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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Lands Tribunal >> Swift v Barnsley Metropolitan Borough Council [2004] EWLands ACQ_22_2002 (7 June 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWLands/2004/ACQ_22_2002.html Cite as: [2004] EWLands ACQ_22_2002 |
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[2004] EWLands ACQ_22_2002 (7 June 2004)
ACQ/22/2002
LANDS TRIBUNAL ACT 1949
COMPENSATION – Compulsory Purchase – 458m2 of grassland, formerly site of dwelling house – valuation of freehold – whether planning permission to be assumed for construction of new dwellinghouse – whether valuation to reflect hope of future planning consent – three sites within CPO acquired at very different prices per m2 – compensation of £750 awarded.
IN THE MATTER OF A NOTICE OF REFERENCE
BETWEEN
DONALD FRASER SWIFT
Claimant
and
BARNSLEY METROPOLITAN
Acquiring
BOROUGH COUNCIL
Authority
Re:
Site of 1 Quarry House,
Near The Smithies,
Monk Bretton,
Barnsley.
Before: N J Rose FRICS
Sitting at Barnsley County Court
on 21 April 2004
Mrs Mary Swift for the Claimant with permission of the Tribunal
Martin Carter instructed by Mr A Prosdick, Borough Secretary, Barnsley MBC for the Acquiring Authority
DECISION
"1. The site forms part of an elevated, prominent, topographical feature overlooking the Dearne Valley and which remains substantially undeveloped. In the opinion of the Local Planning authority this site represents a significant townscape feature of important amenity value and should therefore remain undeveloped. The proposed development would, in the opinion of the Local Planning Authority, thereby diminish the character and appearance of Burton Bank to the detriment of visual amenity.
2. The processing, tipping and reclamation of waste materials would, in addition and in the opinion of the Local Planning Authority, by reason of its close proximity to dwellinghouses and the likely noise, general disturbance and dust generated therefrom, be detrimental to the residential amenities of the occupants of the dwellings."
"I presume we will resist such a certificate. If we don't it will open the door to the applicant being able to claim residential or other value on the site. Estates have assumed the site will be POS valued in earmarking funds within the Capital Programme".
"In my opinion you are quite right to assert that the former uses have been abandoned and that residential development for a single dwellinghouse would not be acceptable in land use planning terms.
The area including and surrounding plots 2 and 3 was the subject of a mineral extraction operation undertaken in approximately 1989 and granted planning permission on 19 August 1988 (ref No. B/88/0996/BA). A copy of this permission and application site boundary are attached for your information. This permission was implemented and the land restored to amenity use.
Notwithstanding the above the site has also been subject to two planning permissions for reclamation and use as public open space. The first of these was granted on 8 May 1980 (ref No.B/80/0067BA) and more recently on 13 August 1992 (ref No.B/92/0690/BA). In addition, the certificate of appropriate development for residential, commercial and the processing and tipping of waste materials was refused on 9 May 1996, a copy of which is enclosed. Against the above background I am firmly of the opinion that the permission for the former uses has been abandoned.
If a planning application were to be submitted for residential development on any part of the site it is my opinion that this would be recommended for refusal. The site is allocated as an Urban Green Space proposal on the Unitary Development Plan and policies GS34 and GS35 are relevant. These policies require that areas of urban green space remain open and undeveloped and any proposal likely to have a significant adverse effect on the function of the area will not normally be approved. In my opinion residential development, even for one dwelling, will have a significant adverse effect on the function of the area sufficient to sustain the refusal of planning permission. In addition such development would also have an adverse visual impact on the character and appearance of Burton Bank Quarry."
Mr Stafford's valuation was prepared on the assumption that the contents of Mr Normington's letter were accurate.
"Subject to subsection (4) of this section, it shall be assumed that, in respect of the relevant land or any part of it, planning permission would be granted –
(a) subject to the condition set out in Schedule 10 of the Town and Country Planning Act 1990, for any development of a class specified in paragraph 1 of Schedule 3 to that Act …"
Paragraph 1 of Schedule 3 refers to
"(a) the rebuilding, as often as occasion may require, of any building which was in existence on July 1 1948 …
… so long as the cubic content of the original building is not substantially exceeded."
1. Site of former 7a Old Row, Smithies.
59m2, part of plot 1 on the CPO plan to the west of plot 2. Agreed price £500 plus fees and interest. Valuation date at or close to 29 January 1996.
2. Site of former 2 and 3 Quarry House, Smithies.
634 m2 adjoining the subject property. Plot 3 on CPO plan, entirely surrounded by plot 2. Price £1,000 plus fees and interest. Again, the date of valuation was at or close to 29 January 1996.
3. Land to the east of Wakefield Road.
Acquisition by private treaty, with CPO powers in the background, of 4.73 ha (11.68 acres) approximately. Price £35,000, each party paying its own costs. Date of transfer 16 December 1992. The sale price was broken down as follows: 1.1 acres (0.45 ha) allocated for industrial use, £30,000; 10.58 acres (4.2 ha) of scrubland, £5,000.
Dated 7 June 2004
N J Rose FRICS
Addendum
"But, where there has been no [unconditional] offer or where the amount of the award exceeds the amount of the offer, then (again, prima facie) 'the expenses of determining the amount of disputed compensation may be seen to be part of the reasonable and necessary expense which is attributable to the taking of the lands compulsorily by the acquiring authority', as the Lord President observed in Emslie & Simpson Limited v Aberdeen District Council [1995] RVR 159, at p164. In such a case the refusal to allow the claimant some part of his costs of the reference must be justified by a finding that the costs to be disallowed have not been incurred as part of the reasonable and necessary expense of pursuing the reference. As Potter LJ has put it, the Tribunal must be able to identify circumstances 'in which the claimant's conduct of, or in relation to, the proceedings has led to an obvious and substantial escalation in the costs over and above those costs which it was reasonable for the claimant to incur in vindication of his right to compensation"'.
Dated 8 July 2004
N J Rose FRICS