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Scottish Court of Session Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Houston, Re An Application For Judicial Review [2007] ScotCS CSOH_44 (02 February 2007)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/2007/CSOH_44.html
Cite as: [2007] CSOH 44, [2007] ScotCS CSOH_44

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OUTER HOUSE, COURT OF SESSION

 

[2007] CSOH 44

 

     

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

OPINION OF LORD MENZIES

 

in the Petition of

 

ALAN TERENCE HOUSTON

 

Petitioner;

 

for

 

Judicial Review of The Renfrewshire Council (West Johnstone) Compulsory Purchase Order 2003

 

 

 

ญญญญญญญญญญญญญญญญญ________________

 

 

 

Petitioner: Party

Respondents: Mure; Simpson & Marwick (Renfrewshire Council)

Springham; R Henderson, Solicitor to the Scottish Executive (Scottish Ministers)

 

2 February 2007

Introduction
[1] The petitioner formerly resided at 12 Benston Place, Johnstone, Renfrewshire. In this petition he seeks judicial review of the Renfrewshire Council (West Johnstone) Compulsory Purchase Order 2003. He seeks an Order reducing this Compulsory Purchase Order and stopping the respondents from proceeding any further in reliance on it with the development of the lands which are the subject of the Order. The respondents are Renfrewshire Council. The Scottish Ministers have lodged answers as interested parties.

[2] The petition was lodged on 8 December 2006, and on 12 December 2006 a first order was granted and the court assigned 2 February 2007 as the date for the First Hearing. The matter came before me on that date at First Hearing. In their answers the respondents stated two preliminary pleas in the following terms:

"1. The petition being incompetent in terms of paragraph 16 of the first schedule to the 1947 Act and by virtue of the petitioner's failure to exercise his statutory right of appeal against the 2003 Order, the petition should be dismissed.

2. The petitioner being barred by mora, taciturnity and acquiescence from insisting in the present application, the petition should be refused."

Substantially the same pleas were contained in the answers for the Scottish Ministers. I indicated at the outset of the hearing that it might be appropriate to hear arguments on questions of competency and personal bar, and to reach a decision thereon, before proceeding to consider the substantive merits of the petition. I suggested that counsel for the respondents and the Scottish Ministers should make their submissions as to competency and personal bar first, and that the petitioner should thereafter respond to these submissions. None of the parties demurred from this suggestion, and that is how matters proceeded.

 

Submissions for the respondents
[3]
Counsel began by explaining that the Order which is challenged by the petitioner was promoted by the respondents in their capacity as education authority. Section 20(5) of the Education (Scotland) Act 1980 provides as follows:

"An education authority may be authorised by the Secretary of State to purchase land compulsorily for the purposes of this Act, and the Acquisition of Land (Authorisation Procedure) (Scotland) Act 1947 shall apply in relation to any such compulsory purchase as if this Act had been in force immediately before the commencement of that Act."

Counsel then referred me to the Acquisition of Land (Authorisation Procedure) (Scotland) Act 1947 ("the 1947 Act") and in particular to the provisions of sections 1(1) and 5(1) and to the procedures set out in paragraphs 1, 4(2) and 6 of the first schedule thereto.

[4] Counsel then referred me to the statutory mechanism for appeals to this court, and to the provisions preventing challenge by any other means, which are contained in paragraphs 15 and 16 of schedule 1 to the 1947 Act. As these played an important part of the arguments before me, it is perhaps appropriate to set out the salient parts of these paragraphs here. Paragraph 15(1) provides inter alia as follows:

"If any person aggrieved by a compulsory purchase order desires to question the validity thereof, or of any provision contained therein, on the ground that the authorisation of a compulsory purchase thereby granted is not empowered to be granted under this Act or any such enactment as is mentioned in subsection (1) of section 1 of this Act, or if any person aggrieved by a compulsory purchase order or a certificate under Part III of this Schedule desires to question the validity thereof on the ground that any requirement of this Act or of any regulation made thereunder has not been complied with in relation to the order or certificate he may, within six weeks from the date on which notice of the confirmation or making of the order or of the giving of the certificate is first published in accordance with the provisions of this Schedule in that behalf, make an application to the Court of Session ...".

Paragraph 16 provides as follows:

"Subject to the provisions of the last foregoing paragraph a compulsory purchase order or a certificate under Part III of this Schedule shall not, either before or after it has been confirmed, made or given, be questioned in any legal proceedings whatsoever, and shall become operative on the date on which notice is first published as mentioned in the last foregoing paragraph."

