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Supreme Court of Ireland Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Supreme Court of Ireland Decisions >> Murphy v. Wicklow County Council [1999] IESC 83 (2nd December, 1999) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ie/cases/IESC/1999/83.html Cite as: [1999] IESC 83 |
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1. This
case concerns the Glen of the Downs in County Wicklow which is an area of
outstanding natural beauty and is designated as a nature reserve. A public road
runs through the Glen. The road widening scheme which has given rise to these
proceedings involves the construction of a dual carriageway for approximately
five kilometres. Around 0.68 hectares of the land of the Glen on either side of
the existing roadway is involved. Elsewhere the applicant has argued that the
works and development will irrevocably destroy the woodland of the Glen. The
respondent, on the other hand, takes the view that present traffic volumes are
too high for the road and they have raised safety issues. However, this appeal
does not involve issues as to the woodland, the environment of the Glen, road
traffic volumes or safety.
2. This
is an appeal by Dermot Murphy, the applicant (hereinafter referred to as
“the applicant”) from part of a decision of the High Court,
delivered on 19th March, 1999. It is unnecessary to relate an extensive history
of these proceedings as, while many issues were before the High Court, only two
grounds were argued on behalf of the applicant in the Supreme Court and these
raise technical legal issues.
3. Mr.
Paul Sreenan, S.C., counsel on behalf of the applicant, submitted that the only
reliefs being sought now were those in the statement of grounds at paragraph
D.4 and D.9 being:
4. He
stated that the relevant grounds of relief in the statement of grounds were set
out in paragraphs E.4, E.7 and E.13 being:
5. Wicklow
County Council, the respondent, (hereinafter referred to as “the
respondent”), brought a notice to vary the judgment of the High Court on
the grounds that the learned trial judge erred in:
9. Pursuant
to the powers conferred on him by s.15 of the Wildlife Act, 1976, by Statutory
Instrument No. 178 of 1980, the Minister established a nature reserve in the
Glen of the Downs. There has been no claim as to the validity of the Statutory
Instrument or the Act; both are presumed valid.
10. The
Minister has a duty under s.15(4) of the Wildlife Act, 1976 to manage the land
of the nature reserve so as to secure, as best may be, the objectives indicated
in the order having regard to and in accordance with the general protection of
the natural environment. Duties also arise for others, including local
authorities, such as the respondent, under s. 12(2) of the Wildlife Act, 1976.
However, those matters do not arise on this appeal. For decision on this appeal
are issues on net legal points.
11. The
first issue is whether or not the Statutory Instrument needs to be amended in
view of the proposed widening of the road. This requires that Statutory
Instrument No. 178 of 1980 be construed. Article 2(1) of the Statutory
Instrument declared that the land specified in paragraph (2) of that Article
shall constitute and thereby was established as a nature reserve. The
description of the extent of the lands within the nature reserve is set out in
the Statutory Instrument. The relevant words in Article 2(2) are:
12. It
is necessary to construe the Statutory Instrument to see what land is included
in the nature reserve. This may be determined by seeing what is excluded. It is
clear that excluded from the nature reserve is “any part thereof which
forms part of a public road.” This is clear language and can be
interpreted literally. The reference to the map in the article is a reference
back to the lands rather than to a road and thus Article 2(2) should be read as:
14. Thus,
the area of the nature reserve is delineated and excluded is “any part
thereof which forms part of a public road.” It is a territorial
definition of the nature reserve, however, excluded is any part which forms
part of a public road. The use of the indefinite article is important, the
description is of “a” road, not “the” road. Thus, a
public road is excluded from the nature reserve. The clear reference by the
indefinite article to a public road indicates that the Statutory Instrument is
not fixed to the public road of 1980. By the clear words of the Statutory
Instrument a public road is exempted from the nature reserve. Indeed,
16. However,
this does not mean any person can act with impunity. The Minister and the
respondent have duties under the Wildlife Act, 1976 in relation to the nature
reserve, for example the obligations under s.12. Murphy, J. in his judgment has
analysed some of the steps, including the consultation process, which have
taken place in relation to this nature reserve and the proposed road widening.
17. In
light of my determination on the first issue the second issue does not arise
for decision. The Statutory Instrument does not need to be modified, therefore
no question arises as to a time of modification.
18. The
only remaining issue is that raised on the notice to vary by the respondent
challenging the right of the applicant to apply to the courts to enforce the
Wildlife Act, 1976. The issue of the
locus
standi
of
the applicant was before the High Court and was determined in his favour. That
issue was not appealed. The third issue raised on appeal is as to whether the
courts, on the application of a person other than the relevant Minister under
the Wildlife Act, 1976, can entertain an application such as that of the
applicant to restrict Wicklow County Council’s intended roadworks on the
basis that they interfere with a statutory established nature reserve. This
issue highlights the unsatisfactory situation that a relevant Minister, the
Minister for Arts, Heritage, Gaeltacht and the Islands, is not a party to this
action. In light of my decision on the interpretation of the Statutory
Instrument and in view of the circumstances of the case it is not necessary to
determine this third issue.
19. I
conclude by determining that Statutory Instrument No. 178 of 1980 does not need
to be amended because of the proposed road widening and consequently the
applicant is not entitled to the declaration and order sought. I would dismiss
the appeal.
20. Wicklow
County Council has planned for nearly ten years to replace some five kilometres
of the N11 where it passes through the Glen of the Downs in County Wicklow with
a modem and much needed dual carriageway. The Council drew up all the necessary
plans. It has obtained the best professional advice. It procured detailed
Environmental Impact Studies and held public hearings partly by reason of the
nature of the works involved and partly by reason of the fact that the Council
initiated compulsory purchase proceedings in respect of lands required for the
purposes of the extended or widened roadway.
21. The
Applicant Appellant, Dermot Murphy, did not participate in any of these
inquiries or hearings but instead instituted proceedings by way of judicial
review against the Council
22. The
only matter debated before the Supreme Court was the effect of the Nature
Reserve (Glen of the Downs) Establishment Order, 1980, S.1.178 of 1980. (the
1980 Order)
23. The
1980 Order was made by the Minister for Fisheries and Forestry under
s.
15
of the Wildlife Act, 1976. That order declared the lands referred to therein
and delineated on the map annexed thereto
“other
than any part thereof which forms part of a public road”
to
be a Nature Reserve for the purposes of the Act of 1976. The N11 effectively
bisects in a north south direction the nature reserve so constituted.
25. The
Act of 1976 confers on the Minister very broad and generalised functions in
relation to the conservation of wildlife. The Act comprises 78 sections and a
number of schedules. Sections 1-12 are general in their application. Section 13
which provided for the creation of the Wildlife Advisory Council was repealed
by the Heritage Act, 1995. Chapter II of the Act of 1976 (which includes
sections 15-18) deals with the classification of certain areas of land for
conservation purposes. The bulk of the Act - sections 19-78 inclusive - deals
largely with the protection of wild birds, protected animals and flora and
creates a variety of offences concerning damage to flora and the killing,
exportation or injury of birds or animals of different species and at different
times of the year. In addition, the relevant Minister is given wide powers to
make regulations for the protection of various species of birds and animals and
the habitats in which they breed.
26. The
consequence of any land being constituted a reserve or a refuge under any of
the provisions contained in Chapter II of the Act of 1976 can only be
ascertained by an
27. In
addition there is what might be described as a concurrent condition. The
Minister is required to specify in the establishment order the reasons why a
nature reserve is being established and the object for which it is being so
established.
28. All
of that being said, the section does not of itself impose any obligation on
anyone other than the relevant Minister and on him/her it imposes two
obligations only, namely:-
29. Whilst
the key role of the Minister is to
“manage”
the
lands to which an establishment order relates,
s.
15
provides no definition or explanation of that word. This is a surprising
omission having regard to s.18 which, in subsection 7 thereof, defines the word
(but only for the purposes of s. 18) in the following terms:-
30. “(7)
In this section “management” in relation to land means use of the
land for agriculture or forestry, the carrying out of works on, in or under the
land, the making of any change in the physical, topographical or ecological
nature or characteristics of the land and the use of the land for educational
or recreational purposes.
31. The
powers and duties conferred and imposed on the Minister by
s.
15
appear to be very modest. They may be best understood by comparing the
consequences of orders made under that section with orders or agreements made
under the three subsequent sections.
32. Again,
one can see that the recognition order does not of itself impose any obligation
on anybody. It merely recognises the work of conservation which is being
carried on by an occupier of particular land. A recognition which will be
withdrawn or may be withdrawn if he ceases to maintain the lands.
