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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Technology and Construction Court) Decisions >> Hall v Environment Agency [2017] EWHC 1309 (TCC) (31 May 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2017/1309.html Cite as: [2017] WLR(D) 740, [2018] WLR 1433, [2018] Env LR 11, [2017] EWHC 1309 (TCC), [2018] RVR 48, [2018] 1 WLR 1433 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
BRISTOL DISTRICT REGISTRY
TECHNOLOGY AND CONSTRUCTION COURT
B e f o r e :
____________________
ANTHONY HALL |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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ENVIRONMENT AGENCY |
Defendant |
____________________
Nicholas Ostrowski (instructed by The Environment Agency) appeared for the defendant
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Background to the claim
"1. Caused or permitted a section of the Culvert roof to the rear of the Property to be removed, leaving an exposed opening measuring approximately 5m by 2.5m, without taking or requiring to be taken any or any adequate measures to prevent the escape of water from the opening after heavy rainfall and/or to contain such water, for instance by constructing a temporary sealing plate with a weight (such as a kentledge block) to the opening or by creating a sand bag bund around the perimeter of the opening or otherwise;
2. Failed to give any or any adequate consideration in planning and/or commissioning and/or carrying out the works, whether by way of sufficient risk assessment or otherwise, to the known risk that water levels could rise rapidly in Cotting Burn and/or the Culvert thereby giving rise to a risk of flooding to the Property, unless appropriate measures were taken to remove or reduce that risk;
3. Failed when planning and/or commissioning and/or carrying out the works to have any or any sufficient regard to the warnings and/or other available information, ... as to the risk of the Culvert running surcharged during heavy rainfall;
4. Failed to take any or any adequate precautions when planning and/or commissioning and/or carrying out the work to the Culvert roof to guard against the risk of flooding to the Property, having particular regard to the absence of rain gauges or river level recorders on Cotting Burn;
5. Failed to give any or any adequate consideration to the high water levels observed during the course of carrying out the works to the Culvert, prior to removing the section of the roof;
6. Failed to take any or any sufficient emergency action, whether by constructing an emergency bund or otherwise, to prevent damage being caused to the Property by the possible escape of water from the open roof of the Culvert after high and/or rising levels of water observed in Cotting Burn and/or the Culvert during the evening of 30 March 2010;
7. Failed in the premises to plan and/or commission and/or carry out the works to the Culvert roof with adequate care and skill."
The statutory compensation scheme
"765. General powers to carry out works
(1) The Agency shall have power, in connection with a main river—
(a) to maintain existing works, that is to say, to cleanse, repair or otherwise maintain in a due state of efficiency any existing watercourse or any drainage work;(b) to improve any existing works, that is to say to deepen, widen, straighten or otherwise improve any existing watercourse or remove or alter mill dams, weirs or other obstructions to watercourses, or raise, widen or otherwise improve any existing drainage work;(c) to construct new works, that is to say, to make any new watercourse or drainage work or erect any machinery or do any other act (other than an act referred to in paragraph (a) or (b) above) required for the drainage of any land.
(2) The Agency shall also have power irrespective of whether the works are in connection with a main river, to maintain, improve or construct drainage works for the purpose of defence against sea water or tidal water; and that power shall be exercisable both above and below the low-water mark.
(3) The Agency may construct all such works and do all such things in the sea or in any estuary as may, in its opinion, be necessary to secure an adequate outfall for a main river.
...
177. Compensation etc. in respect of exercise of works powers
Schedule 21 to this Act shall have effect for making provision for imposing obligations as to the payment of compensation in respect of the exercise of the powers conferred on the appropriate agency by sections 159 to 167 above and otherwise for minimising the damage caused by the exercise of those powers.
"5. Compensation in respect of flood defence and drainage works
(1) Where injury is sustained by any person by reason of the exercise by the Agency of any powers under section 165(1) to (3) of this Act, the Agency shall be liable to make full compensation to the injured party.
