Mayclose Ltd v Central Electricity Generating Board
(Before Sir John DONALDSON MR, Lord Justice GLIDEWELL and Sir Frederick LAWTON)
Compensation — Claim against CEGB for deterioration in value of land as a result of the placing of the placing of electricity power lines by board — Appeal by case stated from decision of Lands Tribunal on a preliminary point of law — Whether claimants’ right to compensation was governed exclusively by a deed of grant entered into by their predecessors in title so that any claim under section 17 of the Electric Lighting Act 1882 was excluded — The deed of grant in question, executed in 1965, in addition to covenanting to pay rent for wayleaves and compensation for damage, provided for compensation for diminution in the value of any land for which planning permission had been granted, due to the existence of the electric lines on that land — What was envisaged at that time was a possible sterilisation of part of development land, with a consequent reduction in value, but what actually happened to the present claimants in 1981 was a complete refusal of permission for development — It was submitted on behalf of the claimants that the deed of grant of 1965 was not an exclusive agreement outside the ambit of the statutory provisions contained in section 22 of the Electricity (Supply) Act 1919 and section 17 of the Electric Lighting Act 1882, but was a grant of consent under the former and attracted the compensation provisions in the latter so far as not covered by the deed of grant — Held by the Court of Appeal, upholding the decision of the Lands Tribunal, that the rights of the parties were governed exclusively by the deed of grant — It was clear that the deed of grant, executed after lengthy negotiations, was intended to encompass the whole of the relationship between the parties in regard to rent and compensation, including compensation for any depreciation in the value of the subject land — Appeal dismissed
No cases are
referred to in this report.
This was an
appeal by case stated by Mayclose Ltd, successors in title to Pilkington Bros
Ltd, from a decision of the Lands Tribunal (Mr V G Wellings QC) on a
preliminary point of law as to the basis of a claim for compensation against
the Central Electricity Generating Board in respect of electricity lines over
the appellants’ land.
Compensation — Claim against CEGB for deterioration in value of land as a result of the placing of the placing of electricity power lines by board — Appeal by case stated from decision of Lands Tribunal on a preliminary point of law — Whether claimants’ right to compensation was governed exclusively by a deed of grant entered into by their predecessors in title so that any claim under section 17 of the Electric Lighting Act 1882 was excluded — The deed of grant in question, executed in 1965, in addition to covenanting to pay rent for wayleaves and compensation for damage, provided for compensation for diminution in the value of any land for which planning permission had been granted, due to the existence of the electric lines on that land — What was envisaged at that time was a possible sterilisation of part of development land, with a consequent reduction in value, but what actually happened to the present claimants in 1981 was a complete refusal of permission for development — It was submitted on behalf of the claimants that the deed of grant of 1965 was not an exclusive agreement outside the ambit of the statutory provisions contained in section 22 of the Electricity (Supply) Act 1919 and section 17 of the Electric Lighting Act 1882, but was a grant of consent under the former and attracted the compensation provisions in the latter so far as not covered by the deed of grant — Held by the Court of Appeal, upholding the decision of the Lands Tribunal, that the rights of the parties were governed exclusively by the deed of grant — It was clear that the deed of grant, executed after lengthy negotiations, was intended to encompass the whole of the relationship between the parties in regard to rent and compensation, including compensation for any depreciation in the value of the subject land — Appeal dismissed
No cases are
referred to in this report.
This was an
appeal by case stated by Mayclose Ltd, successors in title to Pilkington Bros
Ltd, from a decision of the Lands Tribunal (Mr V G Wellings QC) on a
preliminary point of law as to the basis of a claim for compensation against
the Central Electricity Generating Board in respect of electricity lines over
the appellants’ land.
Nigel Macleod
QC and Christopher Katkowski (instructed by Asshetons, agents for Whelmar Homes
legal department) appeared on behalf of the appellants; F M Ferris QC
(instructed by Chalmers Carr, solicitor to CEGB) represented the respondents.
Giving the
first judgment at the invitation of the Master of the Rolls, GLIDEWELL LJ said:
This is an appeal by way of case stated from a decision of Mr V G Wellings QC,
sitting as the Lands Tribunal, on a preliminary point of law as to whether the
appellants, Mayclose Ltd, are entitled to pursue a claim for compensation under
section 17 of the Electric Lighting Act 1882. The matter was referred to the
Lands Tribunal by the consent of the parties, who then set down, and the
tribunal accepted, the preliminary point of law.
The facts are
set out in the case stated and can be summarised quite shortly. In 1963 an area
of land the subject of the reference, near Doncaster in South Yorkshire, was
owned by the well-known company, Pilkington Brothers Ltd. At that date the
Central Electricity Generating Board had it in mind to construct a major
electric power line, part of which was intended to cross the land owned by
Pilkingtons. In June and July 1963 there was an exchange of correspondence
between the board and Pilkingtons about that proposal. The documents before us
and before the tribunal include not merely that correspondence but also notes
or memoranda of certain meetings that took place between representatives of
Pilkingtons and the board at that time.
From these it
emerges clearly that Pilkingtons wished, and expected to be able, to build
houses on a major part of the land and envisaged that, if this power line were
constructed crossing the land, it would have the effect of reducing the number
of houses which they would be able to construct, thus inevitably sterilising part
of the land and reducing its value as a building site.
For that
reason principally they made it clear that the grant of a wayleave for the
construction of the electricity transmission line would be prejudicial to their
interests and it was unlikely that they would consent to what the board wished
to do. They suggested, understandably, that the line should follow an
alternative route, a little distance to the east, that ran across another
landowner’s property.
However, the
board were not willing to adopt that alternative solution and they returned to
the proposal in a letter of April 16 1964 which said:
. . . I regret
that after very careful investigation, it has been found undesirable to
re-route the proposed line as suggested by you. In view of this, I hope you
will be able to assist the Board by giving your consent to this very important
line.
I therefore
enclose a Statutory Notice . . . together with a Form of Consent and plans,
giving details of the proposals to which I trust you will have no objection.
Before I turn
to that notice, which is included in the bundle before us, I think it
appropriate to go to the statutory provisions. There are a number of Acts which
deal with the supply of electricity and the construction of lines for the
conducting of electricity. They are all, we accept, to be read as one.
The provision
relating to consent is contained in section 22 of the Electricity (Supply) Act
1919. That section deals with wayleaves. So far as is material, subsection (1)
provides:
. . . any
authorised undertakers may place any electric line . . . above ground across
any land other than land covered by buildings or used as a garden or pleasure
ground in cases where the placing of such lines above ground is otherwise
lawful, and where any line has been so placed across any land the . . .
undertakers may enter on the land for the purpose of repairing or altering the
line:
Provided
that, before placing any such line across any land, the . . . undertakers shall
serve on the owner and occupier of the land notice of their intention, together
with a description of the nature and position of the lines proposed to be so
placed; and if, within twenty-one days after the service of the notice, the
owner and occupier fail to give their consent or attach to their consent any
terms or conditions or stipulations to which the . . . undertakers object, it
shall not be lawful to place the line across that land without the consent of
the Board of Trade.
Then there are
provisions for the procedure to be followed if the19
owners will not give their consent and the matter has to be dealt with by what
was then the Board of Trade and is now the Secretary of State for Energy.
That section
thus contains a statutory procedure under which the board gives notice of
intention to construct the power line and seeks the consent of the landowner.
The landowner may give such consent within 21 days or may refuse it. If he
gives consent he may attach conditions to it which the board may not like. If
either consent is refused or the board does not like the conditions the matter
has to go to the minister, now the Secretary of State for Energy, who in turn
may give his consent and attach appropriate conditions.
