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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 >> London Borough of Southwark & Anor v Transport for London [2017] EWCA Civ 1220 (04 August 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2017/1220.html Cite as: [2018] PTSR 333, [2017] WLR(D) 546, [2017] EWCA Civ 1220 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
CHANCERY DIVISION
Mr JUSTICE MANN
HC-2015-000260
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE McCOMBE
and
LORD JUSTICE DAVID RICHARDS
____________________
(1) THE LONDON BOROUGH OF SOUTHWARK (2) THE CITY OF LONDON |
Appellants |
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- and - |
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TRANSPORT FOR LONDON |
Respondent |
____________________
Timothy Morshead QC and Charles Banner (instructed by Wragge Lawrence Graham & Co LLP) for the Respondent
Hearing dates: 1-2 March 2017
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Crown Copyright ©
LORD JUSTICE DAVID RICHARDS:
Introduction
The statutory framework
"(1) Where a highway becomes a trunk road, then, subject to the provisions of this section, as from the date on which the highway becomes a trunk road ("the operative date"), there are transferred to the Minister by virtue of this section –
(a) the highway, in so far as, immediately before the operation date, it was vested in the former highway authority,
(b) the property mentioned in subsection (3) below, in so far as, immediately before the operative date, it was vested –
(i) in the former highway authority for the purposes of their functions in relation to the highway, or
(ii) in a council for the purposes of functions in relation to the highway under any enactment to which this section applies, and
(c) all liabilities incurred by any such authority or council for the purposes of their functions in relation to the highway and not discharged before the operative date, other than loans and loan charges, and the highway and other property so transferred vest, by virtue of this section, in the Minister.
(2) …
(3) the property referred to in subsection (1)(b) above is –
(a) land, other than land –
(i) vested in the former highway authority for the purpose of being used for the storage of materials required wholly or mainly for the maintenance and improvement of other highways, or
(ii) acquired for the improvement or development of frontages to the highway, or of land adjoining or adjacent to the highway, and
(b) all other property (including the unexpended balances of any grants paid by the Minister to the former highway authority, or to any council for the purposes of their functions in relation to the highway), other than –
(i) materials to be used for the maintenance or improvement of the highway, and
(ii) the unexpended balances of any loans raised by the former highway authority, or by any council for the purposes of their functions in relation to the highway."
"(2) As from the operative date there are transferred to the new highway authority by virtue of this section –
(a) the property mentioned in subsection (4) below, in so far as, immediately before the operative date, it was vested in the former highway authority for the purposes of their functions in relation to the transferred highway, and
(b) all liabilities incurred by any such authority for the purposes of its functions in relation to the transferred highway and not discharged before the operative date, other than loans and loan charges, and the property and liabilities so transferred best, by virtue of this section, in the new highway authority.
(3) …
(4) The property referred to in subsection (2)(a) above is –
(a) land, other than land –
(i) vested in the former highway authority for the purpose of being used for the storage of materials required wholly or mainly for the maintenance and improvement of other highways, or
(ii) acquired for the improvement or development of frontages to the highway, or of land adjoining or adjacent to the highway, and
(b) all other property (including unexpended balances of any grants paid by the Minister to the former highway authority), other than –
(i) materials to be used for the maintenance or improvement of the highway, and
(ii) the unexpended balances of any loans raised by the former highway authority."
"In this Act, except where the context otherwise requires, "highway" means the whole or a part of a highway other than a ferry or waterway."
"Subject to paragraph (2) and article 4 below, on the operative date there are hereby transferred to Transport for London in relation to each GLA road –
(a) the highway, in so far as it is vested in the former highway authority;
(b) the property mentioned in paragraph (3) in so far as, on the designation date, it was vested—
(i) in the former highway authority for the purposes of their highway functions in relation to the GLA road, or
(ii) in the former highway authority for the purposes of functions in relation to the GLA road under sections 6 (traffic regulation), 9 (experimental traffic orders), 23 and 24 (pedestrian crossings) and 85 (speed restriction signs) of the Road Traffic Regulation Act 1984
(c) all liabilities incurred by a former highway authority for the purposes of their functions in relation to the GLA road and not discharged before the operative date, other than loans and loan charges.
"The property referred to in paragraph (1)(b) is -
(a) land, other than land—
(i) vested in the former highway authority for the purpose of being used for the storage of materials required wholly or mainly for the maintenance and improvement of other highways; or
(ii) where the former highway authority is a relevant authority, held by that authority for the improvement or development of frontages to the highway, or of land adjoining or adjacent to the highway; and
(b) all other property held in connection with the GLA road (including the unexpended balances of any grants paid by the Secretary of State to any relevant authority for the purposes of their functions in relation to the highway) other than materials to be used for the maintenance or improvement of the highway, and the unexpended balances of any loans raised by the former highway authority, or by any relevant authority for the purposes of its functions in relation to the highway."
Meaning of highway
"This section does not define the term "highway" and it is necessary therefore, whenever the meaning of this word is in issue, to refer to the common law rules. Stated shortly, a highway may be defined as a way over which all members of the public have the right to pass and repass. Their use of the way must be as of right, not on sufferance or by licence."
