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England and Wales Lands Tribunal |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Lands Tribunal >> Purfleet Farms Ltd v Secretary of State for Environment, Transport & the Regions [2001] EWLands ACQ_108_2000 (10 April 2001) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWLands/2001/ACQ_108_2000.html Cite as: [2002] RVR 203, [2001] EWLands ACQ_108_2000 |
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[2001] EWLands ACQ_108_2000 (10 April 2001)
ACQ/108/2000
LANDS TRIBUNAL ACT 1949
COMPENSATION – acquisition following blight notice – development land – planning assumptions – provision of open space – access – cost of necessary highway works – contribution towards general highway improvements – date of grant of assumed planning permission – deferment – net developable area – value per acre – comparables – deduction for poor ground conditions – addition for size – compensation £6,660,000 – Land Compensation Act 1961, ss 9, 14-16.
IN THE MATTER of a NOTICE of REFERENCE
BETWEEN PURFLEET FARMS LIMITED Claimants
and
SECRETARY OF STATE Acquiring
FOR THE ENVIRONMENT, Authority
TRANSPORT AND THE REGIONS
Re: Land at London Road Purfleet and
London Road West Thurrock, Purfleet, Essex
Before: The President and P H Clarke FRICS
Sitting at 48/49 Chancery Lane, London WC2 on
8, 10-12, 15-19 January 2001
The following cases are referred to in this decision:
Mills v Silver [1991] Ch 271
R v South Northamptonshire District Council ex p. Crest Homes Plc [1994] 3 PLR 47
Tesco Stores Ltd v Secretary of State for the Environment [1995] 1 WLR 759
McCarthy and Stone (Developments) Ltd v Richmond upon Thames London Borough Council [1992] 2 AC 48
Michael Barnes QC and Eian Caws, instructed by Rowe and Maw, for the claimants.
Guy Roots QC and Robert Walton, instructed by Ashurst Morris Crisp, for the acquiring authority.
DECISION OF THE LANDS TRIBUNAL
(i) Mr Hugh Jonathan Watson Bullock BSc FRICS MRTPI, a partner of Gerald Eve of London W1 and elsewhere, who gave evidence on town planning.
(ii) Mr William Neville Mayer BSc MSc MICE, a director of Mayer Brown Limited of Woking, who gave evidence on traffic, highways and access.
(iii) Mr Stephen Wilson BSc CEng MICE, a director of Glanville Consultants of Abingdon, who gave evidence on engineering and ground conditions.
(iv) Mr Richard Fabian Cheshire FRICS, a director in the valuation department of Walker Packman of London W1, who gave evidence on values.
(i) Mr James Douglas Williams MA FRICS FRTPI Dip TP, a partner of Drivers Jonas of London W1 and elsewhere, who gave evidence on town planning.
(ii) Mr Richard Parker BSc Dip TE CEng MICE MCIT, senior partner of The Richard Parker Consultancy of Winchester, who gave evidence on traffic, highways and access.
(iii) Mr Clive Onions BSc CEng MICE MIStructE MIWEM MIHT MPWI, an associate director of Ove Arup and Partners International Limited of Bristol and elsewhere, who gave evidence on engineering and ground conditions.
(iv) Mr Richard Alexander Owen BA MRICS IRRV, a partner in the valuation department of Drivers Jonas of London W1 and elsewhere, who gave evidence on values.
FACTS
Channel Tunnel Rail Link
Blight notice and reference
Reference land
Title
"THAT if in or about May 2000 Purfleet Farms Limited had requested the permission of the Company to carry out improvements to Jurgens Road at their own cost in order to make the road more suitable for use to serve a warehouse development on the adjoining land of Purfleet Farms Limited (including the installation of traffic lights at the junction of Jurgens Road and London Road, Purfleet and the dedication as public highway of a small length of Jurgens Road leading south from the Junction if needed to facilitate the installation of those lights) the Company would have granted its permission for no consideration save an undertaking by Purfleet Farms Limited to bear the whole of the costs associated with the improvement works."
Development plan
Planning history of reference land
Access and highway matters
(i) Access to the reference land from London Road Thurrock east of Stonehouse Corner would not have been acceptable to Thurrock Borough Council.
(ii) Access to the reference land from La Farge Road (on the eastern boundary) would not have been practicable because it was in the private ownership of a third party.
(iii) The likelihood of a five-arm roundabout being provided at Stonehouse Corner would have been remote due to the proposal to construct the West Thurrock Marshes Relief Road to the east of the Dartford River Crossing (Queen Elizabeth II Bridge).
Scheme
ISSUES
(1) The effect of such assumptions as to planning permission for the development of the reference land as fall to be made under sections 14-16 of the 1961 Act.
(2) The amount and configuration of such open space as the local planning authority would have required to be provided.
(3) The means of access to the reference land that would have been permitted, and the design and cost of the necessary highways works.
(4) Whether a developer of the reference land would have been required to pay to Thurrock Borough Council a contribution of £40,000 per acre towards the costs of general highway improvements under a planning agreement under section 106 of the 1990 Act.
(5) Whether it should be assumed that planning permission would only have been granted after the valuation date, and if so when, and the amount of any adjustment for deferment that might fall to be made as a consequence.
(6) The net developable area of the reference land for valuation purposes.
(7) The gross value per acre before deductions.
(8) The adjustments to be made in the valuation for:-
(i) ground conditions,
(ii) off-site highway works,
(iii) any contribution payable to Thurrock Borough Council for general highway improvements,
(iv) other costs (if any),
(v) the larger size of the reference land,
(vi) deferment (if any) for the grant of the assumed planning permission.
