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England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> The National Trust v Fleming & Ors [2009] EWHC 1789 (Ch) (17 July 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2009/1789.html Cite as: [2009] NPC 97, [2009] EWHC 1789 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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THE NATIONAL TRUST FOR PLACES OF HISTORIC INTEREST OR NATURAL BEAUTY |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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WILLIAM FLEMING AND OTHERS |
Respondents |
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Mr Tim Cowen (instructed by Burley & Geach) for the Respondents
Hearing date: 9 June 2009
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Henderson :
Introduction and background
"5.9 The land capable of growing such crops is referred to on the Agricultural Land Classification Maps as Grade 1 and Grade 2. Such classification is a small percentage of agricultural land in Sussex and nationally. The particular location has high quality daylight and enjoys a longer growing season than elsewhere in the UK. It is said to be ideal for growing salad crops, field scale vegetables and similar crops. These are grown mostly for national supermarkets.
5.10 Migrant labour is used, so far as South End Farm is concerned, to plant, irrigate and harvest salad crops. The demand for and usage of migrant workers in the Chichester area is high. As a consequence Chichester College provide training courses for migrant workers in this sector of farming.
5.11 The centre of this dispute is at Coopers Barn which is part of South End Farm. Coopers Barn is close to and east of the B2201 road which runs from Chichester to Selsey Bill. It is the site of former farm buildings of which there remains part of a brick and flint barn. On the eastern boundary of the farm buildings is a ditch. An area to the east of this ditch has been taken for siting caravans in addition to the site of the farm buildings. An electricity supply and water supply has been laid on.
5.12 Caravans, washing facilities, waste repository and parking areas occupy an area surrounded by a bund. There is also an amenity area.
5.13 In February and early March 2007, Dr David Chai, who resides to the north of the Coopers Barn site, noticed works were being carried out around Coopers Barn. He met Mr William Fleming who explained that the site was to house seasonal workers. Dr Chai contacted Chichester District Council and the National Trust. No planning permission had been granted for the site but on 7 November 2007 retrospective planning consent was issued by Chichester District Council subject to certain conditions.
5.14 The National Trust, mindful of their responsibilities, wrote to Mr William Fleming on 20 March 2007, requesting that he cease all works at the Coopers Barn site immediately. On 16 April 2007 the National Trust again wrote to William Fleming to the effect that they were of the opinion that the site constituted a breach of the Covenant which the National Trust held over the land. They asked for his proposals to remove the caravans and hard standing within 7 days.
5.15 Mr William Fleming completed the works to the site and migrant workers occupied the caravans and worked at the farm."
"nothing in the foregoing stipulations shall prevent the cultivation of the said land or any part thereof in the ordinary course of agriculture or husbandry in accordance with the custom of the country."
Section 69 of the Arbitration Act 1996
"(3) Leave to appeal shall be given only if the court is satisfied –
(a) that the determination of the question will substantially affect the rights of one or more of the parties,
(b) that the question is one which the tribunal was asked to determine,
(c) that, on the basis of the findings of fact in the award –
(i) the decision of the tribunal on the question is obviously wrong, or
(ii) the question is one of general public importance and the decision of the tribunal is at least open to serious doubt, and
(d) that, despite the agreement of the parties to resolve the matter by arbitration, it is just and proper in all the circumstances for the court to determine the question.
(4) An application for leave to appeal under this section shall identify the question of law to be determined and state the ground on which it is alleged that leave to appeal should be granted.
(5) The court shall determine an application for leave to appeal under this section without a hearing unless it appears to the court that a hearing is required."
The 1966 Deed
"of all those pieces or parcels of land at Donnington in the county of Sussex containing in the whole 846.543 acres or thereabouts (hereinafter called "the said land") and for the purpose of identification only delineated on the plan annexed hereto and thereon coloured pink."
The Deed went on to recite the power of the National Trust under section 8 of the 1937 Act to accept restrictive covenants, and the agreement between Mr Harris and the Trust
"that the said land shall be made permanently subject to the restrictions and stipulations hereinafter mentioned."
"In pursuance of the said Agreement and by virtue of Section 8 of [the 1937 Act] the Covenantor with intent and so as to bind the said land into whosesoever hands the same may come … HEREBY COVENANTS with the Trust … that he will at all times hereafter observe and perform the restrictions and stipulations contained in the Schedule hereto."
Clause 2 provided that any dispute or question which might arise between the Covenantor or his successors in title and the Trust as to the construction of the Deed or the covenants therein contained should be referred to a single arbitrator to be appointed by the President for the time being of the Land Agents' Society. The Land Agents' Society no longer exists, having merged with the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors, and the parties therefore agreed that the arbitrator should be appointed by the President of the latter institution.
"1. No act or thing shall be done or placed or permitted to remain upon the said land which in the opinion of the Trust shall materially alter the natural appearance or condition of the said land or which in the opinion of the Trust shall be prejudicial to the amenities of the said land or of the neighbourhood or to the Trust.
2. No caravan house on wheels tent or similar object shall be permitted to be or remain on the said land.
3. No new building or other erection shall without the previous written consent of the Trust at any time be erected or allowed to remain upon any part of the said land.
4. No mine or quarry shall be opened or worked upon any part of the said land without the previous written consent of the Trust.
5. No timber or timberlike trees shall without the previous written consent of the Trust be felled … PROVIDED ALWAYS that nothing in the foregoing stipulations shall prevent the cultivation of the said land or any part thereof in the ordinary course of agriculture or husbandry in accordance with the custom of the country."
The Decision of the Arbitrator on the Proviso
"7.4 Mr Leddington-Hill was the only expert witness called. In 2007 he advised over 35 producer organisations on their structure and operation including salad, vegetable, soft fruit, top fruit and glasshouse production in various parts of the country. He states that migrant labour is vital to current and future operations of many UK businesses. Mr David Kay also states that it is a necessity to have seasonal migrant labour for the continued existence and operation of the business. Mr Kay is a general manager with a farming company operating in Sussex, Berkshire and Surrey. He refers to a caravan site for workers in Surrey.
7.5 Mr Fleming referred to caravans located on other farms for migrant workers to enable them to work on these farms. Mr Brown confirmed that there are caravans on his farm for migrant workers.
…
7.8 The evidence supports the Respondents' contention that the local agricultural usage, customs and practice are to grow salad crops and in order to produce those salad crops there is a necessity for migrant labour. Migrant labour needs to be housed. It is custom and practice not only in the parish but also over a much wider area that those seasonal migrant workers are housed on the farms.
7.9 The evidence from all the Respondents' witnesses is, and they were not challenged over the necessity to use migrant workers, that to successfully grow these crops, in such a way that makes it attractive to the supermarkets, then migrant workers are an essential part of that growing process. They plant or sow the crop and they harvest the crop."
"… the ordinary course of agriculture must be taken to mean that which is necessary to carry out agriculture."
He then continued:
"7.17 It follows from the evidence of witnesses that, if migrant workers are not available to South End Farm, then the farm will not be farmed in the most efficient and economical way, that is growing crops to which it is best suited, in a similar way to others in the general area. The migrant workers are part of the process of cultivating the land. I hesitate to use the expression but they are human machines, used as part of the cultivation process.
…
7.18 If the migrant workers were not on site then the farm would unlikely be farmed in the same way; there would be a different system [of] farming. This would be a misuse, a waste, of a very valuable asset. It would not be " … the cultivation of the said land or any part thereof in the ordinary course of agriculture or husbandry in accordance with the custom of the country."
7.19 I therefore conclude that, the land upon which the caravans and ancillary offices stand at Coopers Barn, whether the site of former buildings or the newly created site, do form part of the land which is in the ordinary course of agriculture. Also, that both the land on which they stand and the caravans are necessary and benefit the proper cultivation of the land. Without them the land would not be farmed to its best potential with salad crops and consequently that would prevent cultivation of the land in the ordinary course of agriculture in accordance with the custom of the country.
7.20 The Respondents' case is proven so far as the Proviso is concerned."
(1) On the true construction of the Proviso, the question of what constitutes the ordinary course of agriculture in accordance with the custom of the country is a question of fact to be determined in the light of changing circumstances, and is not to be answered solely by reference to the circumstances which existed at the time of the 1966 Deed (paragraph 7.2).
(2) By 2007, the cultivation of salad crops on South End Farm was an activity undertaken in the ordinary course of agriculture and in accordance with the custom of the country (paragraphs 7.3 to 7.16, and in particular paragraph 7.8).
(3) The use of seasonal migrant labour is a necessity (my emphasis) for the cultivation of such salad crops, and it is the custom and practice in the area for such workers to be housed on the farms (again my emphasis) (paragraphs 7.8 and 7.9, and see also paragraph 7.17: "The migrant workers are part of the process of cultivating the land").
(4) The sole purpose of the disputed caravan site is to house seasonal migrant workers on South End Farm (paragraph 5.15; no other use for the site has ever been suggested).
(5) Accordingly, removal of the caravan site would prevent the cultivation of South End Farm (or at any rate the part of it which is used for growing salad crops) in the ordinary course of agriculture in accordance with the custom of the country (paragraph 7.19, and in particular the two final sentences thereof).
(a) that to place a caravan on a piece of land is not to cultivate that piece of land;
(b) that a vehicle on wheels plays no part in the cultivation of a lettuce;
(c) that the removal of the caravan site would, in any event, not prevent the cultivation of the land, but only make it less profitable;
(d) that cultivation of salad crops would not be impossible unless migrant workers were housed in caravans on South End Farm or other land subject to the 1966 Deed (for example, they could be housed in a nearby village); and
(e) that the arbitrator "took his eye off the ball" by failing to appreciate that the Proviso is concerned only with not preventing the cultivation of the land in accordance with the custom of the country, so a custom which does not prevent cultivation, but merely makes it less convenient or more expensive, is not within the scope of the Proviso.
Conclusion