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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Lands Tribunal >> Chapter Group PLC v London Regional Transport & Anor [2006] EWLands CON_87_2004 (25 January 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWLands/2006/CON_87_2004.html Cite as: [2006] RVR 242, [2006] EWLands CON_87_2004 |
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Chapter Group Plc v London Regional Transport & Anor [2006] EWLands CON_87_2004 (25 January 2006)
CON/87/2004
LANDS TRIBUNAL ACT 1949
COMPENSATION – Costs – Sealed offer accepted - S.4(1) of Land Compensation Act 1961 – s.3(5) of Lands Tribunal Act 1949 - Reasonable time for acceptance of sealed offer – Guidance as to form of sealed offer
IN THE MATTER OF A NOTICE OF REFERENCE
BETWEEN CHAPTER GROUP PLC Claimants
and
LONDON REGIONAL TRANSPORT (1) Compensating
LONDON UNDERGROUND LIMITED (2) Authority
Re: Commercial Freehold / Leasehold Land
9 & 9A St Thomas Street, London SE1 9RY
Before: His Honour Michael Rich QC
Sitting at Procession House, 110 New Bridge Street, London EC4V 6JL
on 19 January 2006
The following cases are referred to in this decision:
PurfleetFarms Ltd v. Secretary for Transport, Local Government and the Regions [2002] EWCA Civ 1430
Stanford Marsh Ltd v Secretary of State for the Environment [1997] 1 EGLR 175
Tague v Lancaster City Council [1999] 2 EGLR 103,
Miss Galina Ward Instructed by Barlow Lyde & Gilbert for Claimants
Mr David Holland instructed by Watmores for the Compensating Authority.
DECISION
"We write to let you know that the Compensating Authority London Regional Transport and London Underground Limited, are prepared to offer your client the sum of £60,000 plus your client's standard basis costs (to be assessed failing agreement) in full and final settlement of your client's claim under the above reference. This offer is made pursuant to Rule 44 of the Lands Tribunal Rules 1996."
On 26 September 2005 the claimant's solicitors replied
"We are instructed to accept the offer contained in your fax dated 2 August 2005."
There is no issue between the parties that by this exchange of correspondence they agreed the amount of the compensation due to the claimant for injurious affection by the works, and the sum of £60,000 has been duly paid. I shall refer to this agreement by exchange of letters as "the settlement".
"No doubt you will be preparing a draft Consent Order for our consideration and signature in due course. Please can you ensure that the draft Consent Order provides that the "compensating authority" should pay your client up to 2 August 2005 and that your client should pay the "compensating authority's" costs after that date."
That proposal as to how the costs should be provided for in a form of Order which both parties agree to be necessary in order to implement the agreement which they had made, if only in order to provide for the assessment of the costs agreed to be paid in case the parties failed to agree them, was not agreed.
"To enter into an arbitration agreement that the Lands Tribunal may determine, so far as is necessary in order to resolve the dispute between the parties, the meaning of the agreement entered into by the exchange of letters dated 2 August 2005 and 26 September 2005."
"Where ..
(a) the acquiring authority have made an unconditional offer in writing of any sum as compensation to any claimant and the sum awarded by the Lands Tribunal to that claimant does not exceed the sum offered …
The Lands Tribunal shall, unless for special reasons it thinks proper not to do so, order the claimant to bear his own costs and to pay the costs of the .. authority so far as they were incurred after the offer was made …" (my underlining).
The sub-section does not require that the offer should deal with costs at all. It operates if the sum awarded exceeds the unconditional offer "of any sum as compensation" (again my underlining). The offer must, however be unconditional, that is to say that it cannot be time-limited. Once made, it is open to acceptance even during the course of the hearing, and subject to the Lands Tribunal's finding special reasons for a different order (which in case of an acceptance in such circumstances, it well might) the costs consequences would follow. To construe the offer made in this sealed offer as being not only of those costs already incurred, to which the claimant would ordinarily be entitled, as to that extent a successful claimant, even if he recovered less than the sealed offer, but also of any further costs which might be incurred on an open-ended basis, in respect of which it is the purpose of the subsection to debar him from entitlement except for special reason unless he recovers more than the offer, is so far at variance with the purpose of the sealed offer as to be an impossible construction of it, unless the words used could bear no other meaning. On the contrary, I think that the natural meaning of "your client's costs" is those costs as already incurred and I so construe the settlement.
".. order that the costs of any proceedings before it incurred by any party shall be paid by any other party .."
and, in my judgement can make appropriate orders in respect of any costs, not the subject of agreement in the settlement. This is the procedure expressly dealt with in paragraph 20.6 of the Practice Directions dated 4th January 2005 in regard to Calderbank offers which, in my judgement, subject to s.4(1) of the Act of 1961, applies equally to sealed offers:
"Where an offer is accepted, the Tribunal retains jurisdiction over the costs of the proceedings except to the extent that these are covered by the agreed terms".
It is on the basis that these post-offer costs are not covered by the agreed terms of the settlement, that I will deal with them as a matter of discretion in accordance with Rule 52 of the Rules. But before doing so, I should refer to two decisions of Mr. P.H.Clarke FRICS, sitting as a Member of the Lands Tribunal, to which I was referred in the course of argument.
" .. the offer has two defects. First it was made too close to the hearing. … [The claimants] accepted the offer at the earliest reasonable opportunity (the first day of the hearing) and should have their costs up to and including that day."
"The second defect is that the offer is expressly stated to be exclusive of costs. In my view, it was reasonable for the claimants to defer their response until the question of costs had been clarified. The council could have included an offer as to costs in their letter, thus dealing with both outstanding issues. An offer during proceedings in this tribunal should have the dual purpose of settling the outstanding claim and compromising the reference. The general rule is that an acquiring authority should normally bear the costs of proceedings in the Lands Tribunal and therefore an offer that makes no reference to costs is defective in that respect."
I do not think that, in the context, Mr Clarke was intending to say that a sealed offer which failed to deal with the costs of the reference was defective as a sealed offer. It clearly is not, because the offer is required to be only as to the amount of the compensation. It is however defective as an offer whose acceptance would bring all proceedings to an end. In order to achieve that it would be necessary to make a fair offer as to costs either in the sealed offer letter or in a contemporaneous letter in the form of a Calderbank offer. The latter might be more appropriate when it would be appropriate to limit the offer as to costs as to time for acceptance, but where the reasonable period to allow for consideration and acceptance of the offer can be seen at the time of the offer, because a sufficient period remains before the time of escalation of costs immediately before the hearing, it would be sensible to include in the unconditional offer, an offer to pay the claimant's costs of the reference to be assessed on a standard basis if not agreed up to the end of a named reasonable period for consideration and acceptance of the offer. In my judgement it would be difficult for a claimant to argue that the period allowed for acceptance of an offer made under Part 36 of the Civil Procedure Rules, namely 21 days, was less than reasonable. If an offer so made is accepted after the expiry of such period, such offer would leave no room for the Tribunal to exercise a discretion in respect of that period, but there would be little room for argument that the claimant should be entitled to any further costs thereafter. Any risk that the claimant may incur costs unnecessarily during the period that would thus be available for consideration of the offer is met by noting that costs are recoverable on the standard basis only if they are reasonably incurred and are reasonable in amount and are proportionate to the matters in issue (see CPR Part 44.4). Moreover, for reasons which I will explain in deciding the award of costs in this case I would think that the authority should usually be entitled to its costs after that date.
"The general rule is that the successful party ought to receive his costs. On a claim for compensation for compulsory acquisition of land, the costs incurred in establishing the amount of disputed compensation are properly seen as part of the expense imposed on him by the acquisition. The Tribunal will, therefore, normally make an order for costs in favour of a claimant who receives an award of compensation unless there are special reasons for not doing so."
"As an absolute maximum we would argue, by analogy with the provisions contained in the Civil Procedure Rules, that a 21 day period should apply"
but there was no offer to agree costs on that basis. This is not, in my judgement, sufficient to constitute a special reason to make an order of costs in favour of the Authority, although as Miss Ward accepted the Claimant's position could not justify an award in its favour. In the absence of any proper offer on the part of the authority, the costs of disputing the order as to costs from the date of the settlement should therefore lie where they fall and there should be no order as to costs from 26 September, including the costs of the hearing on 19 January 2006, which it was agreed that I should deal with in this Decision without further submission.
Dated 25 January 2006
His Honour Michael Rich QC