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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Stroude v Beazer Homes Ltd & Ors [2005] EWHC 2686 (Ch) (25 November 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2005/2686.html Cite as: [2005] EWHC 2686 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
PETER LONGWILL STROUDE |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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(1) BEAZER HOMES LTD (2) BEAZER GROUP LTD (3) PERSIMMON HOMES LTD |
Defendants |
____________________
Timothy Fancourt QC and Edward Peters (instructed by Messrs Nabarro Nathanson) for
the Defendants
Hearing dates: 4th ,5th,6th, & 7th October 2005
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Warren
Introduction
The history since early 1995
The 1995 Contract
a. Under Clause 3.1, the responsibility for pursuing a planning application is cast on Beazer Bedford.
b. Under Clause 3.3, it is provided as follows:
"3.3 Negotiations with the Council [CCC ; See para 6 below] [Beazer Bedford] will negotiate in good faith with the Council and use all reasonable endeavours to achieve the following:- 3.3.1 the dedication as public highway of such part of the Council's Land as shall be required in connection with the construction of the By-pass; and ."
c. Clause 6 deals with the sale and purchase of the Contract Land.
i. Clause 6.10.1 provides for the transfer of the Contract Land to contain, among other matters, the grant to Beazer Bedford over Mr Stroude's other land of such rights and easements as shall be reasonably necessary for the provision of an infrastructure of roads and services in order to carry out the residential deve lopment of the Contract Land pursuant to the Contract Land Planning Permission (a defined term of the 1995 Contract in effect a suitable planning permission for residential development at a specified density).
ii. Clause 6.10.2 provides for the exception and reservation to Mr Stroude of easements, access and services over the Contract Land as shall be reasonably necessary to facilitate the present use and future development of the remainder of the Mr Stroude's land. Clauses 6.10.1 and 6.10.2 thus make provision for reciprocal rights to facilitate the development of each party's land. But neither Clause 6 nor any other provision of the 1995 Contract deals with similar rights over the Cartwright Land should it be acquired by either party.
d. It is recognised in the 1995 Contract that the Cartwright Land would be needed for the by-pass. Clause 7.16.1 therefore allows Mr Stroude to exchange any part or parts of the First Option Land for any part or parts of the Cartwright Land [see paragraphs 6 and 9 below] notwithstanding the option which was granted to Beazer Bedford, whereupon the land acquired would form part of the First Option Land and become subject to the option over it; and the land transferred to Mr and Mrs Cartwright would be released from the option over the First Option Land.
e. Clause 24 provides that the provisions of the 1995 Contract should remain in full force and effect in so far as they remained to be performed and observed after completion of the sale and purchase of the Contract Land (and the First Option Land and the Second Option Land if relevant).
The Cartwright Contract
Formation of the section 106 Agreement and related matters
Details of the section 106 Agreement
a. Definitions of
i. "the Estate Owners" being Mr Stroude, the Cartwrights, CCC and Beazer Homes in other words, all of the persons owning or interested in land required for the development (but drawing no distinction between different Beazer group companies for this purpose).
ii. "the Highway Works" meaning the construction of (i) the bypass (ii) an interim access road between Hatton Road and Over Road (ii) certain road and junction improvements.
iii. "the Highway Works Progamme" meaning the programme for the phased construction of the Highway Works set out in Part III of the First Schedule.
iv. "the Obligations" being "the obligations undertaken under Section 106 [of the Town & Country Planning Act 1990] in this Agreement and which are set out in clause 7.4 and 7.6.3 and Parts I and III of the First Schedule". It is to be noted that not all of the obligations undertaken in the section 106 Agreement fall within this definition.
v. "the Planning Permission" meaning, in the event, the outline planning permission granted on 16 October 2000 including alterations, amendments and renewals of it.
vi. "the Property" including all of Mr Stroude's land, the Cartwright Land and the CCC Land.
vii. "Traffic Orders" meaning the orders required to enable all of the Highway Works to proceed made under the various statutory provisions mentioned.
b. In order to comply with the requirements of section 106 to make planning obligations binding on successors in title to land subject to such obligations, recitals 2.1 to 2.5 states the interests of the various Estate Owners in the Property and recital 2.6 states (i) that the Obligations (as just defined) are planning obligations within section 106 (ii) the land subject to the Obligations is the Property, that is to say all of it, and (iii) SCDC is the local planning authority by which the Obligations are enforceable. It also recites that CCC is, in relation to the obligations in Part II of the Schedule (which are not, at least expressly, within the Definition of "Obligations"), the local planning authority and also the local highway authority for the purposes of the Highways Act 1980 for the Highway Works.
c. The section 106 Agreement was (see Clause 3) conditional upon and was not to have effect until the later of (i) the expiry of a time limit connected with any challenge to the Planning Permission and (ii) the commencement of development. There was in fact a challenge by judicial review brought by a local resident. The application was refused but continued, with appeals, until October 2002 when the House of Lords refused the resident further leave to appeal.
d. Clause 4 stated that the section 106 Agreement was made "pursuant to the provisions of section 106 and section 38 and 278 of the Highways Act 1980 Act and all other powers enabling and enactments which may be relevant for the purposes of giving validity hereto or facilitating the enforcement of the obligations herein contained [which I consider includes all of the Obligations as defined] with intent to bind the Estate Owners interest in the Property". By Clause 4.2, covenants falling within the provisions of section 106 were deemed to be expressed to be planning obligations to which the section should apply and should be enforceable.
e. Clause 6 is an important provision headed "Release from obligations" a heading which is not entirely apposite. It provides at Clauses 6.1 and 6.2 as follows:
"6.1 An Estate Owner shall not be bound by the Obligations or any other covenants on his part either individually or jointly herein contained in respect of any period which shall commence after he shall have parted with his interest in the Property or that part of the Property to which the obligation or covenant relates (the term "interest" excluding any easement equitable interest or interest arising under any mortgage or charge or restrictive or other covenant)
6.2 [Beazer Homes] shall be bound at the date hereof only by the Obligations on its part undertaken in respect solely of the land forming part of the Property in which it has an interest under the provisions of the [1995 Contract] with [Mr Stroude] and the [Cartwright Contract] with [Mr and Mrs Cartwright]". The main purpose of this provision, I imagine, is to make clear that Beazer Homes had no responsibility in relation to the business park. It should be noted that this provision relates only to the Obligations, and not to any other obligations resting on Beazer Homes under the section 106 Agreement.
f. Clause 7 is headed "The Estate Owners' Covenants". It provides
i. At Clause 7.1: "The Estate Owners covenant with [SCDC] (subject to the foregoing provisions of this Agreement) to observe and perform the Obligations". The reference to the foregoing provisions must, I think, be to Clause 6 so that the obligations of Beazer Homes are circumscribed by Clause 6.2.
ii. Clause 7.2: "The Estate Owners covenant with [CCC] to observe and perform the obligations which are set out in Part II of the First Schedule".
iii. Clause 7.5: "Except in respect of [CCC's] covenant in paragraph 7.6.3 below, [CCC] shall not be personally liable in respect of any of the Obligations but the Obligations shall be binding upon successors in title of [CCC]". In effect, the Obligations (being planning obligations under section 106) are to bind the land but not so as to render CCC itself liable.
iv. Clause 7.6 then provides that, in consideration of clause 7.5, CCC grants access easements to the Estate Owners over the CCC Land for the benefit of the remainder of the Property for the purposes of carrying out the Highway Works. In other words, the Estate Owners have a right to go onto the CCC Land to construct the bypass. Mr Fancourt relies quite heavily on this provision since the express provision for access in relation to the CCC Land makes it difficult, he says, to imply such a right of access to the Cartwright Land. CCC also undertook with SCDC and the other Estate Owners on completion of those of the Highway Works as fall on the CCC Land (ie in practice part of the bypass) to dedicate the same as a public highway: see Clause 7.6.2.
g. Clause 10.7 provides: "Where any covenant is given herein by more than one party then subject to the provisions of Clause 6.1 it shall be on the basis of joint and several liability".
