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Green and others v Secretaries of State for the Environment and Transport and another

Compulsory purchase — Application under section 23 of the Acquisition of Land Act 1981 to quash a compulsory purchase order — The applicants also sought to quash an associated order for the stopping up of highways, but as the two orders were interdependent the case was argued on the compulsory purchase order — Applicants were engaged in the retail furniture and furnishings trade and owned land in Eastleigh which was included in the order — The main issue was whether the Secretary of State for the Environment had erred in failing to have regard to a material consideration, namely, the question of ‘financial viability’, ie the balance between the cost of acquisition and the ground rent likely to be received by the local authority from the site — The scheme proposed was to provide on the 8-acre site a covered shopping centre and car park with rear pedestrian access — The applicants relied on such cases as Sovmots Investments Ltd v Secretary of State for the Environment and Prest v Secretary of State for Wales and submitted that there was an obligation on the local authority to call evidence to show the balance of cost and return — It was argued that as they had not done so the Secretary of State could not properly decide the issue in the absence of such evidence — Held, however, that the decision letter showed that the Secretary of State had not considered the financial viability of the scheme to be material and it was not therefore necessary for him to make a decision about it — He had accepted the inspector’s conclusion that the advantages of acquiring the site and proceeding with the scheme outweighed the necessity of extinguishing the applicants’ business (although the local authority did not admit such necessity, as they had offered relocation) and the consequential costs of acquisition — In these circumstances the Secretary of State was entitled to accept the inspector’s conclusion that the compulsory purchase order should be confirmed — Application dismissed

The applicants
were A T Green, the trustees of the Green settlement and Eastsleep Ltd, the
respondents being the Secretaries of State for the Environment and Transport
and Eastleigh Borough Council. The applicants’ interests and the land in
question are described at the beginning of Glidewell J’s judgment.

R Sears QC and
A Dinkin (instructed by Slaughter & May) appeared on behalf of the
applicants; M Spence QC and A Porten (instructed by R Read, Solicitor of
Eastleigh Borough Council) represented the council. The Secretary of State for
the Environment did not appear and was not represented.

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