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DAVID HALSTEAD (For himself and others, the members of the Whalley Range Methodist Church Council and for the Custodian Trustees for Methodist Church Purposes) v. COUNCIL OF CITY OF MANCHESTER [1997] EWCA Civ 2555 (23rd October, 1997)
IN
THE SUPREME COURT OF JUDICATURE
QBENF
96/0077/C
COURT
OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON
APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
QUEEN'S
BENCH DIVISION
MANCHESTER
DISTRICT REGISTRY
(Mr
Justice Buckley)
Royal
Courts of Justice
Strand
London
WC2
Thursday,
23rd October 1997
B
e f o r e :
LORD
JUSTICE NOURSE
LORD
JUSTICE EVANS
LORD
JUSTICE WARD
---------------
DAVID
HALSTEAD
(For
himself and others, the members of the
Whalley
Range Methodist Church Council and for
the
Custodian Trustees for Methodist Church Purposes)
Plaintiff
(Respondent)
-v-
THE
COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF MANCHESTER
Defendant
(Appellant)
---------------
Handed
Down Judgment prepared by
Smith
Bernal Reporting Limited
180
Fleet Street London EC4A 2HD
Tel:
0171 421 4040 Fax: 0171 831 8838
(Official
Shorthand Writers to the Court)
---------------
MR
C GEORGE QC
and
MR
P KEENAN
(MR T COMYN 23.10.97 only) (instructed by the City Solicitor, Council of the
City of Manchester) appeared on behalf of the Appellant Defendant.
MR
A GILBART QC
and
MR
M HARPER
(instructed by Messrs Pannone and Partners, Manchester) appeared on behalf of
the Respondent Plaintiff.
---------------
J
U D G M E N T
(As
Approved by the Court)
Crown
Copyright
Thursday,
23rd October 1997
LORD
JUSTICE EVANS :
This
appeal raises two issues regarding a claim for interest on compensation paid by
an acquiring authority under the compulsory purchase legislation. The first
question is whether, and if so for what period, interest becomes due under
section 11(1) of the Compulsory Purchase Act 1965. The second is the date when
the cause of action for statutory interest arises, for the purposes of applying
the Limitation Act 1980, section 9(1).
The
facts
The
plaintiff sues on behalf of the Manchester and Salford Methodist Mission ("the
Mission") which in 1972 was the owner of two churches, one in the Moss Side
district of Manchester and the other in Whalley Range. These became known as
"site B" and "site C" respectively. Both sites were included within slum
clearance Compulsory Purchase Orders made by the defendants, the Manchester
City Council, in 1972. Notices of Entry were served on 9 June 1972 but entry
was not effected until 4 April 1974.
After
much discussion, it was agreed that a single replacement church would be built
on the Whalley Range site, site C, at the cost of the Council. Work started on
8 December 1980 under a contract between the Mission and the builders, and the
Council reimbursed the Mission for the sums that became due under that contract
and for associated professional fees and the like. The Council made 23 stage
payments in all, between 24 April 1980 and 6 November 1986, totalling
£718,420. The contract works were completed in February 1983, but the
Mission was able to begin using the new church in 1982. The parties' final
agreement as to the amount of compensation due was recorded in a letter (page
50) from the Council dated 25 November 1985.
They
failed, however, to reach agreement as to what further sum, if any, was due as
interest. The plaintiff's writ issued on 21 May 1990 claimed interest on the
sum paid (£718,420) from the date of entry until the date of payment
"namely the 6th November 1986", giving credit for each of the stage payments as
and when it was made. The total claim, up to the date of the Writ, was for
£783,949.68p. The Council raised a number of defences, including some
which were abandoned or which failed before the judge and have not been revived
on appeal.
The
trial took place before Buckley J. at Manchester in December 1993. There was
oral evidence on certain factual issues, as well as legal argument on the
issues now raised before us.
The
Council's view, ably presented by Mr Charles George Q.C., is that the Mission
has no valid claim for interest on the sums which the Council has paid for
reinstatement of the two churches, now combined in one modern purpose-built
structure on site C. The Mission was never out of pocket in relation to the
building costs, and the Council moreover has indemnified the Mission against
certain bank interest which became due when its account was overdrawn. There
was only a short period during which the Mission could not use a church, either
the old or the new building on site C, and if it had wished to do so, it could
have rented some other premises for use during that period, at a much lower
cost than the interest now claimed. This represents a "windfall" for the
Mission and it means, if the full amount is rightly claimed, that financially
it is far better off as a result of the compulsory purchase of site B. This
would be, Mr George submits, a breach of the fundamental principle of
"equivalence" which requires the acquiring authority to pay as much as, but no
more than, is necessary to compensate the owner for the loss of the property
acquired.
Mr
Gilbart Q.C. submits that the Mission clearly is entitled to recover interest
under the express provisions of section 11(1) of the 1965 Act; moreover, from
1974 until compensation was fully paid the Council had the benefit both of
possessing site B, which they re-developed for housing purposes, and of the
amount of compensation which they were already liable to pay, notwithstanding
that the amount of compensation was not established until 1985.
These
submissions are not directly relevant to the correct interpretation of the
statutory provisions, but they do underline why the amount of the claim is as
large as it is. There was an unusually long period between the Council's entry
into possession of site B (April 1974) and the agreement to build the new
church on site C (1980).
The
cost of rebuilding then agreed with the contractor was increased in the usual
way by escalation clauses in the building contract allowing for inflation
during the contract period, and the rate of inflation during that period was
notoriously high. So it comes about that the cost of reinstatement under the
1980 contract, as eventually agreed in 1985, was much greater than it would
have been under a contract agreed in or soon after April 1974. This highlights
a fortuitous element, Mr George submits, which itself provides a reason why the
present claim should not succeed.
Interest
Section
11(1) of the Compulsory Purchase Act 1965 provides as follows :-
"S.11
Powers of entry
(1) If
the acquiring authority have served notice to treat in respect of any of the
land and have served on the owner, lessee and occupier of that land not less
than 14 days notice, the acquiring authority may enter on and take possession
of that land, or of such part of that land as is specified in the notice; and
then any compensation agreed or awarded for the land of which possession is
taken shall carry interest at the rate prescribed under section 32 of the Land
Compensation Act 1961, from the time of entry until compensation is paid, or is
paid into court in accordance with this Act . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
(2)
The
acquiring authority may also enter on and take possession of any of the land by
following the procedure in Schedule 3 to this Act . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . (4)
Except
as provided by the foregoing provisions of this section, the acquiring
authority shall not, except with the consent of the owners and occupiers, enter
on any of the land subject to compulsory purchase until the compensation
payable for the respective interests in that land has been agreed or awarded,
and has been paid to the persons having those interests or had been paid into
court in accordance with this Act."
Reference
should also be made to section 5 of the Land Compensation Act 1961 :-
"s.5
Rules for assessing compensation
Compensation
in respect of any compulsory acquisition shall be assessed in accordance with
the following rules:
.
. . . . . . . . . . .
(2) The
value of land shall, subject as hereinafter provided, be taken to be the amount
which the land if sold in the open market by a willing seller might be expected
to realise :
.
. . . . . . . . . . .
(5) Where
the land is, and but for the compulsory acquisition would continue to be,
devoted to a purpose of such a nature that there is no general demand or market
for land for that purpose, the compensation may, if the Lands Tribunal is
satisfied that reinstatement in some other place is bona fide intended, be
assessed on the basis of the reasonable cost of equivalent reinstatement :
(6) The
provisions of rule (2) shall not affect the assessment of compensation for
disturbance or any other matter not directly based on the value of land :
.
. . . . . . . . . . . ."
Essential
to Mr George's submission is some understanding of the alternative bases for
assessing compensation under section 5 : rule (2) (open market value) and rule
(5) ("reasonable cost of equivalent reinstatement"). Rule (5) applies when
there is no general demand or market for land used for the purpose to which the
acquired land is being put (and would have continued to be put) and there is a
bona fide intention to reinstate (sc. use for the same purpose) "in some other
place". In such circumstances, there is no "open market value" for the land
for its continued use for the purpose in question, although it could be said
that the land itself has a market value, in the present case a mere £8000.
The measure of compensation may then be equivalent to the reasonable cost of
reinstatement, although in deciding whether or not rule (5) applies the rule
(2) open market value (for some other purpose) should not be ignored :
Harrison
& Hetherington v. Cumbria C.C.
(1985) 50 P & CR 396 at 397.
The
underlying principle of equivalence is clearly established by the House of
Lords' decision in
Birmingham
Corpn. v. West Midland Baptist (Trust Association Inc.
(1970) A.C. 874 where it was held that the correct date for assessing the value
and therefore the amount of compensation (unless previously agreed or assessed)
is the date of entry rather than, as previously supposed, the date of the
earlier notice to treat. This ruling was found to be necessary in order to
avoid great injustice to the landowner at a time of rising land values (per
Lord Donovan at 910 and per Salmon L.J. [1968] 2 Q.B. at 210-1).
Undoubtedly,
the same principle gives rise to the statutory right to interest under section
11(1). This is made clear by Lord Nicholls' speech in
Director
of Buildings and Lands v. Sheen Fung Ironworks Ltd
[1995] 2 AC 111 at pp. 125 and 139. Since neither the principle nor its
specific application in relation to interest are challenged in this appeal, it
is unnecessary to quote the relevant passages here.
Mr
George's submission is that there is no scope for a claim for interest in a
reinstatement (rule (5)) case. The acquiring authority pays for the reasonable
cost of acquiring other land which can be used for the same purpose as the
acquired land. The owner of the land is never out of pocket as regards the
costs of reinstatement, and if he incurs costs during the intervening period
between being deprived of the acquired land and obtaining possession of other
equivalent land, then he is entitled to recover these as compensation for
disturbance under rule (6). The situation therefore is quite different, he
submits, from "open market value" compensation paid under rule (2), where the
landowner clearly should be entitled to be paid the value of the land from the
moment he is dispossessed, for the reasons expressed in the
West
Midlands
case, and to recover interest as compensation for any delay in payment
thereafter. No question regarding interest arose in
West
Midlands
,
where "the claimants had been allowed to remain in possession on the terms that
they claimed no interest on the compensation and paid no rent" (Headnote,
[1970] A.C. at 875A).
The
appellants acknowledge that on a literal reading of section 11(1) the claim for
interest does arise ; the amount of "any compensation agreed or awarded for the
land . . . shall carry interest . . . from the time of entry until the
compensation is paid . . . ". If the claim is allowed on this basis, however,
the claimant in a rule (5) case receives a windfall benefit in excess of what
is necessary to compensate him for his actual loss, and so the principle of
equivalence is breached. The appropriate result can be achieved, Mr George
submits, in any of three ways, which in the circumstances is a proper
interpretation of section 11(1).
First,
by limiting the award of interest to an amount calculated by reference to the
open market value of the land, as if it was a rule (2) case. Even this would
give the claimant some additional benefit, because in a case of prompt
reinstatement he would suffer no financial loss at all.
The
judge rejected this submission on the ground that it would be inconsistent with
rule (5) to assess section 11 interest as if it was a rule (2) case. In my
judgment, he was right to do so, for the reason which he gave. Although regard
must be had to rule (2) in deciding whether or not compensation is payable
under rule (5), the decision or agreement that rule (5) does apply cannot be
re-opened, in my view, for the purpose of assessing what interest is payable
under section 11(1).
Mr
George's second submission is that the costs of reinstatement, which in fact
were incurred between 1980 and 1986, by reference for the most part to the
terms of a contract agreed in 1980, should be "discounted" to an equivalent
figure which would be valid for the date of entry in April 1974. Discounting
implies that the actual figure is reduced by the reverse application of an
appropriate annual percentage figure. This is therefore precisely equivalent,
if an interest rate percentage figure is used, to negativing an award of
interest in respect of the period between the date of entry and the payment of
compensation ; yet the right to such an award is what the claimant is given by
section 11(1).
