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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 >> Winter & Anor v Traditional & Contemporary Contracts Ltd [2007] EWCA Civ 1088 (07 November 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2007/1088.html Cite as: [2008] 1 EGLR 80, [2007] EWCA Civ 1088 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE LANDS TRIBUNAL
N J ROSE FRICS
LP/49/2005
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE RIX
and
LORD JUSTICE CARNWATH
____________________
WINTER & ANR |
Appellants |
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- and - |
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TRADITIONAL & CONTEMPORARY CONTRACTS LTD |
Respondent |
____________________
WordWave International Limited
A Merrill Communications Company
190 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7404 1400, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Richard Colbey (instructed by Traditional & Contemporary Contracts Ltd) for the Respondent
Hearing date : Tuesday 17th July, 2007
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Carnwath :
Introduction
"Although the objectors are concerned about the effects of the new buildings on their amenities, they accept that it would be unrealistic to expect the Courts to order their demolition. Thus, the issue before the Tribunal is the amount of the consideration, if any, which should be paid to the objectors under section 84(1)(i)"
"(aa) that (in a case falling within subsection (1A) below) the continued existence thereof would impede some reasonable user of the land for public or private purposes or, as the case may be, would unless modified so impede such user…"
Subsection (1A) provides:
"(1A) Subsection (1)(aa) above authorises the discharge or modification of a restriction by reference to its impeding some reasonable user of land in any case in which the Lands Tribunal is satisfied that the restriction, in impeding that user, either—
(a) does not secure to persons entitled to the benefit of it any practical benefits of substantial value or advantage to them; or
(b) is contrary to the public interest;
and that money will be an adequate compensation for the loss or disadvantage (if any) which any such person will suffer from the discharge or modification."
Since the modification order was not opposed, the tribunal did not find it necessary to make any express finding whether the modification was being allowed under (a) or (b). However, it may be inferred from his findings on the compensation issue that he would have done so under (a).
[We note in passing that the layout of the amended provisions makes reference to the different parts somewhat awkward. We shall refer to what are in effect the two sub-grounds of ground (aa) stated in subsection (1A) as respectively the "limited benefit" and "public interest" grounds.]
"may direct the applicant to pay to any person entitled to the benefit of the restriction such sum by way of consideration as the Tribunal may think it just to award under one, but not both, of the following heads, that is to say, either—
(i) a sum to make up for any loss or disadvantage suffered by that person in consequence of the discharge or modification; or
(ii) a sum to make up for any effect which the restriction had, at the time when it was imposed, in reducing the consideration then received for the land affected by it."
As already noted, the claim before the tribunal was based on (i).
The tribunal's decision
"a variety of Victorian, Edwardian, inter-war and modern housing, comprising bungalows, detached, semi-detached and terraced houses".
The Winters' property was -
"one of a pair of two storey semi-detached houses erected in the 1930s. It has a net internal area of approximately 80m2…, it is approximately 5 feet above pavement level. It has a garage and an attractive rear garden."
"Until recently, the applicant's property contained a single detached house, arranged on two storeys and with a net internal area of approximately 206m2. The site sloped upwards from street level towards the rear and the front of the house was approximately 5 feet above pavement level. To the front of the house was a single garage and a carport capable of receiving two cars. Otherwise, the front garden contained a variety of bushes and shrubs. There was a large rear garden, containing a large amount of vegetation.
The two detached houses which have recently been erected on the application property have been designed in a similar style to the Edwardian houses on the opposite side of the road. That style is different from the immediately adjoining properties, Nos 93 and 99. The new houses are effectively arranged on three storeys and, in order to retain some consistency with the surrounding properties, the sloping site has been excavated at the front. The ground floors of the new houses are now at pavement level and the height to the tops of their ridges is not much greater than to the tops of the adjoining houses. The floor areas of the new houses, however, (212m2 and 179m2 net internal for 97 and 95 respectively) are significantly larger than those of 93 and 99."
"The objectors say that the retrospective modification of the restriction adversely affects their amenities. They no longer enjoy the benefit of a 60 feet tall Scots pine tree, formerly within their ownership at the front of their house. It was felled at the applicant's expense in order to prevent damage to the flank wall of the new house, 97, which was to be sited one metre from the boundary with 99; the original house was two metres from the boundary. The outlook from the front drive of 99 towards 97 and the new paved parking area in front of it is less attractive than the view of saplings which the objectors previously enjoyed as they walked up their front driveway. Moreover, the original house at 95/97 was partly concealed by a privet hedge. The house was long and low and painted white. The objectors were barely conscious of its presence. Its rear elevation was 3.6m in front of the rear elevation of 99. Consequently, when the objectors went into their rear garden and looked directly towards the left, they simply saw saplings; the adjoining house was some distance behind them. The rear elevation of 97 is now 5.1m further back than it was before. This means that the view towards 97 on entering the rear garden of 99 is now one of an overpowering brick wall. It also means that the rear garden of 99 is overlooked by 97 much more than it was by the original house, particularly from the window at second floor (or roof) level. The objectors make good use of their garden for gardening, relaxing beneath an attractive pear tree and from time to time playing games with their grandchildren."
"26. The objectors claim compensation on the basis of the consideration they say they would have received if they had been approached by the applicant before construction of the two new houses had commenced. The appropriateness of this approach was considered by the President in Skupinski. He reviewed earlier judgments by the Court of Appeal and concluded:
'On the basis of this authority I have no doubt that it would be open to me to assess compensation by reference to the increase in value that the playroom has given to Mrs Skupinski's land if I were to conclude that Mrs Hignett would suffer loss or disadvantage by reason of the modification of the covenant. Since, however, Mrs Hignett's entitlement to enforce the covenant derives from the covenant's ability to protect her land rather than from any reservation to her of the power to extract a share of the development value of the applicant's land, I would for my part seek if possible to assess compensation for any 'loss or disadvantage' she has suffered by reference to the effect on her enjoyment of her own land rather to the applicant's gain. Of course the assessment of compensation for loss of amenity, where such loss is not, or is not wholly, reflected in a reduction in the value of the land, must inevitably be extremely judgmental, but I would not regard the applicant's gain as a useful determinant of the objector's loss.' (para 22)
I respectfully adopt the President's approach in… Skupinski to the award of compensation in this case".
"... how the character of the area and the amenities would be affected by the modification of the restriction is not in my view to be judged by envisaging the worst that could be done without breaching the restriction and comparing it with what the proposed modification is intended to permit... In such a case as this, the provision, it seems to me, operates in this way. By preventing development that would have an adverse effect on the persons entitled to its benefit, the restriction may be said to secure practical benefits to them but if other developments having adverse effects could be carried out without breaching the covenant, these practical benefits may not be of substantial value or advantage. Whether they are of substantial value or advantage is likely to depend on the degree of probability of such other development being carried out and how bad, in comparison to the appellant's scheme, the effects of that development would be." (Paras 29-30, emphasis added)
"In the light of the evidence and my site inspection, I have come to the conclusion that the previous house on the application land would not have been demolished if the use of the site had been permanently restricted to one house. It is very possible that the house would have been refurbished and extended. Any such extension is likely to have been to the rear, but the northern flank wall would almost certainly have remained in its previous position, namely 2m from the objectors' boundary. In view of the sloping nature of the site, the construction of a rear extension would have involved an element of excavation, albeit less than that which has been undertaken to the front of 95/97."
[We have added italics in this passage and the quotations below, to indicate the various phrases used to describe the probability of the alternative. This is relevant to the 4th issue in the appeal.]
i) The view of the flank wall of 97 The tribunal thought this was, not because of the position or height of the wall, but because the trees and other vegetation within the application land, which formerly masked the wall, had been removed. They could have been removed without breaching the restriction, and "may well have been so removed at some stage". The removal of the privet hedge at the front of 99 was within the Winters' control and not dependent upon the erection of two houses on the adjoining plot. Accordingly, the increased view of the flank wall was not the result of modification of the covenant.ii) Disturbance during construction The temporary disturbance during construction was not "likely to have been very much greater than that which would have resulted from the construction of a large extension to the previous building".
iii) The removal of the large pine tree Of this the tribunal said:
"Similar considerations apply to the removal of the large pine tree in the objectors' front garden. Mr Winter said that, when representatives of the applicant asked him to agree to its removal in order to avoid damaging the proposed new house at 97 he was aware that, if he refused, the applicant would cut off a large number of the branches overhanging the application land. This would have resulted in the tree becoming dangerous as well as unsightly. He therefore felt that he had no alternative but to agree to the applicant's request. I accept that evidence. Nevertheless, it seems to me that there is a real likelihood that the overhanging branches would at some stage have been lopped by the owner of the application property, even if the former house had remained. Since the objectors are likely to have lost their tree even if the restriction had continued to be observed, its loss is not something for which they are entitled to be compensated."iv) Overlooking Again the tribunal compared the position if a rear extension had been built to the existing house:
"As I have found, there is a real possibility that, if the restriction had remained in place, the previous house on the application land would have been extended to the rear. If so, the rear elevation may well have been sited as far back as it is now, and possibly even further back. In addition, there may well have been a rear window in the roof of the extension; no photographs of the rear of the previous house were produced, but it is clear that the property had a small window to the front elevation at roof level. It follows that the objectors might well have suffered increased overlooking of their rear garden without any breach of the restriction occurring. They are therefore not entitled to be compensated on this account."
"It is most unlikely that the backfill problems would have arisen if the application property had continued to be restricted to one residential unit. Had the covenant been modified before the commencement of construction, there is no doubt that the compensation payable would have reflected the manner in which the works were proposed to be carried out. Now that the works have been carried out, it is appropriate for compensation to be assessed by reference to the loss or disadvantage which has in fact been suffered by the objectors. I am satisfied that the applicant's failure to deal with the backfill close to 99 in the same way as was done close to 93 has been the cause of significant apprehension to the objectors. In my judgment, the sum which would be required to compensate for this concern is £10,000. This sum shall be paid by the applicant, unless it provides the objectors with adequate assurance that the necessary strengthening works will be carried out."
"I order that the applicant shall pay the objectors compensation totalling £10,000. This figure will be reduced to nil if, within 28 days of the date of this decision, the applicant shall have executed a deed, undertaking to carry out pressure cement grouting to the backfilled area on the boundary with 99 Ravensbourne Avenue within six months from the date of this decision, such work to be carried out to the reasonable satisfaction of the objectors' consulting engineer, whose reasonable fees are to be borne by the applicant.
An order modifying the restrictions to permit the construction of the two houses presently on the application land will be made by the Tribunal provided, within three months of the date of this decision, the applicant shall have paid the appropriate sum to the objectors."
The appeal
i) Reasons The tribunal's reasoning was inadequate.ii) Share of development value The tribunal should have assessed compensation by reference to the additional development value released by the modification.
iii) Loss of influence The tribunal failed to take account of the fact that, by starting the works before the modification of the covenant, the company had deprived the Winters of the possibility of influencing the form of the development. (This was presented by Miss Collignon as one aspect of issue (ii), and we shall deal with it under that head.)
iv) Alternative development The tribunal gave undue weight to the prospect of alternative development on the application site.
v) Backfill problems The tribunal failed to compensate the Winters for the "significant apprehension" caused by the company's failure to address the backfill problems at an earlier stage.
Share of development value and loss of influence
The Winters' case
The authorities
"The defendants had committed a breach of covenant, the effects of which continued. The judge was not willing to order the defendants to undo the continuing effects of that breach. He had therefore to assess the damages necessary to compensate the plaintiffs for this continuing invasion of their right. He paid attention to the profits earned by the defendants, as it seems to me, not in order to strip the defendants of their unjust gains, but because of the obvious relationship between the profits earned by the defendants and the sum which the defendants would reasonably have been willing to pay to secure release from the covenant." (p 281H-282A)
"no logical reason why the basis of compensation awarded by the Lands Tribunal should be less favourable than that awarded by the Court by way of compensation although called damages"
He assessed the development value at £19,000, and fixed the compensation at £9,500, on the basis that "the most likely outcome of friendly negotiations would have been an agreement to split the development value equally" ( p 206-7).
"So, we come back to the question: what is the basis or proper basis of compensation? It is simply to make up 'for [the] loss or disadvantage suffered' by the borough council. There is no method prescribed by the Act by which it is to be assessed; it is essentially a question of quantum. It is however, to be assessed for loss of amenities, loss of view and so forth, which are things which it is hard to assess in terms of money… It is similar to compensation for pain and suffering." (emphasis added)
Lord Denning mentioned the President's reference to the Wrotham Park Estate case, in which a percentage of 5% had been used:
"The President looked at it in much the same way. He took a higher percentage. Instead of 5% he took 50%. He took the realisable development value and split it equally. That was, he said, fair to the parties. It was a method by which he was getting at the loss or disadvantage. I see no error of law in it. The loss or disadvantage is an intangible matter which is incapable of exact calculation in money, and he took a fair and sensible way of assessing it…."
Stephenson LJ said that the method for assessing compensation was not contrary to the Act or to authority. The modification had resulted in the council losing a benefit of "substantial value or advantage" for which they were entitled to "substantial compensation".
"I do not think that that sort of possibility of financial advantage is to be regarded as a "practical benefit" to the person entitled to the benefit of the restriction at all…. The subsection is concerned with practical benefits on the land in the nature of amenities and not with merely financial bargaining position which the person entitled to the benefit of the covenant could have used to extract money for his consent to a release or modification of the restriction even if the section had never been enacted." (p 284)
"in assessing compensation for loss of amenities, however slight, a substantial proportion of the development value should be awarded as compensation wherever the modification allows valuable commercial development to take place." (p 285)
i) Re Kershaw's Application (1975) 31 P&CR 187. In this case (before the Court of Appeal decision in SJC) the modification was allowed under the limited benefit ground, subject to conditions. The tribunal (Douglas Frank QC) awarded compensation in sums between £250 and £1,500, to four neighbouring resident-owners affected by the development of a bungalow. He accepted that loss of market value would not be an appropriate measure, because it would fail to take into account what he called "consumer surplus", that is "the loss peculiar to the occupier of a house, for example, the mere alteration in the local environment". He assessed that by asking himself "what would the owners, being reasonable persons, have accepted in friendly negotiation" ... p 190).ii) Re Fisher & Gimson (Builders) Ltd's Application (1992) 65 P&CR 312. (This was the decision relied on by the Winters before the tribunal.) A new house was built in contravention of a covenant, which the builder thought to be unenforceable. The objector, who was a neighbouring resident, was held to have the benefit of the covenant. Other potential objectors had received negotiated payments to agree to release the covenant. The objector claimed 100% of the developer's, which he assessed at £290,000. The tribunal (Victor Wellings QC, President) allowed the modification on the limited benefit ground, and indicated that he was willing to award compensation based on "a share in the development value… released". However, he rejected the objector's calculations as "misconceived", and awarded £6,000, based on a comparison with the sums paid to the other potential objectors.
iii) Re Kennet Properties' Application (1996) 72 P&CR 353. A covenant was modified under ground (a) (obsolete covenant) to enable the erection of 42 houses. The tribunal (HH Judge Michael Rich QC) awarded compensation of sums ranging from £5,000 to £10,000 to four objectors. Although he did not in terms take account of the released development value, he observed that compensation was awarded "to make up for any loss or disadvantage" suffered by the objector, and said:
"Such loss in the case of a long-standing resident with no intention of selling is not best measured by the diminution in the value of his property. His primary loss is the loss in the enjoyment of his property and the extent of it will depend at least in part on his own assessment of what it is that he enjoys… " (p 363-4)
"57…. it is important to keep in mind that tribunal decisions are not to be regarded normally as setting any precedent in relation to what must be essentially a question of fact and degree. However, one of the functions of a specialist tribunal such as the Lands Tribunal (made explicit by s 4(1)(b) of the Land Tribunal Act 1949) is to promote consistent practice in the application of the law to its specialist field. Unexplained inconsistency of approach may in certain circumstances amount to an error of law."
Skupinski and the present case
Alternative development
"… in judging the effectiveness of the protection provided by the covenants, one is concerned with practicality, not theory." (para 40)
It is important to note, however, that these comments were made in the context of decisions whether to allow modifications, not on the amount of compensation. In Fairclough the modification was refused, on the basis that the impact of the proposed development was "much worse" than the assumed alternative. Accordingly, the question of compensation did not arise.
"what alternative forms of development, not involving a breach of the restriction, might reasonably have been anticipated on the application land?"
He answered it by assuming for comparison purposes the refurbishment and extension of the original house, which he regarded as "very possible". As has been seen, various other terms were used to describe the degree of possibility or probability of various aspects of the alternative.
"There was no evidence that there was any prospective purchaser interested in remodelling and extending the existing property. The evidence from both parties was that the existence of a purchaser wishing to carry out this sort of work was unlikely, not that it was real possibility, very possible, or likely. The Tribunal erred in finding that the loss of amenity would have occurred even if works had been done within the scope of the covenant."
Backfill problems
"the value of the covenant in providing protection from the effects of the ultimate use, rather than from the short-term disturbance which is inherent in any ordinary construction project" (para 58).
Although the boundary problems in this case may have gone beyond the ordinary, it was for the tribunal to decide how best to deal with them as a practical matter, and whether in the circumstances any additional sum was necessary.
Conclusion
Note 1 Arguably, the statutory scheme, which allows for modification of a covenant (inter alia) in the public interest or where it is of limited benefit, is distinguishable from the common law position. In the statutory context it cannot be assumed in any negotiations that the covenant will be upheld without modification. The supposed loss of negotiating position which is the basis of the development value approach has to be looked at in that context. Since what has to be valued is the loss of the objector’s amenities, it is prima facie not helpful to approach that question obliquely by asking what a modification to the covenant adds to the value of the applicant’s development and then taking some indeterminate percentage of it. [Back]