"All highways that were in existence prior to the passing of the Highways Act 1835 were maintainable by some body or person. Prima facie, the parish would be responsible for repair unless they could prove that some other person or body had repaired the road by reason of tenure of land, by prescription or by virtue of enclosure of land. However, while the common law enforced the duty of the parish to repair, the question as to whether any legal interest in the highway had passed to the parish did not arise. The obligation to repair fell upon the inhabitants at large of the parish and such an unincorporated body of persons could not hold any interest in land. Furthermore, in their consideration of the extent of the rights of the landowner, as against the rights of the public to travel over the land, the courts took the view that the landowner's interest in the highway remained intact subject only to the right of passage of the public…
When the courts were first called upon to analyse the nature of the interest vested by statute in the highway authority, they found themselves dealing with an unusual species of property right. The interest was created by statute and appeared to take away, without compensation, part of the interest of the land owner that had previously been regarded as being intact – subject only to highway rights over it. The courts were likely, therefore, to take a narrow view of the extent of the highway authority's acquired interest."
"My Lords, I really am hardly able to follow the reasoning which suggests that a right of property in the subsoil, to the extent and degree to which it has here been taken possession of, has passed under any Act of Parliament whatever. Whatever may be the true construction of the word "street" – and many observations might be made about the mode in which the word "street" is defined – it appears to me that in no sense have these structures been placed in the "street". The word certainly would be very inappropriate in ordinary parlance to describe a subterranean excavation made with the conveniences described. Mr Lords, for my own part, I am disposed to adopt every word of what James L.J. said in the passage that has been quoted as to the true effect and meaning of the vesting of a "street" in a local body. That the street should be vested in them as well as under their control may be, I suppose, explained by the idea that, as James L.J. points out, it was necessary to give, in a certain sense, a right of property in order to give efficient control over the street. It was thought convenient, I presume, that there should be something more than a mere easement conferred upon the local authority, so that the complete vindication of the rights of the public should be preserved by the local authority; and, therefore, there was given to them an actual property in the street and in the materials thereof. The same section that vests the street in them vests also the materials, the actual personal property provided for the purpose of repair, and so forth. It is intelligible enough that Parliament should have vested the street quâ street, and, indeed, so much of the actual soil of the street as might be necessary for the purpose of preserving and maintaining and using it as a street."
"My Lords, it seems to me that the vesting of the street vests in the urban authority such property and such property only as is necessary for the control, protection, and maintenance of the street as a highway for public use."
"It has been decided by a long series of cases that the word "vest" means that the local authority do actually become the owners of the street to this extent: they become the owners of so much of the air above and of the soil below as is necessary to the ordinary user of the street as a street, and of no more. For example, they do not take that part of the subsoil which has to be used for the purpose of laying sewers."
"It seems to me that the standard which determines this question is, not how much the owner has to give, but how much the local authority under the Public Health Act have the right to take."
"The statute of 1929 vested in the local authority the top spit, or, perhaps, I should say, the top two spits, of the road for a legal estate in fee simple determinable in the event of its ceasing to be a public highway."
The arbitrator's award
The judgment of Mann J
"I then consider the reorganisation as a whole against the background of those different sorts of holdings. The scheme has three relevant elements. First, the recategorisation of roads as GLA roads by the Designation Order. Second, there is making TfL highway authority for the GLA roads – section 1(2A) of the 1980 Act (added by amendment) achieves that. Third, there is the vesting of property by the vesting order. I think that one can detect an overall pattern from this structure. That pattern is that TfL stepped into the shoes of the local authorities so far as the highways were concerned. That is obviously the case in a situation where the local authorities had hitherto held just the surface and no more – there is no real dispute about that. But in my view it is also the case where the highway authority held more than that, pursuant to its highway functions. At this level one cannot detect any level of refinement about the process. The object was to move roads and functions. The roads are described in the designation order in a broad brush way. The functions are transferred by re-designation of the highway authority. And the vesting order transfers land pursuant to that general overall scheme. In using the words in Article 2(1)(a) "insofar as it is vested in the highway authority" I consider that Parliament was not only intending to convey the "nemo dat quod non habet" concept, but was also giving an indication that it was intending to vest land held qua highway authority, whether the surface or a wider holding."
"… there would be the potential for a series of split holdings – TfL would get the surface, and the land below and the air above (or the air above a certain height) would remain vested in the local authority in question, notwithstanding that it originally held those planes as highway authority. It is not easy to divine any good reason why that should have been Parliament's, or the draftsman's, intention. I acknowledge, of course, that there remains the possibility of this sort of split holding where the highway authority may not hold the entire land qua highway authority, but that does no more than reflect the sort of situation which exists in dedication cases like Bayliss. It does not mean that Parliament intended to create the potential for "layering" on as wide a scale as Mr Elvin's submissions would give rise to. Mr Elvin identified the purpose of the vesting order as being to enable the vesting of GLA roads so as to enable it to carry out its functions as highway authority, and that did not require more than the surface to vest in it. If one identifies that as the narrow purpose, and then applies a narrow view of what that requires, then Mr Elvin might well be right. However, I consider that it misidentifies the purpose, and is too narrow a view. The "layering" it would give rise to points against it."
Discussion
"But all this depends on the fact that what the relevant statute vests in the authority is a "street" and not "land". The Land Acquisition Ordinances of Trinidad and Tobago, however, authorise the compulsory acquisition of "land", and under both Ordinances publication of the statutory notice had the effect of vesting in the Crown the "land" described in the notice. In their Lordships' opinion this means the physical land and the totality of the estates and interests therein. Once the land had vested in the Crown and the owners had been compensated for their respective estates and interests, there was no reversionary or other interest left outstanding."
"The effect of "trunking" a highway is that the highway vests in the Minister (now the Secretary of State) [by virtue of section 265]. The extent of the vesting is such part of the land as is necessary for the highway authority to perform its statutory functions. It has been described as the "two top spits"."
Lord Justice McCombe:
Lord Justice McFarlane: