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England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Midtown Ltd v City of London Real Property Company Ltd [2005] EWHC 33 (Ch) (20 January 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2005/33.html Cite as: [2005] EWHC 33 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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MIDTOWN LIMITED |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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CITY OF LONDON REAL PROPERTY COMPANY LIMITED |
Defendant |
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Mr Paul Morgan QC and Mr David Forsdick (instructed by Nabarro Nathanson) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 15th to 20th December 2004
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr. Justice Peter Smith :
INTRODUCTION
THE CLAIMANTS RIGHT TO LIGHT
THE CLAIMANTS' TITLE TO THE PROPERTY
"There is no absolute rule of law or practice which precludes an amendment to rely on a cause of action which has arisen after the commencement of the proceedings in circumstances where (but for the amendment) the claim would fail. The court has a discretion whether or not to allow the amendment in such a case; a discretion which is to be exercised as justice requires. …"
THE YELLOW LAND
THE 1930 CONVEYANCE
"AND the Purchaser to the intent that the covenants hereinafter contained shall bind the said hereditaments into whosesoever hands the same may come for the benefit of the adjoining and neighbouring lands belonging to the Commissioners hereby covenants with the Commissioners in manner following that is to say:-
(1) That the Commissioners shall have full power at all times without obtaining any consent from or making any compensation to the Purchaser to deal as the Commissioners may think fit with any of the hereditaments adjoining opposite or near to the said hereditaments hereby conveyed and to erect or suffer to be erected on such adjoining opposite or neighbouring hereditaments any buildings whatsoever whether such buildings shall or shall not affect or diminish the light or air which may now or at any time hereafter be enjoyed by the Purchaser or other the owners tenants or occupiers of the said hereditaments hereby conveyed or any part thereof
(2) That the Purchaser will not do or suffer to be done on the said herditaments hereby conveyed or any part thereof any act matter or thing whatsoever which may be or tend to the annoyance nuisance damage or disturbance of the Commissioners or any of their lessees or tenants of their adjoining or neighbouring property".
SECTION 237 TOWN AND COUNTRY PLANNING ACT 1990
THE SECTION
"237 Power to override easements and other rights
(1) Subject to subsection (3), the erection, construction or carrying out or maintenance of any building or work on land which has been acquired or appropriated by a local authority for planning purposes (whether done by the local authority or by a person deriving title under them) is authorised by virtue of this section if it is done in accordance with planning permission, notwithstanding that it involves—
(a) interference with an interest or right to which this section applies, or(b) a breach of a restriction as to the user of land arising by virtue of a contract.
(2) Subject to subsection (3), the interests and rights to which this section applies are any easement, liberty, privilege, right or advantage annexed to land and adversely affecting other land, including any natural right to support.
(3) Nothing in this section shall authorise interference with any right of way or right of laying down, erecting, continuing or maintaining apparatus on, under or over land which is—
(a) a right vested in or belonging to statutory undertakers for the purpose of the carrying on of their undertaking, or(b) a right conferred by or in accordance with the telecommunications code on the operator of a telecommunications code system.
(4) In respect of any interference or breach in pursuance of subsection (1), compensation—
(a) shall be payable under section 63 or 68 of the Lands Clauses Consolidation Act 1845 or under section 7 or 10 of the Compulsory Purchase Act 1965, and(b) shall be assessed in the same manner and subject to the same rules as in the case of other compensation under those sections in respect of injurious affection where—
(i) the compensation is to be estimated in connection with a purchase under those Acts, or(ii) the injury arises from the execution of works on land acquired under those Acts.
(5) Where a person deriving title under the local authority by whom the land in question was acquired or appropriated—
(a) is liable to pay compensation by virtue of subsection (4), and(b) fails to discharge that liability,the liability shall be enforceable against the local authority.
(6) Nothing in subsection (5) shall be construed as affecting any agreement between the local authority and any other person for indemnifying the local authority against any liability under that subsection.
(7) Nothing in this section shall be construed as authorising any act or omission on the part of any person which is actionable at the suit of any person on any grounds other than such an interference or breach as is mentioned in subsection (1)".
"(b) Any reference to the appropriation of the land for planning purposes is a reference to the appropriation of it for purposes which land can be (or as the case may be could have been) acquired under [sections 226 or 227]".
"Mr Howell also submits that the wider construction of section 237(1) leads to unreasonable results, which cannot have been intended by parliament. He points out that the section applies whether work is done by the local authority or by a person deriving title under a local authority. He postulates a case where: (a) a local authority acquires land for a planning purpose, say, building a shopping centre, and builds the centre; (b) the local authority disposes of the centre to an owner in the private sector; (c) the new owner grants rights to various shopkeepers within the centre; (d) the new owner obtains planning permission for a development which will interfere with the rights which the new owner has granted. If the new owner can override the rights that he has granted to the shopkeepers in such circumstances, says Mr Howell, that is a result which is so unreasonable that it could not have been intended by parliament.
