Lewis v Hackney London Borough Council
(Before Lord Justice GLIDEWELL, Lord Justice TAYLOR and Sir George WALLER)
Compulsory purchase — No compensation after 17 years — Appellant did not adopt normal procedure of challenging compulsory purchase order under the Acquisition of Land (Authorisation Procedure) Act 1946, which was then in force — Writ claiming damages served by appellant some 15 years after acquiring authority had entered on the land — Limitation Act not pleaded by authority — Provision in 1946 Act that, subject to the procedure laid down for an application to the High Court, a compulsory purchase order ‘shall not . . . be questioned in any proceedings whatsoever’
The
appellant’s terrace house was one of a number of houses in the same block
included in a compulsory purchase order made in 1969 — The Secretary of State
for the Environment, on the recommendation of an inspector, excluded the houses
from the order but directed that the larger part of each of the respective
gardens should remain within it — Purporting to act under the order, the
acquiring authority took possession of a part of the appellant’s garden, some
58 ft in depth, in 1973 — Despite the passage of nearly 17 years no
compensation had yet been paid to the appellant — He did not pursue the
procedure then available to him under the Acquisition of Land (Authorisation
Procedure) Act 1946 (later replaced by the Acquisition of Land Act 1981) to
challenge the validity of the compulsory purchase order by application to the
High Court — However, in 1987 the appellant, acting in person, commenced the
present proceedings by writ, claiming £50,000 damages from the authority as
compensation for their occupation and use of the land — He described his claim
as for breach of a statutory contract
The
respondent authority relied upon the compulsory purchase order as entitling
them to enter on the appellant’s land and pointed out that the appellant was
entitled to compensation under the Compulsory Purchase Act 1965, to be
determined in default of agreement by the Lands Tribunal — In fact the
authority did not refer the matter to the tribunal until after the commencement
of the appellant’s action — The authority did not plead the Limitation Act 1980
in answer to the appellant’s action, although it would appear that they would
have been entitled to do so — However, Morritt J dismissed the plaintiff’s
claim and he appealed to the Court of Appeal
Compulsory purchase — No compensation after 17 years — Appellant did not adopt normal procedure of challenging compulsory purchase order under the Acquisition of Land (Authorisation Procedure) Act 1946, which was then in force — Writ claiming damages served by appellant some 15 years after acquiring authority had entered on the land — Limitation Act not pleaded by authority — Provision in 1946 Act that, subject to the procedure laid down for an application to the High Court, a compulsory purchase order ‘shall not . . . be questioned in any proceedings whatsoever’
The
appellant’s terrace house was one of a number of houses in the same block
included in a compulsory purchase order made in 1969 — The Secretary of State
for the Environment, on the recommendation of an inspector, excluded the houses
from the order but directed that the larger part of each of the respective
gardens should remain within it — Purporting to act under the order, the
acquiring authority took possession of a part of the appellant’s garden, some
58 ft in depth, in 1973 — Despite the passage of nearly 17 years no
compensation had yet been paid to the appellant — He did not pursue the
procedure then available to him under the Acquisition of Land (Authorisation
Procedure) Act 1946 (later replaced by the Acquisition of Land Act 1981) to
challenge the validity of the compulsory purchase order by application to the
High Court — However, in 1987 the appellant, acting in person, commenced the
present proceedings by writ, claiming £50,000 damages from the authority as
compensation for their occupation and use of the land — He described his claim
as for breach of a statutory contract
The
respondent authority relied upon the compulsory purchase order as entitling
them to enter on the appellant’s land and pointed out that the appellant was
entitled to compensation under the Compulsory Purchase Act 1965, to be
determined in default of agreement by the Lands Tribunal — In fact the
authority did not refer the matter to the tribunal until after the commencement
of the appellant’s action — The authority did not plead the Limitation Act 1980
in answer to the appellant’s action, although it would appear that they would
have been entitled to do so — However, Morritt J dismissed the plaintiff’s
claim and he appealed to the Court of Appeal
It was clear
that as a result of para 16 of Schedule 1 to the Acquisition of Land
(Authorisation Procedure) Act 1946 it was not open to the appellant to
challenge the validity of the compulsory purchase order before the High Court
or the Court of Appeal — The main point made by the appellant in the present
proceedings was, however, that the authority had failed to prove that they were
entitled to enter on his land because they could not establish that a notice to
treat had been served — The authority’s case was that a notice to quit had in
fact been served by recorded delivery in 1971 and a notice of entry given in
1973 — They could not positively prove service by recorded delivery after this
lapse of years, but there was evidence in subsequent correspondence with
valuers or surveyors which supported the authority’s assertion that a notice to
treat had been served — The judge’s conclusion to that effect had been
justified — Other points raised by the appellant were rejected, such as a
question whether the notice to treat had been signed by the proper officer and
a suggestion that it was not sufficiently specific — The court also rejected a
submission that it was unfair for the judge to have made an award of costs
against the appellant, still without compensation, 17-18 years after the event,
in favour of an authority whose documentary evidence had not even been complete
— The appellant’s appeal was, however, dismissed with costs
The following
case is referred to in this report.
