Hughes and another v Doncaster Metropolitan Borough Council
(Before Lord Justice DILLON, Lord Justice STAUGHTON and Lord Justice MANN)
Compensation for acquisition of land — Land Compensation Act 1961, rule (4) in section 5 — Appeal by case stated from decision of Lands Tribunal — Court of Appeal divided — Leave given to appeal to House of Lords — Discussion of some fundamental matters affecting compensation for disturbance — Whether rule (4) in section 5 (account not to be taken of increase in value of land due to use contrary to law) applies to compensation for disturbance or other matters not directly based on the value of land (rule (6)) — Ambiguity of the ‘value of land’ — Distinction between the value of land to the owner, which would include the amount of the loss which the owner might suffer as a result of the disturbance of his possession, and the value which the owner could obtain in the open market simply for the sale of his interest — Whether the use of land which was immune from enforcement action in consequence of section 87 of the Town and Country Planning Act 1971 could nevertheless be ‘contrary to law’
In the
present case the compulsory acquisition resulted in the closing down of the
claimants’ business, that of scrap metal and rag merchants, which had been
developing successfully until the acquisition — The crucial factor, which gave
rise to the questions raised in these proceedings, was that at no time had
planning permission been sought or obtained for the uses of the business or the
erection of buildings for it — An important distinction, however, had to be
made between the ‘blue land’ and the ‘green land’ (areas identified by their
colours on a plan) — The point of the distinction was that the blue land had,
because of the date of its unauthorised development, become immune from
enforcement proceedings whereas the green land did not enjoy this immunity —
The claimants claimed compensation on the basis of the extinguishment of their
business — Three questions of law were raised in the case stated but only the
first two had to be argued
The first
question was whether the tribunal erred in law by holding that rule (4) in
section 5 of the 1961 Act did not affect a claim for compensation for
disturbance or other matters mentioned in rule (6) on the ground that such
matters were not part of ‘the value of land’ within the meaning of rule (4) —
Dillon LJ, who gave the first judgment but the minority view, held that the
tribunal did err in this respect — He considered that rule (4) did apply to the
valuation of the claimants’ business for the purpose of compensation as well as
to the valuation, in accordance with rule (2), of the land itself —
Compensation for disturbance was part of the value of the land to the owner;
such compensation and the market value of the land must, on this view, be
considered together — Staughton LJ and Mann LJ disagreed — Staughton LJ thought
it significant that ‘the value of land’ in rule (2) referred to the open-market
value, not the extended value which included compensation for disturbance; and
the same was true of the words in rule (6) — One would therefore, on the
principle of noscitur a sociis, expect that the words would have the same
meaning in rule (4) — Mann LJ considered that rule (6) recognised that
disturbance was a thing by itself and not part of the value of land in the
sense there used — The majority view was therefore that the answer to the first
question was ‘no’, or, to express the matter in positive form, that the Lands
Tribunal was correct in holding that rule (4) did not apply to the assessment
of compensation for disturbance
Compensation for acquisition of land — Land Compensation Act 1961, rule (4) in section 5 — Appeal by case stated from decision of Lands Tribunal — Court of Appeal divided — Leave given to appeal to House of Lords — Discussion of some fundamental matters affecting compensation for disturbance — Whether rule (4) in section 5 (account not to be taken of increase in value of land due to use contrary to law) applies to compensation for disturbance or other matters not directly based on the value of land (rule (6)) — Ambiguity of the ‘value of land’ — Distinction between the value of land to the owner, which would include the amount of the loss which the owner might suffer as a result of the disturbance of his possession, and the value which the owner could obtain in the open market simply for the sale of his interest — Whether the use of land which was immune from enforcement action in consequence of section 87 of the Town and Country Planning Act 1971 could nevertheless be ‘contrary to law’
In the
present case the compulsory acquisition resulted in the closing down of the
claimants’ business, that of scrap metal and rag merchants, which had been
developing successfully until the acquisition — The crucial factor, which gave
rise to the questions raised in these proceedings, was that at no time had
planning permission been sought or obtained for the uses of the business or the
erection of buildings for it — An important distinction, however, had to be
made between the ‘blue land’ and the ‘green land’ (areas identified by their
colours on a plan) — The point of the distinction was that the blue land had,
because of the date of its unauthorised development, become immune from
enforcement proceedings whereas the green land did not enjoy this immunity —
The claimants claimed compensation on the basis of the extinguishment of their
business — Three questions of law were raised in the case stated but only the
first two had to be argued
The first
question was whether the tribunal erred in law by holding that rule (4) in
section 5 of the 1961 Act did not affect a claim for compensation for
disturbance or other matters mentioned in rule (6) on the ground that such
matters were not part of ‘the value of land’ within the meaning of rule (4) —
Dillon LJ, who gave the first judgment but the minority view, held that the
tribunal did err in this respect — He considered that rule (4) did apply to the
valuation of the claimants’ business for the purpose of compensation as well as
to the valuation, in accordance with rule (2), of the land itself —
Compensation for disturbance was part of the value of the land to the owner;
such compensation and the market value of the land must, on this view, be
considered together — Staughton LJ and Mann LJ disagreed — Staughton LJ thought
it significant that ‘the value of land’ in rule (2) referred to the open-market
value, not the extended value which included compensation for disturbance; and
the same was true of the words in rule (6) — One would therefore, on the
principle of noscitur a sociis, expect that the words would have the same
meaning in rule (4) — Mann LJ considered that rule (6) recognised that
disturbance was a thing by itself and not part of the value of land in the
sense there used — The majority view was therefore that the answer to the first
question was ‘no’, or, to express the matter in positive form, that the Lands
Tribunal was correct in holding that rule (4) did not apply to the assessment
of compensation for disturbance
The second
question was whether the tribunal erred in law in holding that uses which are
by statute immune from enforcement action under the Town and Country Planning
Act 1971 cannot be said to be ‘contrary to law’ within the meaning of rule (4)
— Here again Dillon LJ’s view was the minority one — His conclusion was that
the effect of the Town and Country Planning Acts of 1968 and 1971 was to
proclaim a measure of oblivion for breaches of planning control which took
place before the end of 1963 — It would be wrong to regard breaches so far
given as still contrary to law — He did not regard the decision in LTSS Print
& Supply Services Ltd v Hackney London Borough Council as dealing with the same kind of
situation — Staughton and Mann LJJ, on the other hand, considered that the
Lands Tribunal had been in error on this question — Apart from the theoretical
point, which they did not wish to rely on, that there might be a duty (and
therefore a breach of duty) without a sanction, they considered that the
decision in the LTSS Print & Supply Services case, dismissed by Dillon LJ
as not in point, was in fact relevant and, in Staughton LJ’s view, binding —
The majority view on the second question was that the Lands Tribunal was in
error in deciding that the uses immune from enforcement action were thereby not
contrary to law
The appeal
was allowed in accordance with the majority view and the order of the Lands
Tribunal varied accordingly — However, leave to appeal to the House of Lords
was granted
The following
cases are referred to in this report.
Commissioners
of Inland Revenue v Glasgow & South-Western
Railway Co (1887) 12 App Cas 315
Dreyfus
(Louis) & Cie v Parnaso Cia Naviera SA
[1959] 1 QB 498; [1959] 2 WLR 405; [1959] 1 All ER 502; [1959] 1 Lloyd’s Rep
125
Horn v Sunderland Corporation [1941] 2 KB 26; [1941] 1 All ER
480, CA
Jubb v Hull Dock Co (1846) 9 QB 443
M’Ardle v Glasgow Corporation 1972 SC 41
LTSS
Print & Supply Services Ltd v Hackney London
Borough Council [1976] QB 663; [1976] 2 WLR 253; [1976] 1 All ER 311;
(1975) 74 LGR 210; 31 P&CR 133; 240 EG 711, [1976] 2 EGLR 148, CA
Munton v Greater London Council [1976] 1 WLR 649; [1976] 2 All ER
815; sub nom Munton v Newham London Borough Council (1976) 32 P&CR
269; 74 LGR 416; [1976] EGD 469; 239 EG 43, [1976] 2 EGLR 5, CA
Ricket v Metropolitan Board of Works (1865) 31 LJ (QB) 257
Stebbing v Metropolitan Board of Works (1870) LR 6 QB 37
Tooth
& Co v Tillyer (1956) 95 CLR 605; [1956]
ALR 891
Venables v Department of Agriculture for Scotland 1932 SC 573
This was an
appeal by case stated by which Doncaster Metropolitan Borough Council
challenged a decision of the Lands Tribunal, V G Wellings QC, in regard to the
compensation payable to claimants (the present respondents), Charles Arthur
Hughes and41
Nora Louisa Hughes, for the compulsory acquisition of land at Black Bank,
Doncaster Carr, Doncaster.
Lionel Read
QC, Simon Pickles and Peter Harrison (instructed by Sharpe Pritchard, agents
for Mr W R Bugler, Doncaster Metropolitan Borough Council) appeared on behalf
of the appellant authority; R M K Gray QC and Robin Campbell (instructed by
Taylor Bracewell, of Doncaster) represented the respondent claimants.
In a
dissenting judgment, DILLON LJ said: This is an appeal from a decision
of the Lands Tribunal given on November 16 1987 on a reference by the
respondents to the appeal (‘the claimants’) to determine the amount of
compensation payable by the appellants, the Doncaster Metropolitan Borough
Council (‘the acquiring authority’), for the compulsory acquisition of certain
lands and premises owned and occupied by the claimants. The appeal therefore
takes the form of a case stated by the member of the Lands Tribunal raising
questions of law for the decision of this court. There are three questions put
in the case, but in the event only the first two have been argued.