The document
which the board put forward in April 1964 was not merely a form of consent but
it included what they were suggesting were conditions which they would find
acceptable. The document in form, if it had been signed by Pilkingtons, would
have contained their consent to the board’s placing the line across the
property on the route shown on a plan. It provided for the board paying a
yearly rent for the wayleave, and then, in the Third Schedule, it provided by
way of conditions for certain other payments.
Clause 4 of
the Third Schedule provided:
In addition to
paying the yearly rent the Board shall:
(a) If the existence of the electric line shall
cause any interference with agricultural operations pay to the Owner . . . in
accordance with the following scale . . . .
There then
follows a scale which is related to the size of the base of the pylons at a
rate per annum.
(b) Pay to the Owner or Occupier as the case may
be compensation for any loss sustained by him in consequence of any damage
caused by the electric line or by the placing of the electric line to his land
. . . or property or shall make good such damage to his reasonable
satisfaction.
(c) Keep the Owner indemnified against all
actions claims costs and expenses which may be made against the Owner.
The statutory
provisions for compensation for damage are contained in section 17 of the
Electric Lighting Act 1882, which provides:
In the
exercise of the powers in relation to the execution of works given them under
this Act, or any licence, order or special Act, the undertakers shall cause as
little detriment and inconvenience and do as little damage as may be, and shall
make full compensation to all bodies and persons interested for all damage
sustained by them by reason or in consequence of the exercise of such powers,
the amount and application of such compensation in case of difference to be
determined by arbitration.
For myself I
think it likely that the intention of clause 4(b) of the Third Schedule to the
form of consent was to indicate one part of the compensation for damage which
the board accepted they would have to pay under section 17 of the 1882 Act, but
that question does not directly arise in the circumstances of this case.
What happened
thereafter was that, by a letter of June 5 1964, Pilkingtons refused their
consent. The writer of the letter said: ‘. . . I am afraid the matter will have
to be referred to the Minister for a decision.’
Before the
matter got before the minister, the board wrote again to the legal department
of Pilkingtons. Apparently there had been a discussion between representatives
of the board and the company in the meantime, and the letter from the board
included this paragraph:
So far as the
proposed erection of the line on your Company’s property is concerned, you will
recall that it was confirmed that the Board would pay compensation for any
depreciation the proposed line may cause to the property, and I attach a
‘compensation clause’ which, I think you will agree, makes the position quite
clear. The Board would be happy for this clause to be included in the form of
consent already in your possession.
Then it goes on
to make it clear that the company was still unhappy about the possible loss of
building land.
In reply to
that, on August 20, a Mr Hartley on behalf of Pilkingtons wrote that he was
taking instructions, he was going away on holiday and he would not be able to
let the board have a full reply until after his return, but:
If the
Company’s Board is prepared to consent, I think I would prefer to have a Deed
of Grant covering all the terms of the wayleave in a similar form to the one
which has been negotiated for the Rainhill/Kirkby 400 kV line across the
Company’s Eccleston Hall Estate in St Helens. Similarly, I think a capital
payment in place of rent would be preferable.
When he got
back from holiday Mr Hartley took instructions and wrote another letter in
which he said, on September 15 1964:
Further to my
letter of the 20th August, the Company is prepared to consent to the Generating
Board’s proposal to erect the above mentioned line across its estate, subject
to the terms of a Deed of Grant being settled and approved on behalf of the
Company.
Then he said
that he had already indicated that he preferred the deed to be in a form
similar to that which had already been negotiated in respect of land in the St
Helens area.
So in due
course a deed of grant was prepared, and it was executed on January 4 1965. Its
material terms provide:
. . . the
Grantor has agreed to sell and the Board have agreed to purchase the said
rights and liberties at the price of Nine hundred pounds.
The rights and
liberties which were granted by the deed were of three kinds: ‘full right and
liberty for the Board to erect use maintain repair renew inspect and remove the
electric lines and works specified in the Schedule’, right and liberty to fell
and lop trees which would be in the way of the line, and right and liberty to
enter to inspect and to repair where necessary.
