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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Redrow Homes Ltd, R (on the Application of) v Knowsley Metropolitan Borough Council [2014] EWCA Civ 1433 (31 October 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2014/1433.html Cite as: [2015] WLR 386, [2015] BLGR 42, [2014] WLR(D) 465, [2014] EWCA Civ 1433, [2015] RTR 12, [2015] 2 All ER 228, [2015] 1 WLR 386 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT, QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION, ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
MICHAEL FORDHAM QC (sitting as a Deputy High Court Judge)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LADY JUSTICE GLOSTER
and
LADY JUSTICE KING
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THE QUEEN ON THE APPLICATION OF REDROW HOMES LIMITED |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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KNOWSLEY METROPOLITAN BOROUGH COUNCIL |
Respondent |
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(Transcript of the Handed Down Judgment of
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Paul Tucker QC and John Hunter (instructed by Legal Dept/Knowsley Metropolitan Borough Council) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 22 October 2014
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Crown Copyright ©
Master of the Rolls:
"on the correct interpretation of section 38(6) of the Highways Act 1980, a section 38 agreement, including when made under section 38(3), can in law contain provision for the party other than the highway authority to pay a sum (whether a commuted sum or otherwise) referable to the expenses of a highways maintenance after the date on which it becomes maintainable at public expense."
The 1980 Act
"(1) Subject to subsection (2) below, where any person is liable under a special enactment or by reason of tenure, enclosure or prescription to maintain a highway, the Minister, in the case of a trunk road, or a local highway authority, in any other case, may agree with that person to undertake the maintenance of that highway; and where an agreement is made under this subsection the highway to which the agreement relates shall, on such date as may be specified in the agreement, become for the purposes of this Act a highway maintainable at the public expense and the liability of that person to maintain the highway shall be extinguished. "
(3) A local highway authority may agree with any person to undertake the maintenance of a way
(a) which that person is willing and has the necessary power to dedicate as a highway, or
(b) which is to be constructed by that person, or by a highway authority on his behalf, and which he proposes to dedicate as a highway;
and where an agreement is made under this subsection the way to which the agreement relates shall, on such date as may be specified in the agreement, become for the purposes of this Act a highway maintainable at the public expense.
(6) An agreement under this section may contain such provisions as to the dedication as a highway of any road or way to which the agreement relates, the bearing of the expenses of the construction, maintenance or improvement of any highway, road, bridge or viaduct to which the agreement relates and other relevant matters as the authority making the agreement think fit".
"(1) A person who proposes to dedicate a way as a highway and who desires that the proposed highway shall become maintainable at the public expense by virtue of this section shall give notice of the proposal, not less than 3 months before the date of the proposed dedication, to the council who would, if the way were a highway, be the highway authority therefor, describing the location and width of the proposed highway and the nature of the proposed dedication.
(2) If the council consider that the proposed highway will not be of sufficient utility to the public to justify its being maintained at the public expense, they may make a complaint to a magistrates' court for an order to that effect.
(3)If the council certify that the way has been dedicated in accordance with the terms of the notice and has been made up in a satisfactory manner, and if
(a)the person by whom the way was dedicated or his successor keeps it in repair for a period of 12 months from the date of the council's certificate, and
(b)the way has been used as a highway during that period,
then, unless an order has been made in relation to the highway under subsection (2) above, the highway shall, at the expiration of the period specified in paragraph (a) above, become for the purposes of this Act a highway maintainable at the public expense.
(4)If the council, on being requested by the person by whom the way was dedicated or his successor to issue a certificate under subsection (3) above, refuse to issue the certificate, that person may appeal to a magistrates' court against the refusal, and the court, if satisfied that the certificate ought to have been issued, may make an order to the effect that subsection (3) above shall apply as if the certificate had been issued on a date specified in the order.
.."
"(1) Where a person is liable by reason of tenure, enclosure or prescription to maintain a highway, a magistrates' court may, on a complaint made either by that person or by the highway authority for the highway, make an order that the liability of that person to maintain the highway shall be extinguished, and on the extinguishment of that liability the highway, if it is not then a highway maintainable at the public expense, shall become for the purposes of this Act a highway maintainable at the public expense.
..
(3) Where by virtue of an order under this section the liability of a person to maintain a highway is extinguished, that person is liable to pay to the highway authority for the highway such sum as may be agreed between him and that authority or, in default of agreement, as may be determined by arbitration to represent the value to him of the extinguishment of his liability."
Redrow's case
Fifthly, if the judge's interpretation of section 38(6) is correct and a developer can be required under a section 38 agreement to maintain or pay for the maintenance of the highway in the future, the developer will prefer to operate the section 37 procedure and have the road established as a highway maintainable at the public expense as of right. In that way, the authority will not be able to impose the burden of future maintenance or payment for it on the developer. The result is likely to be that section 38 will become something of a dead letter. The great benefit of section 38 agreements is that the developer and a highway authority can agree in advance exactly where the roads shall go and their characteristics. It is in order that there should be co-operation on matters of this sort for the general benefit that section 38 was enacted.
Discussion
In my view, the judge reached the correct conclusion largely for the reasons given by him and amplified by Mr Tucker QC. The starting point is that section 38(6) is expressed in wide and unqualified terms. On its face, it permits an agreement between a developer and a highway authority containing "such provisions as to the dedication as a highway of any road or way , the bearing of the expenses of the construction, maintenance or improvement of any highway, road to which the agreement relates and other relevant matters as the authority making the agreement think fit". It could hardly be wider in its scope. In particular, there is nothing in the language of the subsection which draws a distinction between what is permitted in respect of the period before and what is permitted in respect of the period after the road or way becomes a highway maintainable at the public expense. As the judge said at para 44 of his judgment:
"If Parliament had intended a provision which did not include a temporal restriction, what would that provision look like? In my judgment, there is no reason to suppose that it would not look like subsection (6) of section 38."
"37. Mr Barnes points out that [section 38(1)] is a specific provision, dealing with a specific statutory mechanism. I agree. But, in my judgment, it is inconceivable that Parliament could both: on the one hand, require a provision for the payment of sums plainly referable to future maintenance for that is the value of what is being extinguished when the case gets to the magistrates; but also on the other hand, exclude any equivalent voluntary provision in an agreement between two parties who wished to arrive at an agreed position and avoid going before the magistrates.
38. I can see no logical basis on which it could be said to be impermissible to have a consensual payment of the sort which would become mandatory were the matter to be pursued before the magistrates under section 53.
39. I find nothing in the wording of section 38(6) to indicate such a restriction. On the contrary, in my judgment, the wording chosen by Parliament is not only broad but open-textured in including that sort of expense provision."
Conclusion
Lady Justice Gloster:
Lady Justice King: