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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> London Borough of Waltham Forest v Oakmesh Ltd & Anor [2009] EWHC 1688 (Ch) (10 July 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2009/1688.html Cite as: [2009] EWHC 1688 (Ch), [2010] JPL 249 |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
B e f o r e :
Deputy Judge of the High Court
____________________
THE MAYOR AND BURGESSES OF THE | ||
LONDON BOROUGH OF WALTHAM FOREST | Claimants | |
And | ||
OAKMESH LIMITED | ||
FAMILY MOSAIC HOUSING | ||
Defendants |
____________________
Mr Richard Humphreys QC and Andrew Thomas, instructed by Prince Evans, appeared for the Second Defendant.
The First Defendant did not appear.
JUDGMENT
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
The Facts:
"to provide at nil cost to the Council a footpath link through the said land to link Queen's Road and Walthamstow Central Station, provided that the detailed design of the bridge link to include method of construction, siting, surfacing, boundary treatment and lighting shall be submitted to the Council for approval prior to the construction of the road network serving the footpath link and the footpath link shall be constructed in accordance with the agreed details prior to the first occupation of the final phase of the residential units to be constructed as part of the said development."
" in order that our consultants can produce finalised details to enable us to obtain tenders for the works.
We are aware of our obligations under the section 106 Agreement and trust the enclosed [proposals] satisfied your Engineers requirements and that there is no necessity to seek legal enforcement compliance."
The submitted plan diverged from the plan which had been approved in principle in May 1998 and was therefore rejected.
"will be in contact as soon as we have progressed this matter further and can advise you of the association's programme for the implementation of the section 106 works. Please be assured that every effort is being made to close this matter as soon as possible".
"I hope that the above demonstrates our commitment to instruct and proceed with these works and will continue to persuade the council to pursue them in a reasonable and cost effective manner for all parties."
"It appears to me that building this bridge would no longer achieve the Council's objective and certainly would not serve the interests of local residents. I appreciate that we freely entered into this Section 106 obligation but I wonder whether even at this late stage it would be preferable to reconsider this requirement, and perhaps seek some alternative enhancement that would be acceptable to the Council and of greater benefit to the local community."
"As a consequence it is contended that the Claimant is obliged to provide the Bridge Link and is not therefore entitled to enforce the covenant or covenants against Family, the Claimant itself being in breach of the said covenant to provide a Bridge Link."
This has been referred to in argument as "the adoption issue". I should add that shortly before the hearing Family clarified its position on this plea in that it conceded that the interest which the Claimant thereby obtained did not operate to bar relief; its argument is that the Claimant's obligation to provide the bridge link was jointly and severally owed (i.e. together with Family and Oakmesh) and, in any event, was a matter going to the discretion to grant the relief claimed.
The Application to Amend:
"A planning obligation may not be entered into except by an instrument executed as a deed which
(a) states that the obligation is a planning obligation for the purposes of this section;
(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; and
(d) identifies the local planning authority "
"(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 as "a planning obligation"), enforceable to the extent mentioned in subsection (3)-
(a)
(b) requiring specified operations or activities to be carried out in, on, under or over the land;"
"If in the course of litigation a party (A) accepts the truth of an assertion of fact expressly or impliedly made by his opposing party (B) and founds on that fact formally to claim relief to which he would not be entitled if that fact were not true (A knowing if the fact is true or not, whether or not B knows), and if the litigation is thereafter conducted on the basis of the truth of that fact, A may not thereafter assert the falsity of that fact and retract his acceptance of its truth where the effect would be both to deny B a remedy which would have been available to B had A asserted the falsity of that fact from the beginning and to deny B a remedy to which A's acceptance of that fact entitled him."
"I want to be fair but .. I am left with no alternative but to get on. To do this apparently we have to accept that [Mr Wroe] is holding over under the Landlord and Tenant Act from 1st October 1997 and now do so "
The judge held that Mr Wroe occupied by virtue of a licence and did not have a tenancy. Mr Wroe appealed on the ground that the landlord was estopped from arguing that he held under a licence. The court concluded that as a matter of construction, the representation could not have created a tenancy by estoppel; it was not unequivocal and Mr Wroe did not remain in occupation in reliance on the representation and had not otherwise acted to his detriment. After referring to Benedictus v Jalaran Ltd, Chadwick LJ stated
"In my view the appellant gains no assistance from the decision in Benedictus v Jalaram Ltd.
On a true appreciation of the position, this is not a case in which it can be said that the respondent company has elected between two inconsistent remedies, nor that it has sought to approbate and reprobate. The most that can be said is that the respondent made a procedural mistake. It should have raised the "licence or tenancy" issue in its answer to the appellant's application for a new tenancy The judge in my view would have been correct to hold that the respondent was not precluded by that mistake from raising the 'licence or tenancy' issue."
That conclusion was reached as a matter of construction of a particular letter and on its particular facts. I do not find it helps me resolve the issue.
"(6) The determination of an appeal by the Secretary of State under this section shall be final.
(7) Schedule 6 applies to appeals under this section."
Schedule 6 of the Act, which by paragraph 2(1)(aa) expressly applies to persons appointed to conduct appeals under section 106B, provides as follows:
"(6) Where an appeal has been determined by an appointed person, his decision shall be treated as that of the Secretary of State.
(7) Except as provided by Part XII, the validity of that decision shall not be questioned in any proceedings whatsoever."
Accordingly, argues Mr Jefferies, an amendment to plead that there is no planning obligation is simply not possible.
"I do not see how it can be appropriate for the parties to confer on the court a jurisdiction which it does not have pursuant to a statute which does not confer it by agreement. I find it difficult to envisage a circumstance in which this court would estop a party from taking a point on jurisdiction, so as to confer on the court enforcing the estoppel a jurisdiction which it did not have."
The Application for an Injunction:
"(1) an Order that the Defendants do perform the obligation in clause 4 of the Agreement to construct the Bridge Link in accordance with the Approval in Principle and such further details of the method of construction, siting, surfacing boundary treatment and lighting as shall be approved by the Claimant. And
(2) an Order that on completion of the Bridge Link to the reasonable satisfaction of the Claimant the First Defendant specifically perform the obligation in the Agreement to dedicate the Bridge Link as public highway maintainable at public expense, such dedication being at nil cost to the Claimant."
The adoption point:
"(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".
"The statute vests 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 it ceasing to be a public highway".
The interest of the highway authority has been referred to as "a fee simple absolute in possession determinable" by Mann J. in Wiltshire CC & Others v Frazer (1983) 82 LGR 313.
" a planning obligation is enforceable by the authority (a) against the person entering into the obligation; and (b) against any person deriving title from that person."
"Even if the achievement of the result is a complicated matter which will take some time, the court, if called upon to rule, only has to examine the finished work and say whether it complies with the order This distinction between orders to carry on activities and to achieve results explains why the courts have in appropriate circumstances ordered specific performance of building contracts and repairing covenants."
And again at 14 D he stated that the need for precision in the terms of the order is:
"a question of degree and the courts have shown themselves willing to cope with a certain degree of imprecision in cases of orders requiring the achievement of a result in which the plaintiff's merits appeared strong; "