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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Barratt Homes Ltd v DWR Cymru Cyfyngedig (Welsh Water) [2008] EWCA Civ 1552 (28 November 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2008/1552.html Cite as: [2009] Env LR 25, [2009] 11 EG 120, [2008] EWCA Civ 1552, [2009] JPL 1095, [2009] 1 EGLR 55 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
CARDIFF CITY REGISTRY
(MR JUSTICE WYN WILLIAMS)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE CARNWATH
and
LORD JUSTICE LAWRENCE COLLINS
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BARRATT HOMES LIMITED |
Appellants |
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- and - |
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DWR CYMRU CYFYNGEDIG (WELSH WATER) |
Respondent |
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Mr M Sheridan appeared on behalf of the Respondent.
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Carnwath:
Background
i) Alternative location Whether DCC was entitled to require the connection to be made at an alternative location, because of the prospect of sewer overload
ii) The 21 day limit Whether by serving its response outside the 21 day limit set by the Act, DCC lost the right to object to the connection at point X.
iii) European law Whether the answer is affected by the EC Directive on the treatment of Urban Waste Water (91/271/EEC).
The statute
"(1) Subject to the provisions of this section—
(a) the owner or occupier of any premises in the area of a sewerage undertaker; or
(b) the owner of any private sewer draining premises in the area of any such undertaker,
shall be entitled to have his drains or sewer communicate with the public sewers of that undertaker and thereby to discharge foul water and surface water from those premises or that private sewer.
(2) A person desirous of availing himself of his entitlement under this section shall give notice of his proposals to the sewerage undertaker in question.
(3) At any time within twenty-one days after a sewerage undertaker receives a notice under subsection (3) above, the undertaker may by notice to the person who gave the notice refuse to permit the communication to be made, if it appears to the undertaker that the mode of construction or condition of the drain or sewer is such that the making of the communication would be prejudicial to the undertaker's sewerage system
(4) For the purpose of examining the mode of construction and condition of a drain or sewer to which a notice under subsection (3) above relates a sewerage undertaker may, if necessary, require it to be laid open for inspection."
(i) foul water into a sewer provided for surface water; or
(ii) except with the approval of the undertaker, surface water into a sewer provided for foul water…"
Factual background
"No development should take place until a scheme of foul drainage and surface water drainage has been submitted to and approved by the local planning authority and the approved scheme shall be completed before the buildings are first occupied."
Section 106 -- history and case-law.
"…the regulations of that authority in respect of the mode in which the communications between such drains and sewers are to be made…"
The issues
Alternative location
"…it does appear to me that, wise as the words of subsection (1) may be, and for the moment ignoring the opening qualification, they do not confer upon an individual the right to connect his sewer to the water authority's sewer at any point which he may choose. In most cases, of course, the matter will be quite academic. There will be the water authority's sewer, going along the road; a new house is built in the road; and quite obviously and clearly the owner will expect to have a right to drain into that sewer, and it would be very difficult, assuming that there are no problems under the proviso to subsection (1), to imagine a set of circumstances where the water authority would be entitled to say that he must not connect to that sewer but to some other sewer. Even so, if the new house was built at a crossroads and there were available sewers in both roads, I can see no reason why the owner should be entitled to drain into the sewer of his choice if the water authority required him to drain into the other, which might, for example, well be a relief sewer expressly provided for the district because the other sewer was approaching capacity. Similarly, I see no reason why the owner is entitled to connect at point X rather than an adjacent point Y, if the water authority requires him to connect at Y. I think that I am only saying here in less felicitous language what has already been said in very much more forthright terms by Romer and Stirling LJJ, particularly the latter, in Wilkinson v Dina Powis Rural District Council [1903] 2 Ch 695…"
The 21 day limit
"Where a statute requires an act to be done in a particular manner, it may be possible to regard the requirement that the act be done as mandatory but the requirement had been done in a particular manner as merely directory…But that is not the case with a stipulation as to time. If the only time limit which is prescribed is not obligatory, there is no time limit at all. Doing an act late is not the equivalent of doing it in time." (p.738 c-f)
As has been seen, Mr Porten's position is supported by OFWAT.
European issues
"I do not interpret the measures required in respect of urban waste water "entering" collecting systems as requiring restrictions on entry. The obligations are to provide the required collecting systems and treatment and discharge standards. The result to be achieved is a compliant system and the wording and purpose of the Directive do not expressly or impliedly require restrictions on new connections in non compliant areas. It is not for the Court to introduce an obligation to prevent new connections in non compliant areas where that does not arise expressly or impliedly under the Directive or the Regulations."
Section 106 in context
Lord Justice Lawrence Collins:
Lord Justice Pill:
"The Environment Agency has confirmed they have no objection to the proposed development subject to drainage conditions. The applicants are in discussion with Dwr Cymru…whose formal comments on the application are awaited particularly with regard to sewage. If off-site infrastructure improvements are required, this could be addressed by 'Grampian' condition or by S.106 Agreement as appropriate and Committee will be informed of Welsh Water's response."
There is no doubt that the respondent did object to the proposal on sewage grounds.
"The proposed development would overload the existing public sewerage system. No improvements are planned within Dwr Cymru['s]…Capital Investment Programme. We consider any development prior to improvements being undertaken to be premature, and therefore OBJECT to the development. It may be possible for the Developer to fund the accelerated provision of replacement infrastructure or to requisition a new sewer under Sections 98-101 of the [1991 Act].
Reason:- to prevent hydraulic overloading of the public sewerage system, to protect the health and safety of existing residents and ensure no detriment to the environment"
"Until work had been carried out to improve the drainage in the area, to Welsh Water standards, work on constructing the housing development could not take place…In addition, the new site would improve the drainage network in the area, which was currently, in Welsh Water's opinion, at capacity, resulting in objections from that body to additional single dwellings utilising the existing drainage network."
"No development shall take place until a scheme of foul drainage and surface water drainage, has been submitted to, and approved by, the Local Planning Authority and the approved scheme shall be completed before the building(s) is/are first occupied."
The reason given is "To ensure a satisfactory method of foul and surface water drainage".
"We would recommend that the Local Planning Authority await finalisation of the foul discharge arrangements between the applicant, Barratt Housing Developments and Welsh Water prior to discharging condition 10 to ensure there is an agreed approach and sufficient capacity available to deal with foul flows from this site. Once the LPA is satisfied with foul water disposal arrangements, we can recommend discharge of Condition 10."
"However, after seeing a copy of the planning committee report and the comments and recommendations made at the meeting it is evident that the planning condition imposed reflects the discussion which highlighted that improvement works are required to the public sewerage system prior to this development communicating"
"I can confirm that, further to receipt of the above correspondence, Barratt's are in the process of investigating litigation of Welsh Water [that reference is to advice which leading counsel had prepared on the legal issue on which in the event this court has found in the appellants' favour]. I would therefore respectively request that condition 10 be discharged as a matter of urgency."
Order: Appeal allowed.