(2) In case of dispute, the amount of any compensation under sub-paragraph (1) above shall be determined by the [Upper Tribunal].
(3) Where injury is sustained by any person by reason of the exercise by the Agency of its powers under subsection (l)(b) of section 167 of this Act—
(a) the Agency may, if it thinks fit, pay to him such compensation as it may determine; and
(b) if the injury could have been avoided if those powers had been exercised with reasonable care, provisions of sub-paragraphs (1) and (2) above shall apply as if the injury had been sustained by reason of the exercise by the Agency of its powers under section 165(1) to (3) of this Act."
The rival arguments
(1) that the statutory Compensation Scheme is an exclusive code for compensation for loss or damage arising out of works carried out by the EA pursuant to its powers under section 165 of the WRA 1991;
(2) that, where the Scheme applies, all other civil remedies e.g. for damages for nuisance or negligence or for an injunction, are excluded and the common law is superseded;
(3) that the only exceptions to this exclusionary rule are those described by Jenkins LJ in Marriage v East Norfolk Rivers Catchment Board [1950] 1 KB 284 at 309;
(4) that this case does not fall within any of those exceptions; and
(5) that, accordingly, Mr Hall has no claim for negligence which can be pursued in the County Court and his action should be struck out under CPR 3.4(2)(b) on the ground that the Particulars of Claim discloses no reasonable grounds for bringing the claim.
(1) that the Compensation Scheme under the WRA 1991 is not an exclusive code because it is subject to the exceptions identified by Jenkins LJ in the Marriage case;
(2) that it is not appropriate to conduct a mini-trial on an application to strike out, so the Court must assume that one or more of the Claimant's pleaded allegations of negligence will be proven at trial.
(3) that the claimant need only show on the present hearing that he has a real prospect of establishing that the negligence claim which he advances is one which is not precluded by the Scheme, but lies within one of the exceptions in the Marriage case where ordinary rights of action at common law can still be pursued.
(4) that the claimant can do so because: (i) the damage to his property was not the result of "the exercise by the Agency of any powers under section 165(1) to (3) of this Act" but is "for damages for negligence at common law in respect of the manner in which the works to the Culvert were carried out, planned and commissioned by the Defendant" (see paragraph 3 of the Reply), in other words was the product of some negligent act occurring in the course of an exercise of the EA's powers but was not itself an act which the EA was authorised to do, alternatively, (ii) the damage was not the product of an operation which the EA intended to carry out, but was an unintended occurrence brought about in the course of carrying out the work owing to negligence in carrying it out.
Discussion
"(1) Every drainage board acting within its district shall have power
(a) to maintain existing works, that is to say, to cleanse, repair or otherwise maintain in a due state of efficiency any existing watercourse or drainage work:
(b) to improve any existing works, that is to say, to deepen, wide, straighten or otherwise improve any existing watercourse, or remove mill dams, weirs or other obstructions to watercourses, or raise, widen or otherwise improve any existing drainage work:
(c) to construct new works, that is to say, to make any new watercourse or drainage work or erect any machinery or do any other act not hereinbefore referred to, required for the drainage of the area comprised within their district.
…
(3) Where injury is sustained by any person by reason of the exercise by a drainage board of any of its powers under this section, the board shall be liable to make full compensation to the injured person, and in case of dispute the amount of the compensation shall be determined in the manner in which disputed compensation for land is required to be determined by the Lands Clauses Acts."
"No action can be maintained for anything which is done under the authority of the legislature, though the act is one which if unauthorised by the legislature, would be injurious and actionable. The remedy of the party who suffers the loss is confined to recovering such compensation as the legislature has thought fit to give him: ..."
"... I take it, without citing cases, that it is now thoroughly well-established that no action will lie for doing that which the legislature has authorised, if it be done without negligence, although it does occasion damage to anyone; but an action does lie for doing that which the legislature has authorised, if it be done negligently".
