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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 >> Thorp & Anor v Abbotts & Ors [2015] EWHC 2142 (Ch) (22 July 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2015/2142.html Cite as: [2015] EWHC 2142 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
BIRMINGHAM DISTRICT REGISTRY
Bull Street, Birmingham B4 6DS |
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B e f o r e :
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John Richard Thorp (1) Elizabeth Belinda Thorp (2) |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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Timothy John Abbotts (1) Claire Louise Abbotts (2) |
Defendants |
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David Warner (instructed by Whatley Weston & Fox) for the Defendants
Hearing dates: 1-3 June 2015
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Crown Copyright ©
HHJ David Cooke:
Introduction
The facts
"3. Notices
3.1 Has the seller either sent or received any communication or notices which in any way affect the property (for example from or to neighbours, the council or a government department)?
If yes, please supply a copy.
3.2 Has the seller had any negotiations or discussions with any neighbour or any local or other authority affecting the property in any way?
If yes, please give details."
Both questions were answered "No". The first page of the form contains a statement that it "should be completed and read in conjunction with the explanatory notes available separately", but I was not referred to those notes. There is in the bundle a copy of a set of notes relating to the 2013 edition of form TA6, but it seems to me I cannot assume that these are materially the same as those in use in 2010.
"3 Notices and proposals
3.1 Have any notices or correspondence been received or sent (e.g. from or to a neighbour, council or government department), or any negotiations or discussions taken place, which affect the property or a property nearby? If Yes, please give details:
3.2 Is the seller aware of any proposals to develop property or land nearby, or of any proposals to make alterations to buildings nearby? If Yes, please give details:"
It may be said that this expanded language addresses more directly the sort of concern the claimants have in this case. However, neither the fact of alteration nor the nature of the changes subsequently made to this form can affect the construction of the version in issue before me.
i) Copcut Rise, an area to the North East of Oakwood Lodge on the far side of the A38. The nearest houses built on that site would be behind an earth bank and shallow screen of trees running along the A38, and were estimated to be about 250 or 300m from Oakwood Lodge.
ii) South Pulley Lane, an area of Green Belt farmland to the South of Pulley Lane, including land immediately opposite Oakwood Lodge.
iii) Yew Tree Hill, an area to the East of the Ridings estate presently consisting of farmland and open land used for amenity purposes such as walking. That site would front to Pulley Lane. The nearest point of any development would, Mr. Thorp agreed, be about half a mile from Oakwood Lodge.
"7.8 Droitwich Spa
Due to limited land being available within the existing built up area, nearly all the growth will need to happen outside the existing development boundaries. We believe there are some locations which meet our criteria without jeopardising the role of the Green Belt."
Two sites were referred to; Copcut Rise (said to be suitable for 1500 homes plus 10Ha of commercial development) and Yew Tree Hill (said to be suitable for 250 houses). South Pulley Lane was not referred to, no doubt because it was in the Green Belt. These two sites must therefore have been regarded as "preferred" options to some degree, though it is clear from the subsequent process that no decision had been taken and that the options identified might be changed.
"It was made clear that Yew Tree Hill was not a preferred option for the council. Concerns were raised as I recall about flooding and water retention… I was satisfied from this meeting that there was nothing of concern that might affect Oakwood. "
He also said that in response to questions about access to Yew Tree Hill if any development materialised, a planning officer was unable to give a specific answer but said that alternatives were being considered including a possible new road across fields. Although Mr. Abbotts said this specific point made him sure nothing could affect Oakwood Lodge, I do not see how he could have gained much reassurance from such a vague reply.
The sale process
"[the SWJCS] is being prepared in accordance with the Local Development Framework…[On] adoption in 2011 it will provide for the strategic planning framework for South Worcestershire…up to 2026… This will include allocated sites for significant residential and employment development… Further information on the preferred locations for development and emerging draft policies can be found via www.swjcs.org...
Alongside the SWJCS the three partner authorities are also preparing an Allocations Development Plan Document to identify smaller residential sites within towns and villages, along with other sites for development, eg hospitals, schools etc…" (p 417)
The solicitor did not apparently send the search results themselves to Mr. & Mrs Thorp, but sent an email on 10 September saying "Your searches have arrived with me today and are perfectly satisfactory". This suggests he was not aware of any anxiety expressed by Mr. & Mrs Thorp about possible nearby development, or he might have advised them to look at the JCS website to identify any that might concern them.
After the sale
Misrepresentation?
i) In relation to Copcut Rise, although no planning application had been submitted prior to the date of exchange, it was generally known, and certainly known to Mr. & Mrs Abbotts, that the land was one of the Preferred Options in the draft SWJCS process and documentation, that the relevant planning authority were minded to approve it for large scale development and accordingly that it was highly likely that such an application would at some point be made and approved.
ii) In relation to Yew Tree Hill, again no planning application had been made. The site had been put forward as a Preferred Option for development of 250 houses in the original version of the JCS and officers had as late as January 2009 been in favour of an increased allocation. However by some point no later than the end of 2009 the position of the planning authority had changed, probably in response to representations, such that it was not in favour of development on that site and was minded to adopt a policy that it be retained as open space. At some point the site was removed from the Preferred Options document; it is not clear exactly when though it may have been around the same time. Whether or not that had occurred by the date contracts were exchanged, the authority's change of position had occurred before then, probably in late 2009. Mr. & Mrs Abbotts had been told that was the case, and so had SOGOS, which was effectively dormant from September 2009 onwards because it knew the councils had accepted its case. Thus, although there was no formal policy in place to prevent development taking place, there was no likelihood that such development would be favoured, still less encouraged, by the planning authority.
i) That the following were "communications or notices affecting the property or the neighbouring property":
a) Public consultation documents inviting them to the meetings arranged by the JCS authorities on 27 January 2009 and 7 June 2010b) Other unspecified similar documents the court is asked to infer were received,c) The SOGOS flyer delivered in May 2009, andii) That the following were "negotiations or discussions with [a] neighbour or [a] local or other authority affecting the property":
a) The discussion with Mr. Kennedy in May 2009b) A discussion with Mr. Porter, the owner of a nearby house on Pulley Lane who made a witness statement stating that he had been approached in 2008 on behalf of Barberry Properties seeking to purchase his house. Barberry are one of the developers who later made the Yew Tree Hill application and so may have been seeking to acquire the house to facilitate road widening for access. However, Mr. Porter in evidence said that though he had met Mr. Abbotts and discussed possible development in the area in general terms, he had not mentioned the approach by Barberry. This allegation was not pursued further.c) Other unspecified discussions the court is invited to infer the defendants would have had with neighbours or the local authority.
i) Questions 4,5,6,9 and 10 deal respectively with guarantees, insurance, utility supplies, council tax liability, building works and expenses incurred at the property itself,
ii) Question 1 deals with boundaries between the property and immediately adjoining properties
iii) Question 2 deals with disputes "about this property or any neighbouring property" or complaints "about what [a] neighbour has done or not done". Insofar as such disputes or complaints are about neighbours, they could only be reasonable matters for a purchaser to enquire about if they were adjoining neighbours or, at most, the owners of property very nearby. If for instance the owner of Oakwood Lodge had officiously complained about, say, trees being cut down at a house 200m away that is not a matter which would be expected to affect a purchaser since it would not directly affect Oakwood Lodge itself and he would not run a risk of becoming involved in that complaint simply by virtue of purchasing the house the complainant lived in. Question 2.3 may be wider, in that it seeks information about complaints "about anything the seller has or has not done as owner", without limitation as to who made the complaint. Thus an officious complaint by a nearby householder about tree cutting at Oakwood Lodge may be relevant, since it relates to something done "as owner" and the complainant might be equally officious in future, but a complaint by the same person about, say, the seller's driving would not be.
iv) Question 7 asks about sharing arrangements for things "in joint use" or "used by neighbours". Examples given are a shared drive, drain or private road. The other parties involved are thus likely to be close neighbours and to have some direct property interest in common.
v) Question 8 asks about "formal or informal arrangements which the seller has over any neighbouring property" or "which someone else has over the property". The former could only reasonably be of relevance to a purchaser if he would be likely to need or wish to make use of the same arrangement in his capacity as the new owner, and so to be arrangements with adjoining or very near properties relating to the use of the property and not the personal activities of the seller. It would thus be relevant if the seller had (say) an informal arrangement with the Woodland Trust to have access to Oakwood Lodge over its land, but not if he had an informal arrangement to walk dogs on the land of a farmer a mile away.
i) Discussions with Mr. Kennedy, whether over the fence at Oakwood Lodge or subsequently at SOGOS meetings were not "discussions with a neighbour" engaging Question 3.2, because he was not a "neighbour" as that term is used in the SPIF. His own house was too far away for him to be considered a neighbour.
ii) Nor were they discussions "affecting the property", since Mr. Kennedy was not himself putting forward any development proposal that might affect Oakwood Lodge or acting in any official capacity to approve or permit any such development. He and his wife were keenly interested in opposing any development, but the mere fact that the possible event discussed will or may affect the property if it happens is not enough in itself and the nature of their interest does not make discussion with them any more relevant in terms of the effect of that discussion itself on the property than if it had been a conversation with a stranger in a pub.
iii) For similar reasons, any flyers or similar documents put out by SOGOS were not "communications… affecting the property" such as to engage question 3.1.
iv) Mr. Abbotts did however receive "communications" from the JCS authorities about the JCS process, in the form (at least) of the letter of 11 February 2009, and engaged in "discussions" with them in the form (at least) of his discussions with planning officers at the two public meetings he attended, such as were capable of engaging question 3.1 and 3.2.
v) As at the date of exchange of contracts however these were not matters "affecting the property", because for reasons expanded on below the reasonable person would have concluded, as I find Mr. & Mrs Abbotts did, that the likely development of Copcut Rise would not affect Oakwood Lodge and that the JCS process as it then stood was not such as to show any sufficient risk that Yew Tree Hill or South Pulley Lane would be approved for development.
Other issues
"I am of the view that any prospective purchaser of the Property would have taken note of the Yew Tree Farm proposals, so that despite this not being submitted as at 2010 the existence of the planning proposals would have a serious effect on the value of the Property… for the purpose of this valuation I anticipate that there is a strong likelihood that the proposals will be granted consent. In that anticipation, potential purchasers of the Property will be highly likely to be deterred."
This in my view shows that despite being reminded that he should look at matters as they were known in 2010, Mr. Paul was still doing so with hindsight. As at September 2010 there was no planning proposal for Yew Tree Hill, no planning application having been made. Insofar as it was known that there was interest in the site being developed, it was manifested only in that it had been put forward for consideration for strategic allocation in the JCS, and by that date the planning authorities had made known they were of the view that it should be rejected. There is no evidence that it was, or could have been, anticipated that notwithstanding this such an application would be made, or that if made it would be allowed on appeal. It is incorrect therefore to refer to the "existence" of planning proposals and unrealistic to say that in the circumstances at that date purchasers would have considered that there was "a strong likelihood" that consent would be given for development.