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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 >> London Borough of Southwark & Anor v Transport for London [2015] EWHC 3448 (Ch) (01 December 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2015/3448.html Cite as: [2015] EWHC 3448 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Rolls Building, 7 Rolls Buildings Fetter Lane London EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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(1) London Borough of Southwark (2) City of London Corporation |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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Transport for London |
Defendant |
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Mr Timothy Morshead QC and Mr Charles Banner (instructed by Wragge Lawrence Graham & Co LLP) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 21st and 22nd October 2015
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Mann :
Introduction
"2 Property etc transferred in relation to GLA roads
(1) Subject to paragraph (2) and article 4 below, on the operative date there are hereby transferred to Transport for London in relation to each GLA road—
(a) the highway, in so far as it is vested in the former highway authority;
(b) the property mentioned in paragraph (3) in so far as, on the designation date, it was vested—
(i) in the former highway authority for the purposes of their highway functions in relation to the GLA road, or
(ii) in the former highway authority for the purposes of functions in relation to the GLA road under sections 6 (traffic regulation), 9 (experimental traffic orders), 23 and 24 (pedestrian crossings) and 85 (speed restriction signs) of the Road Traffic Regulation Act 1984;
(c) all liabilities incurred by a former highway authority for the purposes of their functions in relation to the GLA road and not discharged before the operative date, other than loans and loan charges.
(2) There is not transferred by virtue of this article—
(a) any right or liability of a relevant authority in respect of—
(i) work done, services rendered, goods delivered, or money due for payment, before the operative date;
(ii) damages or compensation for any act or omission before that date;"
(iii) the price of, or compensation for, any land purchased, or for which a contract to purchase has been concluded, before that date; or
(b) any copyright held by the Crown; [or
(c) all property of the Secretary of State comprised in and relating to College Farm, Fitzalan Road (including 47 and 49 Fitzalan Road), Finchley, London N3 3PG as the same is registered at HM Land Registry with title absolute under Title Numbers MX141872 and NGL 244982].
(3) The property referred to in paragraph (1)(b) is—
(a) land, other than land—
(i) vested in the former highway authority for the purpose of being used for the storage of materials required wholly or mainly for the maintenance and improvement of other highways; or
(ii) where the former highway authority is a relevant authority, held by that authority for the improvement or development of frontages to the highway, or of land adjoining or adjacent to the highway; and
(b) all other property held in connection with the GLA road (including the unexpended balances of any grants paid by the Secretary of State to any relevant authority for the purposes of their functions in relation to the highway) other than materials to be used for the maintenance or improvement of the highway, and the unexpended balances of any loans raised by the former highway authority, or by any relevant authority for the purposes of its functions in relation to the highway."
The usual ownership of a highway authority
"263 Vesting of highways maintainable at public expense
(1) Subject to the provision of this section, every highway maintainable at the public expense, together with the materials and scrapings of it, vests in the authority who are for the time being the highway authority for the highway.
(2) Subsection (1) above does not apply—
(a) to a highway with respect to the vesting of which, on its becoming or ceasing to be a trunk road, provision is made by section 265 below …"
"The statute of 1929 vested in the local authority the top spit, or, perhaps, I should say, the top two spits, of the road for a legal estate in fee simple determinable in the event of its ceasing to be a public highway."
A "spit" is a spade's depth.
"It is contended that the rights of the plaintiffs are being interfered with, and this is put in two ways. It is said, first, that these electric wires are only two feet beneath the surface of the street - that is, under the foot pavement of it, and that the subsoil of the street, for the depth of at least two feet, is vested in the plaintiffs. If that is so, of course the plaintiffs are right, and this is a continuing trespass and violation of their rights of ownership. But it seems to me that the answer to that is to be found in Tunbridge Wells Corporation v. Baird … If that is so, if the pavement which the plaintiffs have vested in them carries with it only so much of the soil under this street as falls within that definition, they clearly cannot maintain this action as owners of the soil under the pavement. If that is so, one of the most formidable grounds upon which the plaintiffs base their case is disposed of."
"My Lords, it seems to me that the vesting of the street vests in the urban authority such property and such property only as is necessary for the control, protection, and maintenance of the street as a highway for public use."
The arbitrators questions and his answers.
"2. In relation to the Southwark Roads and the CoL Roads, upon the true interpretation of the Highways Act 1980, the Designation Order and the Transfer Order, as of 3rd July 2000 was there, or did there then become vested in the Claimant, highway under Article 2(1)(a) or other property under Article 2(1)(b) of the Transfer Order:
(a) only to the extent pleaded in paragraph 15 of the First Defendant's Points of Defence and only to the extent pleaded in paragraphs 20-21 in the Second Defendant's Points of Defence (as the Defendants contend); or
(b) those interests as well as all other interests of the Defendants in the Southwark Roads and CoL Roads respectively including any interest in their subsoil (including under legal ownership or under ad medium filum as a result of the Defendants' ownership of land adjoining the Southwark Roads and the CoL Road as applicable) and airspace (as the Claimant contends)?
Including:
(i) What was the extent in the horizontal plane of the interest of the Defendants which passed to the Claimant in relation to the Southwark Roads and CoL Roads?
(ii) What was the extent in the vertical plane of the interest of the Defendants which passed to the Claimant in relation to the Southwark Roads and CoL Roads?"
"15. For the purposes of ss. 14A-14D of the 1980 Act (as added by the 1999 Act) and for the purposes of the of the 2000 order:
(1) "highway" has the same meaning as it carries under the 1980 Act and in the general law (see s. 263(1) of the 1980 Act). It follows that what vested in TfL as GLA Road was the "top two spits" together with the materials and scrapings;
(2) The subsoil beneath any highway transferred as GLA Road does not vest in TfL except such as may be necessary for the reasonable exercise by the highway authority of its duties and powers as highway authority;
(3) The airspace above any highway transferred as GLA Road does not vest in TfL other than that necessary for the operation of the highway as highway and the reasonable exercise by the highway authority of its duties and powers as highway authority;
(4) The horizontal extent of highways transferred to TfL as GLA Road did not exceed the extent of the highways immediately prior to their vesting in TfL, applying the meaning of highway within the 1980 Act and general law."
"265. I determine these issues as follows:
2. So far as concerns the GLA Roads and subject to my decision on issue 3 in relation to the City:
(1) Vertical plane:
(a) the top two spits of the highway and the necessary land vested in TfL on the 3rd July 2000;
(b) all the other airspace and subsoil of the highway vested in TfL on the 3rd July 2000 under Article 2(1)(a) of the Transfer Order (if and in so far as the former highway authority had any such interest in that other airspace and subsoil as at the 22nd May 2000), but subject to the obligations etc. in Article 5 and subject to (c) below;
(c) in some instances particular layers or slices of subsoil and/or airspace (for example, certain structures) may have received or acquired a separate identity by the 22nd May 2000 such that they could not properly be called, and would not pass as, "the highway" under Article 2(1)(a); in such cases no vesting in TfL under Article 2(1)(a) occurred on the 3rd July 2000;
(d) but absent such instances, all subsoil and airspace above and below the highway owned by the Councils on the 22nd May 2000 vested in TfL on the 3rd July 2000 subject to the obligations etc. in Article 5;
(e) the identification of such instances as are mentioned in (c) is a matter for agreement between TfL and the Councils in accordance with the principles explained in this award or, absent agreement, determination by arbitration.
(2) Horizontal plane:
(a) the lateral extent of the highway vesting in TfL under article 2(1)(a) on the 3rd July 2000 corresponds to the land over which the highway existed as at the 22nd May 2000;
(b) other land may also have vested in TfL under Article 2(1)(b)(i). The conditions (i)-(iii) below must be met, in relation to such land:
(i) such land was originally acquired or appropriated by the Councils for the purposes of their highway functions in relation to the GLA Road;
(ii) such land remained vested in the Councils as at the 22nd May 2000 for the purposes of their highway functions in relation to the GLA Road; and
(iii) such land was not appropriated (either express or inferred) to some other purpose prior to the 22nd May 2000 and nor was there a change of circumstances such that the land could no longer properly be described as held by the Councils for the purposes of their functions in relation to the GLA Road."
The arbitrator's reasoning
(i) A comparison of the consequences of the rival contentions favours TfL's case. If the local authorities were right then, starting from a case where the freehold of the road was owned, only the surface of the actual highway would vest, leaving split layers of subsoil, surface and airspace being separately owned. That is a complication that Parliament is unlikely to have intended.
(ii) The words "in so far as it is vested in the former highway authority", added to the word "the highway" in the vesting order suggested that TfL was intended to step into the shoes of the local authorities to the full extent of the property in the roads vested in the local authorities, whether that be the surface or the full freehold interest. The words required an inquiry as to what it was that was vested in the local authorities, and that is what passed. If the local authorities were right in their construction the words "in so far as vested in the former highway authority" were otiose.
(iii) The underlying purpose of the vesting order seemed to the arbitrator to be to enable TfL to step into the shoes of the two highway authorities. It was unlikely that Parliament would have intended that one owner should be replaced by two (in the case of the ownership of the freehold). This is, on analysis, another way of putting point (i).
(iv) Various statutory provisions pointed the same way, or pointed against the highways authorities being right. If the vesting order had the effect of merely vesting the surface in TfL, it was otiose because section 263 of the Highways Act did that anyway. He rejected a complex analysis of other provisions advanced by Mr Elvin which sought to demonstrate that a vesting order which vested only the surface still did useful work.
(v) He stood back and considered the overall effect of the respective cases. He repeated that it was hard to believe that Parliament would have intended the diversity of ownership that would follow from the local authorities' arguments.
