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England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Hampshire County Council v Beazer Homes Ltd [2010] EWHC 3095 (QB) (29 November 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2010/3095.html Cite as: [2010] EWHC 3095 (QB), [2011] PTSR D8 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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IN THE MATTER OF a claim for a declaration as to the meaning of an agreement made under section 106 of the Town and Country Planning Act 1990 AND IN THE MATTER OF a claim under CPR Part 8 Hampshire County Council |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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Beazer Homes Ltd |
Defendant |
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Richard Phillips QC and Jeremy Phillips (instructed by Davies Arnold Cooper LLP) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 12 – 13 October 2010
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Crown Copyright ©
The Hon. Mrs Justice Swift DBE :
Introduction
The parties
The development project
The Section 106 Agreement
The obligations under the Section 106 Agreement
"To pay to [the claimant] on occupation of 350 dwellings the sum of £125,000 as a contribution towards traffic management measures in the vicinity of the Development Site and improvements to Cove Road and for no other purpose".
"(A) To pay to [the claimant] within 14 days of Implementation [a term defined elsewhere in the Agreement] the sum of £200,000 as a first instalment of a contribution towards the Fleet Inner Relief Road ("the Contribution").
(B) To pay to [the claimant] within two years of Implementation the sum of £900,000 as a second instalment of the Contribution.
(C) To pay to [the claimant] within three years of Implementation the sum of £500,000 as a third instalment of the Contribution.".
"(A) At any time prior to the completion of the Development [the claimant] may elect to use the Contribution or any part thereof towards such alternative transportation improvements in Fleet as [the claimant] considers to be of benefit to the public ("the alternative schemes") and [the claimant] shall account to [the defendant] for the cost of the alternative schemes PROVIDED THAT in any event the Contribution shall only be used for the Fleet Inner Relief Road or the alternative schemes and no other purpose."
"In the event of works on the Fleet Inner Relief Road not being commenced before the occupation of 1700 dwellings the Contribution paid by [the defendant] shall be refunded save for any part of the Contribution which may have been expended on the alternative schemes."
"[The claimant] shall following the completion of the Fleet Inner Relief Road or the alternative schemes as the case may be provide to [the defendant] such evidence of sums expended as [the defendant] may reasonable require and shall forthwith refund any unexpended balance of the Contribution to [the defendant]".
The progress of the development
The highway works
The continuing dispute between the parties
"10.2 Without prejudice to the other rights of [the defendant] where any dispute or difference shall arise between the parties to this Deed regarding any matter referred to herein any party to such dispute or difference shall be entitled to have the matter referred to the determination of an expert planning and development surveyor ("the appointed expert") having not less than ten years' relevant experience in the field of the matter in dispute and being a member of the Royal Institute of Chartered Surveyors [RICS] the identity of such person in default of agreement being an appointment made on the application of any party to such dispute at any time by or on behalf of the President for the time being of the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors."
"10.1 The provisions of this clause do not relate to any dispute or difference arising in connection with any matter covered by this Deed to the extent that the same is a dispute or difference as to a matter of law or concerning the interpretation of this Deed ..."
The proceedings
The defendant's complaints summarised
a) The amount of the defendant's financial contributions expended by the claimant on experts' fees and administrative costs in connection with both the Clause 4.14 and the Clause 4.16 works was unreasonable, disproportionate to the overall cost of the works and excessive by reference to the standards prevailing in industry, as well as being greatly in excess of the claimant's own earlier estimates;
b) In particular, the amount of the financial contributions used by the claimant to pay internal costs (namely the salaries of the claimant's own employees and other internal administrative expenses) was unreasonable, disproportionate to the overall cost of the works and excessive. Furthermore, it was wrong in principle for the claimant to use financial contributions made under a Section 106 Agreement to defray its own internal costs.
c) Certain items of expenditure related to sums which had not actually been paid out (although the claimant had entered into commitments to pay the sums to third parties) by the date when the 1,700th home was occupied and had not therefore been "expended" at that time. Those sums should have been refunded to the defendant;
d) In the case of some items of expenditure, the information provided by the claimant was still not adequate to enable the defendant to assess whether the relevant expenditure had been reasonably and properly incurred and whether it had been proportionate and used for the purposes specified in the Section 106 Agreement.
The claimant's response summarised
The issues to be determined
i) Should terms be implied into Clause 4.14 and 4.16 of the Agreement to the effect that the claimant's expenditure of the defendant's contributions must be "reasonably" (in the "common law sense") and "properly" incurred?ii) Did Clause 4.14 and Clause 4.16 of the Agreement give rise to the creation of a trust and, if so, what fiduciary duties were owed by the claimant and to whom?
iii) What is the meaning of "account" in Clause 4.16.2(A)? In particular, does it include a requirement to explain and justify the expenditure incurred?
iv) Should terms be implied into Clause 4.14 requiring the claimant to account to the defendant for the costs of the relevant works carried out pursuant to that Clause, to provide evidence of the sums expended and to refund to the defendant any unexpended funds?
v) Should terms be implied into Clause 4.16 providing that, if the claimant should (a) fail adequately to account to the defendant for the costs of the works undertaken pursuant to that Clause and/or (b) fail to provide such evidence of the costs as is reasonably required by the defendant, the claimant should be required to refund to the defendant that part of its financial contributions for which no sufficient account and/or evidence has been provided?
vi) How should the word "expended" in Clause 4.16.2 be interpreted?
In addition, both parties seek a ruling on the role of the expert appointed pursuant to Clause 10 of the Section 106 Agreement.
Implied terms: the law
"The Court… ought not to imply a term merely because it would be a reasonable term to include if the parties had thought about the matter, or because one party, if he had thought about the matter, would not have made the contract unless the term was included; it must be such a necessary term that both parties must have intended that it should be a term of a contract, and have only not expressed it because its necessity was so obvious that it was taken for granted".
"'Prima facie that which in any contract is left to be implied and need not be expressed is something so obvious that it goes without saying.'
Thus, if, while the parties are making their bargain, an officious bystander were to suggest some express provision for it in their agreement, they would testily suppress him with a common: 'Oh of course'".
"The court's function is to interpret and apply the contract which the parties have made for themselves. If the express terms are perfectly clear and free from ambiguity, there is no choice to be made between different possible meanings: the clear terms must be applied even if the court thinks some other terms would have been more suitable. An unexpressed term can be implied if and only if the court finds that the parties must have intended that term to form part of their contract: it is not enough for the court to find that such a term would have been adopted by the parties as reasonable men if it had been suggested to them: it must have been a term that went without saying, a term necessary to give business efficacy to the contract, a term which, though tacit, formed part of the contract which the parties made for themselves."
"In my opinion such obligation should be read into the contract as the nature of the contract itself implicitly requires, no more, no less: a test, in other words, of necessity."
In the same case, Lord Edmund-Davis said at 266C-D:
"The touchstone is always necessity and not merely reasonableness".
"When it implies a term in a contract the court is sometimes laying down a general rule that in all contracts of a certain type – sale of goods, master and servant, landlord and tenant and so on – some provision is to be implied unless the parties have expressly excluded it. In deciding whether or not to lay down such a prima facie rule the court will actually ask itself whether in the general run of such cases the term in question would be one which it would be reasonable to insert."
He went on to contrast this with the position with an individual agreement:
"Sometimes, however, there is no question of laying down any prima facie rule applicable to all cases of a defined type, but what the court is being in effect asked to do is to rectify a particular – often a very detailed – contract by inserting in it a term which the parties have not expressed. Here it is not enough for the court to say that the suggested term is a reasonable one the presence of which would make the contract a better or fairer one: it must be able to say that the insertion of the term is necessary to give – as it is put – "business efficacy" to the contract and that if it its absence had been pointed out at the time both parties – assuming them to have been reasonable men – would have agreed without hesitation to its insertion".
The test in the latter type of case was, he said, that of necessity.
"… it is not enough to show that had the parties foreseen the eventuality which in fact occurred they would have wished to make provision for it, unless it can also be shown either that there was one contractual solution or that one of several possible solutions would without doubt have been preferred".
Issue 1: Should a term be implied into Clause 4.14 and Clause 4.16 of the Section 106 Agreement to the effect that the claimant's expenditure of the defendant's contributions must be "reasonably" (in the "common law sense") and "properly" incurred?
The defendant's case
The claimant's case
"… the discretion conferred upon the council by the statute must be exercised reasonably …".
However, as the subsequent decision in Pickwell made clear, the word "reasonably" in that context is to be construed in the sense of "Wednesbury reasonably". In Pickwell, Ormrod LJ said at 1001B:
"The headnote to the report [in Roberts] is misleading because it suggests that the decision depended upon the unreasonableness of the exercise of the discretion and the excessiveness of the expenditure, that is, a quantitative rather than a qualitative test".
"The court's control over the exercise by a local authority of a discretion conferred upon it by Parliament is limited to ensuring that the local authority has acted within the powers conferred. It is not for the court to substitute its own view of what is a desirable policy in relation to the subject-matter of the discretion so conferred. It is only if it is exercised in a manner in which no reasonable man would consider justifiable that the court is entitled to interfere".
Ormrod LJ went to say:
"In my judgment, this passage should be regarded as definitive of the court's powers and should be adhered to in all cases in which it is claimed that an authority has misused its discretionary power".
"It is plain from these authorities that a decision-maker's discretion will be limited, as a matter of necessary implication, by concepts of honesty, good faith and genuineness, and the need for the absence of arbitrariness, capriciousness, perversity and irrationality. The concern is that the discretion should not be abused. Reasonableness and unreasonableness are also concepts employed in this context, but only in a sense analogous to Wednesbury unreasonableness, not in the sense in which that expression is used when speaking of the duty to take reasonable care, or when otherwise deploying entirely objective criteria …"
Mr Village argued that cases such as Socimer demonstrated that the principle in Pickwell is not confined to cases where the court was seeking to interfere with a discretion conferred by statute. It is also applicable to parties who have discretion conferred on them under a contract.
Discussion and conclusions
Issue 2: Did Clause 4.14 and Clause 4.16 of the Agreement give rise to the creation of a trust and, if so, what fiduciary duties were owed by the claimant and to whom?
The defendant's case
"The reality is that the planning obligation created by Clause 5 … involved, as it says, the "deposit" of a sum of money with the respondent to be held with the respondent for certain purposes. As the appellant themselves recognised, indeed argued, this creates a form of trust. The appellants remained the beneficial owners of the money unless or until it was drawn down, but were precluded from exercising their rights of ownership so long as the trust remained in place. It follows that their obligation was not merely to deposit the money, but to permit the respondent to use it for the purposes of the trust. It was, accordingly, an extant planning obligation at all relevant times".
The claimant's case
"This approach, which in my opinion is fundamental, has important consequences, because the nature of a public duty and the remedies of those who seek to challenge the manner in which it is performed differ markedly from the nature of a private duty and the remedies of those who say that the private duty has been breached. If a public duty is breached, there is a remedy of judicial review. There is no remedy in breach of trust or equitable account. The latter remedies are available, and available only, when a private trust has been created. The duty imposed on the possessor of a statutory power for public purposes is not accurately described as fiduciary because there is no beneficiary in the equitable sense".
"The latest case is Bromley London Borough Council v Greater London Council [1983] 1AC768. This again was an ultra vires case which involved difficult questions of construction of some obscurely worded statutory provisions … In so far as the speeches in the House of Lords dealt with the question of discretion, they affirmed Jenkins LJ's opinion in Prescott v Birmingham Corporation [1955] Ch 210, that local authorities owe a fiduciary duty to their ratepayers. As in Prescott's case, the existence of this duty was a relevant factor to be taken into account in determining the ambit of the statutory powers. However, it would not be right to regard this case as authority for the general proposition that this fiduciary duty opens up a route by which the courts can investigate and, if thought appropriate, interfere with any exercise of their discretionary powers by local authorities. This would completely undermine the principles of the Wednesbury case … and make nonsense of Diplock LJ's definition of the court's powers in Luby…"
"Some reliance was also placed on the fiduciary duty owed by Camden to its ratepayers, but this line of attack must have a very limited application, if any, in a case in which the local authority had ample authority to determine wage rates, were genuinely acting on that authority, and on their appreciation of problems and conditions with which they were confronted. The fiduciary duty, as I understand it, arises because the councillors are entrusted with ratepayers' money to use it for duly, that is legally, authorised purposes and not otherwise, much as trustees hold the trust fund, to apply it for the purposes authorised by the trust instrument, or by statute, as the case may be".
Discussion and conclusions
Issue 3: What is the meaning of "account" in Clause 4.16.2(A)? In particular, does it include a requirement to explain and justify the expenditure incurred?
The defendant's case
The claimant's case
Discussion and conclusions
Issue 4: Should terms be implied into Clause 4.14 requiring the claimant to account to the defendant for the costs of the relevant works carried out pursuant to that Clause, to provide evidence of the sums expended and to refund to the defendant any unexpended funds?
The defendant's case
The claimant's case
Discussion and conclusions
Issue 5: Should terms be implied into Clause 4.16 providing that, if the claimant should (a) fail adequately to account to the defendant for the costs of the works undertaken pursuant to that Clause and/or (b) fail to provide such evidence of the costs as is reasonably required by the defendant, the claimant should be required to refund to the defendant that part of its financial contributions for which no sufficient account and/or evidence has been provided?
The defendant's case
The claimant's case
Discussion and conclusions
Issue 6: How should the word "expended" in Clause 4.16.2(B) be interpreted?
"In the event of works on the Fleet Inner Relief Road not being commenced before the occupation of 1,700 dwellings the Contribution paid by [the defendant] shall be refunded save for any part of the Contribution which may have been expended on the alternative schemes".
The defendant's case
The claimant's case
Discussion and conclusions
The role of the appointed expert