The
judge held that this too would be "contrary to the clear words of section 11",
and again I agree with him. The appellants submit that he failed to appreciate
that the reason for the discounting was to seek to achieve fairness and
equivalence, and the pivotal role of the date of valuation i.e. the date of
entry in the context in which section 11 was enacted. This however merely
restates the windfall argument which, in my judgment, itself begs the question
whether section 11(1) does give the claimant a right to interest from the date
of entry in a rule (5) reinstatement case.
Finally,
Mr George suggests an approach which was not put forward below. This would
involve both discounting the agreed figure to a 1974 value and also deducting
"the difference between the compensation already paid and the discounted
amount". This seems to me, if I have understood it correctly, to deprive the
claimant twice over of the right to claim interest on the discounted figure in
respect of the period between the date of entry and the payment of compensation
which is given to him by the express words of section 11(1). I would reject
this suggestion also.
Mr
George referred a number of reported rule (5) cases where a claim for interest
may have arisen but was nowhere referred to (
Lane
v. Dagenham Corporation
(1961) 12 P & CR 374
Cunningham
& Ors. v. Sunderland C.C.
(1963) 14 P & CR 208 and
Trustees
of Nonentities Society v. Kidderminster BC
(1971) 22 P & CR 224) and to
Aston
Charities Trust Ltd. v. Stepney Corpn.
(1952) 2 P & R 289 where passing reference was made to the question of
interest in a Lands Tribunal judgment (see p.295). He did not suggest,
however, that there is clear guidance in any of the authorities on the issue as
to the application of section 11(1) in a Rule (5) case which we have to decide.
I
therefore would uphold the judge's ruling that the Mission is entitled to
recover interest in accordance with the express terms of section 11(1), that is
to say, on the amount of compensation which was agreed, from the time of entry
in 1974. The essential answer to the "windfall" objection, in my judgment, is
that the amount of interest depends upon the value given to the land by rule
(5) and the length of the period from the time of entry until reinstatement; in
other words, the period during which the claimant is dispossessed. During that
time, and possibly thereafter (how long the period continues is the second
question raised under this head), he has neither the land nor its value, and he
is compensated for non-payment of its value by the award of interest ; the
classic function of such an award (
Riches
v. Westminster Bank Ltd.
[1947] AC 390). It is relevant also that during the same period the
acquiring authority is free to use the land for its own purposes, and if the
appellants are correct it would also retain for its own benefit the
compensation due to the claimant for the land. In my judgment, that would
breach the principle of fair compensation or equivalence, rather than the
reverse, as Mr George submits. As regards the suggested discounting exercise,
to 1974, this overlooks the fact that discounting is the accepted method of
adjusting the value of money over a period, to take account both of inflation
and its earning capacity (interest rates). The discounted 1974 figure is not
the real equivalent of the amount agreed in 1985.
Period
Interest
is payable under section 11(1) "until the compensation is paid". The
compensation due in the present case was measured by the cost of reinstatement
(rule (5)) which was paid in instalments between 1980 and 1986. Meanwhile, in
October 1982 the Mission achieved practical reinstatement by moving into the
new church on Site C. Mr George submits that this marks the end of the period
during which interest should run. The Mission was reinstated in equivalent
land, and it had no liability for the cost of reinstatement against which it
was not entitled to be indemnified by the Council. The builders effectively
were paid by the Council direct.
The
fact remains, however, that section 11(1) provides that the right to interest
continues until the compensation is paid. I do not see how these express words
can be read as meaning "until reinstatement takes place". In a case where the
claimant has contracted with, and therefore is liable to, the builder of new
premises, he remains under that liability until the price is fully paid. His
right to receive compensation from the acquiring authority is independent of
his relations with the builder, and if compensation is due but unpaid, then
there is no reason why interest should not be paid as compensation for late
payment. Conversely, the authority has the use of the money until such time as
payment is made.
I
would hold, again in agreement with the judge, that the clear wording of
section 11(1) applies.
Limitation
Section
9(1) of the Limitation Act 1980 reads as follows :-
"(1) An
action to recover any sum recoverable by virtue of any enactment shall not be
brought after the expiration of six years from the date on which the case of
action accrued".
There
is no appeal from the judge's decision that this provision governs the claim
for interest made under section 11(1) of the 1965 Act in the present case.
The
issue raised before us was whether the Mission's cause of action accrued when
the amount of compensation was agreed, vis. 25 November 1985, or pro rata on
the date when each instalment was paid, vis. between 1980 and 1986.
The
writ was issued on 21 May 1990. If the former view is correct, then there is
no limitation defence. If the second view is correct, as the Council submits,
then the claim is statute-barred save as regards interest (to the date of the
final payment) claimed in respect of the last three payments, which were the
only ones made after 21 May 1984, six years before the writ was issued.
The
payments were described as "payments on account of compensation payable for the
property . . . . in accordance with Rule V of section 5 of the Land
Compensation Act 1961". It is common ground that no payment was made on
account of the claim for interest. This claim was raised when the amount of
compensation was discussed. The judge found that overall agreement on
compensation was not reached until November 1985. He also found that "the
question of the Mission's statutory right to interest, a legal point" was
expressly reserved at a meeting held on 29 January 1981. The Mission's
representative's note of the meeting was that the parties agreed not to hold up
reinstatement on this point which was basically a matter of law, and the judge
recorded that the Council's witness accepted the note "as likely to be accurate
and in accordance with his general recollection of what was agreed at the time".
There
is no finding that the parties agreed, at any time, to extend the time within
which interest might be claimed. No such agreement was alleged.
Mr
George submits that there was agreement by 29 January 1981 at the latest about
the base-cost of reinstatement, which would be adjusted in accordance with the
terms of the building contract up to such time as the final settlement took
place. He contends that each instalment was a part-payment of this amount and
that the Mission could have put forward an unanswerable claim for interest due
in respect of each payment as it was made.
In
my judgment, however, the statutory right to recover interest does not arise
until the amount on which interest becomes due is awarded or agreed. That is
the amount on which interest is payable, and the clear intention is that the
right to interest will compensate the claimant for non-payment during the
intervening period. The judge's finding that there was agreement on but not
before 25 November 1985 therefore precludes the Council from asserting that
agreement was reached at some earlier date. I would hold that the claim is not
statute-barred.
I
should also refer to correspondence which took place in July, following the
judgment of Mr Stanley Burnton Q.C. (Deputy Judge) in
London
Borough of Hillingdon v. ARC Ltd.
(unreported 12 June 1997). By letter dated 2 July, Mr George sent us copies of
this judgment and of the Court of Appeal's judgment in
Moore
v. Gadd
(5 February 1997, reported in The Times Law Reports on 17 February 1997) which
is referred to in it. These were concerned with the date when the cause of
action for compensation accrued. Mr Gilbart replied that his submissions were
not concerned with the right to recover compensation as distinct from the
statutory right to recover interest. He also submitted that the Deputy Judge's
judgment was wrong. Mr George by a further letter dated 16 July confirmed that
the right to compensation is not in issue in the present case and that he had
referred to the
Hillingdon
case only in relation to the narrow issue whether it is necessary for the
quantum of principal/compensation to have been agreed before time can run ; for
this reason, he did not reply to Mr Gilbart's submissions in detail. As
already indicated, the statutory right to interest arises, in my judgment, when
the compensation is awarded or agreed, and it then becomes payable in respect
of the intervening period after the date when entry occurred. That is what
section 11(1) says. The Deputy Judge's judgment and
Moore
v. Gadd
were not concerned with such a claim.
It
is therefore unnecessary to say more about these judgments than that we are
grateful to counsel for their further assistance.
For
the reasons given above, I would dismiss the appeal.
LORD
JUSTICE WARD :
I
agree.
LORD
JUSTICE NOURSE :
I
also agree.
Order: appeal
dismissed with costs; leave to appeal to the House of Lords refused.
© 1997 Crown Copyright
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