) stating that an agreement is sought on an interim basis and—
(a) the operator and that person have agreed to the making of the order and the terms of the agreement imposed by it, or
(b) the court thinks that there is a good arguable case that the test in paragraph 21 for the making of an order under paragraph 20 is met.
(4) Subject to sub-paragraphs (5) and (6), the following provisions apply in relation to an order under this paragraph and an agreement imposed by it as they apply in relation to an order under paragraph 20 and an agreement imposed by it—
(a) paragraph 20(3) (time at which operator may apply for agreement to be imposed);
(b) paragraph 22 (effect of agreement imposed under paragraph 20);
(c) paragraph 23 (terms of agreement imposed under paragraph 20);
(d) paragraph 24 (payment of consideration);
(e) paragraph 25 (payment of compensation);
(f) paragraph 84 (compensation where agreement imposed).
(5) The court may make an order under this paragraph even though the period mentioned in paragraph 20(3)(a) has not elapsed (and paragraph 20(3)(b) does not apply) if the court thinks that the order should be made as a matter of urgency.
(6) Paragraphs 23, 24 and 25 apply by virtue of sub-paragraph (4) as if—
(a) references to the relevant person were to the person mentioned in sub-paragraph (1) of this paragraph, and
(b) the duty in paragraph 23 to include terms as to the payment of consideration to that person in an agreement were a power to do so.
(7) Sub-paragraph (8) applies if—
(a) an order has been made under this paragraph imposing an agreement relating to a code right on an operator and a person in respect of any land, and
(b) the period specified under sub-paragraph (2)(a) has expired or, as the case may be, the event specified under sub-paragraph (2)(b) has occurred without (in either case) an agreement relating to the code right having been imposed on the person by order under paragraph 20.
(8) From the time when the period expires or the event occurs, that person has the right, subject to and in accordance with Part 6 of this code, to require the operator to remove any electronic communications apparatus placed on the land under the agreement imposed under this paragraph."
"(1) This paragraph applies where—
(a) an operator gives a notice under paragraph 20(2) to a person in respect of any land,
(b) the notice also requires that person's agreement on a temporary basis in respect of a right which is to be exercisable (in whole or in part) in relation to electronic communications apparatus which is already installed on, under or over the land, and
(c) the person has the right to require the removal of the apparatus in accordance with paragraph 37 or as mentioned in paragraph 40(1) but the operator is not for the time being required to remove the apparatus.
(2) The court may, on the application of the operator, impose on the operator and the person an agreement between them which confers on the operator, or provides for the person to be bound by, such temporary code rights as appear to the court reasonably necessary for securing the objective in sub-paragraph (3).
(3) That objective is that, until the proceedings under paragraph 20 and any proceedings under paragraph 40 are determined, the service provided by the operator's network is maintained and the apparatus is properly adjusted and kept in repair."
The reference
"… the ability to enter and inspect the Land so as to verify its assessment that the Land is suitable for the installation and operation of electronic communications equipment apparatus and provide permanent and consistent network capacity and mobile phone coverage in the area of Paddington Station."
Is the right sought a code right?
"[72] Focussing then on language, it seems to me that the right conferred by para.3(a) to install apparatus on over or under land must include a right to enter on the land and to carry out each step required to achieve the permitted installation. The fact that no mention is there made of "entry" or of any specific works (such as excavation or tunnelling) does not support the conclusion that no right of entry has been conferred or that works were not envisaged as being an essential part of the process of installation permitted by para.(a). The inclusion of a specific right, at para. (f), to enter land to inspect, maintain etc, apparatus already on that land does not make it any less clear that para.(a) was intended to include a right of entry to install.
[73] In the same way as a right of entry is clearly included in the right to install under para.3(a), so must the taking of other necessary steps be included, since otherwise the grant of the right would be illusory. This does not involve implying additional rights, nor any departure from the presumption that private property rights will not be infringed without clear words, but is simply a matter of giving full effect to the language in which the right has been described. The right to "install" is intended to permit an operation involving a series of distinct steps and the single word is sufficient to connote, as a component of the right, each of those steps."
"… an agreement conferring the right to install equipment necessarily entitles an operator to undertake preparatory surveys required as a prelude to the installation itself. As a matter of ordinary meaning, such surveys, and a right of access to carry them out, are part of the right "to install" under para. 3(a)."
""Install" connotes a variety of tasks or works undertaken for the purpose of providing equipment on a site; "works in connection with the installation" connotes a still wider range of activities. Although expressed as separate rights, these paragraphs are obviously intended to be complementary and, between them, to describe all of the steps necessary to the installation of apparatus."
"Schedule 4 (which provides for compulsory acquisition of land by the provider of an electronic communications network in whose case the electronic communications code applies and for entry on land by persons nominated by such a provider) shall have effect."
"Compulsory Purchase and Entry for Exploratory Purposes"
"(1) A person—
(a) nominated by a code operator, and
(b) duly authorised in writing by the Secretary of State,
may, at any reasonable time, enter upon and survey land in England and Wales for the purpose of ascertaining whether the land would be suitable for use by the code operator for, or in connection with, the establishment or running of the operator's network.