DEVELOPMENT PLAN
PLANNING ASSUMPTIONS
"consists or forms part of a site defined in the current development plan as the site of proposed development of a description specified in relation thereto in the plan."
In respect of such land it is to be assumed that planning permission would be granted for such development.
Subsection (2) applies to land which:-
"consists or forms part of an area shown in the current development plan as an area allocated primarily for a use specified in the plan in relation to that area."
Subsection (3) applies to land which:-
"consists or forms part of an area shown in the current development plan as an area allocated primarily for a range of two or more uses specified in the plan in relation to the whole of that area."
"(a) define the sites of proposed roads, public and other buildings and works, airfields, parks, pleasure grounds, nature reserves and other open spaces, or allocate areas of land for use for agricultural, residential, industrial or other purposes of any class specified in the plan."
OPEN SPACE
ACCESS
STONEHOUSE CORNER
THE £40,000 PER ACRE
DEFERMENT
VALUATION
Value of land with normal ground conditions | Value of land with normal ground conditions | Value of land with normal ground conditions |
21.6 ac @ £638,015.8 per acre | £13,781,141 | |
Less | ||
Cost of road access | £ 652,123 | |
Fees 10% | 65,212 | |
Excess foundation costs (inc pumping station £425,000) |
1,300,000 |
|
Fees | 43,000 | |
Pumping station site | 45,050 | £ 2,105,385 |
£11,675,756 | ||
Add 5% for site size | £ 583,788 | |
£12,259,544 | ||
say | £12,260,000 |
Mr Cheshire prepared a second valuation in the sum of £10,773,646 using the value of the land with poor ground conditions (£530,000 per acre) as his starting point with deductions for road access, fees and pumping station (and site), but not for excess foundation costs, with a similar addition of 5% for site size. He adopted his higher value on the grounds that the market at the valuation date was extremely good and the price would be the optimum of his two valuations. All types of purchasers would be present in numbers sufficient to produce competitive bidding.
Potential value of land | Potential value of land | Potential value of land |
18.95 ac @ £460,000 per ac | £8,717,000 | |
Deduct for |
||
Ground conditions | £1,750,000 | |
Associated costs | 400,000 | |
Highway costs | 1,795,000 | |
Planning costs | 760,000 | |
Other costs | 80,000 | £4,785,000 |
£3,932,000 | ||
Defer 6 months @ 10% | 0.9535 | |
£3,749,162 | ||
say | £3,750,000 | |
Tesco
Prologis site (Dolphin Park)
Grainger site (Dolphin Park)
Edison's Park, Crossways, Dartford
Volvo site
Land adjoining Fyffe's warehouse, Crossways
Claimants' case
Secretary of State's case
Decision
(i) The area of open space on the reference land to satisfy Policy LR4 is 0.95 hectare (2.3 acres). This is the amount that the negotiating parties would have assumed would be provided.
(ii) Access to the reference land from Jurgens Road would be acceptable in highway terms.
(iii) The components of the highways scheme for development of the reference land are an improved junction at Jurgens Road and London Road Purfleet and a junction improvement at Stonehouse Corner, designed to function well with the closure of Stonehouse Lane. The cost of these works allowed for by a purchaser of the reference land would be £1,100,000.
(iv) Thurrock Borough Council would have been satisfied with a contribution of £1,100,000 for highway works and would not have insisted on payment of a further contribution of £400,000 per acre.
(v) The planning permission that both valuers assume for B8 development (warehousing and distribution) would, in the no-scheme world, have been granted at the valuation date.
(i) The net developable area for valuation purposes.
(ii) The gross value per acre before adjustment.
(iii) The adjustments to be made in the valuation for:-
(a) ground conditions,
(b) other costs (if any),
(c) the larger size of the reference land.
We now deal with each of these matters.
(1) Conventional building (slab at ground level) £2,200,00
Additional cost for:-
Option 1 – flooded site £2,010,000
Option 2A – pumped site £1,750,000
Option 2B – pumped site with 1.3m high floor slab £2,010,000
(2) Conventional building (floor slab 1.3m above
ground level) £2,910,000
Additional cost for:-
Option 1 – flooded site £1,300,000
Option 2B – pumped site £1,300,000
The conventional building includes a ground bearing slab and external pavement. The flooded site option includes raised building slabs on piles and ground bearing external pavement. The pumped site option includes piled ground bearing slab and external pavement and a pumping station adjacent to the Thames. The parties agree that piled foundations will be required for any buildings erected on the reference land.
19.3 acres at £475,000 per acre £9,167,500
Less
Highway costs £1,100,000
Excess foundation and drainage costs £1,410,000 £2,510,000
£6,657,500
say £6,660,000
Dated: 10 April 2001
(Signed) George Bartlett QC, President
(Signed) P H Clarke
ADDENDUM
"If the court decides to make an order about costs –
(a) the general rule is that the unsuccessful party will be ordered to pay the costs of the successful party; but
(b) the court may make a different order."
Rule 44.3(4) requires regard to be had to all the circumstances including "the conduct of all the parties". "Conduct" includes "whether a claimant who had succeeded in his claim, in whole or in part, exaggerated his claim" (rule 44.3(5)(d)). In the AEI decision, referred to above, Lord Woolf MR said (page 1522H):-
"I draw attention to the new Rules because, while they make clear that the general rule remains, that the successful party will normally be entitled to costs, they at the same time indicate the wide range of considerations which will result in the court making different orders as to costs. From 26 April 1999 the 'follow the event principle' will still play a significant role, but it will be a starting point from which a court can readily depart."
DATED: 10 April 2001
(Signed) George Bartlett QC, President
(Signed) P H Clarke