This example also raises the second issue that arises in the present case, and to which I shall come shortly. But, leaving that aside, there are a number of comments to be made. As Mr Sullivan points out, first, the fact that an improbable factual example can be devised which would lead to an unexpected result is no reason to depart from the clear wording of an enactment. Second, having acquired the land for a planning purpose, and built the shopping centre, it is unrealistic to assume that the local authority in question would not have retained any control over the rebuilding of the centre, not least because they would remain potentially liable to compensation claims under section 237(5). Third, if in the circumstances of the example, the local authority considered it desirable that the shopping centre should be redeveloped and granted planning permission for it, in order to bring the centre up to date and preserve its vitality, then this would be entirely in accordance with section 237.
In my view, there is force in these points. I am not persuaded by examples of the kind given by Mr Howell that the wider interpretation may lead to results which are so unreasonable that they could not have been intended by parliament. Mr Howell placed great emphasis on the fact that successors in title to the local authority can enjoy the fruits of section 237(1). I do not have to consider in the case whether, as a matter of construction, there are any, and if so what, limits to the application of section 237(1) to those who derive title under the acquiring or appropriating local authority. My provisional view is that, in order to attract the immunity conferred by the subsection, the work done (whether by the local authority or the person deriving title under them) must be related in some way to the planning purposes for which the land was acquired. That would explain why, even in cases where the work is done by a person deriving title under a local authority, parliament has decided that the local authority should have a contingent liability to pay compensation.
This brings me to the final argument advanced by Mr Howell, which is based on the facts of the case. He submits that, since the land was acquired as begin "immediately necessary in the interests of the proper planning of the area", the planning purpose for which the site was acquired was the development that was recognised as being immediately necessary, ie the first development, and not any subsequent redevelopment. He relies on the resolution by the first respondents made on March 25 1954 to which I have already referred, and which spoke of the acquisition of the land as "immediately necessary in the interests of the proper planning of the area". These words echo the language of section 38(2)(a) of the 1947 Act. The compulsory purchase order, however, makes no reference to the acquisition being immediately necessary in the interests of the proper planning of the area. It speaks simply of a purchase "for the purpose of securing the development, or redevelopment of the area". This reflects the language of section 38(1)(a) of the 1947 Act. It may be that between the date of the resolution and the date of the compulsory purchase order, a development plan had become operative. At all events, it seems to me that I should look to the terms of the compulsory purchase order itself, rather than to the resolution that preceded it, to determine the purpose for which the land was acquired. There is nothing in the language of the compulsory purchase order that supports Mr Howell's submission.
Even if I am wrong about that, and the purpose for which the land was acquired was a purpose which was immediately necessary in the interests of the proper planning of the area, I would not feel able to accept Mr Howell's argument. On this hypothesis, no doubt it would be right to say that some form of immediate development was necessary, and it was for the purpose of that immediate development that the land was acquired by the first respondents. There is, however, no reason to infer that the first respondents acquired the land only for the purpose of carrying out that immediate development, and not for the purpose, if necessary, of later carrying out redevelopment. In the absence of words making it clear that the first respondents acquired the site only for the purpose of carrying out the development that was immediately necessary at the date of acquisition, and no subsequent redevelopment, I would hold that the purposes for which the site was acquired are not to be construed in this restricted manner".
HUMAN RIGHTS
AMOUNT OF INFRINGEMENT
INFRINGEMENT A NUISANCE?
REMEDIES
MIDTOWN
"Mr Smith who appeared for CIS said that if the order became oppressive (for example because Argyle were being driven into bankruptcy) or difficult to enforce they could apply for it to be varied or discharged. But the order would be a final order and there is no case in this jurisdiction in which such an order has been varied or discharged except when the injuncted activity has been legalised by statute".
"But if there is really a question as to whether the obstruction is legal or not, and if the defendant has acted fairly and not in an unneighbourly spirit, I am disposed to think that the Court ought to incline to damages rather than to an injunction. It is quite true that a man ought not to be compelled to part with his property against his will, or to have the value of his property diminished, without an Act of Parliament. On the other hand, the Court ought to be very careful not to allow an action for the protection of ancient lights to be used as a means of extorting money. Often a person who is engaged in a large building scheme has to pay money right and left in order to avoid litigation, which will put him to even greater expense by delaying his proceedings. As far as my own experience goes, there is quite as much oppression on the part of those who invoke the assistance of the Court to protect some ancient lights, which they have never before considered of any great value, as there is on the part of those who are improving the neighbourhood by the erection of buildings that must necessarily to some extent interfere with the light of adjoining premises".
"It has always been recognised that the practical consequence of withholding injunctive relief is to authorise the continuance of an unlawful state of affairs. If, for example, the defendant threatens to build in such a way that the plaintiff's light will be obstructed and he is not restrained, then the plaintiff will inevitably be deprived of his legal right. This was the very basis upon which before 1858 the Court of Chancery had made the remedy of injunction available in such cases. After the passing of Lord Cairns's Act many of the judges warned that the jurisdiction to award damages instead of an injunction should not be exercised as a matter of course so as to legalise the commission of a tort by any defendant who was willing and able to pay compensation. In Shelfer v. City of London Electric Lighting Co. [1895] 1 Ch 287, 315-316 Lindley L.J. said:
"But in exercising the jurisdiction thus given attention ought to be paid to well settled principles; and ever since Lord Cairns's Act was passed the Court of Chancery has repudiated the notion that the legislature intended to turn that court into a tribunal for legalizing wrongful acts; or in other words, the court has always protested against the notion that it ought to allow a wrong to continue simply because the wrongdoer is able and willing to pay for the injury he may inflict."
And Buckley J. said in Cowper v. Laidler [1903] 2 Ch 337, 341:
"The court has affirmed over and over again that the jurisdiction to give damages where it exists is not so to be used as in fact to enable the defendant to purchase from the plaintiff against his will his legal right to the easement."
The plaintiff is, therefore, in good company when she says in her skeleton argument (prepared when she was acting in person):
"What Judge Jack has in effect done in his judgment is to grant Mr. and Mrs. Sawyer a right of way in perpetuity over my land for a once and for all payment. I do not understand how the court can have power to produce such a result as it effectively expropriates my property . . . Ashleigh Avenue is a private roadway and Judge Jack has turned it into a public highway. Surely he does not have the jurisdiction to do this?"
It will be of small comfort to her to be told that the jurisdiction is undoubted, though it is to be exercised with caution. What does need to be stressed, however, is that the consequences to which the plaintiff refers do not result from the judge's exercise of the statutory jurisdiction to award damages instead of an injunction, but from his refusal to grant an injunction. Lord Cairns's Act did not worsen the plaintiff's position but improved it. Thenceforth, if injunctive relief was withheld, the plaintiff was not compelled to wait until further wrongs were committed and then bring successive actions for damages; he could be compensated by a once and for all payment to cover future as well as past wrongs. Of course, the ability to do "complete justice" in this way made it easier for the courts to withhold the remedy of an injunction, and it was therefore necessary for the judges to remind themselves from time to time that the discretion to withold it, which had existed as well before 1858 as after it, was to be exercised in accordance with settled principles; that a plaintiff who had established both a legal right and a threat to infringe it was prima facie entitled to an injunction to protect it; and that special circumstances were needed to justify withholding the injunction.
Nevertheless references to the "expropriation" of the plaintiff's property are somewhat overdone, not because that is not the practical effect of withholding an injunction, but because the grant of an injunction, like all equitable remedies, is discretionary. Many proprietary rights cannot be protected at all by the common law. The owner must submit to unlawful interference with his rights and be content with damages. If he wants to be protected he must seek equitable relief, and he has no absolute right to that. In many cases, it is true, an injunction will be granted almost as of course; but this is not always the case, and it will never be granted if this would cause injustice to the defendant. Citation of passages in the cases warning of the danger of "expropriating" the plaintiff needs to be balanced by reference to statements like that of Lord Westbury L.C. in Isenberg v. East India House Estate Co. Ltd.(1863) 3 De G. J. & S. 263, 273 where he held that it was the duty of the court not
"by granting a mandatory injunction, to deliver over the defendants to the plaintiff bound hand and foot, in order to be made subject to any extortionate emand that he may by possibility make, but to substitute for such mandatory injunction an inquiry before itself, in order to ascertain the measure of damage that has been actually sustained."".
"In considering whether the grant of an injunction would be oppressive to the defendant, all the circumstances of the case have to be considered. At one extreme, the defendant may have acted openly and in good faith and in ignorance of the plaintiff's rights, and thereby inadvertently placed himself in a position where the grant of an injunction would either force him to yield to the plaintiff's extortionate demands or expose him to substantial loss. At the other extreme, the defendant may have acted with his eyes open and in full knowledge that he was invading the plaintiff's rights, and hurried on his work in the hope that by presenting the court with a fait accompli he could compel the plaintiff to accept monetary compensation. Most cases, like the present, fall somewhere in between".
KENDALL FREEMAN