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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 >> CPC Group Ltd v Qatari Diar Real Estate Investment Company [2009] EWHC 3204 (Ch) (07 December 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2009/3204.html Cite as: [2009] EWHC 3204 (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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CPC GROUP LIMITED |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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QATARI DIAR REAL ESTATE INVESTMENT COMPANY |
Defendant |
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Mr J Smouha QC and Mr A Twigger (instructed by Messrs Herbert Smith ) for the Defendant
Hearing date: Ist December 2009
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Warren :
Introduction
The SPA
"as may be varied or any new application which may be made for the development of the [Site] by or consented to by [QD] .."
"(i) .the Mayor has indicated that he intends to exercise his power to direct [WCC] to refuse the Planning Application ([one of the events amounting to] a "Deemed Refusal"); and
(ii) the Planning Consultant recommends to [QD] and [CPC] jointly that a revised Planning Application stands a better chance of a delivering a Planning Permission than the pursuit of an Appeal of the previous planning application".
a. to withdraw the Planning Application provided that it submits a replacement application with a view to securing the objectives of paragraph 5 of Schedule 4
"with all due diligence and expedition to meet the reasons for the Deemed Refusal provided that such changes do not go further than is necessary to meet those reasons for the Deemed Refusal otherwise the resubmission will be treated as a variation and the provisions of paragraph 5(c), 5(d) and 5(e) shall apply to the proposed changes"
b. to continue with the Planning Application where the Planning Consultant has advised that there is a chance equal to or better than evens of success of an Appeal.
Observations on paragraph 5 Schedule 4 SPA
The Mayor
Events following the SPA
"we have been informed by GLA officers that the Mayor is not happy with the scheme in its current form and has said that he would be inclined to refuse it (this is why they have been pressing for changes). We have had the same view on a confidential basis from the Deputy Mayor;
.there is little or no chance of approval on 18th June, a very good chance of deferral and some chance of refusal;
the chances of the current scheme achieving consent at appeal are good; and
it seems to us that a new scheme would be likely to carry political support at the local and strategic levels and so, depending of course on its precise content, would have an even better chance of achieving consent than the chances for the current scheme at appeal."
The disputes
Procedural history
a. Since the unilateral withdrawal was not allowed within the framework of the SPA, it fell to be treated as an election under paragraph 5(aa) giving rise to an obligation to pay £68.5 million. Alternatively, it was a breach of contract giving rise to a damages claim of £81 million.
b. CPC was willing to defer the enforcement of its entitlement and co-operate with QD provided that QD complied with the variation procedure in paragraphs 5(c) to 5(f).
c. The right to commence proceedings on 1 week's written notice was reserved in the event of no satisfactory response to the letter.
The proceedings
a. That there has been no Deemed Refusal (paragraph 50.1 of the Particulars of Claim).
b. That the Planning Consultant has not recommended to QD and CPC jointly that a revised Planning Application stands a better chance of sucess than an Appeal of the original Planning Application (paragraph 50.2 of the Particulars of Claim).
c. That QD has acted in breach of the terms of the SPA by withdrawing or causing PBGL to withdraw the Planning Application (paragraph 50.3 of the Particulars of Claim).
d. That QD has acted in breach of the SPA by failing to support the Planning Application and/or to pursue (and procure that PBGL pursued) the Planning Application (paragraph 50.4 of the Particulars of Claim).
e. That QD's breaches of the SPA and/or each of them are repudiatory of the SPA (paragraph 50.5 of the Particulars of Claim).
a. That the Planning Consultant has advised within paragraph 5(f)(iv) that there is an equal to or greater than 55% chance of an appeal succeeding (paragraph 51.1 of the Particulars of Claim).
b. Alternatively, that no advice has been given for paragraph 5(f)(iv) purposes (paragraph 51.2 of the Particulars of Claim).
c. In any case that the reason for the Deemed Refusal was not the negligence of CPC (paragraph 51.3 of the Particulars of Claim).
d. That, if there has been such a refusal, a declaration as to the reasons for the Deemed Refusal (paragraph 52 of the Particulars of Claim).
Discussion
a. Paragraph 5(d) would continue to apply although its exact manner of application in circumstances where the original Planning Application is no longer live may be a matter for debate. There is no reason why QD should be allowed to proceed as if, by wrongly withdrawing the original Planning Application, the constraints on any new application can simply be ignored. Of course, at present CPC does not know if there will be a reduction in Developable Area. But by the time it does, it will be even later in the day and even more difficult for it to obtain an urgent answer to the question whether the original Planning Application was validly withdrawn.
b. Paragraph 5(g) would need to be considered. Read literally, the paragraph does not apply: the Planning Application does not remain undetermined because it has been withdrawn. However, it cannot be right to allow QD to take advantage of its own wrong and to claim that paragraph 5(g) simply does not apply at all in these circumstances. It is at least strongly arguable that QD would have to implement paragraph 5(g) on the footing that the original Planning Application remained on foot. That requires it to refer the new application to the Planning Consultant as if it were a variation under paragraph 5(c).
c. I have already addressed the difficulty of construction which would then arise. On one view, paragraphs 5(d) and (e) are implicitly incorporated into the process (in which case the position is as under paragraph a. above). On another view, it is only paragraph 5(c) which incorporated into the process but then the new application may not, in accordance with the closing words of paragraph 5(g), be submitted at all. QD can then get rid of CPC by paying it £68.5 million under paragraph 5(aa); or it might argue that the mutual obligations of good faith oblige CPC to co-operate in obtaining a new permission. The extent to which such an obligation would compel CPC to agree to any particular proposal from QD must be a matter of considerable argument. Indeed, the answer to this may be that QD is obliged to resubmit the original Planning Application although there are no doubt many considerations to take into account in deciding whether this could sensibly be done. WCC may have a very different and less favourable view of the original scheme today than it did in June.
a. An application for a mandatory order (injunction or specific performance) requiring the original Planning Application to be resubmitted. As to this, he says that any such application would, to have had any prospect of success, have to have been made immediately after the original Planning Application was withdrawn. The application would, anyway, have been likely to fail (and would be even more likely to do so now) because damages were always an adequate remedy, resubmission was unlikely to be possible without harming the prospects of success and the longer the delay in applying for the relief, the greater the prejudice to QD of having incurred the cost of working towards the Proposed Planning Application.
b. A claim for damages but this requires establishing a number of factual issues which will not be determined by this action. For instance, there are initial hypothetical questions, which are not addressed in the Particulars of Claim, as to whether the original Planning Application would have succeeded and, if it would when that would have happened and whether the scope of the permission ultimately granted would have been reduced in a way which would have adversely affected the amount payable to CPC. Further, in assessing damages, a comparison would need to be made with the permission which would have been granted pursuant to the original Planning Application and the permission actually obtained at a date after this action should, on CPC's timetable, have been completed. Accordingly, at the end of the day, CPC might obtain only nominal damages.
"and in such circumstances [QD] shall either:
(iii) ; or
(iv) "
The Law
"any order for expedition involves a disturbance of the normal procedure of a case to be got to trial. It involves giving preference to one case in the allocation of court time over other cases; it also involves requiring the lawyers on both sides to give preference to the tasks of preparation of a trial for that case as over tasks of a similar nature in relation to the affairs of other clients."
This is an aspect which is of even more weight in relation to appeals to the Court of Appeal: see the remarks of Sir Thomas Bingham MR in Unilever plc v Chefaro Ltd. (Practice Note) [1995] 1 WLR 243, recognising that it was necessary to impose "a high threshold which a party must cross before its application will be granted" because of the potential disruption and unfairness to other litigants caused by postponing their hearing until after the hearing in a matter which was commenced later.
" .he has no particular locus to oppose expedition and to draw my attention to and emphasise the claimant's earlier different attitude to the timing of these proceedings."
Conclusion