h. Clause 11 provides that nothing contained or implied in the section 106 Agreement itself shall prejudice or affect the rights discretion powers duties and obligations of SCDC or CCC in the exercise of their functions as a local authority.
i. Part II of the First Schedule is headed "Highway Works":
i. Paragraph 1 obliges the Estate Owners to carry out the Highway Works at their own expense in accordance with the Highway Works Programme (see below) and in accordance with approved drawings and so as to connect the Highway Works to the public highway.
ii. Under paragraph 22, CCC covenants that it will use all reasonable endeavours to assist and facilitate the Estate Owners in carrying out those of the Obligations undertaken in Part II of the Schedule, including not unreasonably delaying or withholding consent to design drawings and specifications relation to the Highway Works and co-operating with the Estate Owners in all respects in the execution of the Highway Works. It is slightly odd to see this reference to Obligations (with an upper-case "O") in Part II since the definition of Obligations refers only to Parts 1 and III, not to Part II.
j. Part III of the First Schedule is headed "The Highway Works Programme".
i. Under Paragraph 1, "The Estate Owners covenant" (a) prior to the commencement of any development, to construct a road between points E and F shown on the Plan to a standard suitable for construction traffic and (b) prior to the occupation of 101 dwellings or prior to occupation of any premises on the Business Park, to complete certain of the Highway Works (other than the construction of the bypass).
ii. Under paragraph 2:
"The Estate Owners will
a) prepare and submit to [CCC] for its approval
i. all detailed drawings designs and specifications to enable the construction of the Longstanton Bypass
ii. all detailed drawing required to enable a stage 2 Safety Audit to be carried out on the Longstanton Bypass prior to the occupation of 50 (fifty) dwellings
b) if the relevant approvals are received in respect of the matters described in paragraph 2(a) above and [CCC] has made and confirmed the Traffic Orders then the Estate Owners will invite tenders from suitably qualified contractors for the Longstanton Bypass and commence construction of the same within twenty weeks
c) complete the Longstanton Bypass prior to the occupation of the [sic] 251 (two hundred and fifty one) Dwelling on the Property" As to b), it is to be noted that CCC should have dealt with the Traffic Orders under paragraph 22b) of Part II of the First Schedule within 21 days of the issue of Planning Permission.
Events after October 2000
The issues
a. declaring (stated shortly) that Mr Stroude or any successor in title to his retained land (ie the land allocated for residential development and the development of the Business Park) is entitled as against Beaze r Homes and its successors in title to the Cartwright Land to perform the joint and several obligations of himself and Beazer under the section 106 Agreement to construct the bypass, and for that purpose to enter the Cartwright Land and ultimately procure its adoption as a highway, alternatively that there is an implied term of the section 106 Agreement to that effect;
b. restraining Beazer Homes from obstructing or interfering with that right; and
c. directing entry of a notice in respect of that right on the title to the Cartwright Land.
a. First, he says that, as a matter of the general law any one of two or more persons subject to a concurrent obligation is entitled, as against his co-obligors, to perform it without having to wait to be sued by the obligee. It is not clear to me quite how far that proposition is intended to go. On the facts of the present case, I am dealing only with covenants given by the Estate Owners collectively by the very same clauses of a single document (although there is a dispute to which I will come later about whether the covenants are joint and several or only several). Accordingly, it is necessary for me to consider Mr Hill's proposition only in the context of a concurrent liability which is either joint or several (or both).
b. He also says that a term is to be implied into the section 106 Agreement that Mr Stroude is entitled, as against Beazer Homes, to take all steps required, including entry onto the Cartwright Land, to construct the bypass.
c. He adds that Beazer Homes has consented to the submission of the necessary plans to CCC for approval of the bypass. On receipt of such approval, and the making of the relevant Traffic Orders, the section 106 Agreement imposes an obligation to appoint a contractor and to construct the bypass (an obligation on both Mr Stroude and Beazer Homes).
d. He relies, further, on the provisions of the 1995 Contract (now binding on Persimmon Homes) to use all reasonable endeavours to ensure the adoption as highway of the northern leg of the bypass over the CCC Land; this can only be done by ensuring that the entire bypass is constructed. So, he argued, Persimmon Homes is bound to invoke whatever relevant inter-group arrangements exist within the Persimmon group which have allowed Persimmon PLC to state to SCDC and CCC that it is committed to the construction of the bypass.
e. Finally, he argued that Mr Stroude's rights to enter the Cartwright Land to construct the bypass are proprietary, saying that they are not planning obligations and do not, therefore, give rise to a local land charge. They therefore need to be protected on the Register.
a. First, he submits that Mr Hill's first proposition in relation to concurrent obligations is wrong. Even if there is something in the proposition, it must depend on two or more persons being liable to perform a single, joint obligation. No such implied right arises in the case of several obligations which are necessarily distinct obligations.
b. Secondly, Mr Fancourt submits that the obligations to SCDC and CCC under the section 106 Agreement on which Mr Hill relies are not joint obligations but only several obligations, so that Mr Hill's argument based on concurrent liability does not get off the ground.
c. Thirdly, he says that it is not possible to imply a term into the section 106 Agreement such as Mr Hill suggests. He says this for a number of reasons, the principal one being that the section 106 Agreement is not intended to deal with rights of access over the Cartwright Land but is concerned with matters between the Estate Owners (as landowners) on the one hand and SCDC and CCC (as planning and highway authorities) on the other hand. It is neither necessary or apposite to imply into the section 106 Agreement terms enforceable as between the Estate Owners: it is not necessary to do so to give business efficacy to the section 106 Agreement since all the necessary rights of enforcement to ensure the construction of the bypass are already vested in SCDC and CCC under the relevant legislation, and nor, he says, would the response to the "officious bystander" be to the effect "of course Mr Stroude must have access" since he would equally likely to be told "that matter is not for this agreement; we will deal with it in due course on the sale of the further residential land".
The statutory provisions
"(1) Any person interested in land in the area of a local planning authority may, by agreement or otherwise, enter into an obligation (referred to in this section ..as "a planning obligation"), enforceable to the extent mentioned in subsection (3)
(a) restricting the development or use of the land in any specified way;
(b) requiring specified operations or activities to be carried out in, on, under or over the land;
(c) requiring the land to be used in any specified way; or
(d) requiring a sum or sums to be paid to the authority on a specified date or dates or periodically."
a. States that the obligation is a planning obligation for the purposes of section 106.
b. Identifies the land in which the person entering into the obligation is interested.
c. Identifies the person entering into the obligation and states what his interest in the land is.
d. Identifies the local planning authority by whom the obligation is enforceable.
Discussion
a. First, it is accepted by the defendants that Mr Stroude is, without the concurrence of any the defendants, able to submit all the necessary plans etc to enable the construction of the bypass and detailed drawings required to enable a stage 2 Safety Audit to be conducted (as envisaged by paragraph 2.a) of Part II) whether or not 50 dwellings are about to be, or have been, occupied. Plans have in fact now been submitted for approval, although the final design of bridge structures remains outstanding.
b. Secondly, once the approvals are obtained and Traffic Orders confirmed, there is then an obligation, under paragraph 2.b) on the Estate Owners to invite tenders for the bypass and to commence construction within 20 weeks. The defendants concede, obviously correctly, that the construction must then continue; the Estate Owners could not simply carry out a few minor works and then sit back and do nothing. Indeed, the invitation for tenders would inevitably contain a timetable for completion of the works which would, in practice, determine the time within which the bypass would be completed. Paragraph 2.c) then contains a long-stop provision designed to ensure that the bypass in completed before additional traffic is generated to the extent entailed by the occupation of 251 dwellings.
a. First, a contractual obligation on the part of the Estate Owners to CCC under Clause 7.2 and paragraph 1 of Part II to construct the bypass in accordance with the timetable and other provisions of paragraph 2.b) and c) of Part III.