The rest of the legislative background
"A1 from where it crosses the boundary of London to the south East side of its junction with Wakley Street including the roads which comprise the Archway Interchange."
Arguments and conclusions
"Effect of land becoming part of the highway
Two consequences flow from the land becoming part of the highway maintainable at the public expense. First, public rights of way exist over it. Second, under section 226 of the Highways Act 1959.:
"… every highway maintainable at the public expense together with the materials and scrapings thereof, shall vest in the authority who are for the time being the highway authority for the highway …"
The reason why the surface of the land vests in the highway authority is that it is necessary for it to do so in order that the authority can perform its statutory obligations to repair and maintain the highway. As I have said, the highway was designated a trunk road on April 1, 1977. The effect of "trunking" a highway is that the highway vests in the Minister (now the Secretary of State). The extent of the vesting is such part of the land as is necessary for the highway authority to perform its statutory functions. It has been described as the "top two spits". The nature of the interest vested in the highway authority is a determinable fee simple, so that it is a legal estate recognised by the Law of Property Act 1925. Subject to that vesting, the owner's ownership of and rights over the land remain. He is entitled to the sub-soil, to minerals under the highway, and so on."
"265 Transfer of property and liabilities upon a highway becoming or ceasing to be a trunk road
(1) Where a highway becomes a trunk road, then, subject to the provisions of this section, as from the date on which the highway becomes a trunk road ("the operative date"), there are transferred to the Minister [or the strategic highways company, whichever is highway authority for the trunk road,] by virtue of this section—
(a) the highway, in so far as, immediately before the operative date, it was vested in the former highway authority,
(b) the property mentioned in subsection (3) below, in so far as, immediately before the operative date, it was vested—
(i) in the former highway authority for the purposes of their functions in relation to the highway, or
(ii) in a council for the purposes of functions in relation to the highway under any enactment to which this section applies, and
(c) all liabilities incurred by any such authority or council for the purposes of their functions in relation to the highway and not discharged before the operative date, other than loans and loan charges,
and the highway and other property so transferred vest, by virtue of this section, in the Minister [or the company].
(2) There is not transferred to the Minister [or a strategic highways company] by virtue of this section any right or liability in respect of—
(a) work done, services rendered, goods delivered, or money due for payment, before the operative date, or
(b) damages or compensation for any act or omission before that date, or
(c) the price of, or compensation for, any land purchased, or for which a contract to purchase has been concluded, before that date.
(3) The property referred to in subsection (1)(b) above is—
(a) land, other than land—
(i) vested in the former highway authority for the purpose of being used for the storage of materials required wholly or mainly for the maintenance and improvement of other highways, or
(ii) acquired for the improvement or development of frontages to the highway, or of land adjoining or adjacent to the highway, and
(b) all other property, (including the unexpended balances of any grants paid by the Minister to the former highway authority, or to any council for the purposes of their functions in relation to the highway), other than—
(i) materials to be used for the maintenance or improvement of the highway, and
(ii) the unexpended balances of any loans raised by the former highway authority, or by any council for the purposes of their functions in relation to the highway."
"Where an Act confers powers to make subordinate legislation, expressions used in that legislation have, unless the contrary intention appears, the meaning which they bear in that Act."
"6 Highways Subsoil
All interests of the Residuary Body in the subsoil of existing highways acquired for highways purposes on or before 1st April 1974 by the Greater London Council or its predecessors, other than those specified in Schedule 2 to this order, shall vest in
(a) the London Borough council in whose area such subsoil is situated; or
(b) where such subsoil is situated in their area, in the Common Council of the City of London."
He invoked this provision to demonstrate that there was no reason to suppose that the vesting order was intended to vest subsoil automatically, in the absence of an equivalent provision in the vesting order.
(a) Highways Act s14A(2)(b) permits the designation of a highway as a GLA road and provides for "de-trunking" of trunk roads (not a word which appears in the statute, but one which was used frequently at the hearing) in that event - the Secretary of State ceases to be the highway authority for that road.
(b) That de-trunking occurred on the Operative Date of the designation.
(c) Section 263 (vesting of the surface in a highway authority for the time being) does not apply when a trunk road ceases to be a trunk road - see section 263(2)(a). Section 265 deals with that situation.
(d) Section 265(7) provides that when a road is de-trunked the preceding provisions of the section (which, inter alia, vest the trunk road "highway" in the Minister) apply in like manner so as to vest the de-trunked "highway" in the "council" which becomes the highway authority.
(e) Highways Act section 329 defines "council" as "a county council or a local authority", and TfL does not fit within that description.
(f) It would therefore seem that additional vesting provisions were necessary in that context, to make sure that TfL acquired what it would not otherwise get in respect of this category of GLA roads (former trunk roads), and the vesting order was created accordingly.
Conclusion