(2) This paragraph does not apply in relation to land covered by buildings or used as a garden or pleasure ground."
"(1) A network provider may make a request to an infrastructure operator for an on-site survey of elements of the operator's physical infrastructure provided the request—
(a) is in writing;
(b) specifies the elements of the operator's infrastructure to which the request relates; and
(c) is made with a view to deploying elements of a high-speed electronic communications network to which the elements to be surveyed are relevant."
A right to install
"To place (an apparatus, a system of ventilation, lighting, heating, or the like) in position for service or use:"
"any chattel installed or attached or intended to be installed or attached in or to any structure or land."
"The question is whether those words are sufficient in themselves and without more to completely subvert the existing law in respect of taxation of real estate and personal property, particularly of bowling alleys, and to reverse the underlying and prevailing general policy and impose upon the building owner taxation in respect of personal property belonging to a tenant, brought on as such by him for his use while tenant and removable by him as such."
"Again, "installed" is not a word of art nor a word of precision. Indefiniteness gives it, as it gives any word, a chameleon-like character so that associate words show through and give their colour and meaning to it. It is not necessary here, however, to decide just what the word "installed" means. Unless it is perfectly clear that it means what the city contends, the city's argument cannot be upheld."
Works in connection with the installation
i) Is the word "works" wide enough to encompass an MSV?
ii) If so, does the MSV amount to works "in connection with the installation of electronic communications equipment"?
"It is apparent from the Code itself (for example from paragraph 21(4) which identifies "the public interest in access to a choice of high quality electronic communications services") that the Code is not simply concerned with the better regulation of private rights. Its objective is the speedy and economical delivery of communications networks in the public interest. It simply cannot have been intended that, before an operator may insist on the acquisition of Code rights in consideration of payments assessed on a favourable "no network" basis, it must first negotiate outside the scope of the Code to acquire a right of entry to undertake essential preliminary surveys. The ransom position which site owners would enjoy on that interpretation of the Code, and their ability to insist on sharing in the economic value of the operator's network which paragraph 24 denies them, are both contrary to the principles on which the Code has been designed."
"… regarded as an ordinary English expression I think I would have said … that "connected with" can naturally be used to describe a relation with a contemplated event which is still [in the future]."
"Of course, it may be that it was plain that there was going to be an assessment, whereas when an application is made under section 1 (1) it is not plain that there is going to be a cause, because the court may refuse to grant leave under the proviso; but, nevertheless, I have myself found what was stated [by the Canadian court] very helpful in deciding this case."
"There may be difficulty in speaking of a matter as "arising out of" a cause not yet on foot, but I for my part see no reason whatever why an application such as this should not be "connected with" the proposed matrimonial cause."
Consequences of a code right
Can a right to carry out an MSV be free standing?
"We have concluded that the revised Code should allow early access for Code Operators, but only on an interim basis. We recommend that this should be achieved by enabling Code Operators, when making an application for Code Rights under the revised Code, to apply to the Lands Chamber for an interim order for access pending the resolution of disputes over payment. Such orders would only be granted on terms that give the landowner the right to vacant possession if a final order in favour of the Code Operator is not made before the expiry of the interim order." (Emphasis added)
"… the objective of the interim order would be to enable access pending determination of valuation issues, and so the final hearing would resolve the question of consideration (and payment would then be backdated with interest to the date of the interim order)."
"We recommend that the revised Code should enable the Lands Chamber of the Upper Tribunal to make an order conferring Code Rights on an interim basis, either by consent, or where the Code Operator has made out a good arguable case that the test for the imposition of Code Rights is satisfied. Such orders may include terms as to compensation and as to interim consideration; they must provide that if the test for the imposition of Code Rights is not satisfied at a final hearing (or the Code Operator discontinues the proceedings) the landowner will have an immediate right to enforce removal of any electronic communications apparatus placed on the land pursuant to the interim order."
"To promote greater efficiency, the new Code will also contain provisions that allow fast interim access to sites for communications providers in appropriate circumstances. This will enable operators to access sites more quickly, even while valuation is still being resolved. Government does, however, have a clear policy to only introduce new powers of entry in exceptional circumstances. Having reviewed the evidence very carefully, it was decided that at present criminal penalties for denial of access and associated stronger powers of entry are not warranted." (Emphasis added)
"Paragraph 26 provides that an operator may apply for "interim code rights". This enables code rights to be granted on an interim basis pending the parties reaching, or the court imposing, a final agreement. Rights may be granted on an interim basis either (a) where the parties agree to the making of the order, and the terms of the interim agreement (which may be the case, for example, where the only issue not agreed between them is the consideration to be paid); or (b) when the court considers that there is a good arguable case that the interim code right will be made permanent at a final hearing." (Emphasis added)
"An order under this paragraph imposes an agreement on the operator and a person on an interim basis if it provides for them to be bound by the agreement—
(a) for the period specified in the order, or
(b) until the occurrence of an event specified in the order."
"… a notice which complies with paragraph 20(2) stating that an agreement is sought on an interim basis…"
"(a) setting out the code right, and all of the other terms of the agreement that the operator seeks, and
(b) stating that the operator seeks the person's agreement to those terms."
Result