The lands and
premises in question are at Black Bank, Doncaster Carr, Doncaster, and they
were compulsorily acquired under a compulsory purchase order made in 1973 by
the former Doncaster Borough Council. Notice to treat was served by the
acquiring authority on January 23 1976 and possession was taken on November 1
1981.
The lands and
premises in question — the reference land — have been identified by reference
to a plan on which part is coloured blue and part is coloured green. These
parts have been referred to as ‘the blue land’ and ‘the green land’ and for the
purposes of this appeal it is unnecessary to identify them further.
The claimants
purchased the blue land from a Mr Brough under a conveyance of September 30
1969, and they purchased the adjoining green land under a conveyance of October
26 1972. At the time of the 1969 conveyance they also acquired from Mr Brough
the goodwill of the business of scrap metal merchants and rag merchants carried
on on the blue land under the name of William Brough & Sons and certain
plant fixtures and fittings. That business had been commenced by Mr Brough on
the blue land in or about 1959. The business was continued and developed by the
claimants after their 1969 purchase and was extended on to the green land after
the 1972 purchase. The business was highly successful; the decision of the
Lands Tribunal records that its turnover in the three years prior to 1981 was
regularly nearly £2m and in 1981 was £2,830, 803. As a result of the compulsory
purchase, the business, as carried on on the reference land, ie the blue and
green lands, had to be closed down, as it was not possible, despite protracted
search, to find an appropriate alternative site. The claimants claim to be
compensated for the closing down of that business.
The crucial
factor, which gives rise to the questions on this appeal, is that at no time
was planning permission sought or obtained by Mr Brough or by the claimants for
the change of use of the blue land or of the green land to use for the purposes
of the business which I have mentioned, or for the erection on these lands of
warehouses or other buildings used for the purposes of that business. The
distinction between the blue land and the green land lies in the dates when the
development took place, whether by change of use or by erection of buildings.
There was a dwelling-house erected on the blue land in 1930 and another
dwelling-house erected on the reference land in 1936; nothing turns on these.
The unauthorised development of the blue land began in or about 1959 in the
time of Mr Brough and was completed sufficiently long ago to have been immune
from enforcement action under the Town and Country Planning Acts for the time
being in force at all times relevant to the compulsory purchase of the blue
land by the acquiring authority. By contrast, the development of the green land
took place later and was not so immune. Full details are set out in the
decision of the Lands Tribunal and it is unnecessary to set them out in this
judgment, which is concerned only with the questions of law raised by the Lands
Tribunal.
The
compensation to be paid by the acquiring authority to the claimants for the
compulsory acquisition of the reference land falls to be assessed in accordance
with the rules set out in section 5 of the Land Compensation Act 1961, which
provides as follows:
5.–Compensation in respect of any compulsory acquisition shall be
assessed in accordance with the following rules:
(1) No allowance shall be made on account of the
acquisition being compulsory:
(2) The value of land shall, subject as
hereinafter provided, be taken to be the amount which the land if sold in the
open market by a willing seller might be expected to realise:
(3) The special suitability or adaptability of
the land for any purpose shall not be taken into account if that purpose is a
purpose to which it could be applied only in pursuance of statutory powers, or
for which there is no market apart from the special needs of a particular
purchaser or the requirements of any authority possessing compulsory purchase
powers:
(4) Where the value of the land is increased by
reason of the use thereof or of any premises thereon in a manner which could be
restrained by any court, or is contrary to law, or is detrimental to the health
of the occupants of the premises or to the public health, the amount of that
increase shall not be taken into account:
(5) Where land is, and but for the compulsory
acquisition would continue to be, devoted to a purpose of such a nature that
there is no general demand or market for land for that purpose, the
compensation may, if the Lands Tribunal is satisfied that reinstatement in some
other place is bona fide intended, be assessed on the basis of the reasonable
cost of equivalent reinstatement:
(6) The provisions of rule (2) shall not affect
the assessment of compensation for disturbance or any other matter not directly
based on the value of land:
and the
following provisions of this Part of this Act shall have effect with respect to
the assessment.
This section
repeats provisions formerly contained in, and first introduced as, section 2 of
the Acquisition of Land (Assessment of Compensation) Act 1919.
The 1919 Act
was preceded by the report of a committee, presided over by Mr Leslie Scott KC
MP, appointed by the Prime Minister of the day in July 1917:
to consider
and report upon the defects in the existing system of law and practice involved
in the acquisition and valuation of land for public purposes, and to recommend
any changes that may be desirable in the public interest.
In the course
of the argument on this appeal we were invited by counsel for the claimants to
look at the recommendations of the Scott Committee in this report. We did so, de
bene esse; but as we found nothing in the recommendations or in the report
itself which was relevant to the questions which are before us, we found it
unnecessary to rule on their admissibility, which was disputed. That there was
nothing relevant in the report was not surprising, since at the time the Scott
Committee reported and the 1919 Act was passed there was no town and country
planning law.
The first
question put to this court in the case stated by the Lands Tribunal is whether
the member of the tribunal erred in law in holding that rule (4) in section 5
of the Land Compensation Act 1961 did not invalidate the claimants’ claims for
compensation for disturbance or other matters under rule (6) of the said
section because compensation for disturbance or such matters as aforesaid was
not part of ‘the value of the land’ within the meaning of the said rule (4).
The view of
the member was that as a matter of construction rule (4) applied only to ‘the
value of the land’ as land to be assessed under rule (2). Consequently the
respondents were entitled under rule (6) to compensation for the business they
had lost by way of compensation for disturbance — in effect a separate heading
— whether or not that business had been carried on ‘contrary to law’ on the
blue land or the green land.
In considering
this question it is, in my judgment, important to keep in mind that in the
leading case of Horn v Sunderland Corporation [1941] 2 KB 26 the
majority of the court firmly rejected the argument that under the Act of 1919,
which as I have said was the statutory predecessor of section 5 and was in the
same terms, the value of the land and compensation for disturbance must be
considered as two distinct matters (so to speak in watertight compartments) in
respect of each of which the landowner was entitled as a matter of law to have
a sum awarded for compensation and that the question whether compensation for
disturbance should be awarded could not in any way be affected by the nature
and amount of the sum arrived at in respect of the value of the land.
In Horn’s
case Sir Wilfrid Greene MR said at p 34, in words that are equally applicable
to section 5 of the 1961 Act:
Now r 6 does
not confer a right to claim compensation. It merely leaves unaffected the right
which the owner would before the Act of 1919 have had in a proper case to claim
that the compensation to be paid for the land should be increased on the ground
that he had been disturbed.
That is in line
with the opinion of Lord Alness in Venables v Department of
Agriculture for Scotland 1932 SC 573 at p 579 (cited42
with agreement by Scott LJ in Horn’s case at p 41) that rule (6)
‘confers no new rights although it manifestly purports to save existing
rights’.
In truth there
has never been any statutory provision which has in express terms conferred a
right to compensation for disturbance on an owner whose land has been
compulsorily acquired from him. The conception of compensation for disturbance
has come in by judge-made law by way of interpretation of the statutory
obligation to pay compensation for taking the land: see the judgment of Erle CJ
in Ricket v Metropolitan Board of Works (1865) 31 LJ (QB) 257 at
p 261 and the earlier case of Jubb v Hull Dock Co (1846) 9 QB 443
there cited.
The obligation
to pay compensation for taking the land arose for many years under the Lands
Clauses Consolidation Act 1845. The statutory authority is now section 7 of the
Compulsory Purchase Act 1965, which provides that:
7.–In assessing the compensation to be paid by the acquiring
authority under this Act regard shall be had not only to the value of the land
to be purchased by the acquiring authority, but also to the damage, if any, to
be sustained by the owner of the land by reason of the severing of the land
purchased from the other land of the owner, or otherwise injuriously affecting
that other land by the exercise of the powers conferred by this or the special
Act.
(See also
section 10 of the 1965 Act.)
Compensation
for disturbance comes in, where appropriate, as part of the value to the owner
of the land to be purchased by the acquiring authority. The owner is to be
compensated for property compulsorily taken from him to the extent of his loss,
which is the value of that property to him: see per Cockburn CJ in Stebbing
v Metropolitan Board of Works (1870) LR 6 QB 37 at p 42.
Where land is
compulsorily acquired, therefore, compensation for disturbance, if payable, and
the market value of the land as land have to be considered together. This is
underlined by the decision in M’Ardle v Glasgow Corporation 1972
SC 41. That was concerned with the Scottish equivalent of section 14 of the 1961
Act. Section 14(1) provides that:
14.–(1) For the purpose of assessing compensation in respect of any
compulsory acquisition, such one or more of the assumptions mentioned in
sections 15 and 16 of this Act as are applicable to the relevant land or
any part thereof shall be made in ascertaining the value of the relevant
interest.
(My emphasis.)
The relevant
interest is the interest being compulsorily acquired in the relevant land.
In M’Ardle’s
case it was held that a statutory assumption that a certain planning permission
would be granted in respect of the relevant land applied not merely to the
assessment of the market value of the relevant land under rule (2) but also to
the assessment, for the purposes of compensation for disturbance, of the value
of the business carried on by the owner on the relevant land. The Lord
President, Lord Clyde, said at pp 47-48:
But the fact
is that nowhere in this series of statutory provisions since 1845 is a
disturbance claim treated as something separate and distinct from the rest of
the claim. It is an element in the total computation of the compensation. The
distinction which the acquiring authority seek to make between a disturbance
claim and a claim for the value of the land is thus a false distinction.
The present is
the converse case in the sense that rule (4) in section 5 of the 1961 Act is
concerned to reduce, rather than increase, the compensation payable to the
owner. But there is a clear parallel between the opening words of section 5:
Compensation
in respect of any compulsory acquisition shall be assessed in accordance with
the following rules: . . .
and the
opening words of section 14:
For the
purpose of assessing compensation in respect of any compulsory acquisition . .
