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England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Redlawn Land Ltd v Cowley & Anor [2010] EWHC 766 (Ch) (02 February 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2010/766.html Cite as: [2010] EWHC 766 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand London WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
(Sitting as a Judge of the Chancery Division)
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REDLAWN LAND LIMITED |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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(1) TUDOR GEORGE COWLEY (2) ANN CHRISTINE COWLEY |
Defendants |
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(Official Court Reporters and Tape Transcribers)
1st Floor, Paddington House, New Road, Kidderminster DY10 1AL
Tel. 01562 60921
MR J MALE QC and MISS K HOLLAND (instructed by Hardwick Legal) appeared on behalf of the DEFENDANTS
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Crown Copyright ©
JUDGE PURLE:
"If the Vendor and the Purchaser shall fail to agree the consideration payable for the Development Land within a period of sixty days from the date on which negotiations are to be commenced pursuant to clause 7.4 or (if earlier) the date when the parties agree to commence such negotiations any party may require the Open Market Value and the Agricultural Value of the Development Land and the consideration payable by the Purchaser for the Development Land to be determined in accordance with the provisions of clause 11 hereof."
"The decision of the Specialist shall not be final and binding on the parties to the Dispute and for the avoidance of doubt either Party shall be entitled to apply to the Courts of England for resolution of the Dispute."
"The expert is appointed as a consequence of a requirement given pursuant to Clause 7.5 [that is the clause which I have read]. Prima facie I would anticipate that the date upon which the expert was required to determine the two values would be the date upon which the requirement was made. That would be the date upon which his jurisdiction was established. Of course, that date would yield to any contrary expression in the Clause; the Clause is however completely silent as to a valuation date. The language of Clause 7.5 seems to me to be require a valuation as at the date of the requirement."
"The suggestion that the date of determination by the expert would be the correct date strikes me as implausible. Submissions would be out of date as soon as served. There would be no date upon which the parties could fix their attention. The expert's decision would inevitably be based on submissions of the parties as to an earlier date. When the date in fact was would depend upon the efficiency or lack of it of the expert. These factors militate strongly against the date of the expert's decision being the correct date."
"Whilst I understand the desire to have as up to date a valuation as possible for obvious reasons, it does not seem to me that that factor is sufficient to displace what seems to me to be the clear and obviously correct construction."
"...the Open Market Value of the Development Land as agreed in writing between the Vendor and the Purchaser or in default of agreement to be determined by an expert in accordance with the provisions of Clause 11, and the principles and guidelines as described in the Practice Statement last published by the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors before the date of valuation [which is tantalisingly not specified] and on the following additional assumptions... [which I need not read]."
"The expert shall act as an expert and not as an arbitrator (unless he shall refuse to act as expert when he shall act as arbitrator) but before making his determination he shall afford to each party the opportunity to deliver to him written representations (to be delivered within twenty eight days of receipt of the letter requesting the same) and the opportunity to reply to any representations made by any party (to be delivered within fourteen days of receipt of a copy of such representations from the expert or such longer period as the expert shall determine)."
"No stage can be singled out as the date of expropriation in every case. Sometimes possession is taken before compensation is assessed. Then it would seem logical to fix the market value of the land as at that date and to take actual consequential losses as they occurred then or thereafter, provided that the dispossessed owner had acted reasonably. But if compensation is assessed before possession is taken, taking the date of possession can I think be justified because then either party can sue for specific performance and the promoters obtain a right to the land, as if there had been a contract of sale at that date."
"The claimants point out that the valuation evidence can never relate precisely to the date of the award since the tribunal's rules require that its decision shall be given in writing and the award is consequently and necessarily in the nature of a reserved judgment. We think that there is nothing in this. The award must be based on evidence; the evidence must be given at the hearing and so must to some extent antedate the award, but normally the interval would be relatively short and of no significance. If in a particular case the tribunal were to think it likely that the values had changed materially since the hearing and before the award was promulgated, further evidence could be heard and, if thought desirable, arrangements could be made for the award to follow almost immediately after the further hearing."