33. There
is a fundamental difference between a designation order and either an
establishment order or a recognition order. A designation order may be made
where the Minister considers that a particular species of fauna should be
protected on land which constitutes a habitat of the species. A designation
order may (under s.17 subsection 9):-
34. There
are then provisions in
s.
17
enabling and requiring the Minister to compensate the occupier of the land for
the diminution in value of his lands caused by the protective measures
contained in the relevant order. In addition there is - unlike the previous
sections - an express provision (subsection 15) in the following terms:-
35. Again,
this section may be enforced. The Minister can sue on the contract entered into
by him and the section provides machinery under which the agreement may be
enforced against the successors in title of the landowner who enters into the
agreement. Like
s.
17,
the arrangement under the
s.
18
agreement may make provision for the payment of monies by the Minister to the
landowner by way of compensation for the obligation assumed by him under the
agreement. What may be more significant is that all four sections contain
precisely the same provision for the giving of notice by the Minister to the
Commissioners for Public Works, An Bord Pleanala and the local planning
authority as to the making of an order under sections 15, 16 or 17 or the
entering into an agreement under section 18 aforesaid. The common thread is
that all relevant bodies should be aware of the fact that the lands affected by
the orders or agreement have been classified as in need of, or suitable for,
conservation in one form or another. Such information might be of assistance to
the planning authorities in considering the desirability of making a
conservation order under s.46 of the Local Government (Planning and
Development) Act, 1963.
36. More
immediately, publication of this information is necessary to make effective the
provisions of
s.
12
of the Wildlife Act, 1976. That section provides that a Minister of State, any
local authority, the Commissioners for Public Works and any State or semi-state
company shall:-
37. It
seems to me that it is s. 12 aforesaid which provides the principal means by
which the legislature and the Minister secures the conservation of habitats and
ecosystems comprised in lands the subject matter of establishment orders,
recognition orders, designation orders or s. 18 agreements or at any rate the
avoidance as far as practicable of any interference with them.
38. No
doubt the Minister can in relation to designation orders and s. 18 agreements
exercise immediate and direct powers by invoking criminal or civil sanctions.
No such remedies are available in relation to sections 15 or 16. The reality in
relation to s.15
is
that the lands the subject matter of an establishment order are by definition
State lands. Indeed s.59 of the 1976 Act defines the lands in respect of which
an establishment order is made under s. 15 as a
“State
land nature reserve
“.
As the lands to which the Glen of the Downs order relates are not vested in the
Minster for Arts and were not acquired under s.56 of the 1976 Act the
39. Minister
for Arts does not have the title to exercise effective control over these
lands. If, for example, vandals were to trespass on the Glen of the Downs
nature reserve and take up residence there with the intention or the
consequence of damaging the ecosystem the Minister for Arts could not sustain
proceedings to eject them. She does not have an appropriate estate in the
lands. Such an action could only have been brought by the owner, namely, the
Minister for Agriculture. It may be presumed that where one Minister is given a
statutory power to manage State lands in the ownership of another Minister that
the other Minister would co-operate with his or her colleague in achieving the
statutory purpose. On the other hand it is clear that the function of
management cannot be wholly divorced from the ownership of the lands. This is
recognised in s.59 of the Act of 1976. That section gave to the Minister power
to make regulations permitting the public generally or any particular class or
section of the public to have access to various land including:-
40. It
would be noticed that regulations may only be made in relation to lands
comprised in an establishment order which is land owned by the State. More
particularly, subsection 8 of s.59 expressly provides that:-
41. To
that extent the legislature recognised expressly that regulations could not be
made conferring rights or obligations on or in respect to land in which the
State had no legal interest or which would survive the disposal of lands in
which the State did have an interest.
42. On
the 11th September 1991 the Council wrote a letter to the Minister for Finance
entitled
“Section
12, 1976 Wildlife Act”
and
expressly invoked the consultation procedure thereby required. Some confusion
appears to have arisen from the fact that the letter was addressed to the
Minister for Finance. I believe that the letter was correctly addressed to that
Minister but any confusion as to the responsible department is fully
understandable. In
Devlin
.v. The Minister for Arts
[1999] 1 ILRM 462 [FL378] I attempted to explain the devolution of the title
from the Minister for Lands to the Minister for Arts, Culture and the Gaeltacht
(subsequently the Minister for Arts, Heritage, Gaeltacht and the Islands) in
the following terms:-
43. However,
the Department of Lands became the Department of Fisheries pursuant to
Statutory Instrument S.I. No. 29 of 1977. The name of that department was
changed on 14 July 1978 to the Department of Fisheries and Forestry. By a
further change made on 19 February 1986 it became the Department of Tourism,
Fisheries and Forestry. By S.I. No. 82 of 1987 the name was refined to
“The Department of the Marine”. By S.I. No. 96 of 1987 the
functions vested in the Minister for the Marine under the Wildlife Act, 1976,
were transferred to the Minister for Energy. Subsequently by S.I. No. 156 of
1987 the powers of the Minister for Energy under the 1976 Act were transferred
to the Minister for Finance. Later still those functions were transferred from
the Minister for Finance to the Minister for Arts, Culture and
44. It
would seem, therefore, that the letter of the 11th September 1991 was correctly
addressed to the Minister for Finance and it did as a matter of fact initiate
the consultation process envisaged by s.12 of the 1976 Act. Before writing a
letter dated the 9th August 1995 the Commissioners had also received a
compulsory purchase order in relation to part of the lands comprised in the
Glen of the Downs nature reserve. In their letter the Commissioners referred to
that order and to the various discussions and consultations which had taken
place in relation to the Council’s proposals and the effect which they
would have on the nature reserve. The Commissioners expressed their views as
follows:-
45. The
Commissioners did, however, go on to advise of certain concerns which they were
anxious that the Council would take into account, namely:-
46. Finally,
in their letter the Commissioners expressed the view that a compulsory purchase
order was an inappropriate procedure to adopt but confirmed that they were
willing to hand over the lands in question to the Council.
47. It
is clear that the Heritage Act, 1995, under which the responsible Minister is
again the Minister for Arts, Culture and the Gaeltacht, overlaps to a
considerable extent with the Wildlife Act of 1976. They do have a similar
purpose and it is significant the Wildlife Advisory Council established
pursuant to the 1976 Act
(s.
13)
was wound-up and replaced by the Heritage Council created by
s.5
of
the 1995 Act. The functions of the Commissioners for Public Works in relation
to national heritage under the various Acts included in the table to s.24 of
the 1995 Act (and those included the Wildlife Act, 1976) were thereafter to be
performed by the Commissioners subject to the directions of the Minster for
Arts. This may explain why the correspondence between the State and the Council
in relation to the Glen of the Downs nature reserve concludes with
correspondence from the Commissioners in their capacity as
“the
Heritage Service”.
48. It
was ultimately the view of the Commissioners that the lands comprised in the
1980 Order excluded any part of a public road and that accordingly the proposed
widening of the existing carriageway would be a public road when built and that
accordingly no amendment to the statutory instrument was necessary.
49. In
my view the County Council invoked and complied fully with the requirements of
s. 12 of the 1976 Act. The matter was complicated by organisational changes
within the State agencies but there is no doubt that the consultation process
was initiated with the correct Minister and that the appropriate officers and
agents of the State reviewed, discussed and considered the impact of the
planned roadway on the nature reserve and were satisfied to approve the same
subject to the two provisions which they invited the Council to adopt for the
purpose of minimising or avoiding interference with the nature reserve.
Certainly the discussions and correspondence which took place met the
substantive requirements of s. 12 of the Act of 1976. If any error occurred as
to the designation of the particular agencies to whom some of the
communications were addressed (and I am not convinced that such was the case)
it did not affect the substance of the matter and the important interchange of
views which took place. A procedural error within that context would not
justify the Court in exercising its discretion to grant relief by way of
judicial review. It seems to me that the statutory benefits intended to be
achieved by declaring lands to be a nature reserve were obtained and there is
no further statutory embargo to Wicklow County Council constructing the roadway
by reason of the fact - if such it was - that the additional strip of road
would intrude into part of the nature reserve.
50. Furthermore,
I am satisfied as a matter of law that once those parts of the State lands
comprised in the nature reserve were validly and effectively conveyed to
Wicklow County Council the relevant Minister could no longer exercise any
statutory power of management or control over the lands which had ceased to be
in State ownership.
51. I
am satisfied that the 1980 Order did not require to be amended to enable the
proposed carriageway to be constructed but it may be desirable to redefine the
area excluded from the