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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Lands Tribunal >> Pierce & Anor v Coal Authority [2000] EWLands LCA_2_1998 (22 May 2000) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWLands/2000/LCA_2_1998.html Cite as: [2000] EWLands LCA_2_1998 |
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[2000] EWLands LCA_2_1998 (22 May 2000)
LCA/2/1998
LANDS TRIBUNAL ACT 1949
COSTS - coal mining - compulsory rights order - compensation - sealed offer accepted on first day of hearing - liability for costs before and after date of sealed offer - whether costs to be assessed on standard or indemnity basis - held compensating authority to bear claimants' costs incurred up to date of sealed offer - thereafter claimants to bear costs of compensating authority - claimants to receive two-thirds of their costs in connection with the costs hearing - all costs to be assessed on the standard basis.
IN THE MATTER of a NOTICE OF REFERENCE
BETWEEN JOHN ELVET PIERCE
and
PATRICIA MARY PIERCE Claimants
and
THE COAL AUTHORITY Compensating
Authority
Re: Aerodrome and agricultural land
totalling 63.15 acres at Ley Farm, Chirk,Wrexham LL14 5BG
Before: N. J. ROSE FRICS
Sitting in public at: 48/49 Chancery Lane, London WC2A 1JR on 22 and 23 May 2000
The following case is referred to in this decision:
Heaven and Kesterton Ltd v Sven Widaeus A/B [1958] 1 All ER 424
Richard McCombe QC and Timothy Evans, instructed by Nicholas Drukker and Co, Solicitors, of London, for the Claimants
Arthur Rumbelow QC and Nigel Clayton, instructed by Nabarro Nathanson, Solicitors, of Sheffield for the Compensating Authority.
DECISION OF THE LANDS TRIBUNAL
i. On 27 September 1985 the compensating authority made an application for the necessary authorisation and for confirmation of the CRO under sections 1 and 4 (1) of the 1958 Act. The authorisation was made and the CRO confirmed on 8 July 1986, following an Inquiry on 24 May 1986.
ii. The compensating authority entered on the subject property on 26 September 1986.
iii. The Welsh Office entered on part of the CRO land on 19 April 1989 for the purpose of constructing the Chirk By-pass, pursuant to a compulsory purchase order ("the CPO") which had been made on 20 May 1987. The CRO land, excluding that affected by the CPO, was returned to the claimants on 26 March 1994.
iv. The claim for compensation arising from the CRO was referred to this Tribunal on 22 December 1997.
v. On 17 May 1999 the compensating authority made a sealed offer of £360,000 in settlement of all the claims which were the subject of the reference. The offer letter included the following sentence:
"In addition, provided that the above offer is accepted within 14 days of the date hereof our Clients will agree to pay the costs reasonably incurred by your Clients for the purposes of, or for purposes connected with, the preparation and prosecution of their claim pursuant to the Opencast Coal Act 1958, such costs to be assessed by the Registrar of the Lands Tribunal on the High Court standard scale in the absence of agreement."
a) The CRO gave temporary rights of occupation from 26 September 1986 for 7½ years. The claimants were offered, and rejected a Working Rights Agreement before the compensating authority took entry.
b) In May 1986 the High Court appointed a receiver, for Barclays Bank, of Mr. Pierce's affairs pursuant to a charging order on his property made in 1984, arising out of a judgement, in favour of the bank, for £136,000 in April 1980. The receivership continued until March 1993; the receiver's solicitors did not actively pursue any compensation claim; Mr. Pierce made it extremely difficult for the District Valuer (and the receiver) to discover his entitlement to the CRO land and the validity of any compensation claim. Indeed, in the course of his judgment delivered on 9 October 1987 following litigation between Barclays Bank and Mr. Pierce, Mr. Justice Knox found that Mr. Pierce had dishonestly purported to dispose of his interest in the CRO land in order to avoid his liability to the bank.
c) When the receivership ended in 1993 the District Valuer unsuccessfully attempted to engage the claimants in negotiation; in 1994 the claimants incorrectly launched a compensation claim by a writ in the High Court; the claimants did not refer the matter to this Tribunal until December 1997; the claims for annual compensation were out of time, although the compensating authority later agreed not to take the point; the claimants did not serve their points of claim until 9 months after making the reference; thereafter they sought successive extensions of time and made very late delivery of large volumes of material.
i. The offer of a Working Rights Agreement did not provide an excuse for the non-payment of compensation once statutory powers had been invoked.
ii. The receiver did actively pursue a claim for compensation. His agent, Strutt and Parker, submitted a detailed claim on 8 December 1987. By then, the judgment of Mr. Justice Knox was available. That judgment did not go to the question of whether the compensating authority would have to compensate the claimants and, if so, for how much. It was irrelevant to the present dispute.
iii. The receiver was discharged on 30 March 1993. Two weeks later the claimants' solicitors, Nicholas Drukker & Co., wrote to the District Valuer suggesting a very early meeting to discuss the compensation claim. The litigation in the High Court was still extant and directions had been given very recently for the further conduct of the action. The decision by the compensating authority to extend the time for referring the matter to this Tribunal was not made altruistically, but having regard to the provisions of paragraph 4 of the Opencast Coal (Claims) Regulations 1959. Moreover, the extensions of time for serving the claimants' pleadings were granted by this Tribunal without objection from the compensation authority.
Decision
Dated:
(Signed) N.J. Rose