The board
specifically covenanted, among other matters, to:
forthwith
make good to the reasonable satisfaction of the Grantor any damage to the . . .
property or to the buildings . . . caused by the electric lines or by the
erection of the electric lines. If for any reason any such damage cannot be
made good they shall in lieu of making good such damage compensate the Grantor
or its tenants thereof.
The board also
covenanted to place the towers in specified positions and that the towers would
be at a height which would allow the construction underneath the lines of
houses no greater than 30 ft in height. In their turn Pilkingtons covenanted,
in relation to the position as dwelling-houses, that no part of any
dwelling-house would be less than 18 ft from the conductors.
Then there was
a clause specifically dealing with what the parties apparently envisaged as a
real possibility at that time, namely that if planning permission were granted
for the development of the land it would contain a limitation requiring the
houses to be kept away from the pylons. Clause 4 provides:
If at any
time during the continuance in force of these Presents the Grantor obtains
permission under the Town and Country Planning Legislation to develop the said
property or any part thereof the Board shall within six months of their
receiving written notice thereof from the Grantor pay such additional sum to
the Grantor as compensation for any diminution in the value of such part of the
said property for which planning permission is granted by reason of the
existence of the electric lines as may be agreed between the Board and the
Grantor or in default of agreement as may be determined . . . by the Lands
Tribunal
on reference to
it.
That was the
position when, by a conveyance of June 30 1971, Pilkingtons conveyed the land
to the present applicants, Mayclose Ltd. At some stage in the meantime the
electricity power line had been constructed. Mayclose Ltd are a company whose
business is or includes the construction of houses, and in due course they
applied for planning permission to build on the land. In 1981, not having
received any response to their application, they appealed to the Secretary of
State for the Environment against the failure to give a decision on their
application.
An inspector,
who held an inquiry into that appeal, on November 12 1981 recommended to the
Secretary of State that the appeal should be dismissed and the Secretary of
State accepted that recommendation. There are three matters considered in the
Secretary of State’s conclusion as to why the appeal should be dismissed, one
of which was the existence of the electric power line across the land and the
undesirability of having houses close to or underneath the line. I need not go
into the question whether that was really the sole reason for refusal or what
were the reasons for the refusal. The fact is that there was a refusal.
It is obvious
to me that Pilkingtons and the board, back in 1963-64, had not envisaged a
complete refusal of planning permission in respect of the land. What they had
envisaged was a possible sterilisation of part of the land and a reduction in
its value accordingly, but they had not envisaged that they would not be
allowed to develop at all.
The applicant
company, Mayclose Ltd, then claimed compensation from the board not under the
terms of the deed but under section 17 of the 1882 Act, the terms of which I
have already read out. The response from the Generating Board was that there
was no right to compensation under section 17 because the whole of the rights
of the parties are governed by the deed of January 4 1965. It was in effect the
question whether that was correct or not which was set down for the decision of
the Lands Tribunal.
The learned
member of the Lands Tribunal said:
20
The questions
upon which the decision of the . . . Court is desired are:
(A) Whether on the facts stated in my . . .
decision I erred in law in holding:
(i) that the rights of the parties were governed
exclusively by the deed of grant made on 4th January 1965 between Pilkington
Brothers Limited and the Respondents.
(ii) that therefore:
(a) the claimants had no entitlement to make a
claim under section 17 of the Electric Lighting Act 1882
and then two
consequential matters upon which we so far have not heard argument.
(b) the Lands Tribunal had no jurisdiction to
entertain the reference:
(c) accordingly, the Tribunal had no power to
make an order for costs.
The first part
of that is the matter upon which at the moment I am giving judgment. The
learned member did go on to express certain opinions in the event that he was
wrong on the first point of law, but we have not been into those and there is
no need to do so.
In the case
stated, which sets out the position with entire clarity, the learned member
rehearsed the history much as I have done and then posed the preliminary point
of law as:
(1) Are the rights of the parties governed
exclusively by the deed of grant so that any claim by the claimants under
section 17 of the Act of 1882 is precluded?
