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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Leeds Group Plc v Leeds City Council [2010] EWHC 810 (Ch) (21 April 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2010/810.html Cite as: [2010] NPC 47, [2010] EWHC 810 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
LEEDS DISTRICT REGISTRY
Oxford Row Leeds LS1 3BG |
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B e f o r e :
sitting as a Judge of the High Court
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LEEDS GROUP PLC |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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LEEDS CITY COUNCIL |
Defendant |
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Morag Ellis QC (instructed by Karen Blackmore, Solicitor, Leeds City Council, Civic Hall Leeds LS1 1UR) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 29th, 30th and 31st March 2010
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Crown Copyright ©
Judge Behrens :
1. Introduction
2. The issues
The definition of a TVG.
'town or village green' means [a] land which has been allotted by or under any Act for the exercise or recreation of the inhabitants of any locality or [b] on which the inhabitants of any locality have a customary right to indulge in lawful sports and pastimes or [c] on which the inhabitants of any locality have indulged in such sports and pastimes as of right for not less than twenty years. [In accordance with a practice adopted in the authorities I have added the parentheses]
(1A) Land falls within this subsection if it is land on which for not less than twenty years a significant number of the inhabitants of [i] any locality, or [ii] of any neighbourhood within a locality, have indulged in lawful sports and pastimes as of right, and either
(a) continue to do so, or
(b) .
I have added the [i] and [ii] above to identify what Mr Laurence called limbs I and II of the amended definition..
- Land on which for not less than 20 years
- a significant number of the inhabitants of [i] any locality or of [ii] any neighbourhood within a locality
- have indulged in lawful sports and pastimes,
- as of right, and ...
- continue to do so.
3. The nature of the jurisdiction in section 14 proceedings.
The High Court may order a register maintained under this Act to be amended if
(a)
(b ) the register has been amended in pursuance of section 13 of this Act and it appears to the court that no amendment or a different amendment ought to have been made and that the error cannot be corrected in pursuance of regulations made under this Act;
and, in either case, the court deems it just to rectify the register.
1. The court is free to adopt the procedure best calculated to enable a just and fully informed decision to be reached, whether no amendment or a different amendment ought to have been made, whether it is just to rectify the register and what should stand as evidence and what evidence should be admitted.
2. The Court has power to direct that evidence adduced before the registration authority should stand as evidence and that any finding by it shall stand as a finding of fact or as a finding of fact in the absence of evidence to the contrary.
4. The Inspector's Report
Locality
1. In his view there could hardly have been a more obvious candidate than Yeadon for the sort of "locality" which under the old law would have been entitled to have a town green for the benefit of its inhabitants.
2. He accepted that for the period between 1984 and 2004 there was no legally recognisable local government unit called Yeadon. However (in paragraph 13.16) he pointed out that Yeadon was a locality known to the law for a long time, and still has all the other characteristics that it had prior to 1937.
3. He concluded that there was nothing in the authorities to suggest that the word "locality" as used in section 22 of the 1965 Act was intended to exclude a place like Yeadon merely because the current local government status has been re-organised. In his view such a result would be a "defiance of reason".
Neighbourhood
It seems to me that the "cohesiveness" point cannot in reality mean much more, in an urban context, than that a neighbourhood would normally be an area where people might reasonably regard themselves as living in the same portion or district of the town, as opposed (say) to a disparate collection of pieces of residential development which had been "cobbled together" just for the purposes of making a town or village green claim.
The Haws is the area north of Yeadon Town Centre, its southernmost street being Hawthorn Avenue, stretching between roughly St Andrew's Church and the (apparently) historic line of the bridleway carrying on from Otley Lane on the west side, eastwards across to Cemetery Road. Most of the residential development, apart from Whitestone Crescent, is on the east side of Haw Lane. Large parts of the area consist of semi-detached houses which give the strong impression of having been developed as a common scheme between the two world wars of the 20th century; some of the streets contain housing which is obviously newer than that (but still several decades old),though often still semi-detached (but there is still some terraced and other housing); over near (and on) Cemetery Road there are however a number of apparently 19th century properties, a lot of them quite small.
Banksfield is essentially the area west of Yeadon Banks and the old bridleway, to the west of the old Banksfield dyeworks site and then (as I understand it) roughly to the west of St Andrew's Church/Otley Lane at the southern end. Its suggested western edge is along roads called Queensway and Coppice Wood Road. Both these roads have the appearance of 'local distributor roads', which I mean not in any technical sense but in the sense that they are not just residential side streets or culs-de-sac but carry a certain amount of local 'through traffic' heading for streets which branch off them [the same incidentally is true of Cemetery Road on the east side of The Haws]. Many of the street names within Banksfield incorporate the word "Banksfield" in them. Most of the housing in Banksfield has very much the appearance of post World War II speculative development, again mostly semi-detached though there are some exceptions, including two more recent-looking blocks of flats. There are a number of ginnels or passageways enabling pedestrian access to be gained through from Banksfield Crescent, Banksfield Grove, and Banksfield Mount to Yeadon Banks itself (the City Council part) as well as several private gateways from back gardens directly on to Yeadon Banks.
5. Ms Ansbro's evidence
1. She made the point that there was no definition of neighbourhood in the statute. Thus in her report she had identified a whole series of things that one might look at which could help to define the cohesiveness of the area and give it some identity. All these could be put into "the melting pot" to see whether there was a neighbourhood.
2. She did not disagree with the Inspector's comment in paragraph 13.30 that it was not essential for the area to have within it a row of shops, or a surgery or some other community facility. In her view, however, these were factors to be put into the melting pot.
3. She did not wholly agree with the Inspector's descriptions of The Haws and Banksfield in paragraphs 13.33 and 13.34. She did not agree that there was a common scheme and differed as to the dates of construction. She made the point that the housing to the west of Queensway is indistinguishable from the housing in Banksfield to the east.
4. She did not agree with the Inspector's conclusion in paragraph 13.35. In particular she disagreed with his finding that there was a degree of cohesiveness. She relied on the matters set out in her report.
6. The view
7. The authorities on neighbourhood and locality
Many of the authorities contain extensive reviews of the authorities both in respect of the registration of common law (Class B) and the new statutory (Class C) TVGs. It is, however common ground that there is no authority at High Court level on the meaning of "neighbourhood" although there are dicta to which my attention has been drawn.
The Cheltenham Builders case [2003] EWHC 2803 (Admin)
85 It is common ground that a neighbourhood need not be a recognised administrative unit. A housing estate might well be described in ordinary language as a neighbourhood. For the reasons set out above under "locality", I do not accept the defendant's submission that a neighbourhood is any area of land that an applicant for registration chooses to delineate upon a plan. The registration authority has to be satisfied that the area alleged to be a neighbourhood has a sufficient degree of cohesiveness, otherwise the word "neighbourhood" would be stripped of any real meaning. If Parliament had wished to enable the inhabitants of any area (as defined on a plan accompanying the application) to apply to register land as a village green, it would have said so.
87 Mr Petchey referred to the joint arrangements made between the two unitary authorities to deal with such matters as strategic planning. The need for such arrangements merely emphasises the fact that there are indeed two separate authorities. He sought to rely on section 6(c) of the Interpretation Act 1978 and invited me to read section 22(1A) as though "neighbourhood within a locality" meant "neighbourhood within a locality or localities".
88. In my judgment, a contrary intention appears in section 22. For the reasons set out above, locality in the case of class (a) and (b) village greens means an administrative unit, not one or more administrative units. That "locality" has the same meaning in sub-section (1A) is reinforced by the use of the word "within", signifying that a "neighbourhood" must be wholly inside a single locality. In effect, the defendant's case requires sub-section (1A) to be read as though it referred to a "neighbourhood within, or partly within one and partly within another, locality".
The Oxfordshire case
In Sunningwell, not only was the principle of the modern Class C green accepted by the House of Lords without question, but it was taken as one of the reasons for the statutory provision for amendment. Since then, the amendment made in 2000 to the statutory definition of Class C can be seen as implicit endorsement of the principle by Parliament. Accordingly, even if (as I believe) it was not what was intended in 1965, the clock cannot be turned back. However, this history may be relevant when one is trying to make sense of the statutory scheme as we now have it.
This general approach can be seen as having received endorsement by Parliament in the 2000 Act, which introduced the new concept of a "neighbourhood within a locality", and required no more than a "significant" number of local users. Whatever precisely that expression means (which happily is one of the few issues not before us), it can only have the effect of weakening still further the links with the traditional tests of customary law.
In Hammerton v Honey (1876) 24 WR 603, 604, Sir George Jessel MR rejected a claim to rights of recreation over Stockwell Green on the ground (among others) that the evidence did not show that use of the green was confined to inhabitants of Stockwell:
"If you allege a custom for certain persons to dance on a green, and you prove in support of that allegation, not only that some people danced, but that everybody else in the world who chose danced and played cricket, you have got beyond your custom."
there is no doubt that the locality rule was the pinch-point through which many claims to customary rights of recreation failed to pass.
26 Soon after the decision in the Sunningwell case, the question of town and village greens was raised in Parliament. This was in the debates on the bill which became the Countryside and Rights of Way Act 2000. No one voiced any concern about the construction which the House in its judicial capacity had given to the 1965 Act. On the contrary, the only question raised in debate was whether the locality rule did not make it too difficult to register new village greens. In your Lordships' House, Baroness Miller of Chilthorne Domer described the need for the users to be predominantly from the local community, defined by reference to a recognised ecclesiastical parish or local government area, as a "loophole" in the 1965 Act which "allows greens to be destroyed" (Hansard (HL Debates) 16 October 2000, col 865). The Government was sympathetic and introduced a suitable amendment which was adopted at the report stage (Hansard (HL Debates) 16 November 2000, col 513). This became section 98 of the 2000 Act, which amended section 22 by substituting a new third limb of the definition (Class C):[Lord Hoffmann set out the amendment and went on:]
27 "Any neighbourhood within a locality" is obviously drafted with a deliberate imprecision which contrasts with the insistence of the old law upon a locality defined by legally significant boundaries. I should say at this point that I cannot agree with Sullivan J in R (Cheltenham Builders Ltd) v South Gloucestershire District Council [2004] JPL 975 that the neighbourhood must be wholly within a single locality. That would introduce the kind of technicality which the amendment was clearly intended to abolish. The fact that the word "locality" when it first appears in subsection (1A ) must mean a single locality is no reason why the context of "neighbourhood within a locality" should not lead to the conclusion that it means "within a locality or localities".
MOD v Wiltshire CC
Other points were argued. In particular, Mr Drabble QC argued that it was impossible for a village green to be created by the exercise of rights save on behalf of some recognisable unit of this country--and when I say recognisable I mean recognisable by the law. Such units have in the past been occasionally boroughs, frequently parishes, both ecclesiastical and civil, and occasionally manors, all of which are entities known to the law, and where there is a defined body of persons capable of exercising the rights or granting the rights.
The idea that one can have the creation of a village green for the benefit of an unknown area--and when I say unknown I mean unknown to the law, not undefined by a boundary upon a plan, but unknown in the sense of unrecognised by the law-then one has, says Mr Drabble, no precedent for any such claim and no proper basis in theory for making any such assertion. In my belief that also is a correct analysis.
Oxfordshire and Buckinghamshire Mental Health Trust v Oxford City Council [2010] EWCH 2010 ["the Mental Health Trust case"]
69. First, the provision had changed in two material respects. The area from which users must come now includes a neighbourhood as well as a locality. On any view that makes qualification much easier because it was accepted that a locality had to be some form of administrative unit, like a town or parish or ward. Neighbourhood is on any view a more fluid concept and connotes an area that may be much smaller than a locality. But in addition the requirement is now not that there is land on which the inhabitants of any locality have indulged but rather land on which a significant number of the inhabitants of any locality have indulged. It is said that this latter change does no more than state what was obvious anyway that there needed at least to be a significant number from the locality, rather than just a handful. But without more this need not follow. It could equally indicate a change from a requirement that the users predominantly come from the locality (or now neighbourhood) to a requirement that the users include a significant number from it so as to establish a clear link between the locality (or now neighbourhood) and proposed TVG even if such people do not comprise most of the users. That overall, the requirements were relaxed is supported by paragraph 65 of the judgment of Carnwath LJ in Oxfordshire
70. Thus there is no reason now to assume that the user required for class (c) rights should be the same as for class (b) rights.
71. On that footing, I reject the notion that the Predominance Test has been carried forward into s22(1A). That provision is clear in its terms and provided that a significant number of the inhabitants of the locality or neighbourhood are among the users it matters not that many or even most come from elsewhere.
It makes it clear that qualifying use must be by a significant number of people from a particular locality or neighbourhood. That removes the need for applicants to demonstrate that use is by people from the locality and means that use by people from outside that locality will no longer have to be taken into account by registration authorities. It will be sufficient for a significant number of local people to use the site.
Secondly, the amendment addresses the problem of applications being accepted only where it can be demonstrated that users come from a discrete area such as a village or parish. That is not easy in large built up areas. The amendment introduces the concept of neighbourhood and provides that users should either come from a locality or from a neighbourhood within a locality.
8. Submissions and Discussion
Locality
a locality of a size and situation such that, given the particular activities which have in fact taken place, might reasonably have been capable of accommodating a proper spread of qualifying users undertaking activities of that type.
a locality of a size and situation such that, given the particular activities which have in fact taken place, might reasonably have been capable of accommodating a proper spread of qualifying users undertaking activities of that type.
Neighbourhood.
More than one neighbourhood
The Claimant says that it cannot possibly be the case that neighbourhood in Limb II means neighbourhood or neighbourhoods any more than locality in limb I (or in limbs b and c of the original definition) means locality or localities. If it did, the whole basis of customary village green law would have been undermined by the amendment. If neighbourhood included the plural, it would mean that however many neighbourhoods people came from and however far flung within any locality the inhabitants were, the inhabitants of all the neighbourhoods would on registration acquire a right to use the land. Even Lord Hoffmann did not suggest that neighbourhood in limb II included the plural which he surely would have done if that had been his view.
in a case like Yeadon Banks, where the Application Land is the nucleus of semi-urban housing development lying either side whose inhabitants admittedly used the land for LSP without any attempt by the landowner at restraint for more than 20 years, rejecting registration on the basis of the number of labels which might be given to the recreational community would thwart the legislative intention; such a result would be truly "objectionable". Adopting the pragmatic construction of "neighbourhood" avoids the hypothetical questions set out in Claimant's Skeleton Argument,
The meaning of neighbourhood
1. There can only be one qualifying neighbourhood.
2. To qualify the area must have a sufficiently cohesive quality to be described as a neighbourhood
3. The area must have clear and rationally defensible boundaries.
4. a neighbourhood cannot be called a neighbourhood by putting two neighbourhoods together and calling the resulting area a neighbourhood unless the combined area passes tests (2) and (3) which the very cohesiveness possessed (separately) by neighbourhoods 1 and 2 will prevent the combined areas from possessing.
5. In the present case it is obvious from the evidence as recounted by the Inspector and from the evidence to be given by Sue Ansbro [4/34/869-930] that Area C (the combined area of Banksfield and The Haws), did and does not have any kind of individual cohesiveness. The two areas are physically distinct and almost completely separated from each other by the old Dyeworks and Yeadon Banks itself.
6. Even if Banksfield and The Haws were separately regarded as qualifying neighbourhoods, the registration could not be upheld.
Given the clear Parliamentary intention in 2000 to free applications for TVG registration from legalistic "loopholes", 'neighbourhood' should be interpreted to mean the area or areas in which the recreational users reside the neighbourhood or vicinity of the Application Land for the purposes of recreational use of that land ("the recreational community"). There is no statutory requirement for it to have a name or not to have two or more names or sub-areas, "rationally defensible boundaries" or any particular facilities or characteristics or any particular degree of 'cohesiveness'; given the Parliamentary intention, there is no warrant for implying such restrictions. The concept is partly geographical, partly functional and partly one of community identity; such considerations are not always susceptible to logic and the Court should be slow to cut down the statutory term by imposing such requirements. Whether the statutory requirement is met in any case is a question of fact and degree for the decision maker.
"As of right"
The application to register in this case was made in July 2004. It is true that by then the amendment of section 22 of the 1965 Act had been on the statute book for 2½ years, and true also that the House of Lords has held in the Oxfordshire case that applications to register made on and after 30/01/2001 (when the new definition took effect) engaged the new definition. But no reasonable owner, taken to know the law, could ever have thought that Area C was in law a "locality" within the meaning of section 22 whose inhabitants had used the land for 20 years. No reasonable owner could reasonably have been expected, before the coming into force of the new definition, to resist recreational use on the part of people living nearby (i.e. in Area C) when such use was incapable, as a matter of law, of giving rise to a claim to register the land as a green.
"applied only to situations where the relevant activities of the inhabitants occurred after 30th January 2001", holding that there was "nothing in s.98 or any other provision of the 2000 Act to limit its application in this way" and that such an interpretation "would mean that Parliament had chosen to postpone the operation of the amendment indefinitely in what might well be a significant number of cases ... the administrative and other complications of operating two different systems afford powerful reasons for supposing that Parliament would have intended that there should only be one".
9. Conclusion
Note 1 This is not the same as Map A attached to the application for a TVG submitted by Mr Jones. [Back]