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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> BP Oil UK Ltd. v Kent County Council [2003] EWCA Civ 798 (13 June 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2003/798.html Cite as: [2003] EWCA Civ 798 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM A DECISION OF
THE PRESIDENT OF THE LANDS TRIBUNAL
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE MUMMERY
and
LORD JUSTICE CARNWATH
____________________
BP OIL UK LIMITED |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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KENT COUNTY COUNCIL |
Respondent |
____________________
Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited, 190 Fleet Street
London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7421 4040, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Andrew Tait QC and Shourav Lahiri (instructed by Director of Legal Services, Kent County Council) for the Respondent
____________________
AS APPROVED BY THE COURT
CROWN COPYRIGHT ©
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Carnwath:
"On 12 March 1992 KCC made the Kent County Council A299 Thanet Way Dualling (Whitstable to Herne Bay) Compulsory Purchase Order 1992. It was confirmed with modifications by the Secretary of State for Transport on 5 October 1994. Included in the CPO as Plot 92 was the land that is the subject of this notice of reference. A petrol filling station included a large forecourt and a shop/kiosk. There was access to it from the A299 Thanet Way east of the Eddington Roundabout and from Canterbury Road to the south of the roundabout. To the east of the Thanet Way access was an area of woodland. Plot 92 comprised an irregular strip of land along side Thanet Way. It consisted of open land in front of the petrol filling station, the area of woodland, and half the width of Canterbury Road.
The purpose of the CPO was the improvement of the highway intersection by the construction of the new underpass with the roundabout above. A new slip road was to give access to the claimant's site. Notice to treat and notice of entry were served on or about 20 January 1995".
Before the Tribunal there was a dispute as to the date of entry. The Tribunal determined that the County Council entered the land pursuant to the notice of entry on 8th August 1995. There has been no appeal from that determination.
"This agreement is between Kent County Council (KCC) and BP Oil UK Ltd (Freeholders) for sale of land by the latter and its purchase by the County Council for the purposes of the A299 Dualling Scheme (Whitstable to Herne Bay Section) for which the Council has received planning permission and has made Compulsory purchase and Side Roads Orders. The Orders were confirmed by the Secretary of State for Transport on 28 September 1994 and Notice to Treat and Notice of Entry have been served by the County Council.
KCC accepts that due to the construction of the dualled roads, the Links Service Station will not be able to trade effectively unless the access and forecourt layout is amended and works of re-organisation and reinstatement are carried out within the boundaries of the existing property.
(1) BP Oil has prepared an agreed scheme and secured the necessary consents for re-organised facilities as shown on Drawings Nos LSS/2/D, LSS/3, LSS/10/A, LSS/20/B, LSS/30 and WD1 0852 and a contract for these works will be let to Dakin Service Station Contractors (the Contractors).
(2) KCC will transfer the freehold interest of the land coloured green on Drawing No. LSS40 to BP Oil UK Ltd to enable a revised access road to be constructed and will grant early possession of the land to the freeholders for this purpose.
(3) Upon KCC proceeding with the A299 Dualling Scheme the freeholders will:
(a) Yield up possession of the land shown coloured pink on Drawing No.7052/207 (which is required by the Council for incorporation into the highway) to permit construction of the new accesses to the re-organised facilities.
(b) Transfer the freehold estate in the land shown coloured pink to KCC with the benefit of vacant possession.
(4) KCC to pay to the freeholders by way of consideration for the loss of the land compensation to be agreed but assessed in accordance with the statutory Compulsory Purchase Code ie value of land taken, severance/injurious affection and disturbance (including temporary loss of profits if any) the cost of carrying out accommodation works together with legal costs in deducing title and making the conveyance of surveyors fees calculated in accordance with Ryde's Scale (1991).
The liability of the Council under this Clause shall expressly include payment of the sums quoted in a priced Bill of Quantities dated November 1995 (and attached to these Heads of Agreement) in respect of those items listed under the headings of "preliminaries", "landscaping" and "external works" together with such of the "prime costs, provisional sums and contingencies" as are actually incurred by the freeholders.
The Council shall additionally pay any sums which are not referred to in the Bill of Quantities but which are reasonably and necessarily incurred in carrying out and completing the works.
The specification and estimated costs of any such works to be agreed in advance between Kent County Council and the Freeholders.
The procedure shall be as follows:
[(a)…(f)… ]
(5) In the event of the parties failing to agree on the compensation to be paid the matter to be determined by the Lands Tribunal."
There was a further exchange of letters in June 1996 dealing with an error in the plan and incidental matters, but nothing in the argument before us has turned on that later exchange.
"Mr Nardecchia, in his supplemental further submissions, says that BP's submission -
'is that its statutory right to compensation is retained but in a form which is modified altered and extended by the terms of the agreement for the sale of its land. The claim therefore arises from the agreement as do the rights of the parties.'"
The Tribunal commented
"I cannot see how the contention in the second sentence follows from the first sentence. If the statutory right to compensation is retained but in a form that is modified by the agreement, the right to compensation necessarily, it seems to me, arises under the statute."
The Tribunal noted that Mr Tait, for the Council, accepted that, if the agreement "supplanted" the parties' statutory rights, the claim would not be statute barred. However he agreed with Mr Tait that this was not the correct analysis:
"Mr Tait submits, however, that the agreement did not supplant the parties' statutory rights. This is, he says, evident from the document itself, which recites the fact of service of notice to treat and notice of entry and refers to "compensation" rather than to the purchase price, making provision for the assessment of compensation in terms that did no more than re-state the parties' actual position in law. It is also evident, Mr Tait says, from the factual matrix in which the agreement was made. The purpose of the agreement was to provide for the accommodation works, and in the absence of the need to make this provision it would have had no purpose. I accept these submissions, and, as I have said, Mr Nardecchia's contention is not that the agreement supplants, but rather that it retains, the statutory right to compensation. What the agreement does is to make detailed provision for accommodation works and payment for them, but not to alter the claimant's statutory right to compensation. Of course the amount payable as compensation would have to reflect the agreement that the parties had reached in relation to the accommodation works and the transfer to BP of the small area of land for a revised access road. In this respect, however it was no different from any agreement between claimant and acquiring authority, after entry and before a Lands Tribunal determination, agreeing particular items of claim. It conferred no new right to compensation."
Lord Justice Mummery
Lord Justice Kennedy