Mr Macleod,
who appeared for the company before the tribunal as he has before us, submitted
to Mr Wellings, as he has to us, that there were three ways in which the board
might obtain the necessary rights over the reference land to enable it to
construct the electricity power line. One, which never arose in the present
case, is that it might have made a compulsory acquisition of a part of the land
under powers granted to it by section 9 of the Electricity Act 1947. Second, it
might have proceeded under the statutory scheme to which I have already referred,
that is to say by obtaining the consent of the landowner under section 22 of
the Electricity (Supply) Act 1919 or, in default of that consent, the consent
of the minister under that section. In that case, Mr Macleod submits,
compensation, other than specifically provided for in that consent, would be
payable under section 17 of the 1882 Act. Mr Macleod not merely accepts but
asserts that a third possible way in which the board could acquire the
necessary powers is by agreement. The board, being a statutory body, has the
powers granted to it by statute, and it is specifically given the power to
enter into contracts under section 2(5) of the Electricity Act 1947.
Mr Macleod has
argued that the deed of January 4 1965 was not an agreement outside the ambit
of section 22 of the Electricity (Supply) Act 1919 but was a formal grant of
consent under that section. He goes on to argue that the deed, and if he is
right the consent, thus contains terms dealing with the payment of rent for the
wayleave and the payment of compensation in the event that planning permission
is granted but the value of the land depreciates, but that it is inherent in
the statutory procedure that the statutory right to compensation under section
17 of the 1882 Act still applies where there is something not dealt with in the
conditions of the consent. He submits that the position which has arisen here,
where the value of the land has been depreciated by a complete refusal of
planning permission, which he will submit, if he succeeds in this appeal, is
the result of the power line being constructed, is something not dealt with in
the conditions of the consent and accordingly that he is entitled to look to
the statutory provisions for compensation.
For my part I
am not convinced that it is necessary to consider whether the deed is an
agreement outside section 22 or a consent within it. I am inclined to the view
that it is the former, an agreement outside section 22. But the important
question is the question which the member of the Lands Tribunal posed: ‘Are the
rights of the parties governed exclusively by the deed of grant so that any
claim by the claimants under section 17 of the Act of 1882 is precluded?’ To my mind there really can be only one answer
to that question: it is ‘yes’. Parties knowing exactly what they were about,
having negotiated for well over a year, in 1965 entered into this formal
document. They included in it provisions dealing with rent and compensation,
and to my mind it is absolutely clear that that document encompassed the whole
of the relationship between them with regard to this matter. It removed any
potential rights there might be to compensation under the 1882 Act. It was
intended that everything that was to be dealt with should be dealt with in the
document, and so it was. I did suggest during the course of argument that it
may be that under the deed itself there may be a right to compensation: we are
not concerned with whether that suggestion was a sound one or not.
But the answer
to the question posed to the Lands Tribunal to my mind is, as I have said, that
the rights of the parties are governed exclusively by the deed. Accordingly I
conclude that the learned member was entirely justified in the decision he gave
and that this appeal should fail.
Agreeing, SIR
FREDERICK LAWTON said: In my judgment the issue in this case is what the
parties intended by the deed of January 4 1965. Their intention is to be
inferred from the words used in the deed construed in the light of the
surrounding facts and circumstances. As my lord has pointed out, there were
negotiations lasting over a year before the deed was executed. During the
course of these negotiations Pilkington Brothers Ltd made it clear to the board
that they were concerned about the likelihood that the value of their property
would be depreciated having regard to the probability that at some time in the
future the land would be ripe for development.
It is against
that background of fact that one comes to look at the words of the deed. For
the reasons given by Glidewell J it seems to me clear that the parties did
intend that the deed should embody all the terms of the agreement including
compensation for any depreciation in the value of Pilkington Brothers’ land. I,
too, would dismiss the appeal.
SIR JOHN
DONALDSON MR also agreed and did not add anything.
The appeal
was dismissed with costs. Leave to appeal to the House of Lords was refused.