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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Peart v Secretary of State for Transport, Local Government & the Regions [2003] EWCA Civ 295 (25 February 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2003/295.html Cite as: [2003] EWCA Civ 295 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
THE ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
(Mr Justice Maurice Kay)
Strand London WC2 | ||
B e f o r e :
and
LORD JUSTICE CHADWICK
____________________
TERRY NAVARRO PEART | Claimant/Applicant | |
-v- | ||
THE SECRETARY OF STATE FOR TRANSPORT, | ||
LOCAL GOVERNMENT & THE REGIONS | Defendant/Respondent |
____________________
Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited
190 Fleet Street London EC4A 2AG
Tel: 020 7404 1400 Fax: 020 7831 8838
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
The Respondent Defendant did not appear and was not represented.
____________________
(AS APPROVED BY THE COURT)
Crown Copyright ©
LORD JUSTICE AULD: Lord Justice Chadwick will give the first judgment.
LORD JUSTICE CHADWICK:
"If any person aggrieved by -
(a) a compulsory purchase order ...
desires to question the validity thereof on the ground that any relevant requirement has not been complied with in relation to the order ... he may make an application to the High Court."
Subsection (3) defines "relevant requirement", in that context, as any requirement of the 1981 Act or of any regulation made under section 7(2), or any requirement of the Tribunals and Inquiries Act 1992 or of any rules made, or having effect as if made, under that Act. On its face, therefore, the challenge is a challenge to the procedure by which the decision-making process has taken place and the reasoning.
"On behalf of the claimant, Mr Oakley seeks to challenge the confirmation of the compulsory purchase order on four grounds. First he submits that the Inspector and the Secretary of State erred by not considering Article 8 of the European Convention on Human Rights and fundamental freedoms."
He then set out the text of that Article and went on:
"Mr Oakley put his submission in this way in his skeleton argument:
`... private and family life ought to include a person's right to invest for their retirement in the way they think fit. Further, although it is correct to say that Mr Peart will be compensated by monies representing the market value of the property, this can only be capital compensation. If the CPO is not quashed, he will not be compensated for future loss in respect of rental income.'"
Then at paragraph 10 the judge said this:
"It is clear that the Inspector and the Secretary of State had this well in mind and considered Mr Peart's human rights in the context of Article 1 of the First Protocol, to which I shall return later. It is equally clear that neither the Inspector nor the Secretary of State considered Article 8. Was this an error? In my judgment it was not. It is common ground that the property is not the claimant's home. The somewhat vague way in which the case for the claimant seeks to squeeze a person's `right to invest for retirement in the way he thinks fit' into Article 8 is unsustainable."
"13.The second ground of challenge seeks to take issue with the conclusion of the Inspector that the claimant could not be relied upon to carry out the necessary works of refurbishment within a reasonable timescale. I have already set out the paragraphs from the Inspector's report which deal with that issue. Those paragraphs were expressly accepted by the Secretary of State. The complaint here is that the approach is unfairly punitive and backward looking, and that since the claimant was treated as a truthful witness by the Inspector, this distrust of his ability to transform the property within a reasonable time was misplaced.
14.I do not accept this submission. It is not a matter of the claimant's truthfulness, which may have been full of good intentions. The question is whether it was permissible for the Inspector and the Secretary of State to conclude that he was unlikely to implement them within a reasonable time. On the material before me, there can be no doubt that that was a permissible conclusion.
15.Thirdly, Mr Oakley criticises the decision to confirm the compulsory purchase order in circumstances where it would take 12 to 18 months for Newham to bring the property back into residential use, whereas the claimant could achieve that in a much shorter time. This submission falls with the previous one. If, as I have held, it was permissible to conclude that the claimant could not be relied upon to carry out the necessary works within a reasonable time, the fact that private contractors could do them more quickly than the London Borough of Newham would take, is neither here nor there."
"In my judgment, there are two answers to Mr Oakley's submission concerning proportionality. The first is that it is put in a rather vague and unparticularised way. The second is that the Inspector and the Secretary of State were well aware that Article 1 of the First Protocol required them to carry out a proportionality balancing exercise on the material before them. I am quite satisfied from the passages which I have quoted that this they did in an appropriate manner. In my judgment, they reached entirely permissible (indeed virtually inevitable) conclusions in the circumstances of the case."
"The decision of the learned judge was wrong in law.
He failed to consider adequately or at all Article 1 of the First Protocol of the European Convention on Human Rights, Article 8 and the overlap between the two.
He erred in finding that the Inspector and the Secretary of State had properly carried out a balancing exercise with reference to the provision of housing in the borough by the Council's activities as against the serious adverse effect on Mr Peart's pension plans if the Compulsory Purchase Order were confirmed.
Further, the case raises issues of general public importance in that there are no reported cases dealing with the protection of future property rights, i.e. pension income, and its effect on private and family life."
"Although it is open to British citizens to rely on the small state pension alone for their retirement, it is reasonable and indeed eminently sensible not to do so. Mr Peart is close to retirement age now. If the CPO stands, he has no other means of ensuring that he has a regular retirement income at a reasonable level."
LORD JUSTICE AULD: