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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Halpern & Ors v Greater London Authority [2015] EWCA Civ 909 (09 July 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2015/909.html Cite as: [2015] EWCA Civ 909 |
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IN THE COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE LANDS TRIBUNAL
Strand London, WC2 |
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B e f o r e :
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DAVID HALPERN & ORS | Appellant/Applicant | |
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GREATER LONDON AUTHORITY | Defendant/Respondent |
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Mr A Booth (instructed by Squire Patton Boggs) appeared on behalf of the Respondent
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Crown Copyright ©
"We do not see that development on the reference land could have a realistic prospect of viability until the wider development of Stratford City and Carpenters land to the north was likely to happen in the reasonably near future. We have considerable doubt that the sort of development proposed on the reference land would be viable if it faced an indefinite period as a standalone residential development in the comparatively unwelcoming circumstances of Marshgate Lane at the valuation date."
"Planning permission is one thing. When it is commercially viable to implement it is another. Concerning the longer term, as we have said above, we found the evidence of Mr Spiller, Mr Burton and Mr Luck persuasive. We find that in t world without the Olympics there would have been the prospect of an eventual major development at Stratford city with Westfield at its heart and, once that was becoming established, there would have been sufficient demand to support development on the Carpenters' Land. However, without the spur of the Olympics and its CPO, that development would have been long delayed. We do not accept the claimants' suggestion that Mr Spiller, Mr Burton and Mr Luck were exaggerating the various impediments. We think that it is quite possible that the developments would only have been starting to get underway by 2012 or 2013. Of course it is true that the major redevelopment of a large area has to start somewhere, but we do not think that any sensible developer or potential investor, aware of the comparatively peripheral position and access difficulties of the reference land, would have thought that it was a good idea to start here. The predominantly residential development of the reference land would have been unlikely to make financial sense until, at the very least, it was clear that Stratford City was in the process of realisation and that the Carpenters Land and the highway improvements that would bring were committed for the near future.
We therefore conclude that a prospective purchaser of the reference land would have recognised that it had potential development value, but would have thought that it would probably be some seven years or so before that hope could be realised. In the meantime the reference land was valuable as a waste transfer station. In our view the most realistic way to value it in a world without the Olympics is to take its existing use value and add a percentage to reflect the relatively long-term hope value."
"1. The Upper Tribunal (Lands Chamber) erred in law in determining (paragraph 147 and 186 of its Decision) that the amount of compensation payable by the Respondent to the First Appellant for the value of the land taken was £2,127,500 because:
(a) the Tribunal erred in law in concluding that it would probably be some seven years or so before the hope of potential development value could be realised when the weight of the evidence was such that the reference land had potential development value as at the valuation date, which evidence the Tribunal unreasonably failed to accept;
(b) the Tribunal gave no or no adequate reasons as to why it rejected the evidence and submissions of the Appellants on these matters, which were a substantial and significant part of their case; and (c) there was no evidence before the Tribunal to enable it to reach conclusions about the non-viability of development on the reference land until the wider development of Carpenters Land and Stratford City."
"Mr Kelway was of the opinion that the Stratford City scheme would still have proceeded in a no scheme world [that means no Olympic Scheme world] and would have begun to transport the rail lands [and I interpose that the reference site is approximately to or within the rail lands] by the valuation date. He was challenged in cross-examination on this. Reference was made to the Secretary of State's decision in ... 2012 ... Mr Kelway conceded that if there was no CPO to assemble the site and no funding for Stratford City, then that scheme would probably not be viable at the valuation date."
I read from that paragraph a conclusion that Mr Kelway's own analysis was itself dependent upon his view about and an earlier development of Stratford City than that which the Tribunal concluded was probable so there is not, in my view, even arguably the missing link to which Mr Tager refers. For those reasons I do not give permission to appeal on ground 1.
"We have set out our reasons for not being satisfied that the business was totally extinguished. So far as what was happening with the business of Clearun in 2007 and 2008 can be fathomed, it is consistent with a coherent and determined, but undeclared, strategy to maximise the remaining value of the business. For those reasons and the reasons identified by both the acquiring authority and the claimants we are not satisfied that we have any sound basis for deciding that 50% or any other percentage of the business was extinguished.
Ground 2 of the grounds of appeal says this:
"The Upper Tribunal (Lands Chamber) erred in law in determining (paragraph 61) that it had no sound basis for deciding that 50% or any other percentage of the business of the Second Appellant was extinguished because:
(a) the Tribunal possibly confuses (at paragraph 56 of its Decision) the continuation of the business of the Second Appellant, which on its own findings at least part of the business was sold to OS Hire Limited, with the loss of future profits that the Second Appellant would have been expected to have earned but for the forced sale;
(b) there was evidence to enable the Tribunal to determine the proportion of the business that was lost;
(c) there was evidence on which the Tribunal could have assessed the measure of valuation of the business loss under that proportion."