London Regional Transport v Imperial Group Pension Trust Ltd and another
(Before Sir Nicolas BROWNE-WILKINSON V-C)
Compulsory purchase — Effect of acquisition on a right of way and associated rights enjoyed by adjoining property — Acquisition governed by powers under section 14 of London Transport Act 1964, which provided that private rights of way over the compulsorily acquired land would be extinguished, but persons suffering loss by the extinguishment would be entitled to compensation — The right of way and other rights in question had been granted to the defendants’ predecessors in title by the plaintiffs’ predecessors in title — Notice to treat by the acquiring authority had been served in respect of the land over which the rights subsisted but no notice to treat had been served in respect of the rights themselves — The question which arose on the originating summons taken out by the plaintiff authority was whether, by virtue of section 5 of the London Transport Act 1969, incorporating section 14(1) of the 1964 Act, the plaintiffs held the acquired land freed and discharged from the rights over it granted to the defendants’ predecessors in title by a deed of grant in 1939 — Held that there was no doubt that this was the position — There was no requirement that a notice to treat should have been given to the defendants or their predecessors in title — The position was analogous to that which obtains under standard compulsory purchase procedure, where the person entitled to an easement over land acquired has no right to receive a notice to treat but has a claim for injurious affection if he in fact suffers injury — The difference was that here the statute expressly gives a right to compensation — The 1964 Act provides for the statutory extinction of the rights plus a right to compensation — Declaration accordingly (subject to the possibility of proceedings on an issue of estoppel)
The following
cases are referred to in this report.
Badham v Marris (1881) 45 LT 579
Compulsory purchase — Effect of acquisition on a right of way and associated rights enjoyed by adjoining property — Acquisition governed by powers under section 14 of London Transport Act 1964, which provided that private rights of way over the compulsorily acquired land would be extinguished, but persons suffering loss by the extinguishment would be entitled to compensation — The right of way and other rights in question had been granted to the defendants’ predecessors in title by the plaintiffs’ predecessors in title — Notice to treat by the acquiring authority had been served in respect of the land over which the rights subsisted but no notice to treat had been served in respect of the rights themselves — The question which arose on the originating summons taken out by the plaintiff authority was whether, by virtue of section 5 of the London Transport Act 1969, incorporating section 14(1) of the 1964 Act, the plaintiffs held the acquired land freed and discharged from the rights over it granted to the defendants’ predecessors in title by a deed of grant in 1939 — Held that there was no doubt that this was the position — There was no requirement that a notice to treat should have been given to the defendants or their predecessors in title — The position was analogous to that which obtains under standard compulsory purchase procedure, where the person entitled to an easement over land acquired has no right to receive a notice to treat but has a claim for injurious affection if he in fact suffers injury — The difference was that here the statute expressly gives a right to compensation — The 1964 Act provides for the statutory extinction of the rights plus a right to compensation — Declaration accordingly (subject to the possibility of proceedings on an issue of estoppel)
The following
cases are referred to in this report.
Badham v Marris (1881) 45 LT 579
Bedford
(Duke of) v Dawson (1875) LR 20 Eq 353; 44
LJ Ch 549; 33 LT 156
21
Clark v School Board for London (1874) LR 9 Ch 120; 43 LJ Ch 421;
29 LT 903
Swainston v Finn and Metropolitan Board of Works (1883) 48 LT 634; 52
LJ Ch 235
This was an
originating summons by the plaintiffs, London Regional Transport, raising a
question as to whether the acquisition by the plaintiffs of a piece of land
under statutory powers put an end to rights over such land which were
appurtenant to adjoining properties in Wigmore Street, London W1, belonging to
the defendants, Imperial Group Pension Trust Ltd and Imperial Group Pension Group
Investments Ltd.
James L Munby
(instructed by Freshfields) appeared on behalf of the plaintiffs; Jonathan
Brock (instructed by Osborne Clarke, of Bristol) represented the defendants.
Giving
judgment, SIR NICOLAS BROWNE-WILKINSON V-C said: The defendants, Imperial Group
Pension Trust Ltd and Imperial Group Pension Group Investments Ltd, are the
owners of the freehold of certain properties in Wigmore Street, London W1.
