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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Lands Tribunal >> Colneway Ltd v Environment Agency [2003] EWLands ACQ_70_2002 (16 June 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWLands/2003/ACQ_70_2002.html Cite as: [2003] EWLands ACQ_70_2002 |
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[2003] EWLands ACQ_70_2002 (16 June 2003)
ACQ/70/2002
LANDS TRIBUNAL ACT 1949
COMPULSORY PURCHASE - compensation – mineral-bearing agricultural land - land acquired to provide flood relief channel - whether statutorily assumed planning permission restricts right to extract minerals to acquiring authority only - prospects of extracting minerals in no scheme world from land taken and retained land - whether value of minerals to be assumed by uplift to agricultural value or adjusted quarry valuation - whether claimant's retained land suffered severance or injurious affection - compensation awarded £131,478 - Land Compensation Act 1961 s 15
IN THE MATTER OF A NOTICE OF REFERENCE
BETWEEN COLNEWAY LIMITED Claimant
and
ENVIRONMENT AGENCY Acquiring
Authority
Re: Bare agricultural land and
Mineral-bearing agricultural land
Barge and Amerden Farms
Taplow
Buckinghamshire
Before: President and N J Rose FRICS
Sitting in public at 48/49 Chancery Lane, London, WC2A 1JR
on 5-7 and 27-28 March 2003
The following cases are referred to in this decision:
Roberts v South Gloucestershire DC [2002] EWCA Civ 1568
Bwlffa and Merthyr Steam Collieries (1891) Ltd v Pontypridd Waterworks Co. [1903] AC 426
The following further cases were referred to in argument:
Waterworth v Bolton Metropolitan Borough Council (1978) 37 P & CR 104
Trocette Property Co Ltd v Greater London Council [1974] RVR 306
Frances Patterson QC, instructed by Field Fisher Waterhouse, solicitors of London for the Claimant
Guy Roots QC instructed by S J Berwin, solicitors of London for the Acquiring Authority.
DECISION
Facts
First published studies into a flood alleviation scheme | 1983 |
NRA planning application for MWEFAS | Jan 1991 |
First NRA CPO | 1991 |
Second NRA CPO | 1992 |
Start of public inquiry | Oct 1992 |
Inspector's report | Sep 1993 |
Secretary of State's "minded to grant" letter | Nov 1994 |
Secretary of State's decision | 1 Mar 1995 |
Planning permission | 1 Mar 1995 |
CPO confirmed | 21 Mar 1995 |
General vesting declaration | 17 Jun 1996 |
Notice to treat | 17 Jul 1996 |
Entry onto claimant's land (agreed valuation date) | 27 Jul 1996 |
Commencement of construction of channel | Oct 1996 |
Completion of engineering works and channel | Sep 2001 |
Plot 38 | Approx 1,500 m2 of track with public footpath |
Plot 39 | Approx 19,484 m2 of uncultivated arable land |
Plot 40 | Approx 115,720 m2 of uncultivated arable land |
Plot 41 | Approx 2,550 m2 of uncultivated arable land |
Plot 44 | Approx 1,328 m2 of land, being the western half of the road known as Marsh Lane, Taplow. |
No claim has been made in respect of Plot 44.
Issues
(1) The open market value of the subject property
(2) The diminution (if any) in the open market value of the claimant's retained land by reason of severance and injurious affection caused by the acquisition.
The principal issues in dispute are:
A Does any planning permission to be assumed under section 15 of the Land Compensation Act 1961 authorise anyone other than the acquiring authority to extract minerals from the land acquired for the purpose of assessing compensation?
B In the absence of the scheme what were the prospects at the valuation date of obtaining planning permission for the extraction of minerals from (a) the land taken and (b) the claimant's retained land?
C Should the value of the land taken and the effect on the value of the retained land be assessed (1) by means of an uplift on agricultural value or (2) by means of an adjusted quarry valuation?
Issue A: the assumed planning permission and mineral extraction
"(1) In a case where –
(a) the relevant interest is to be acquired for purposes which involve the carrying out of proposals of the acquiring authority for development of the relevant land or part thereof, and
(b) on the date of service of the notice to treat there is not in force a planning permission for the development, it shall be assumed that planning permission would be granted in respect of the relevant land or part thereof, as the case may be, such as would permit development thereof in accordance with the proposals of the acquiring authority.
(2) For the purposes of paragraph (b) of the preceding subsection no account shall be taken of any planning permission so granted as not to ensure (while the permission remains in force) for the benefit of the land and of all persons for the time being interested therein."
Issues B and C: Prospects of planning permission and appropriate valuation method
Land Taken
Minerals £995,860
Surface Value (agreed) £104,453
£1,100,313
Severance/Injurious affection £2,347,374
£3,447,687
"Quarries are usually valued by applying a royalty, a payment per tonne of mineral sold, to an expected level of annual sales. This annual income is capitalised over the life of the quarry. The quarry life will depend on the total quantity of mineral reserves.
If a quarry is not operating, it will be necessary to adjust the capitalised royalty incomes to take account of the deferment period until extraction is expected to commence. This can sensibly be undertaken if a quarry has planning permission and could commence production and sales when required.
Therefore to value a quarry the following factors must be quantified:
i) The level of royalty
ii) The quantity of reserves
iii) The level of annual sales
iv) The commencement date (if not already working)."
"The delay in the sale of minerals must be taken into account when assessing the value as at the date of valuation (1996). The reasonable assumption is to assess the value of the money (expressed as ?one pound' (£1)) in terms of the opportunity of other investments. A ?no risk' investment would be to invest [in] a bank interest-earning account at (say) 2% under the UK base rate. The UK base rate history is shown in the attached table and shows the rates on a monthly basis (whenever there is a change). The average UK base rate from July 1996 to July 2001 is 6%. The reasonable interest to assume for money invested in the future (from July 1996 onwards) is 4% per annum (base rate less 2%). To invest in the minerals at Barge Farm, the purchaser is losing this opportunity interest."
"Jones Lang Wootton are offering in their July catalogue what must be the most valuable lot ever to come up for auction. The 105-acre site, located just one mile from Heathrow airport, fronts four major roads including the A4 Bath Road.
Offered on behalf of a private investment trust, the site is designated green belt. Most of the land is therefore undeveloped, but existing tenants could produce an annual income of almost £100,000 following current rent reviews. There are also some 3 million tonnes of sand and gravel deposits within the site, which could be worth up to £6 million.
A recent report by a firm of consulting engineers suggests that, provided some road improvements are made, the site could hold 2,300 dwellings and 500,000 sq ft of high-tech space.
?In 10 years' time, it could be another Stockley Park' says JLW Associate John Smithers. He adds that no guide price is being set although, with planning consent, the site could be worth, ?well in excess of £100 million'."
"I find there are 3 main objections. First, there is the visual impact of control structures and bridges. I consider that the Amerden Lane bridge and Marsh Lane control structure and bridge would be intrusive elements in the landscape because of their size. As such there is a planning objection to these aspects of the scheme which will have to be weighed against the need for the scheme and the consequent need for these structures…"
"serious and compelling on the basis of the long history of flooding in the area and the nature of the area."
Subject land - surface value | £104,453 |
Subject land - minerals | £5,300 |
Severance/injurious affection | £21,725 £131,478 |
Dated 16 June 2003
George Bartlett QC, President
N J Rose FRICS
ADDENDUM ON COSTS
"4.– (1) Where either –
(a) the acquiring authority have made an unconditional offer in writing of any sum as compensation to any claimant and the sum awarded by the Lands Tribunal to that claimant does not exceed the sum offered; or
(b) …
the Lands Tribunal shall, unless for special reasons it thinks proper not to do so, order the claimant to bear his own costs and to pay the costs of the acquiring authority so far as they were incurred after the offer was made …."
The claimant does not suggest that there are any special reasons for departing from the rule laid down in this provision. There is thus agreement that the claimant should bear its own costs and pay those of the authority after the date of the sealed offer.
"(1) Where …
(b) the Lands Tribunal is satisfied that a claimant has failed to deliver to the acquiring authority, in time to enable them to make a proper offer, a notice in writing of the amount claimed by him, containing the particulars mentioned in subsection (2) of this section;
the Lands Tribunal shall, unless for special reasons it thinks proper not to do so, order the claimant to bear his own costs and to pay the costs of the acquiring authority so far as they were incurred …after the time when in the opinion of the Lands Tribunal the notice should have been delivered.
(2) The notice mentioned in subsection (1) of this section must state the exact nature of the interest in respect of which compensation is claimed, and give details of the compensation claimed, distinguishing the amounts under separate heads and showing how the amount claimed under each head is calculated.
(3) Where a claimant has delivered a notice as required by paragraph (b) of subsection (1) of this section and has made an unconditional offer in writing to accept any sum as compensation, then, if the sum awarded to him by the Lands Tribunal is equal to or exceeds that sum, the Lands Tribunal shall, unless for special reasons it thinks proper not to do so, order the acquiring authority to bear their own costs and pay the costs of the claimant so far as they were incurred after his offer was made."
(a) Where the acquiring authority have made an unconditional offer which is not exceeded by the amount of the award: here the claimant bears his own costs and pays the authority's costs after the date of the offer (subsection (1)(a)).
(b) Where the claimant has failed to deliver a particularised claim to the acquiring authority, in time to enable them to make a proper offer: here the claimant bears his own costs and pays the authority's costs after the time when the claim should have been delivered (subsection (1)(b)).
(c) Where the claimant has made a particularised claim and has also made an unconditional offer to accept a sum as compensation and the award is equal to or exceeds that sum: here the acquiring authority bear their own costs and pay the claimant's costs after the date of the offer (subsection (3)).
(d) Where the acquiring authority have made an unconditional offer which is exceeded by the award, but the claimant has made a claim but no offer.
(e) Where the claimant has made a claim and has also made an offer which is for more than the sum awarded, but the acquiring authority have made no offer.
(f) Where the claimant has made a claim but has not made an offer, and the acquiring authority also has not made an offer.
(g) The period up to the time when the claim should have been delivered.
In these latter four sets of circumstances costs are in the discretion of the Tribunal in the exercise of its general power to award costs under section 3(5) of the Lands Tribunal Act 1949.
"The statutory compensation cannot, and must not, exceed the owner's total loss, for, if it does, it will put an unfair burden on the public authority or other promoters who on public grounds have been given the power of compulsory acquisition, and it will transgress the principle of equivalence which is at the root of statutory compensation, the principle that the owner shall be paid neither less nor more than his loss."
"The expenses of determining the amount of disputed compensation may be seen to be part of the reasonable and necessary expense which is attributable to the taking of the lands compulsorily by the acquiring authority. The principle which applies to litigation as applied by Lord President Robertson in Shepherd v Elliott and quoted by Maclaren on Expenses at p 21 is that the cost of litigation should fall on him who caused it. The cost of determining the amount of the disputed compensation would seem, according to this principle, to fall on the acquiring authority without whose resort to the use of compulsory powers there would have been no need for the owner or occupier to be compensated. That seems to me to be the proper starting point for an examination of the question of expenses in these cases."
(i) From 17 July 1996 (when notice to treat was deemed to have been served) to 17 October 1996 (the date by which it should have delivered a detailed claim). The circumstances are those in (g).
(ii) From 18 October 1996 to the date (three months after the detailed claim that was in due course made) by which the acquiring authority could reasonably have made an offer (18 October 2002). The circumstances are those in (b).
(iii) From 19 October 2002 to the date of the sealed offer (3 February 2003). The circumstances are those in (f).
(iv) After 3 February 2003. The circumstances are those in (a).
"36. I accept counsel for the claimants' submission that, if as a result of applying the principles of ordinary litigation to the hearing of compensation references, the Lands Tribunal adopts a practice of 'ready departure' from the principle that the claimant is entitled to his costs in the absence of a special reason to the contrary, that would involve a change of approach which has previously and properly been adopted in compensation reference cases. However, I equally consider that, in exercising the wide discretion under s 3(5) of the 1949 Act and r 52(1) of the 1996 Rules, and in considering the question of whether or not special reason exists to depart from the usual order, it may usefully 'have regard' to the matters set out in para 19.2 of the Lands Tribunal Practice Directions including whether or not the claimant has exaggerated his claim. In considering that last question, however, exaggeration alone is not enough in the event of a large disparity between the sum claimed and the sum awarded. The matters to which the tribunal should have regard are (a) the reasons for that disparity and (b) their effect upon the conduct of the claim. As to (a), if the reasons are defensible, in the sense that there was a legitimate, albeit unsuccessful, argument put forward in support of the figure concerned, there can be no good reason to regard the claim as exaggerated in the pejorative sense necessary to justify a sanction in costs. As to (b), if, in any event, the effect of the proceedings in terms of the time spent and the costs incurred in disposing of the issue or argument concerned is relatively insignificant, then again an adverse order is unlikely to be appropriate.
37. Turning to the question of expert evidence, if the amount of the 'exaggerated' claim is based on the valuation, opinion and evidence of the claimant's expert witness, it will rarely be appropriate in my view to make an adverse costs order against the successful claimant. Valuation is an inexact science…"
"43. It follows that the fact that the claimant has not been awarded as much as he was seeking by way of compensation – or that the award is nearer (even much nearer) to the amount that the acquiring authority had offered than the amount sought – cannot, of itself, be a reason for depriving the claimant of his costs of the reference. But that does not lead to the conclusion that the claimant's conduct in exaggerating his claim can be of no relevance. The tribunal may be satisfied, in the particular case before it, that the fact that the claimant has exaggerated his claim has led to costs which were not reasonable for the claimant to incur in pursuit of the compensation to which he was entitled; or that it has been the pursuit of issues which it was not reasonable for the claimant to pursue that has led to the exaggeration of the claim. Where the tribunal makes an award of compensation which is well below the amount claimed, it is appropriate for it to consider, in the context of an award of costs, both whether the fact that the claim was exaggerated has led the claimant to incur costs which (given a more realistic evaluation of his claim) he would not have incurred and whether the explanation for the difference between the award and the amount claimed is that issues were pursued on which the claimant had no real chance of success."
Dated 14 August 2003
George Bartlett QC, President
N J Rose FRICS
Appendix 1
Land at Barge and Amerden Farms, Taplow, Bucks.
Valuation by P J Smith MRICS
Land Taken - Mineral Value | Land Taken - Mineral Value |
Area | 12,000 m2 |
Depth | 4.5 m |
Quantity | 528,000 tonnes |
Output | 264,000 tonnes p.a. |
Value | £2 per tonne |
Period of Operation | 2 years |
YP for 2 yrs @ 4% | 1.8861 |
Calculation £2 x 264,000 x 1.8861 = |
£995,860 |
Severance/injurious affection | Severance/injurious affection |
Central Area | |
Quantity | 2,000,000 tonnes |
Annual Output | 200,000 tonnes per annum |
Start Year | 2008 |
Finish Year | 2018 |
Deferment of mineral extraction 12 years (ie delay until planning permission is obtained to extract minerals). |
Deferment of mineral extraction 12 years (ie delay until planning permission is obtained to extract minerals). |
Period of Operation | 10 years |
UP for 10 yrs @ 4% | 8.1109 |
Value per tonne | £2 tonne as at 1996 |
Prospect of Planning | |
Permission | 80% |
Calculation £2 x 200,000 x 0.6245970 x 8.1109 x 0.80 £1,621,134 |
Calculation £2 x 200,000 x 0.6245970 x 8.1109 x 0.80 £1,621,134 |
Extension Area 1 | Extension Area 1 |
Quantity | 700,000 tonnes |
Annual Output | 175,000 tonnes per annum |
Start Year | 2019 |
Finish Year | 2023 |
Deferment of mineral extraction 23 years (ie delay until planning permission is obtained to extract minerals). |
Deferment of mineral extraction 23 years (ie delay until planning permission is obtained to extract minerals). |
PV of £1 for 23 yrs @ 4% | 0.4057263 |
Period of Operation | 4 years |
YP for 4 yrs @ 4% | 3.6299 |
Value per tonne | £2 tonne as at 1996 |
Prospect of Planning | |
Permission | 64% |
Calculation £2 x 175,000 x 0.4057263 x 3.6299 x 0.64 |
£329,895 |
Extension Area 2 | |
Quantity | 1,500,000 tonnes |
Annual Output | 188,000 tonnes per annum |
Start Year | 2023 |
Finish Year | 2031 |
Deferment of mineral extraction 26 years (ie delay until planning permission is obtained to extract minerals) |
Deferment of mineral extraction 26 years (ie delay until planning permission is obtained to extract minerals) |
PV of £1 for 26 yrs @ 4% | 0.3606892 |
Period of Operation | 8 years |
YP for 8 yrs @ 4% | 6.7327 |
Value per tonne | £2 tonne as at 1996 |
Prospect of Planning | |
Permission | 32% |
Calculation £2 x 188,000 x 0.3606892x 6.7327 x 0.32 |
£292,186 |
Extension Area 3 | Extension Area 3 |
Quantity | 1,500,000 tonnes |
Annual Output | 214,000 tonnes per annum |
Start Year | 2031 |
Finish Year | 2038 |
Deferment of mineral extraction 35 years (ie delay until planning permission is obtained to extract minerals) |
Deferment of mineral extraction 35 years (ie delay until planning permission is obtained to extract minerals) |
PV of £1 for 35 yrs @ 4% | 0.2534155 |
Period of Operation | 7 years |
YP for 7 yrs @ 4% | 6.0021 |
Value per tonne | £2 tonne as at 1996 |
Prospect of Planning | |
Permission | 16% |
Calculation £2 x 214,000 x 0.2534155 x 6.0021 x 0.16 |
£104,159 |
Total of claims for severance | Total of claims for severance |
Central Area | £1,621,134 |
Extension 1 | £329,895 |
Extension 2 | £292,186 |
Extension 3 | £104,159 |
Total severance/injurious affection claim £2,347,374 |
Total severance/injurious affection claim £2,347,374 |
TOTALS OF CLAIM |
|
LAND TAKEN |
Minerals £995,860 |
Surface Value £104,453 | |
£1,100,313 | |
SEVERANCE/INJURIOUS AFFECTION £2,347,374 | SEVERANCE/INJURIOUS AFFECTION £2,347,374 |
TOTAL CLAIM |
£3,447,687 |
Appendix 2
Land at Barge and Amerden Farms, Taplow, Bucks
Alternative Quarry Valuation of Land Acquired
by M J S Banton, BSc, MRICS, AMIQ
Royalty | £2/tonne | ||
Annual Sales |
150,000 tonnes |
||
Annual Income = |
Royalty x Annual Sales |
||
= | £2 x 150,000t = £300,000 | ||
Reserves = | 550,000 tonnes | ||
Life = | Reserves = 550,000 t Annual Sales 150,000t/year |
= 3.67 years | |
Years Purchase |
3.67 years @ 10% |
= 2.9516 |
|
Deferred | 42 years @ 10% | = 0.0183 | |
Chance of obtaining planning permission | = 33% | ||
Valuation = | 2.9516 x 0.0183 x 33% x £300,000 | = | £5,347 |
say |
£5,300 |
Appendix 3
Land at Barge and Amerden Farms, Taplow, Bucks
Lands Tribunal's Alternative Mineral Valuation of Land Acquired
Assuming Mineral Planning Consent
Quantity 528,000 tonnes
Output 150,000 tonnes p.a.
Value £2 per tonne
Period of operation 3.5 years
Y.P for 3.5 years @ 10% 2.8284
Annual income: £2 x 150,000 = £300,000
Value: £300,000 x 2.8284 = £848,520
say £850,000