.
The approach
of the courts to the conception of compensation for disturbance must be the
same whether increase or reduction in the compensation for compulsory
acquisition of the relevant interest is in question.
Therefore, in
my judgment, rule (4) in section 5 is applicable to the valuation, for purposes
of compensation for disturbance, of the business carried on by the claimants on
the relevant land, and to the goodwill of that business, as well as to the
valuation in accordance with rule (2) of the land itself. The member of the
tribunal erred, in my judgment, in holding otherwise.
I turn to
question 2 in the case stated, which asks whether the member erred in law in
holding that uses which by statute are immune from enforcement action under the
Town and Country Planning Act 1971 cannot be said to be ‘contrary to law’
within the meaning of the said rule (4).
The full
reference in rule (4) is to use of the land or premises thereon ‘in a manner
which could be restrained by any court, or is contrary to law, or is
detrimental to the health of the occupants of the premises or to the public
health’. The same wording appeared in rule (4) in the Act of 1919.
It is accepted
by the claimants in the present case in relation to the green land that their
use of the green land for the purposes of their business was use in a manner
which could have been restrained by the court or was contrary to law, since no
planning permission for change of use of the green land was ever sought, and,
as the change of use occurred after the end of 1963, there was never any immunity
from enforcement action. Moreover, the rag warehouse building on the green
land, built without planning permission, was begun only in late 1977 and
completed only in 1978: see p 5 of the decision.
So far as the
blue land is concerned, however, the finding of the Lands Tribunal, which is
not now challenged, is that it is probable that all activities on the blue land
and in the buildings on it (including the erection of buildings erected without
planning permission) were immune from enforcement action. An earlier comment in
the decision suggests that this was conceded by Mr Lionel Read QC for the
acquiring authority during the hearing before the tribunal.
In view of the
wording of section 87 of the Town and Country Planning Act 1971, this finding
imports that any breach of planning control in respect of the blue land by
making an unauthorised change of use must have taken place before the end of
1963. The erection of buildings on the blue land also took place more than four
years before the notice to treat of 1976, let alone the taking of possession by
the acquiring authority in 1981.
The law as to
enforcement notices to enforce planning control as it had stood in the Town and
Country Planning Act 1947 and section 45 of the Town and Country Planning Act 1962
was deliberately changed by Parliament in 1968. The new law then introduced is
set out in section 15 of the 1968 Act and is reproduced in, for present
purposes, the same terms in section 87 of the current 1971 Act.
The object of
the change was to remove (save in the very limited instance specified in
subhead (c) of subsection (3) of section 87) the provisions of the earlier law
under which enforcement proceedings could not be brought in respect of a breach
of planning control by an unauthorised change of use if more than four years
had elapsed from the date of the breach. But as a corollary Parliament
recognised, as I read the Acts, the legitimacy of acts done by way of change of
use in breach of planning control before the end of 1963; there was an act of
oblivion in respect of breaches of planning control before that date. That
covers the blue land, and it would be quite wrong, in my judgment, at any time
after the 1968 Act came into force, to regard the use of the blue land as a use
which is ‘contrary to law’ for the purposes of rule (4) in section 5 of the
1961 Act. Indeed it would be monstrous if the acquiring authority could avoid
paying compensation for the disturbance, by closing down, of the business
carried on by the claimants on the blue land when that business, in so far as
carried on on the blue land, could have legitimately been sold by the claimants
to any other purchaser of the blue land.
Mr Read QC
submits for the acquiring authority that we are constrained to reach the
opposite conclusion on this question by the decision of this court in LTSS
Print & Supply Services Ltd v Hackney London Borough Council
[1976] QB 663. He says that the claimants’ use of the blue land was ‘contrary
to law’ up to the time of the compulsory purchase because planning permission
for the change of use had never been obtained and, if there had been no
compulsory purchase, would have remained ‘contrary to law’ (even though not
susceptible of enforcement procedure) for so long as the business was carried
on by the claimants or any successor in title of the claimants or until some
Act of Parliament was passed to cure the situation. In my judgment the
situation has been sufficiently and effectively cured by the two Acts of
Parliament which have been passed, the Town and Country Planning Acts of 1968
and 1971. It is unnecessary to ask for more.
The decision
of the court in the LTSS case does not, in my judgment, bind us in the
present case, because that court did not consider, and possibly did not have
any occasion to consider, the change in the law effected by the 1968 Act.
Moreover, as Mr Gray QC for the claimants has pointed out, the LTSS case
was concerned with a different section, section 23(9) of the 1971 Act and a
different43
phrase, ‘the purpose for which (in accordance with the provisions of this Part
of this Act) it could lawfully have been used if that development had not been
carried out’. The Part of the Act referred to, Part III, does not include
section 87, which is in Part IV. Section 23(9) of the 1971 Act had, so far as I
can see, no antecedent in the 1968 Act, but is derived from section 24(4) of
the 1947 Act and section 13(9) of the 1962 Act.
Accordingly, I
would for my part hold, in answer to question 2 of the case stated, that the
learned member did not err on this question.
Question 3 of
the case stated we do not have to answer.
Expressing the
majority view, STAUGHTON LJ said: It is established law, and not in
dispute, that the seller under a compulsory purchase order is entitled to one
sum as the price or compensation, made up (where appropriate) of two elements:
the value of the land taken and diminution in the value of other land through
severance or injurious affection. That was the law enacted by the Lands Clauses
Consolidation Act 1845 and by the Compulsory Purchase Act 1965, section 7.
Equally, it is
established law and not in dispute that the value of the land taken, for this
purpose, is its value to the seller. Circumstances which are in some degree
personal to the seller can and should be taken into account in calculating that
value. The most obvious example, and that with which this case is concerned, is
the fact that the seller carries on a business on the land, which he will have
to move to other premises if he can find any that are suitable. There will be
removal expenses; and if he can find no other suitable premises, the business
will be wholly extinguished. Such expenses or loss can, in general, be
recovered as part of the value of the land, being described as compensation for
disturbance.
I shall call
that the extended value, adopting the jargon of today. It is to be contrasted
with open-market value — that which the seller could obtain if he sold the land
alone. The open-market value will not take account of circumstances which are
personal to the seller and of no benefit to the purchaser.
Section 2 of
the Acquisition of Land (Assessment of Compensation) Act 1919 effected a change
in the method of assessment previously adopted under the Lands Clauses Act. It
provided by rule (2):
The value of
land shall, subject as hereinafter provided, be taken to be the amount which
the land if sold in the open market by a willing seller might be expected to
realise:
Together with
rule (1) (which I need not quote), this abolished the old practice whereby some
allowance was made in calculating the value for the fact that the seller was
not willing but unwilling. Thenceforth, so far as the land itself was
concerned, compensation was to be the open-market value. But the concept of
extended value was preserved by rule (6):
The
provisions of rule (2) shall not affect the assessment of compensation for
disturbance or any other matter not directly based on the value of land.
‘The value of
land’ in that rule evidently has the same meaning as that given to ‘the value
of land’ in rule (2), namely the open-market value.
Between those
rules in section 2 of the 1919 Act there occurred rule (4). All the rules were
re-enacted in section 5 of the Land Compensation Act 1961, and rule (4) reads:
Where the
value of the land is increased by reason of the use thereof or of any premises
thereon in a manner which could be restrained by any court, or is contrary to
law, or is detrimental to the health of the occupants of the premises or to the
public health, the amount of that increase shall not be taken into account.
The first
question in this case is whether ‘the value of the land’ in rule (4) refers to
the open-market value or to the extended value, which includes both the
open-market value and also compensation for disturbance and anything else
preserved by rule (6).
Mr Read for
the council argues that an owner should not recover compensation for loss of a
business which was carried on contrary to law, any more than he should recover
an increase in the open-market value of the land resulting from such an
activity. He gave as an example a disorderly house, which might well be suited
to the area where the land was and difficult to re-establish elsewhere. Another
example might be a house occupied by a dealer in drugs, which is well placed and
suitable to supply the needs of the neighbourhood without detection.
There are four
possible answers to this apparent anomaly. First, as a matter of valuation it
is doubtful whether the precarious nature of an illegal business would allow
any significant sum to be assessed as compensation. Second, the danger of
pleading and proving an illegal business would deter the owner from making a
claim. Third, I do not suppose that such a claim would succeed, quite apart
from the rules in section 5; it would fail for illegality at common law.
Fourth, if there is an anomaly in this aspect of rule (4), it is not the only
respect in which the rule produces a strange result, as appears from
consideration of the second question in this appeal.
The mischief
at which rule (4) was primarily directed is revealed by the second report of
the Scott Committee on the acquisition and valuation of land for public
purposes. It was the use of land for overcrowded or insanitary housing.
Certainly Parliament cannot in 1919 be thought to have had in mind breach of
planning control. Nor was any mention made of the use of premises by burglars,
forgers or receivers of stolen goods, or those engaged in similar activities.
So I turn to
consider the wording of section 5 without any presumption that rule (4) was or
was not intended to exclude compensation for disturbance in the case of an
activity contrary to law. We have been referred to a number of cases decided in
England or Scotland. These provide valuable guidance to a novice in this field as
to the general law before section 2 of the 1919 Act was enacted. But I can find
nothing at all in them which helps in resolving the present problem. They were
all dealing with other and different questions.
What seems to
me significant is that ‘the value of land’ in rule (2) of section 5 of the 1961
Act is there defined, in effect, as the open-market value; and in rule (6) the
same words manifestly refer to the open-market value, as I have already said. I
would therefore expect the words ‘the value of the land’ in rule (4) to have
the same meaning, and not to refer to the extended value, if only by virtue of
the maxim that a thing is known by its neighbours (compare the judgment of
Diplock J in Louis Dreyfus et Cie v Parnaso Cia Naviera SA [1959]
1 QB 498 at p 515, reversed on other grounds [1960] 2 QB 49.
Mr Read says
that a distinction is to be drawn by reason of the additional definite article
(‘the’) in those words as they occur in rule (4). I find this too small a peg
on which to hang the suggested distinction. I therefore conclude, in agreement
with the Lands Tribunal, that rule (4) deals only with the open-market value
and is not concerned with disturbance.
Support for
that conclusion is, in my judgment, to be derived from the fact that rule (4)
excludes any increase in value by reason of use in a manner which is
detrimental to the health of the occupants or to the public health, as well as
an increase due to use in a manner which is contrary to law. If the rule
applies to compensation for disturbance, this may have strange consequences. A
seller of cigarettes, or even a manufacturer, does (I suppose) carry on an
activity which is detrimental to the public health or at any rate to the health
of those who consume his product. But I cannot believe that he should receive
no compensation for disturbance if his business is wholly extinguished by a
compulsory purchase order. On the other hand I see no great hardship if he is
deprived of the increase (if any) in the open-market value of his premises
caused by the activity which he carried on there. The width of the provision as
to activities detrimental to health militates somewhat against the view that
rule (4) is also dealing with compensation for disturbance.
I would answer
the first question in the case stated ‘no’.
The second
question is whether the use of the blue land was contrary to law within rule
(4), seeing that it had existed since 1963 and was immune from enforcement
action under section 87 of the Town and Country Planning Act 1971. Indeed it
was an established use within section 94.
Counsel wisely
refrained from entering into any general discussion as to the meaning of law
and whether there can be a law with no sanction. Salmond on Jurisprudence
(12th ed, p 35) takes the view that:
The idea of
sanctions, though central to that of law, is not logically essential.
Dias on
Jurisprudence (5th ed, p 236), with a wealth of
examples, is more forthright:
Sanction is
no test of legal duty.
By contrast,
Dixon CJ in Tooth & Co Ltd v Tillyer [1956] 95 CLR 605 at p
618* considered that a liability which could not be enforced was a
‘metaphysical unreality’.
*Editor’s
note: A case in the High Court of Australia; also reported at [1957] CLY 1603.
44
Mr and Mrs Hughes
were free to continue the existing use of the blue land without any
interference by way of enforcement notice or any other restraint or penalty. A
purchaser from them would enjoy the same liberty until the crack of doom. How
then can it be right that, in the event of compulsory purchase, they should be
deprived of any increase in the open-market value of the blue land by reason of
that established use? That would seem to
be confiscation, expropriation without adequate compensation or perilously
close to it; and Mr Read was prepared to concede that a statute is not to be
construed to have that effect unless it says so in plain terms.
Nevertheless,
I, for my part, feel bound to conclude that the use of the blue land was still
contrary to law, by reason of the decision of this court in LTSS Print &
Supply Services Ltd v Hackney London Borough Council [1976] QB 663.
The question here was whether a use of premises was one for which they ‘could
lawfully have been used’ in accordance with the provisions of Part III of the
1971 Act, under section 23(9). The relevant use had commenced without planning
permission, but before 1963, and had continued until the events which caused
the question to arise. It, too, had therefore become immune from enforcement
proceedings or any other sanction. Nevertheless, the court unanimously held
that it was not a use for which the premises could lawfully have been used.
One argument
put forward by Mr Woolf for the Secretary of State was that, as section 87 did
not occur in Part III of the Act, the words in section 23(9) as to lawful use
must be construed without reference to the enforcement procedure or to the
circumstances in which it was no longer available. If that had been the only
ground of the court’s decision, I would not hold that we are bound to follow it
in the present case. But in my judgment it was not the only, or even the
principal, ground. Lawton LJ (at p 677) relied on it to fortify a conclusion he
had already reached; Goff LJ (at p 680) gave it as his ‘second reason’. It is
less easy to detect its priority in the judgment of Cairns LJ; but he, too, was
evidently prepared to decide the case on more general grounds. He said (at p
672):
If a state of
affairs or an activity has been initiated by infringing statutory provisions,
then I do not consider that it can ever be said to be lawful in accordance with
the provisions unless something has supervened to make it lawful. Mere immunity
from process does not make it lawful.
I regret that
I cannot detect any relevant distinction, for present purposes, between the
words ‘could lawfully have been used’ in section 23(9) of the 1971 Act and use
in a manner which is not ‘contrary to law’ in the 1961 Act. In my judgment we
are bound to hold that the use of the blue land was contrary to law. I would
answer the second question in the case stated ‘yes’.
Agreeing with
Staughton LJ, MANN LJ said: This appeal raises two questions. The second
of those questions arises contingent upon the answer to the first. That first
is whether rule (4) of the rules for assessment of compensation applies to a
disturbance claim. If the answer be ‘no’ then it may still be necessary to
determine whether the use of either ‘the’ (emphasis from the statute) blue land
or the green land was ‘contrary to law’ because of the absence of planning
permission.
