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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Clear Channel UK Ltd v Manchester City Council [2005] EWCA Civ 1304 (09 November 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2005/1304.html Cite as: [2005] EWCA Civ 1304 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
CHANCERY DIVISION
The Hon Mr Justice Etherton
HC03C04113
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE JONATHAN PARKER
and
SIR CHRISTOPHER STAUGHTON
____________________
CLEAR CHANNEL UK LIMITED |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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MANCHESTER CITY COUNCIL |
Respondent |
____________________
Mr Jonathan Brock QC (instructed by Manchester City Council Legal Department) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 5th October 2005
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Jonathan Parker :
"land and premises as specified in the Schedule which is owned by [the Council] on which [Clear Channel] is permitted to erect or maintain the Advertising Display under the provisions of this Agreement and shown on location plans attached hereto."
(It is common ground that in the event no plans were attached or annexed to the Agreement.)
"3.1 In consideration of [Clear Channel] making the Payments [the Council] grants [Clear Channel] permission to erect and maintain the Advertising Display at the Sites for the Term subject to the provisions of this Agreement.
….
4.1 The Holding shall form the complete holding of the Sites to be available for use by [Clear Channel] for the purpose of this Agreement.
….
5.1 [The Council] may withdraw any Site from the Holding by giving 28 days notice to [Clear Channel] for any reason and in that event [Clear Channel] shall be required to reinstate the Site …."
"[n]ot to impede or obstruct in any way the officers or servants of [the Council] in the exercise by them of [the Council's] interests in each and every Site and in particular give all reasonable assistance and facilities to the officers servants or agents in or about their entry into the Site in that connection."
"This Agreement shall constitute a licence in respect of each Site and confers no tenancy on [Clear Channel] and possession of each Site is retained by [the Council] subject however to the rights and obligations created by this Agreement".
"78. It is clear, in my judgment, that "the Sites" mentioned in the 2001 Draft Agreement were not the areas of the concrete bases of the Ms, but larger undefined areas of land owned by MCC in which the concrete bases were placed. As I have said, there were no plans attached to the March 2001 Draft Agreement. There is no evidence that there were in existence, at the date the March 2001 Draft Agreement was agreed in principle, any plans identifying the precise location of the concrete bases of the Ms. The plans attached to the planning applications, on which Clear Channel relies, were drawn before all the concrete bases were constructed or their precise location agreed. In the words of Ms Griffiths, in cross-examination, they were "for identification only".
79. "The Sites" specified in the March 2001 Draft Agreement are expressly identified in that document only by reference to its Schedule. As I have said, the Schedule contains only general addresses, and not the specific locations of the concrete bases of the Ms.
80. Further, I reject Mr McGhee's submission that the provisions of the March 2001 Draft Agreement, particularly clauses 7.9.1, 7.9.2, 7.10 and 7.12.1, indicate that the Sites were the actual concrete bases of the Ms. Each of those clauses refers both to "every Site" and to the "Advertising Display". Mr McGhee accepted that the definition of "the Advertising Display in clause 2 of the March 2001 Draft Agreement included the concrete base. Unless the parties intended unnecessary duplication, the "Site" mentioned in each of clauses 7.9.1., 7.9.2, 7.10 and 7.12.1 must have been intended to refer to something other than the "Advertising Display", including its concrete base. Mr McGhee speculated that the reason for the mention of both the "Site" and the "Advertising Display" in each of those clauses was the belief of the parties, as shown by clause 10, that the Ms always belonged to Clear Channel. That, however, is pure speculation, unsupported by any other admissible evidence.
81. By contrast, giving to "the Site" in those clauses the meaning of the wider area of land on which each of the Ms was constructed, and giving to "the Advertising Display" the meaning expressly stated in clause 2 of the March 2001 Draft Agreement, not only avoids unnecessary repetition in the clauses to which Mr McGhee has referred, but makes perfect sense of clause 3.1, which grants Clear Channel "permission to erect and maintain the Advertising Display at the Sites".
82. Furthermore, it is telling, in my judgment, that the March 2001 Draft Agreement contains no express grant of any easement of way to and from "the Sites". Mr McGhee submitted that an easement of necessity would be implied. The omission of an express right of way to and from the Sites, for the purpose of erecting, maintaining, repairing and removing the Ms, would be an obvious and very surprising error, and very poor drafting, if the area of any demise was intended to be limited to the concrete bases of the Ms. The March 2001 Draft Agreement was negotiated over a period of time by Clear Channel's own solicitor, and there has been no suggestion, either by way of submission or in the evidence, that the solicitor would have been likely to have overlooked a point of such obvious importance to Clear Channel.
83. On the other hand, there is no problem of access to "the Sites" if that expression means the wider area of MCC's land under and surrounding the Ms. Clause 3.1 of the March 2001 Draft Agreement gave express permission to Clear Channel to come on to the Sites for the purpose of erecting and maintaining the Ms.
84. Mr McGhee sought to dispel part of the force of this point, which was skilfully developed by Mr Jonathan Brock QC, for MCC, by pointing out that the 2003 Draft Agreement, in respect of the Chester Road Site, did not include an easement of access, even though that document was expressly drafted in the language of a tenancy agreement and identified the actual site of the advertising station as the area of the demise. As I have mentioned, however, unlike the March 2001 Draft Agreement, the 2003 Draft Agreement was never the subject of negotiation or comment by Clear Channel.
85. Clear Channel is not assisted by the evidence of Mr Watson that, before the 2001 Draft Agreement, the precise location of the concrete bases of the Ms was discussed and agreed with Mr Houghton of MCC, and then marked out on the ground by Mr Watson with spray paint. That process of identifying the precise location of each M is perfectly consistent with the grant of a licence over a wider area than the concrete base itself. Furthermore, Clear Channel relies upon the provisions of the March 2001 Draft Agreement as governing the terms on which it was permitted to make use of "the Sites"; but that document does not contain any express provision for a process of discussing and agreeing the precise location of the demise in the manner in which Mr Watson described in his evidence.
86. Further, clause 7.18 of the March 2001 Draft Agreement makes little practical sense if "the Site" is confined to the concrete base of the M and the structure above it. It makes perfect practical sense, however, if "the Site" is a wider area of land on which the M was, or was to be, constructed.
87. If "the Sites" specified in the March 2001 Draft Agreement are undefined areas of land owned by MCC under and surrounding the Ms, it is clear that there was no intention to grant, and there never was a grant, of exclusive possession to Clear Channel. The contrary has not been argued.
88. For those reasons, I dismiss the claim by Clear Channel in respect of the M Sites."
Sir Christopher Staughton:
Lord Justice Waller: