[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
United Kingdom Supreme Court |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Supreme Court >> Adamson & Ors v Paddico (267) Ltd [2014] UKSC 7 (5 February 2014)) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKSC/2014/7.html Cite as: [2014] BLGR 249, [2014] 2 WLR 300, [2014] AC 1072, [2014] 1 P & CR 24, [2014] LGR 249, [2014] 1 AC 1072, [2014] UKSC 7, [2014] JPL 745, [2014] 2 All ER 1, [2014] WLR(D) 51 |
[New search] [Printable PDF version] [View ICLR summary: [2014] WLR(D) 51] [Buy ICLR report: [2014] 2 WLR 300] [Buy ICLR report: [2014] 1 AC 1072] [Help]
Hilary Term
[2014] UKSC 7
On appeal from: [2012] EWCA Civ 262; [2012] EWCA Civ 250
JUDGMENT
Adamson and others (Respondents) v Paddico (267) Limited (Appellant)
Mrs Gill Taylor (on behalf of the Society for the Protection of Markham and Little Francis) (Appellant) v Betterment Properties (Weymouth) Limited (Respondent)
before
Lord Neuberger, President
Lady Hale, Deputy President
Lord Sumption
Lord Toulson
Lord Hodge
JUDGMENT GIVEN ON
5 February 2014
Heard on 15 January 2014
Appellant (Paddico) George Laurence QC Ross Crail (Instructed by DLA Piper UK LLP) |
Respondents Charles George QC Philip Petchey Ned Westaway (Instructed by Public Law Solicitors) |
|
Appellant (Taylor) Charles George QC Philip Petchey Ned Westaway (Instructed by Public Law Solicitors) |
Respondent George Laurence QC William Webster (Instructed by Pengillys Solicitors) |
|
Intervener (Geo H Haigh & Co Limited) Martin Carter (Instructed by Baxter Caulfield) |
LADY HALE, (with whom Lord Neuberger, Lord Sumption, Lord Toulson and Lord Hodge agree)
The statutory background
"'Town or village green' means land which has been allotted by or under any Act for the exercise or recreation of the inhabitants of any locality or on which the inhabitants of any locality have a customary right to indulge in lawful sports and pastimes or on which the inhabitants of any locality have indulged in such sports and pastimes as of right for not less than twenty years."
The first and the third might arise after the statutory deadline, whereas the second could not. In reality, however, provided that the local inhabitants continued to exercise their customary rights "as of right" for 20 years, they would be able to register the land as a "new" or "modern" green. But it was also possible for many other pieces of land on which the inhabitants of any locality had indulged in lawful sports and pastimes as of right for at least twenty years to be registered. This gave rise to several important cases deciding upon the requirements for registration as a new or modern green and on the consequences of such registration, many of them relevant to the issues in the two cases with which we are concerned: see, for example, R v Oxfordshire County Council, Ex p Sunningwell Parish Council [2000] 1 AC 335, R (Beresford) v Sunderland City Council [2003] UKHL 60, [2004] 1 AC 889, Oxfordshire County Council v Oxford City Council [2006] UKHL 25, [2006] 2 AC 674, and R (Lewis) v Redcar and Cleveland Borough Council (No 2) [2010] UKSC 11, [2010] 2 AC 70.
". . . if … (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 . . . the court deems it just to rectify the register."
Anyone may apply for rectification, although the owners of the land registered as a green are most likely to want to do so. There is no statutory deadline for making such an application. The question, therefore, once it has been decided that the entry on the register ought not to have been made, is the relevance of the lapse of time since the registration in deciding whether it is "just" to order rectification.
Betterment: the facts
Paddico: the facts
The scope of this appeal
The proper approach?
(1) Public law
"However, as is well known, there clashes with this principle of legal certainty another principle which is also of great value – the principle of legality which requires that administrators act in accordance with the law and within their powers. When they do things they are not empowered to do this principle points towards the striking down of their illegal actions." (para 16)
"Schiemann LJ's reasoning shows once again how distracting and unhelpful [section 31(6) of the Senior Courts Act 1981] is. It selects one element – time - of the many which may affect the grant of relief and builds upon it some of the many other possible factors which can – as the present case shows – be relevant. It also includes, delphically, detriment to good administration. How, one wonders, is good administration ever assisted by upholding an unlawful decision? If there are reasons for not interfering with an unlawful decision, as there are here, they operate not in the interests of good administration but in defiance of it." (para 32)
(2) Statutory limitation periods
(3) Laches
"A Court of Equity has always refused its aid to stale demands, where a party has slept upon his right and acquiesced for a great length of time. Nothing can call forth this Court into activity, but conscience, good faith, and reasonable diligence; where these are wanting, the Court is passive, and does nothing."
"Now the doctrine of laches in Courts of Equity is not an arbitrary or technical doctrine. Where it would be practically unjust to give a remedy, either because the party has, by his conduct, done that which might fairly be regarded as equivalent to a waiver of it, or where by his conduct and neglect he has, though perhaps not waiving that remedy, yet put the other party in a situation in which it would not be reasonable to place him if the remedy were afterwards to be asserted, in either of these cases, lapse of time and delay are most material. But in every case, if an argument against relief, which otherwise would be just, is founded upon mere delay, that delay of course not amounting to a bar by any statute of limitations, the validity of that defence must be tried upon principles substantially equitable." (pp 239-240)
"In order that the remedy should be lost by laches or delay, it is, if not universally at all events ordinarily . . . necessary that there should be sufficient knowledge of the facts constituting the title to relief." (p 241)
It is for this reason that Mr George accepts that there must be knowledge of the facts before delay can constitute a bar to relief.
Discussion
(i) Prejudice to the local inhabitants
(ii) Prejudice to other individuals
(iii) Prejudice to public authorities and the public they serve
(iv) Prejudice to the fair hearing of the case
Application in the Betterment case
Application in the Paddico case
Conclusion