Smith v East Elloe Rural District Council [1956] AC 736; [1956] 2
WLR 888; [1956] 1 All ER 855; (1956) 54 LGR 233; 6 P&CR 102, HL
This was an
appeal by Earl J Lewis, the plaintiff below, from the decision of Morritt J dismissing
his claim against the Hackney London Borough Council, the present respondents,
for damages as compensation for the taking and use of the greater part of his
rear garden at 9 Sanford Terrace, London N16.
The appellant
appeared in person; Miss Christiana Hyde (instructed by the director of legal
services, London Borough of Hackney) represented the respondents.
Giving
judgment, GLIDEWELL LJ said: The appellant, Mr Lewis, is now the owner
of a dwelling-house at 9 Sanford Terrace, London N16. When it was originally
purchased as a residence for him and his late wife it was registered in his
name, but on August 30 1963 that was changed and it was registered in the name
of Mrs Lewis. Sadly, she died, I am not sure exactly when, but it was
registered again in his name on December 19 1978, so presumably Mrs Lewis died
in that year.
The house is
one of some architectural merit. It is the end of a terrace of houses in
Sanford Terrace, which formerly had quite long gardens at the rear. On May 19
1969 the respondent council, Hackney London Borough Council, made the Smalley
Road Compulsory Purchase Order 1969 under Part V of the Housing Act 1957, that
is to say, the order was for the purpose of providing housing accommodation. No
9 Sanford Terrace and all the houses in the same block, which in the order were
reference nos 22 to 29 inclusive, were included in the order with their
gardens.
There were a
number of objections to the confirmation of the order, although I think not one
from Mrs Lewis herself, but certainly there were objections to the inclusion of
this group of houses in the order and in the usual way an inquiry was held into
those objections. The inspector recommended that with regard to no 9 and the
other houses in the terrace the houses themselves should be excluded from the
order, together with a small area of land behind them, but that the greater
part of the gardens should remain within the order. The16
Secretary of State for the Environment accepted this recommendation and
confirmed the compulsory purchase order with an appropriate modification. That
decision was notified by a letter dated June 2 1971.
Purporting to
act under the authority of that compulsory purchase order, and jumping ahead
now, Hackney London Borough Council on May 9 1973 took possession of the
greater part of the rear garden of 9 Sanford Terrace, together with the rear
gardens of the adjoining houses. Altogether the land they took was a plot some
58 ft in depth. Despite the fact that that is now nearly 17 years ago, no
compensation has yet been paid for the acquisition of the land. At that time,
of course, Mrs Lewis was still alive.
In this
action, which was commenced by writ issued and served together with the
statement of claim on December 1 1987, Mr Lewis claims £50,000 damages from the
borough council as compensation for their occupation and use of the land. His
claim, which he drafted himself, is not in terms framed in trespass, but in his
amended statement of claim for breach of what he describes (not inaccurately)
as a statutory contract. The defence relies on the compulsory purchase order as
entitling the council to enter the land, asserts that the plaintiff is entitled
to compensation under the Compulsory Purchase Act 1965, and says that in
default of agreement as to compensation the issue as to the amount of
compensation has been referred to the Lands Tribunal. However, that did not
happen until the council referred it by a notice dated January 22 1988, which,
as Mr Lewis reminds us, is after he started this action. In his amended reply
to the defence, Mr Lewis said:
I deny that
the Defendants are entitled, at this time, to the powers of the provisions of
the Compulsory Purchase Order made in 1969. Since the Defendants have exhausted
the conditions laid down in the Compulsory Purchase Act of 1965, CH56 in
particular, Section 4 which sets a time limit, also Section 22 Sub-section 3
and other provisions of the Act.
He also said,
in the amended reply in explanation of, that:
No Notice to
Treat has ever been served in relation to the property No 9 Sanford Terrace,
N16 nor any part thereof. The time limits imposed by the Act have long expired
and he referred
to various provisions of the Compulsory Purchase Act.
He also said:
The Defendant
rejected a claim for compensation and abandoned the order and procedure in
spite of reminders for payment by refusing to pursue acquisition within the
time limits or reasonable time, as a Notice to Treat cannot be forever.
It is entirely
correct that the Compulsory Purchase Act 1965 does provide a time-limit within
which, after a compulsory purchase order has been confirmed, steps must be
taken to carry forward the purchase of the land. The first step which must be
taken within the time-limit is the service of the notice to treat and it is
right, therefore, as a matter of law, that if within four years of the
confirmation by the Secretary of State of the compulsory purchase order no
notice to treat was served, then the council were not entitled to proceed now.
However, that
really is not the point, because the council did in fact enter on the land much
less than four years before the confirmation by the Secretary of State had
expired. The real point is that if they did not serve a notice to treat then
they were not entitled to serve a notice of entry, and if they did not serve a
notice of entry then they were not entitled to enter.
They purported
to act under the powers contained in section 11 of the Compulsory Purchase Act
1965, subsection (1) of which provides:
If the
acquiring authority have served notice to treat in respect of any of the land
and have served on the owner, lessee and occupier of that land not less than
fourteen days notice, the acquiring authority may enter on and take possession
of that land, or of such part of that land as is specified in the notice;
and from that
time any compensation, the subsection goes on to provide, shall carry interest.
That is what the council purport to have done.
In the present
proceedings, on May 4 1989, after a hearing, Morritt J dismissed the
plaintiff’s claim and gave judgment for the council and Mr Lewis now appeals to
this court.
It is apparent
that when these proceedings were commenced some 15 years had elapsed since the
date when the compulsory purchase order was confirmed and something over 14
years since the council had entered on the land, and at first sight, quite
apart from anything else, the council had a perfect answer to the claim in the
provisions of the Limitation Act 1980, which provide that the time for bringing
actions for breach of contract is six years and in respect of trespass to land
is 12 years, both of which periods had of course expired.
However, for
whatever reason, the council did not plead limitation as a defence. Had they
done so, it is difficult to see what answer there would have been to that
defence. At the trial, I think at the conclusion of the trial, in the closing
speech, their counsel sought to rely upon limitation, but the judge held, and
it was a matter for his discretion, that not having been pleaded, that defence
was not open to him and he did not allow it to be raised. However, it is only
right to say that in so far as there are deficiencies in the evidence resulting
from the lapse of time the plaintiff should not gain any benefit from those
deficiencies. If after the lapse of so long the council’s records are not as
complete as they might have been had the proceedings been taken at a very much
earlier stage, then that is not something upon which Mr Lewis can base his
claim.
I return to
say something about the procedure in this case. Before the judge, Mr Lewis in
his argument raised issues which the judge summarised as follows at p 9 of his
judgment:
(1) Was the compulsory purchase order valid?
(2) Was the Notice to Treat ever served?
(3) If it was was it sufficiently specific?
(4) Was entry made in accordance with Section 11
of the Compulsory Purchase Act 1965?
(5) Did the local authority abandon the
compulsory purchase order . .?
As to the
validity of the compulsory purchase order, the judge made some brief
observations upon that, but nobody seems to have referred him to the provisions
relating to challenges to compulsory purchase orders contained in the
legislation. The legislation that was in force at the time when this compulsory
purchase order was made was the Acquisition of Land (Authorisation Procedure)
Act 1946. Schedule 1 to that contains in para 15 the well-known statutory
procedure whereby a person aggrieved by a compulsory purchase order is entitled
to challenge it, provided that he does so by application made to the High Court
within six weeks of receiving notice of the confirmation of the order.
Para 16 of the
Schedule then provides:
Subject to
the provisions of the last foregoing paragraph, a compulsory purchase order . .
. shall not, either before or after it has been confirmed . . . be questioned
in any legal proceedings whatsoever.
And so as a
matter of law this is not a limitation defence; it is a requirement that the
courts are not empowered to deal with a challenge to a compulsory purchase
order. The validity of the compulsory purchase order could not be challenged
before Morritt J and may not be challenged before us. If any authority were
needed for the clear words of the statute it is the decision of the House of
Lords in Smith v East Elloe Rural District Council as long ago as
[1956] AC 736.
That brings
one to what really was the major point made, both before Morritt J and before
us, by Mr Lewis, that is to say, that the council had failed to prove that they
were entitled to enter because they had failed to prove that a notice to treat
had been served.
The council’s
case was that under section 4 of the Compulsory Purchase Act 1965 they had
three years within which to exercise their power to acquire the land and under
section 5 of that Act they did so by serving a notice to treat on the landowner
and then, as I have said, they were entitled to enter on the land later by
serving a notice of entry under section 11.
The notice was
required to be served personally or might be served by post. In the documents
produced by the council there is a copy of a letter on their file dated
December 2 1971 addressed to Mrs Lewis. It is obviously a standard letter and
the name of the addressee is written in manuscript. It read:
Dear
Sir(s)/Madam,
The Smalley
Road Compulsory Purchase Order, 1969
and then in
manuscript:
Part of
Garden [rear of] 9 Sanford Terrace N16
I now enclose
by way of service Notice to Treat together with three forms of Claim which
should be completed and returned to me in duplicate.
And then there
follows a copy of a purported notice to treat addressed to Mrs Lewis, referring
to her as owner of part of the garden of no 9 Sanford Terrace, and in ordinary
form it tells her that the council, being authorised to do so by the compulsory
purchase order, required to purchase and take the land described in the
schedule and delineated and coloured pink on the plan therewith,17
which last-mentioned schedule and order are deposited at the underwritten
offices of the council, and then the schedule refers in terms to parts of the
rear gardens of nos 9 to 16 Sanford Terrace.
We have not
seen, because the judge did not see, what the plan was which was deposited at
the council offices to which that schedule referred. The original plan was the
plan with the compulsory purchase order which comprised the whole of the
property, that is to say the houses and the rear gardens. When the Secretary of
State approved the compulsory purchase order but deleted the houses he must
have indicated in some way, it is reasonable to assume, what it was he was
deleting by means of a plan, and it is a reasonable assumption that the plan at
the council offices thereafter showed what it was he was deleting.
Be that as it
may, the first question was, had the notice to treat been served? Following the service of the notice to treat,
Mrs Lewis, or Mr Lewis on her behalf, instructed first one and then another
valuer or estate agent to act for them and to seek to negotiate compensation.
There is no doubt that those gentlemen did enter into either negotiation or
correspondence with the council and nobody made any point at all, on the
documents before us at any rate, to the effect that a notice to treat had never
been served.
On March 20
1972, some three and a half months after the council served, if they served, a
notice to treat, the borough valuer wrote to Mrs Lewis (and Mr Lewis accepts
this letter was received) a letter saying:
I attach two
copies of a drawing
— and it gives
the number —
showing the
extent of the back garden land of your property now included in the Compulsory
Purchase Order, and I hope that this provides you with sufficient detail to
enable you or your surveyor to complete your claim form in connection with the
proposed purchase by the Council.
That is a plan
dated, as Mr Lewis points out, December 15 1971, that is to say after the date
of the notice to treat, with dimensions added on February 29 1972, which shows
a dimension of 14 ft behind the rear, that is to say westerly, wall of the
house, up to the boundary of the land which the council were intending to
acquire. Nobody on Mrs Lewis’ behalf made any objection that that had not been
notified to her before or that it was not an accurate record of something which
had happened.
Following
that, on April 18 1973, the council served a notice of entry on Mrs Lewis,
saying that they intended to enter after the expiration of 14 days and in due
course, as I have said, in May they duly did enter and they have been in
possession of the land ever since. In fact they have constructed a road over
the land, immediately to the rear of what is now the garden of no 9 Sanford
Terrace.
The council
called a witness to the effect that the council’s procedure was to serve
notices to treat by recorded delivery post. If the letter was returned,
indicating that it had not been delivered, then personal service would be
effected on the premises and on the occupier or on the owner if the owner was
present in the premises. There is no record that the council could find that
the letter was ever returned. But they cannot positively prove, and they could
not before Morritt J positively prove, service by recorded delivery, because
they did not any longer have the relevant section of the recorded delivery
receipts. They did have some for an earlier date and they had some for a later
date, but they did not have the record for the date on which they said that
they served notice to treat.
As I have
said, there was the later correspondence which the Lewises undoubtedly did
receive and there was correspondence in 1973 between Mrs Lewis and the surveyor
acting on her behalf. At that time she and her husband were about to go off to
Trinidad. Indeed, the letter of May 9 1973 says ‘we leave for Trinidad today’,
and this is a long letter of instructions to her surveyor as to how steps
should be taken to improve the house and thanking the surveyor for his
co-operation in attempting to push this matter to an early completion. There is
no suggestion that there is anything wrong with the compulsory purchase order
except that the point is made that there is an error in the measurements shown
in the sketch, that they should have left 16 ft, not 14 ft, behind the house.
That is the only point that was made.
Upon that
evidence Morritt J concluded, on the balance of probability, that the notice to
treat had been served by recorded delivery. He rehearsed the evidence which I
have sought to rehearse in some detail, and he said: ‘I conclude that the
notice to treat was properly served and must have been sent to Mr Goldblum when
it was misfiled, but it is now either lost or not available’. In my judgment,
there was ample evidence upon which Morritt J could conclude that that was the
position and I cannot find that Mr Lewis’ argument to the contrary,
persuasively though he put it, is sufficiently persuasive to overturn that
conclusion by the judge.
Mr Lewis’s
next point was that there is no evidence that the notice to treat was ever
signed by the chief executive of the council. He bases that upon the fact that
the only document produced by the council is their file copy, which does not
bear a facsimile signature upon it, whereas the copy they produced from their
file of the notice of entry does bear a facsimile signature upon it. Therefore
he asks us to accept that even if there was a notice to treat we should not
conclude that it had been signed by the chief executive.
I must confess
I do not find that a persuasive argument at all. After all this time it is not
surprising that the only document the council have on their file, indeed the
only document they would normally have had on their file had this point been
taken back in 1972, would be a copy without the signature on what was, after
all, a carbon copy of the original document.
A more serious
point is whether the notice to treat was sufficiently specific. Section 5 of
the Compulsory Purchase Act says that every notice to treat shall give particulars
of the land to which the notice relates. Mr Lewis’s point is that simply to
refer to part of the rear garden of no 9 does not give sufficient particulars.
If that stood alone I would agree. It is not good enough simply to describe a
piece of land in some such vague terms as that. A proper way of indicating
precisely what is being acquired under a compulsory purchase order and under a
notice to treat is by reference to a plan. I have already expressed the view
that the compulsory purchase order, when confirmed, must have referred to and
been accompanied by an amended plan and the notice to treat specifically
referred to that plan. I know the council could have produced it in the
proceedings before Morritt J. I do not know why they did not, but that there
must have been such a plan I am confident, and I cannot find that the notice to
treat was therefore insufficiently specific.
But the matter
does not end there because, as Morritt J pointed out, if it was not
sufficiently specific one would have expected either Mrs Lewis or her surveyor
on her behalf, when served with the copy of the plan showing the area of land
which the council wanted to take, in March 1972, or when served with the notice
of entry in April 1973, to say, ‘Oh, this is not in accordance with a valid
notice to treat’. But no such point was made at that time and that can only
support the conclusion that not merely had a notice to treat been served but
that it was sufficiently specific.
Mr Lewis has
made a number of other points. He has referred to what he calls hearsay in the
notice to treat. By that, as I understand it, he refers again to what he
considers to be the insufficient clarity of the reference in the notice to
treat to what is being acquired. He also started his submissions to us by
referring us to the fact that after the council referred the assessment of
compensation to the Lands Tribunal, some solicitors acting on his behalf
purported to concur in the reference. He argues that those solicitors had no
authority to concur, and indeed he shows us that he has not merely commenced
but has succeeded in an action against those solicitors arising out of this
matter.
For my part, I
cannot see that that has any relevance to the present action. It may have
relevance to the Lands Tribunal proceedings, although for the moment I do not
know what that relevance is, but as far as the present action is concerned, Mr
Lewis tries to persuade us that in some way Morritt J’s view of the situation
was coloured by what he understood to be the fact that Mr Lewis had instructed
solicitors, at least in relation to part of his affairs.
I cannot find
that the learned judge was in any way motivated in his conclusions by his
belief that Mr Lewis had taken legal advice in relation to other matters,
whether such a belief was right or wrong. Though Mr Lewis, as I say, has argued
his case with great clarity, I cannot find in relation to the substance of this
matter that there is any fault to be found in Morritt J’s judgment.
The last
matter Mr Lewis urged was that, at the very least, we should overturn the award
of costs which the learned judge made against him. Mr Lewis says that here he
is, some 17 to 18 years after the event, still without compensation for this
land having been agreed, let alone made, and that it was hard under the
circumstances that the council, whose documents are not complete, should have
an award of costs against him. The answer to that, I am afraid, is that costs
normally follow the event. He brought this action. He failed in18
it. It was a matter for the discretion of the judge, a discretion with which we
in this court cannot properly interfere, as to whether or not to make an award
of costs in the proceedings against him.
Accordingly,
for those reasons I would dismiss this appeal.
TAYLOR LJ and Sir George WALLER agreed and did not add anything.
The appeal
was dismissed with costs.