b. Secondly, a contractual obligation on the part of the Estate Owners to SCDC under Clause 7.1 and paragraph 2.b) and c) of Part III to commence and complete construction of the bypass.
a. One result of Clause 6.1 is that an Estate Owner ceases to be bound by the Obligations or any other covenant once he has parted with his interest in the Property. Although Clause 7.1 does, but Clause 7.2 does not, make the covenants contained in them respectively expressly subject to "the foregoing provisions of this Agreement", I do not consider the result of that to be, as was faintly suggested at one stage, that Clause 6.1 only applies to the Obligations and not to other covenants. The reason for the inclusion of those words in Clause 7.1 is, I think, to cover the special position of Beazer Homes under Clause 6.2.
b. Clause 6.2 provides that Beazer Homes (ignoring the distinction between it and Beazer Bedford) is bound, even at the date of the section 106 Agreement, "only by the Obligations on its part in respect solely of" that part of Mr Stroude's land subject to the 1995 Contract and the Cartwright Land. I find the provisions of Clause 6.2 rather obscure. Beazer Homes is stated to be bound only by the Obligations on its part "undertaken in respect solely of the land" in which it has an interest under the 1995 Agreement and the Cartwright Contract. None of the Obligations relates, so far as I can see, solely to that land and to no other land; I think that the use of the word "solely" does nothing other than reinforce the use of the word "only". That, however, is not the only difficulty since, read literally, the only Obligations binding on Beazer Homes would be the negative requirement concerning land use and building occupation prior to construction of the various highway works. However, paragraphs 1.a), 1.b) and 2. of Part III of the Schedule all appear to create positive obligations on the Estate Owners and it seems inherently unlikely to me that Beazer Homes would not, unlike the other Estate Owners, be under a positive obligation to comply, for instance, with paragraph 1.a) by building the road referred to since those are all necessary for the development and, indeed some of the road and junction works, on land to be retained by Mr Stroude, had to be, and in fact were, completed before any other works were undertaken. Be that as it may, Beazer Homes clearly was bound by the Obligations in relation to the Cartwright Land. Accordingly, so far as the Cartwright Land is concerned, the section 106 Agreement created an Obligation in relation to the Cartwright Land by which all of the Estate Owners (other than CCC: see Clause 7.5) were bound.
The position is complicated further by the fact that Beazer Homes was not, in fact, the purchasing party under the 1995 Contract so that recital 2.2 of the section 106 Agreement is incorrect and Clause 6.2 proceeds on an incorrect basis.
Whatever the true scope of the provision, I conclude that it does not qualify Beazer Homes' obligation as an Estate Owner to see to the construction of the bypass in the same way as other Estate Owners.
c. Under Clause 7.5, CCC is not personally liable in respect of any of the Obligations (other than under Clause 7.6.3), although the Obligations are expressed to be binding upon its successors.
Submissions on the law
a. In the case of a guarantee, the guarantor is entitled to an indemnity from the principal if his guarantee is called upon; this is so in equity even if there is no express contract to that effect as between principal and guarantor. There is, at the end of the day, a relationship between them which creates a direct obligation by the principal to the guarantor: the quia timet right merely enables the guarantor to pre-empt a demand on himself by forcing the principal to perform his own obligations in due time. In contrast, in the present case, the question is whether the relationship between co-obligors enables one to assert rights over the property of the other in order to fulfil their concurrent obligations even though there may be no right for one obligor directly to enforce the obligation against the other obligor.
b. In Hood v Pim, both parties (A, B and C, on the one hand, and D on the other) to the relevant contract were before the Court. The Court clearly felt able to enforce the mutual obligations to which the contract gave rise notwithstanding that C had purported to abandon the contract. The court therefore, it seems, compelled C to fulfil his bargain. An analogy might be drawn with the present case if an obligation to construct the bypass had already arisen (because all relevant approvals and Traffic Orders had been confirmed) and Mr Stroude were seeking, in proceedings to which SCDC and CCC were parties, an order that Beazer Homes comply with its own obligations under the section 106 Agreement. It is a very different thing for Mr Stroude to claim a right of access to enable Mr Stroude himself (or his agents, the contractors) to enter the Cartwright Land to carry out his own contractual obligations to SCDC, especially where he is seeking declaratory relief in advance of such approvals and confirmation.
"I think I may safely say, as a general rule, that where in a written contract it appears that both parties have agreed that something shall be done, which cannot effectually be done unless both concur in doing it, the construction of the contract is that each agrees to do all that is necessary to be done on his part for the carrying out of that thing, though there may be no express words to that effect. What is the part of each must depend on circumstances.
He also said, at p 264, that the principle is "obvious good sense and justice".
"enforce co-operation only in a limited degree to the extent that it is necessary to make the contract workable. For any higher degree of co-operation the parties must rely on the desire that both of them usually have that the business should get done." per Devlin J in Mona Oil Equipment & Supply Co Ltd v Rhodesia Railways Ltd [1949] 2 All ER 1014.
" ..a subsequent disagreement reveals that there are contingencies for which the parties have not provided in their express contract. The question is then whether the court can imply a term to cover the contingency which has unexpectedly emerged."
The relevance of that passage to the present case is, of course, that the parties expected, at the time of the section 106 Agreement, that Beazer Homes would acquire all of Mr Stroude's residential development land and would, therefore, itself be interested in ensuring the completion of the bypass (although, in the light of Mr Stroude also being interested in the construction and completion of the bypass as owner of the Business Park site, arguments about monetary contribution to the cost of construction might have arisen).
a. The section 106 Agreement makes no provision for who is to do the job (and there is no other agreement which fills the gap) so it is necessary to make an implication if there is to be a complete contract, reliance being placed in Liverpool CC v Irwin [1977] AC 239 per Lord Wilberforce at p254A-B:
"The present case, in my opinion, represents a fourth category, or I would rather say a fourth shade on a continuous spectrum. The court here is simply concerned to establish what the contract is, the parties not themselves having fully stated its terms. In this sense, the court is searching for what must be implied."
b. That is the obvious answer to the officious bystander's question "who is to build".
The consequence of concurrent liability
Implication and necessity
"The background to the section 106 Agreement is that both Mr Stroude and Beazer Homes expected that Beazer Homes would purchase all of Mr Stroude's residential development land and that Beazer Homes would purchase the Cartwright Land and the CCC Land. No doubt any mutual rights would have been expected to be dealt with, to the extent necessary, in any further contracts between Mr Stroude and Beazer Homes, as they were in the 1995 Agreement.
The section 106 Agreement does include the grant of rights by CCC as landowner, but that is because it was not liable to carry out the highway works itself: clause 7.5. It was therefore necessary, because not implicit, to grant rights expressly to others to enter onto the Council's land to perform the highway works: clause 7.6.1. Otherwise, if the Council remained as owner of its land, it could not be compelled to build the bypass on that land. If it was obvious to all parties to the section 106 Agreement that each Estate Owner had the right to go onto the others' land to built the By-pass, this provision would not have been included.
This fact is virtually conclusive against any implication of rights of access on an officious bystander basis ."
Conclusion on main issue
Joint or several covenants and section 82 Law of Property Act 1925
"Any covenant, whether express or implied, or agreement entered into by a person with himself and one or more other persons shall be construed and be capable of being enforced in like manner as if the covenant or agreement had been entered into with the other person or persons alone."
"Reasonable endeavours"
Proprietary interest
Overall conclusions
a. Mr Stroude will have rights of access to the Cartwright Land for the purpose of carrying out those parts of the Highway Works that fall to be carried out on that land in accordance with Parts II and III of the First Schedule to the section 106 Agreement, such rights becoming exercisable in accordance with those provisions once the necessary approvals have been obtained and the Traffic Orders made.
b. Mr Stroude is entitled to have such rights protected on the Register of Title.
c. Mr Stroude had, at all material times, an interest in the Cartwright Land which was capable of protection by notice on the register. In the absence of such notice, he was entitled to lodge a caution in respect of it. In my judgment, there is no question of such lodging being "premature" or not.