[5] Counsel set out the chronological sequence of the procedures in the present case as follows. The background and requirement for the 2003 Order were set out at length in the respondents' statement of case (No.7/4 of process) in which the petitioner was noted as a statutory objector. The required notice relating to the Order was served on the petitioner, and solicitors acting on behalf of the petitioner and others wrote to the Scottish Executive by letter dated 30 March 2004 objecting to the Order. On 8 September 2004 a Public Local Inquiry was held by Mr R W Jackson, a reporter with the Scottish Executive Inquiry Reporters Unit. The petitioner attended at that inquiry and made submissions to the reporter in support of his objection to the Order (see paragraphs 3.1 to 3.5 of No.7/5 of process). By letter dated 9 December 2004 the Scottish Ministers accepted the reporter's findings of fact and decided to confirm the Order subject to modifications. Paragraph 9 of that letter referred to the right of any person aggrieved to make application to the Court of Session in terms of paragraph 15 of the first schedule to the Act of 1947 within six weeks of the date on which the notice of confirmation is first published. A copy of this letter was sent on the same day to the petitioner (see No.13/9 of process).

[6] Formal notice of confirmation of the Order by the Scottish Ministers was sent to the petitioner by letter dated 14 January 2005; paragraph 4 of the notice again referred to the six week time limit within which any application to the Court of Session must be made. The notice was published in the press on 19 January 2005. On 21 March 2005 the respondents executed a general vesting declaration which vested certain property in them with effect from 25 April 2005. The property thereby vested included the house then owned and occupied by the petitioner. By letter dated 22 March 2005 the respondents sent to the petitioner notice of the execution of the general vesting declaration and a copy of the schedule describing the land affected. By letter dated 18 April 2005 the respondents wrote to the petitioner drawing his attention to the fact that as from 25 April 2005 they would own his property, and if he had not moved out of the property by that date his continued occupation would be unlawful.

[7] The petitioner did not remove from the subjects at 12 Benston Place, Johnstone on 25 April 2005, and thereafter summary proceedings for recovery of possession of the subjects were raised by the respondents in Paisley Sheriff Court. The petitioner defended those proceedings and represented himself. The case called before the sheriff on 19 August 2005, when the appellant addressed the sheriff. His principal concern was that the respondents had not offered him a suitable alternative property. The sheriff continued the case to 2 September 2005 to enable the respondents to investigate this issue. On that date submissions were made by the solicitor for the respondents, and the petitioner did not challenge the authorities relied on. At this time the appellant asked the sheriff if he could apply for judicial review, and the sheriff pointed out to him that judicial review was a separate court process which had to be raised by him if he wished to do so in the Court of Session. The petitioner made no further submissions to the sheriff, who granted decree in favour of the respondents.

[8] The petitioner appealed against the sheriff's interlocutor of 2 September 2005 to the Sheriff Principal; in his note of appeal the petitioner indicated that he wished to seek redress in the Court of Session, Edinburgh. The matter came before the Sheriff Principal at an Incidental Application Hearing on 16 November 2005. At that hearing the petitioner was absent. The Sheriff Principal dismissed the petitioner's note of appeal in respect that it did not disclose a point of law. In doing so, he included the following comments in his Note:

"The pursuers lodged an incidental application seeking dismissal of Mr Houston's appeal to the Sheriff Principal on the ground that no point of law had been identified for the sheriff principal's adjudication. I fixed 16 November 2005 as a diet for hearing parties thereon. When Mr Houston received notice of that diet he phoned to ask for it to be postponed since he required to go to Australia from 14 November 2005 until 23 January 2006. I took the view that the matter could not properly be put off for such a long time and Mr Houston was informed by telephone on my instruction that the matter would be heard on 16 November 2005 and he should arrange for someone to represent him, who need not necessarily in the circumstances be a lawyer. Mr Houston elected instead to send in a letter dated 13 November 2005 and I have today disposed of the pursuer's incidental application on the basis that his letter adequately states his position for this purpose. In his letter Mr Houston does not go so far as to say that he wishes to abandon his appeal to the Sheriff Principal but he does accept that he may have been following the wrong course in pursuing it rather than a judicial review in the Court of Session."

The sheriff principal went on to explain how an application for judicial review must be made.

[9] Notwithstanding the explanation given in the Sheriff Principal's note dated 16 November 2005, the petitioner did not seek to raise proceedings for judicial review under November 2006. On 28 November 2006 he was granted leave to proceed without a duly authorised signature, in terms of Rule of Court 4.2(5). The petition was lodged on 8 December 2006, and a first order was granted on 12 December 2006. Counsel then drew my attention to photographs which were lodged on behalf of the respondents (No.7/13 of process) which I was told were taken in January 2007 and show the stage at which construction work on the proposed school campus has reached, following upon demolition of the houses which were previously on the site (including the house formerly owned by the petitioner at 12 Benston Place, Johnstone).

[10] Against the history narrated above, counsel submitted that this petition is incompetent by reason of paragraphs 15 and 16 of Schedule 1 to the 1947 Act. He submitted that even if the compulsory purchase order is an absolute nullity, it cannot be challenged in the courts outwith the six week period contained in paragraph 15. In support of this submission he referred me to Martin v Bearsden & Milngavie District Council 1987 S.C. 80 and to Pollock v Secretary of State for Scotland 1993 S.L.T. 1173. The petitioner had been actively involved at every stage of the statutory procedures, and the six week time limit for applications to the Court of Session to be made had been drawn to his attention on more than one occasion. That time limit expired in early March 2005, and it was not open to the petitioner to seek to challenge the Order in these proceedings which were initiated in December 2006.

[11] Separately, counsel for the respondents founded on his plea of mora, taciturnity and acquiescence. The petitioner's property has been demolished, and (as appears from the photographs) very considerable construction works are underway on the site for a new shared school campus. The petitioner has been aware of all of this happening, and has taken no steps to challenge it or prevent it from continuing. Counsel submitted that it was hard to figure a more compelling case in which the absence of legal proceedings has permitted parties to proceed, with the expenditure of considerable sums of money, on the basis of an Order which is only now challenged. In this regard counsel referred me to Devine v McPherson 2002 S.L.T. 213 and in particular to paragraphs 24 and 25 of Lord Eassie's Opinion. In the present proceedings two years have now elapsed since the formal notice was served on the petitioner in January 2005. The petitioner has failed to avail himself of the statutory procedures for review, and has delayed inordinately in bringing forward this petition. Counsel moved me to sustain his first two pleas-in-law.

 

Submissions for the Scottish Ministers
[12]
Counsel for the Scottish Ministers adopted the submissions made on behalf of the respondents and had little further to add. She observed that the petitioner had been involved throughout the statutory procedures, and had caused objections on his own behalf to be made to the Order. He appeared at the Public Local Inquiry and made submissions, he was properly informed of the result and of how challenge to the decision might be made and he had not availed himself of the opportunity provided by the statutory procedures to apply to this court. Counsel moved me to sustain the first and second pleas-in-law for the Scottish Ministers.

 

Submissions for the petitioner
[13]
The petitioner explained that after the Public Local Inquiry he again consulted the solicitors who had written on his behalf to object to the Order, but he could not afford the fees which they indicated would be likely to be charged. The solicitor agreed to read the documents which the petitioner gave him, and on the day before the six week period was due to expire the petitioner received a letter from the solicitor telling him that he could apply to the Court of Session. The petitioner found great difficulty in understanding the procedures, and accepted that he may have made mistakes. He had telephoned people working for the Scottish Executive and had received helpful advice from them. However, his position remained that statements made by the respondents in support of this Order were false. He referred me to several maps of the area in which 12 Benston Place was situated, which he claimed indicated that the respondents had lied in their description of the houses affected. He referred me to minutes of the local authority in 1954, and suggested that the respondents had committed fraud in describing the area to suit their own purposes. In this regard he drew my attention to Lord Clyde's review of the authorities at page 84 of Martin v Bearsden & Milngavie District Council, and he submitted that bad faith verging on fraud is suggested in the present case, so it could be distinguished from Martin. The petitioner accepted that he advanced the same argument before the reporter at the Public Local Inquiry, and that the reporter did not accept this argument. However, he re-iterated the view that the respondents' scheme was fraudulent, that Benston Place had been 40% owner occupied and it was not of the character suggested by the respondents. His solicitors wanted payment of ฃ20,000 to enable an advocate to read the report of the Public Local Inquiry and give advice, which the petitioner could not afford. The solicitor did not tell the petitioner until just before the six week period had expired that he could make an application to the Court of Session himself. His house was demolished in April 2006.

[14] With regard to the question of delay in bringing these proceedings, the petitioner explained that he had asked the court to postpone the appeal hearing because his older brother who was unwell having been given heart bypass surgery was living in a house in Australia which was about to be demolished, and the petitioner had to travel to Australia to help him move house. The petitioner had asked the Sheriff Principal to postpone the hearing, and the Sheriff Principal had indicated that this would be possible if the respondents agreed. The petitioner said that he had spoken to the solicitor acting for the respondents who had agreed to a postponement, but then another employee of the respondents had indicated that the construction works could not wait and that the respondents would not agree to a postponement. The petitioner was evicted from his home while he was in Australia. He had been told by the Sheriff and the Sheriff Principal in September and November 2005 that he might be able to apply for judicial review, but when he sought advice from the Petition Department in the Court of Session he was told that he could not present a petition because he was homeless. Eventually East Ayrshire Council accepted the petitioner as homeless in July 2006 and he obtained a house in September 2006. He then obtained all the information necessary to present the petition, and was granted permission to proceed without a duly authorised signature. The petitioner had never been silent about this matter - he had objected forcefully by telephone to the respondents' employees, and had taken as many steps as he could to air his objections to the Order. It was not his fault that the petition was not presented until December 2006.

 

Discussion
[15]
Paragraphs 15 and 16 of the first schedule to the 1947 Act apply to the procedures surrounding the 2003 Order. It was open to the petitioner to make an application to the Court of Session within six weeks of 19 January 2005 if he wished to question the validity of the Order. Subject to this provision, paragraph 16 provided:

"that a compulsory purchase order ...shall not, either before or after it has been confirmed, made or given, be questioned in any legal proceeding whatsoever and shall become operative on the day on which notice is first published..."

The petitioner was made aware of these provisions because a copy of the letter dated 9 December 2004 from the Scottish Executive Education Department Schools Division to the respondents was sent to him and paragraph 9 of that letter refers to paragraph 15 of the first schedule to the Act of 1947. The provisions of paragraph 15 were also contained in the notice which was sent to the petitioner by the respondents with their letter dated 14 January 2005.

[16] The six week period referred to in paragraph 15 having elapsed in early March 2005, it is not open to the petitioner to seek to challenge the 2003 Order, and the present petition is rendered incompetent by reason of paragraph 16 of schedule 1 to the 1947 Act. As Lord Clyde observed in Martin v Bearsden & Milngavie District Council (at page 88), when referring to the well known dicta of Viscount Simonds in Smith v East Elloe Rural D.C. [1956] A.C.736 and of Lord Denning M.R. in R v Secretary of State for the Environment ex p. Ostler [1977] Q.B.122,

"there was recognition of the policy of Parliament in relation to compulsory purchase orders that finality and security from challenge should be achieved in the public interest. The intention of para.16 is in my view to exclude the kind of challenge which is made in the present case outwith the time limit expressly prescribed for the making of just such a challenge".

[17] In Pollock v Secretary of State for Scotland Lord Cameron of Lochbroom reached the same view in relation to the similar provisions of sections 231 and 233 of the Town & Country Planning (Scotland) Act 1972 which he described as "clear in their meaning and bar any challenge from whatever source it may come after the period of six weeks has passed after the taking of the decision of the Secretary of State on the appeal". The petitioner sought to argue that the present case should be distinguished from the cases of Martin and Pollock because the present case alleges bad faith amounting to fraud on the part of the respondents. However, there are no averments of fraud or bad faith in the petition. It has long been recognised in our procedures that if a party is to allege bad faith or fraud on the part of another he must do so by the clearest and most specific averments. While I make allowance for the fact that the petitioner is a party litigant, nonetheless there are no averments whatsoever in the petition which might amount to a relevant case of fraud or bad faith. The first plea in law states the petitioner's reasons for seeking reduction of the 2003 Order as follows:

"(1) The decision of the Renfrewshire Council to issue Compulsory Purchase Order 2003, being unreasonable et separatim unfair, this should be reduced as craved".

Even if it were appropriate for me to do so, I cannot infer from the petition how the respondents are said to have acted in bad faith or fraudulently. Similarly when he was presenting his submissions in Court, the petitioner referred to old maps and minutes of the respondents' predecessors, but I remain unable to understand how it is that the respondents are said to have acted fraudulently in promoting this Order. The petitioner accepted that he had made similar arguments before the reporter and these had been unsuccessful.

[18] Nothing in the petition nor in what was said by the petitioner in court persuaded me that this case falls to be considered differently from the cases of Martin v Bearsden & Milngavie District Council and Pollock v Secretary of State for Scotland. I consider that this case falls within the ambit of paragraphs 15 and 16 of the 1947 Act, and that the present petition is incompetent because it is brought after the expiry of the six week period referred to therein.

[19] I also consider that the second argument advanced on behalf of the respondents and the Scottish Ministers is sound. I do not consider that the sequence of events relied upon by the petitioner to justify the delay in bringing these proceedings is sufficient to excuse this delay. It is clear that the petitioner was aware of the existence of the remedy of judicial review when he appeared before the Sheriff at Paisley on 2 September 2005. Again, it appears from the terms of the Sheriff Principal's note appended to his interlocutor of 16 November 2005 that the petitioner was considering judicial review. (The petitioner's letter dated 13 November 2005 was not before me, but the Sheriff Principal gives a flavour of the contents of that letter in his note). In circumstances in which the petitioner had allowed the six week period which expired in March 2005 to elapse without taking any action, and he was aware of the existence of judicial review as a remedy which might possibly be open to him by September 2005, I do not consider that it was open to him to challenge the 2003 Order for the first time in Court in proceedings initiated in December 2006. In the period between March 2005 and December 2006 the respondents executed a general vesting declaration which affected the petitioner's property; the respondents raised proceedings for recovery of possession of the house in which the petitioner was living, which proceedings the petitioner defended; the Sheriff granted decree against the petitioner, and this was upheld on appeal; the petitioner was removed from the house, which was then demolished; and very substantial construction works were commenced and significant expenditure has been made on the development of a shared school campus on the site, as appears from the photographs (No.7/13 of process). At no time during this sequence of events has the petitioner sought to interdict the respondents nor has he brought a formal challenge to the 2003 Order until the bringing of this petition in December 2006.

[20] Lord Eassie's observations in Devine v McPherson appear equally apposite in the present case. That was a case in which a group of individuals sought judicial review of the decision of a local planning authority granting outline planning permission for the erection of a house. Planning permission was granted on 13 December 2000, and the group of objectors raised a petition for judicial review on 31 July 2001 (a period of seven and a half months, in contrast to the period of more than one year and ten months in the present case). The court sustained the respondents' plea of mora. Lord Eassie observed that

"where an objector wishes to challenge by means of judicial review, the validity of a decision of a local planning authority granting a planning consent there is a need for the objector to act with alacrity otherwise he risks finding his challenge successfully barred by a plea of mora."

He went on to state that

"in the field of administrative activity with which one is presently concerned, such delay or inactivity, which is not justified by any conceivable practical consideration, falls to be regarded as unreasonable. In my view, the respondents - and no doubt others - were entitled to infer from such inactivity on the part of those who had objected to the grant of outline planning consent that they acquiesced in the validity of the decision".... "It appears to me that in the light of the absence of any indication of an intention to challenge the validity of the grant of the outline planning consent the McPhersons have indeed materially altered their position and would be prejudiced - in a legally relevant sense - were the grant now to be annulled."

[21] In the present case there is no doubt that the petitioner was unhappy with the steps which the respondents were taking regarding his house. He objected to the 2003 Order. He defended the Sheriff Court proceedings. He did not move out of the house voluntarily. He mentioned the possibility of proceedings for judicial review. However, despite all the events which occurred such as his eviction from the house, the demolition of the house and the progress with construction works, he allowed a period of more than one year and ten months to elapse before mounting a formal legal challenge to the 2003 Order. During that period the respondents have expended considerable amounts of money and effort in reliance on the 2003 Order; they have materially altered their position in reliance on the unchallenged Order, and they would be prejudiced were the Order now to be reduced. It has been repeatedly stated that judicial review is a remedy which must be sought expeditiously, and it is not open to persons dissatisfied with a decision if they delay unreasonably. In the present case, while I understand the history given to me by the petitioner, I do not consider that it justifies the delay which has occurred, nor does it render that delay reasonable. Moreover, it is necessary to look not only to the petitioner's explanation for the delay, but also to the steps which the respondents have taken in the course of that delay in reliance on the unchallenged order. As I have said, they have incurred substantial expenditure and would suffer prejudice if the Order is reduced.

[22] Accordingly I shall sustain the first and second pleas in law for both the respondents and the Scottish Ministers, and dismiss the petition.

 

 

 

 


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