Those properties used to back on to a piece of land which was used by Debenhams
Ltd as a car park. By a deed dated May 11 1939 Debenhams, as owner of the land
at the rear, granted to the defendants’ predecessors in title certain rights:
first, a right of access to the rear of the Wigmore Street properties; second,
a turning circle for use in conjunction with that right of access; third, a
right of access to a fire escape serving the upper storeys of the Wigmore
Street properties.
The plaintiff,
London Regional Transport, is the successor of the London Transport Board,
which took statutory powers for the construction of what is now the Jubilee
Line and for that purpose acquired the land at the rear of Wigmore Street,
previously owned by Debenhams, by way of compulsory purchase for the purpose of
constructing the Jubilee Line. The Jubilee Line has now been constructed and is
in operation. The surface land is not required for the purposes of the
plaintiff’s undertaking and it is proposed to sell it. The question which
arises in this case is whether the rights appurtenant to the Wigmore Street
properties and granted by the 1939 deed are or are not exercisable over the
land compulsorily acquired by the plaintiff.
There is no
dispute that the land to the rear was within the land authorised to be
acquired. Authority for the acquisition was contained in the London Transport
Act 1969, section 5 of which contained power to take the land, including the
land in question here. Section 16 of the London Transport Act 1969 incorporated
section 14 of the London Transport Act 1964 which provides as follows:
1. All private
rights of way over any land that may be acquired compulsorily under this Act
shall, as from the acquisition of the land, whether compulsorily or by
agreement, be extinguished.
2. Any person
who suffers loss by the extinguishment of any right under this section shall be
entitled to be paid by the Board compensation to be determined, in case of
dispute, under and in accordance with the Lands Clauses Act.
The notice to
treat which was served on the owner of the land to the rear of Wigmore Street
was served on September 6 1971; notice of entry was given on November 26 1971,
and the plaintiff went into possession in April 1972. On November 8 1972 the
sale of the Wigmore Street properties to the defendants in this case was
completed by the registration on the property register of the defendants as
registered proprietors of the Wigmore Street properties. The register contains
a note referring to rights of way and usage contained in the agreement of May
11 1939. Thereafter negotiations apparently continued for some time between
Debenhams and the plaintiff. They culminated on July 29 1977 and Debenhams’
claim for compensation was finally settled; the property at the rear was
transferred to London Regional Transport and the plaintiff was registered as
proprietors of the land at the rear on August 12 1977. Again there is
registered against the charges register of the plaintiff’s land a reference to
the 1939 deed. Throughout this period there was correspondence passing between
the defendants of the one part and the various organs of the plaintiff of the
other part as to the position relating to the rights under the 1939 deed, in
the course of which a number of confusing and not always consistent things were
said. For the purposes of the matter I am currently dealing with, nothing turns
on that correspondence, though much may at a later date turn on it.
The only
question that arises on the originating summons as it stands at the moment is
the question whether, by virtue of section 14(1) of the 1964 Act as
incorporated in the 1969 Act, the compulsory acquisition of the land from
Debenhams vested the land in the plaintiff freed and discharged from the rights
in favour of the Wigmore Street properties contained in the 1939 deed. In my
judgment, there is no doubt that it did.
The normal
rule in relation to easements affecting land which has been compulsorily
acquired, in the absence of such a special clause as section 14 in the present
case, is that the acquiring authority is not bound to give notice to treat to
the person entitled to the easement. On acquisition of the land the person
entitled to the benefit of the easement over the land has a claim for injurious
affection if in fact injured, under the Lands Clauses Act, but the owner of the
easement is not entitled to notice to treat or to compensation for acquisition
of the easement. That that is so is demonstrated by two decisions: Clark
v School Board for London (1874) LR 9 Ch 120; and Duke of Bedford
v Dawson (1875) LR 20 Eq 353. Those cases clearly establish that in such
a case no notice to treat need be given to the person entitled to the benefit
of the easement over the land acquired.
This kind of
case, however, is rather different. Section 14 is an express provision which in
terms extinguished the easement. It did not merely give a right to compensation
for injurious affection. Such an express provision extinguishing the easement
over the land acquired has been considered in cases under the Artisans and
Labourers Dwellings Improvement Act 1875, which contained a clause providing
that upon the purchase by the local authority of lands required for the purpose
of carrying into effect an improvement scheme all rights of way and all other
rights and easements ‘shall be extinguished’ and provided for the payment of
compensation for such extinction. In two cases it has been held that the
persons entitled to a right of support or other right of the nature of an
easement over the land compulsorily acquired under the Artisans and Labourers Dwellings
Improvement Act were not entitled to injunctions to prevent the doing by the
acquiring authority of acts which would, apart from the statutory provision,
have interfered with their rights of support. It was held in those cases that
the effect of the Act was to extinguish the easements. The two cases are Badham
v Marris (1881) 45 LT 579 and Swainston v Finn and
Metropolitan Board of Works (1883) 48 LT 634. In neither of those cases was
the specific question raised in argument or dealt with in the judgment whether
the owner of the easement so extinguished ought to have been given notice to
treat.
The only
question I have to decide is whether under section 14 notice to treat ought to
have been given to the defendants’ predecessors in title or the defendants on
the acquisition of the land. I have no doubt that there was no need to serve
notice to treat on the persons entitled to the benefit of the rights under the
1939 deed. Section 14 makes it clear that there is a distinction between the
land which is to be acquired under the Act and easements or rights of way over
that land. It seems to me clear that what is being acquired is the land itself;
plainly in relation to that acquisition a notice to treat has to be given. But
it seems to me equally clear that there is no compulsory or other acquisition
of the easement from the person who is entitled to it. I can see nothing in the
Act which would either require or entitle the acquiring authority to serve
notice to treat on the person entitled to the rights of way. All that there is
is a statutory extinction of those rights coupled with a right to compensation.
In my
judgment, bearing in mind the background of the general law on the service of
notice to treat on those entitled only to easements over land they have
acquired, I can see no ground for departing from the general rule and saying
that notice to treat ought to have been given in this case. That may well be an
unfortunate position in that the person whose rights have been extinguished may
not have notice of that extinction. But it is accepted in the present case that
the failure to claim compensation until now does not bar the defendants from
claiming compensation even at this late stage and, therefore, no harm is done
by the failure of the defendants to have the matter brought to their attention
or to claim compensation previously.
However that
may be, in my judgment the statutory position is clear. There was no need or
right to give notice to treat and the effect of compulsory acquisition of the
land from Debenhams was to extinguish the rights of the defendants over the
land.
There is a
further point that emerged at a late stage. It is pointed out that the 1939
deed, on its face, confers four different rights. The first is a right to pass
and repass with vehicles at the rear of the Wigmore22
Street property. That is undoubtedly a right of way and, in my judgment, has
plainly been extinguished.
The second
right is a right to use part of the land belonging to Debenhams to enable
vehicles to turn round. It is said that that is not a right of way.
The third
right is a right to load and unload vehicles at the rear of the Wigmore Street
properties in the form there mentioned. It is said that that also is not a
right of way.
Finally, there
is the fire escape access. That it is accepted is a right of way.
What Mr Brock
says is that the right to turn vehicles and the right to load and unload, not
themselves being rights of way, do not fall within section 14 of the 1964 Act
and have, therefore, not themselves been extinguished. I will assume that he is
right and that they are not technically rights of way — though I do not decide
that. Even on that assumption, those two rights are dependent for their
exercise on the existence of a right of way to get the vehicle to the point
where it turns or unloads. The right of way to get to that point having been
extinguished, it is impossible for the right to turn or the right to unload to
continue to exist in limbo. In my judgment, those rights necessarily ceased to
exist when the rights of way on which they depended were extinguished.
Accordingly,
subject to the question of estoppel, I will make a declaration that the land is
free from any of the rights contained in the 1939 deed.
After hearing
counsel on a question raised by the defendants in regard to estoppel, THE
VICE-CHANCELLOR said: I will make the declaration you ask but direct that the
order should not be drawn up for seven days, and if within that time fresh
proceedings are launched by the defendants putting forward a claim in estoppel
and asking for relief by way of injunction, then my order will continue to be
not drawn up until that action is dispensed with.