"When Parliament has authorised a certain thing to be made or done in a certain place, there can be no action for nuisance caused by the making or doing of that thing if the nuisance is the inevitable result of the making or doing so authorised. The onus of proving that the result is inevitable is on those who wish to escape liability for nuisance, but the criterion of inevitability is not what is theoretically possible but what is possible, according to the state of scientific knowledge at the time, having also in view a certain common-sense appreciation, which cannot be rigidly defined, of practical feasibility in view of situation and of expense."
"Examination of the Land Drainage Act 1930, and of section 34 in particular, leads irresistibly to the view that Parliament recognised that there might be, and frequently must be, a nuisance created by the carrying out of works under the powers given by the section; and compensation for any damage sustained thereby is provided. ... It is this which satisfies me that a person who sustains injury through the operations has no right of action for nuisance. On a fair reading of the section it is shown with sufficient clearness that the intention was that the remedy should be by way of compensation alone. ... These leaves untouched the question of negligence."
"(a) the injury must be the product of an exercise of the board's powers as such, as opposed to the product of some negligent act occurring in the course of some exercise of the board's powers but not in itself an act which the board was authorised to do. For example, an injury caused by flooding on one side of the river due to the heightening by the board of the bank on the other side would be a proper subject of compensation, as opposed to action in the courts; but an injury caused by the negligent driving of one of the board's lorries bringing materials to the site would be actionable in the ordinary way.
(b) The injury must be the product of the operation which the board intended to carry out, and not of some unintended occurrence brought about in the course of carrying out the work owing to negligence in carrying it out. Thus, if the board dig a drain which when dug as planned has the effect of depriving a riparian owner of the full supply of water from the river to which he is entitled, the remedy of the riparian owner will be compensation under the Act, not action in the courts; but if, through negligence in digging the drain, the board undermined and breached a dyke, and thereby inundated the countryside, I apprehend that they could not claim, by way of defence to an action by a person whose land was flooded, that the breaching of the dyke brought about by their negligence, and forming no part of the operation in hand, was done in exercise of heir statutory powers, and therefore a matter of compensation, not action,
(c) The operation must not be one which on the face of it is so capricious or unreasonable, or so fraught with manifest danger to others, that no catchment board acting bona fide and rationally, not recklessly, would ever have undertaken it. The last of these three limitations or requirements inevitably introduces questions of degree, but, as will be seen from the terms in which I have stated it, I think that a very strong case of something amounting to reckless conduct on the part of the board must be made out to enable an action to be maintained on account of an injury which, in the other two respects which I have mentioned, is a matter for compensation under the Act as opposed to action in the courts."
"... their Lordships think it is very plain that, by his averments of negligence, the respondent did not intend to charge, and was not understood to charge the appellants with excess of their statutory powers; and that the jury, by their verdict, only meant to affirm that the appellants, if they had seen fit to do so, might have so planned and executed their works as to occasion less injury to the respondent's land. In the Courts below, the case, from first to last, was conducted upon the footing that what the appellants had done was done in the exercise of the powers conferred upon them by sect. 384. So long as they act within their statutory powers, negligence is, in any question of compensation, immaterial, and cannot affect the extent of their liability, which is for all damage resulting from the construction or maintenance of their works."
"The submission is a remarkable one from every point of view. It amounts to this. A claimant who has never alleged negligence and who has never suggested that the authority was acting ultra vires is to be denied his compensation after a very long and expensive hearing because the person hearing the reference in the course of his decision uses words which are critical of the authority's methods of work or of their attitude towards the owners of fishing rights. Not surprisingly, there is no direct authority which supports such a proposition."
"(1) Subject to the provisions of this section, a local authority shall make full compensation to any person who has sustained damage by reason of the exercise by the authority of any of their powers under this Act in relation to a matter as to which he has not himself been in default.
(2) Any dispute arising under this section as to the fact of damage or as to the amount of compensation shall be determined by arbitration."
Conclusion