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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Lands Tribunal >> Roberts v John Roberts (Bexley) Ltd [2005] UKLands ACQ_100_2004 (9 August 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWLands/2005/ACQ_100_2004.html Cite as: [2005] UKLands ACQ_100_2004 |
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Roberts v John Roberts (Bexley) Ltd [2005] UKLands ACQ_100_2004 (9 August 2005)
ACQ/100/2004
LANDS TRIBUNAL ACT 1949
COMPENSATION – compulsory purchase – preliminary issue – company owned and run by landowner carrying on business on land acquired – company closing business and ceasing occupation before vesting date – whether claim for disturbance in respect of company's losses inadmissible – lifting the veil – Land Compensation Act 1973 s 37 – held company's claim for compensation not inadmissible
IN THE MATTER OF A NOTICE OF REFERENCE
BETWEEN
JOHN EDWARD ROBERTS | First Claimant | |
and | ||
JOHN ROBERTS (BEXLEY) LTD | Second Claimant | |
and | ||
ASHFORD BOROUGH COUNCIL | Acquiring Authority |
Re: Land at George Street
Ashford
Kent
Before: The President
Sitting at Procession House, 110 New Bridge Street, London EC4V 6JL
on 25 July 2005
Jacqueline Rubens instructed by Saunders & Co for the first and second claimants
P R Maude of Hammonds, solicitors of Leeds, for the acquiring authority
The following cases are referred to in this decision:
Director of Buildings and Lands v Shun Fung Ironworks [1995] AC 111
Horn v Sunderland Corp [1941] 2 KB 26
Hughes v Doncaster Metropolitan Borough Council [1991] AC 382
DHN Food Distribution Ltd v Tower Hamlets London Borough Council (1976) 32 P & CR 240
Prasad v Wolverhampton Borough Council (1983) P & CR 252
The following further cases were referred to in argument:
Harvey v Crawley Development Corporation (1957) 8 P & CR 141
Wrexham Maelor Borough Council v MacDougall [1993] 2 EGLR 23
Kovacs v Birmingham City Council (1984) 272 EG 437
Wharvesto Ltd v Cheshire County Council [1984] 1 EGLR 191
Smith, Stone and Knight Ltd v Birmingham Corpn [1939] 4 All ER 116
Walsh v Lonsdale (1882) 21 Ch D 9
Aberdeen City District Council v Sim [1982] 2 EGLR 22
Roberts and Midland Bank Ltd v Bristol Corpn (1960) 11 P & CR 205
DECISION ON A PRELIMINARY ISSUE
"As you are all aware, since the press release in October 1998, the Ashford depot's business has decreased dramatically. I imagine it has had the same effect on surrounding businesses."
In addition to the evidence of Mr Roberts (and that of Mr Smith, to which I will refer) Mrs Rubens for the claimants placed reliance on a letter dated 25 May 2005, marked for the attention of the claimants' solicitors, from Martin Amos, one of the employees to whom the memorandum was addressed. Mr Amos wrote that prior to "the press release in October 1998" signs had been put up overnight in the Victoria Road and George Street area on lamp posts saying that the area was to be redeveloped. On the Monday following it was as if a gate had been put up in the road and the telephone had been cut off. The effect on the tool hire business was dramatic. There was a dramatic effect on activity in and around the depot, and people telephoned to check if the business was still open.
"So where can the boundary be drawn sensibly? If the line contended by the Crown is rejected, as it must be for the reasons already spelled out, there is no sensible stopping place short of recognising that losses incurred in anticipation of resumption and because of the threat which resumption presented are to be regarded as losses caused by the resumption as much as losses arising after resumption. This involves giving the concept of causal connection an extended meaning, wide enough to embrace all such losses. To qualify for compensation a loss suffered post-resumption must satisfy the three conditions of being causally connected, not too remote, and not a loss which a reasonable person would have avoided. A loss sustained post-scheme and pre-resumption will not fail for lack of causal connection by reason only that the loss arose before resumption, provided it arose in anticipation of resumption and because of the threat which resumption presented."
"If the person threatened with inevitable dispossession, displacement, removal, having to quit the land – call it what you will – because of compulsory acquisition acts reasonably in moving to other accommodation before he is given notice to treat, or before his land is actually acquired by compulsory purchase, he is then displaced in consequence of the acquisition…"
9 August 2005
George Bartlett QC, President