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J Bibby & Sons Ltd and others v Merseyside County Council

Compensation for compulsory acquisition–Appeal from decision of Lands Tribunal–Acquisition of premises used as head office of food manufacturers–Dispute as to certain items in disturbance claim–Before Court of Appeal disputed matters restricted to increases in operating costs consequent on move to new premises–Lands Tribunal rejected claim in respect of increased costs on ground that the taking of two floors in new building would have been reasonable and a direct and natural consequence of acquisition, but taking of whole of building was not–Held by Court of Appeal that increased operating costs were a possible head of claim but only where there was no alternative to incurring them and no benefit was derived which made it worth while to do so–Tribunal had found that claimants had got value for extra expenditure and suffered no loss–Tribunal entitled to reach their conclusion and to disallow this part of the claim–Questions of law in case stated not happily framed–Appeal dismissed

This was an
appeal by the Bibby group of companies by case stated from a decision of the
Lands Tribunal rejecting part of the claim under the heading of disturbance
arising from the compulsory acquisition of the group’s head office premises by
the Merseyside County Council under the Liverpool Corporation Act 1966. The
premises acquired were situated a short distance north of the Liver Building in
Liverpool. The new building to which the claimants moved was a new leasehold
office building nearby known as Richmond House. The decision of the Lands
Tribunal (W H Rees FRICS) was reported at (1977) 243 EG 467, [1977] 2 EGLR 154.
This report set out in detail appendices A and B to the tribunal’s decision
which are referred to in the judgment of Brandon LJ.

William Glover
QC and Michael Fitzgerald (instructed by Dodds, Ashcroft, of Liverpool)
appeared on behalf of the appellant companies; R Bruce Martin QC and Frederic
Reynold (instructed by K M Egan, City Solicitor, Liverpool, agent for C K Wilson,
County Solicitor and Secretary, Merseyside County Council) represented the
respondent authority.

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