Upon the first
question there is no authority. We were referred to a number of cases where it
is suggested that disturbance is part of ‘the value of the land’. The most
direct is Commissioners of Inland Revenue v Glasgow &
South-Western Railway Co (1887) 12 App Cas 315, where at p 320 Lord
Halsbury said in regard to section 48 of the Lands Clauses Consolidation
(Scotland) Act 1845:
The two
things, and the only two things, which are within the ambit and contemplation of
the statute, are the value of the lands and such damages as may arise to other
lands held therein by reason of the particular land which is taken being taken
from them.
Observations
were also made in a Scottish context in 1932 and 1972. Thus Venables v Department
of Agriculture for Scotland 1932 SC 573 at p 581:
Finally, I
would advert to a valuable passage in the opinion of Lord Kinnear in Lanarkshire
and Dumbartonshire Railway Co. His Lordship there says: ‘It is a
well-settled rule in the construction of the Lands Clauses Act that when lands
have been taken in the exercise of powers of compulsory purchase, the owner or
occupier, as the case may be, is entitled not only to the market value of his
interest but to full compensation for all the loss which he may sustain by
being deprived of his land’. If that be sound — and the language is quite
general, and the authority of its author unimpeachable — cadit quaestio.
M’Ardle v Glasgow Corporation 1972 SC 41 at p 47:
But their
contention is that no such assumption falls to be made in assessing the
compensation payable under rule (6) in assessing the claim in respect of
disturbance. This contention in our view is ill founded. Had any such
distinction been intended between the compensation for the land taken on the
one hand and the compensation for disturbance on the other, then there was no
need for the legislature to refer in section 22(1) to ‘the value of the
relevant interest’. It would have been enough to refer only to ‘the value of
the relevant land’. But the fact is that nowhere in this series of statutory
provisions since 1845 is a disturbance claim treated as something separate and
distinct from the rest of the claim. It is an element in the total computation
of the compensation. The distinction which the acquiring authority seek to make
between a disturbance claim and a claim for the value of the land is thus a
false distinction. They are both elements in the value of the relevant interest
within the meaning of that phrase in this series of Acts of Parliament.
Observations
have also been made in England. Thus Munton v Greater London Council
[1976] 2 All ER 815 at p 819c:
Since those
Acts, the practice always has been for the compensation for disturbance to be
assessed separately from the value of the land. That is as it should be. The
value of the land can be assessed while the owner is still in occupation. The
compensation for disturbance cannot properly be assessed until he goes out. It
is only then that he can tell how much it has cost him to move, such as to get
extra premises or to move his furniture. The practice is warranted by two cases
in this court: Harvey v Crawley Development Corporation and Minister
of Transport v Lee.
None of the
English cases was directed to the instant problem.
Compensation
for disturbance was a subject created by the judges in the middle of the 19th
century. The subject is now unassailable but it has never been the subject of
Parliamentary authority. Is it to be treated (so as to be caught by rule (4))
as part of the value of the land? In my
judgment it is not. The value of the land does not include disturbance of the
owner. Rule (6) seems to me to recognise that disturbance is a thing apart and
is no part of the value of the land. No purchaser in the open market would pay
for disturbance.
Let it be
supposed that I am wrong and that rule (4) is applicable. I think there can be
scant doubt but that the blue land was immune from enforcement action but that
the green land was not (see Town and Country Planning Act 1971, section 87). A
use is contrary to planning control whether the local planning authority decide
to exercise their discretionary powers to take enforcement action or not. In my
judgment, a use does not cease to be contrary to law because the planning
authority have not served an enforcement notice. The use is a use without the
requisite planning permission. I find some support for my view from a different
context in LTSS Print & Supply Services Ltd v Hackney London
Borough Council [1976] QB 633, where at p 672 Cairns LJ said:
If a state of
affairs or an activity has been initiated by infringing statutory provisions,
then I do not consider that it can ever be said to be lawful in accordance with
the provisions unless something has supervened to make it lawful. Mere immunity
from process does not make it lawful.
And at p 676
Lawton LJ observed:
Under section
23(1) of that Act, if the local planning authority had thought expedient to do
so, it could, within four years of such development beginning, have served on
both the owner and occupier an enforcement notice. This would have been the
first step to starting enforcement proceedings. This provision granted immunity
from proceedings after the end of four years. It did not make lawful that which
had started as an unlawful development.
I would
dismiss this appeal by answering question 1 posed by the tribunal as ‘no’. If
question 2 arises, I would answer it ‘yes’ with the possible consequence as it
would seem (see p 15 of the decision) that there may have to be an adjustment
to the acreage rate for the blue land in the sum of £7,500. I find it
unnecessary to entertain question 3.
The appeal
was allowed and the Lands Tribunal’s order varied. Respondents were awarded
four-fifths of their costs of the appeal. Appellants were granted leave to
appeal on question 1. Respondents were granted leave to appeal on question 2 if
appellants appeal on question 1.