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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Grant v The Secretary of State for Transport [2018] EWHC 111 (QB) (29 January 2018) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2018/111.html Cite as: [2018] EWHC 111 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
(Sitting as a Deputy High Court Judge)
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PATRICIA GEORGINA GRANT (widow and executrix of the estate of DOUGLAS MICHAEL GRANT, deceased) |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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THE SECRETARY OF STATE FOR TRANSPORT |
Defendant |
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Patrick Limb QC (instructed by DWF LLP) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 5th December 2017
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Crown Copyright ©
Martin Chamberlain QC:
Introduction
The claim for income from the development profits of the Highworth Estate
i. To what extent, if at all, should it be assumed that the development of the Highworth Estate would involve bare land sales?
ii. Should it be assumed that a property development consultant would require, in addition to the terms set out by Mr Preece, a commission on investment sales?
iii. Should the 11-year timeline for the development be taken to run from the date of Mr Grant's death or the date of planning permission (which is anticipated in the near future)? Should the cost of engaging a property development consultant be calculated as at 2014 (the date of Mr Grant's death) or as at today?
iv. Should VAT be added to the cost of employing a development consultant when valuing the income dependency claim?
v. Should the dependency ratio generally applicable to income dependency claims be applied to this head of loss?
i. Land sales
"Mr Barefoot advises that the average annual take-up of business units (offices) in the Swindon area is around 200,000 sq. ft and of industrial/warehouse units around 1 million sq. ft (see Joint Statement of Barefoot & Lockhart dated 28 March 2017 para 3.6.9, p. 617 of the Trial Bundle). Over an 11 year anticipated development programme this equates to some 13.2 million sq. ft of office and industrial accommodation. The capacity of the Grant scheme at say 211,228 sq. ft (excluding Aldi) is a mere 1.6% of the anticipated local marketplace activity. It is in this context that Mr Barefoot is of the view that whilst land sales will be considered from time to time, that [sic] apart from the Aldi 'pump-priming' sale, further land sales need not form part of the likely outcome."
Mr Lockhart's position is as follows:
"Mr Lockhart, in his original Statement, dated 24th February 2017, sets out in great detail the take-up of industrial/warehouse and office accommodation in the Swindon area. Excluding Highworth Business Park, there are 39 other major employment areas in Swindon and the immediate surrounding areas, all competing for a share of the annual take-up. The majority of this take up has been second hand accommodation.
Mr Lockhart, in section 5 of his original Statement, stated that there appeared to be 'no appetite' for speculative commercial property development. Mr Lockhart stated and reiterates in this Joint Statement, that there is no evidence to suggest that any speculative property development will take place and that any development will most likely take the form of individual deals, both freehold and leasehold. In other words, transactions will relate to specific known demand, not speculative development. Mr Lockhart took the view that this process would take 21 years. Mr Lockhart further accepted, in cross examination (see paragraph 89 of the Approved Judgment) that his own timeline was based on releasing profits from pre-sales and pre-lets and a shorter timeline would be applicable if land sales were to be entered into as well. This is why Mr Lockhart included land sales in his scenarios Two and Three, of his Assessment, for both the years 2014 and 2017."
"88. First, Mr Barefoot's estimate was based on a comparison of what had been possible in two other projects of which he had direct experience – one at Interface Business Park in Royal Wooton Bassett, the second at Solstice Park in Amesbury. As Mr Barefoot said, these were appropriate comparators for Highworth because the development was managed flexibly, as Highworth would be, through whatever mode would be most likely to yield profit in the market conditions. Another development at Shrivenham that had taken longer to complete was a less useful comparator because in that case the developers, who had several such sites, had stuck rigidly to a single model (which involved building, then securing income from letting and ground rents).
89. Second, Mr Lockhart accepted in cross-examination that his own timeline was based on realising profits through pre-sales and pre-lets; and that a shorter timeline would be applicable to land sales. His concern about land sales was that they were not necessarily profitable. This evidence did not seem to me to fit with what is known about the Aldi transaction. That is structured as a land sale, yet it is projected to yield a significant profit for HBP, even after the Claimant has received from HBP the amount due to her under the option agreement for the land. Although it is only a single transaction, the Aldi deal appears to bear out Mr Barefoot's view that land sales can yield significant value and profit to HBP. Moreover, Mr Lockhart fairly accepted in cross-examination that, if the Aldi deal completes (as both experts expect), it will act as a 'pump primer'. In other words, the involvement of a major retailer, and the fact that services have been installed, will attract others to the site."
ii. Commission
iii. Timeline start date
iv. VAT
"In Welsh Ambulance Service v Williams [2008] EWCA Civ 81, the Court of Appeal upheld an award in favour of the family of a businessman who had, with some assistance from his family, run a builders' merchant and property business. It was irrelevant that the dependants had made a success of the business, because the value of the dependency was fixed at the moment of death; and the only post-death events affecting its value were those which affected the continuance of the dependency (such as the death of the dependant before trial) and the rise (or fall) in earnings to reflect the effects of inflation: see per Smith LJ (with whom Lloyd and Thomas LJJ agreed) at [50]..."
Read in context, the Court of Appeal was addressing a very specific question that arises in dependency claims where the deceased ran a business which the dependant has inherited: does it matter how well the business performs after the death? The answer was no. That precludes the court, subject to the stated exceptions, from taking into account factual developments post-dating the death. It does not, however, require the court, in fixing the value of the dependency at death, to assume that the costs of replacing the services of the deceased would remain exactly as they are on the date of death. And it certainly does not require the court to assume – contrary to the position agreed between the experts – that, simply because the claimant was not registered for VAT the time of death, she would never become registered (whether herself or through a corporate vehicle) even if that were obviously commercially sensible.
v. Dependency ratio
Costs of the specific disclosure application