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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Thames Water Utilities Ltd v Ministry of Defence [2006] EWCA Civ 1620 (29 November 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2006/1620.html Cite as: [2006] EWCA Civ 1620 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION, TECHNOLOGY
AND CONSTRUCTION COURT, BIRMINGHAM
HER HONOUR JUDGE FRANCES KIRKHAM
(5BM50011)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE JONATHAN PARKER
and
LORD JUSTICE MOSES
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THAMES WATER UTILITIES LTD |
Appellants |
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- and - |
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MINISTRY OF DEFENCE |
Respondents |
____________________
WordWave International Ltd
A Merrill Communications Company
190 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7421 4040 Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
MR J ONIONS QC (instructed by Messrs Wragge & Co. LLP, Birmingham) for the Respondents
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Pill:
"In my judgment, the service for which TW charge is the disposal of a volume of waste water ... Section 142 permits TW to charge for services provided. In my judgment, that means a service actually provided – that is disposal of a volume of water. In circumstances where it can be shown that TW are charging by reference to a service which they have not, in fact, provided TW are in my judgment acting beyond their power. Section 142(1)(b) limits an undertaker's right to demand and recover charges from those to whom the undertaker has provided services. The Act does not permit an undertaker to charge a person to whom he provides no service or a lesser service than that for which it charges."
For Thames Water, Mr Nelson QC submits that, under the 1991 Act, Thames Water is entitled to calculate sewerage charges on the basis of water supplied to the site.
"(1) Subject to the following provisions of this Chapter, the powers of every relevant undertaker shall include power—
(a) to fix charges for any services provided in the course of carrying out its functions and, in the case of a sewerage undertaker, charges to be paid in connection with the carrying out of its trade effluent functions; and(b) to demand and recover charges fixed under this section from any persons to whom the undertaker provides services or in relation to whom it carries out trade effluent functions.
(2) Subject to subsections (2A), (3) and (3A) below, the powers conferred by subsection (1) above shall be exercisable—
(a) by or in accordance with a charges scheme under section 143 below; or(b) by or in accordance with agreements with the persons to be charged.
(3) …
(4) Except in so far as this Chapter otherwise provides, a relevant undertaker may fix charges under this section by reference to such matters, and may adopt such methods and principles for the calculation and imposition of the charges, as appear to the undertaker to be appropriate.
(5) …
(6) …
(7) …"
"(1) A relevant undertaker may make a scheme ("a charges scheme") which does any one or more of the following, that is to say -
(a) fixes the charges to be paid for any services provided by the undertaker in the course of carrying out its functions;(b) …(c) makes provision with respect to the times and methods of payment of the charges fixed by the scheme.
(2) …
(3) …
(4) A charges scheme may—
(a) make different provision for different cases, including different provision in relation to different circumstances or localities; and(b) contain supplemental, consequential and transitional provision for the purposes of the scheme;
and such a scheme may revoke or amend a previous charges scheme."
"(1) Subject to the following provisions of this section and except in so far as provision to the contrary is made by any agreement to which the undertaker is a party—
(a) …and(b) sewerage services provided by a sewerage undertaker shall be treated for the purposes of this Chapter as provided to the occupiers for the time being of any premises which—(i) are drained by a sewer or drain connecting, either directly or through an intermediate sewer or drain, with such a public sewer of the undertaker as is provided for foul water or surface water or both; or(ii) are premises the occupiers of which have, in respect of the premises, the benefit of facilities which drain to a sewer or drain so connecting."
"(1) It shall be the duty of every sewerage undertaker –
(a) to provide, improve and extend such a system of public sewers (whether inside its area of elsewhere) and so to cleanse and maintain those sewers as to ensure that that area is and continues to be effectually drained; and(b) to make provision for the emptying of those sewers and such further provision (whether inside its area or elsewhere) as is necessary from time to time for effectually dealing, by means of sewage disposal works or otherwise, with the contents of those sewers."
That duty is reflected in the provisions of Section 144, already cited.
"Subject to the succeeding provisions of this scheme, there shall be payable to Thames Water in respect of connected premises where water supplied thereto by Thames Water or another water undertaker is measured by meter, an amount equal to the sum of the charges referred to in paragraphs (a) or (b) plus (c) below …
(a) Volume charge – standard tariff
(i) The amount produced by multiplying the water supplied as measured by meter … ("the measured quantity") by a rate per cubic metre as shown in the Metered Charges Schedule. However, where it is shown to the satisfaction of Thames Water that more than ten percent of the measured quantity (excluding any quantity which in Thames Water's opinion has been lost through leakage) is not discharged to a public sewer, then for the purpose of this calculation the measured quantity ("the abated quantity") from the date on which this was brought to the attention of Thames Water.
…
(iii) where the connected premises is not a house, the abated quantity should be the total quantity of water not discharged to a public sewer less any quantity which in Thames Water's opinion has been lost through leakage."
"If and so long as a water undertaker is obliged under subsection (2) above to fix charges for the supply of water in respect of any premises by references to the volume of water supplied, a sewerage undertaker is under a corresponding obligation to fix charges in respect of foul water drainage provided by the sewerage undertaker in respect of those premises by reference to that volume."
Where that right is exercised, a statutory obligation is thus imposed on a sewerage undertaker to fix charges by reference to the volume of water supplied by the water undertaker.
"In meeting this requirement Thames provides a network of sewers and treatment works including the facility for the discharge of treated effluent and disposal of sludge. Each element of the process requires capital investment, the maintenance of assets and the operating costs involved in providing the service.")
"Where any act or omission constitutes a contravention of a condition of an appointment under Chapter I of this Part or of a statutory or other requirement enforceable under this section, the only remedies for that contravention, apart from those available by virtue of this section, shall be those for which express provision is made by or under any enactment and those that are available in respect of that act or omission otherwise than by virtue of its constituting such a contravention."
"The common law of nuisance should not impose on Thames Water obligations inconsistent with the statutory scheme".
Lord Nicholls held (paragraph 34) that the claim was a claim that Thames Water should build more sewers. He stated at paragraph 35:
"The existence of a parallel common law right, whereby individual householders who suffer sewer flooding may themselves bring court proceedings when no enforcement order has been made, would set at nought the statutory scheme"
"The 1991 Act makes it even clearer than the earlier legislation that Parliament did not intend the fairness of priorities to be decided by a judge. It intended the decision to rest with the Director, subject only to judicial review."
"Since the claims asserted by [the claimant] do not derive from a statutory requirement, Section 18(8) does not rule them out even though the impugned conduct, namely, failure to drain the district properly is on its face a contravention of Thames Water's general statutory duty under section 94. The closing words of Section 18(8) expressly preserve remedies for any causes of action which are available in respect of an act or omission otherwise than by virtue of its being a contravention of a statutory requirement enforceable under Section 18".
"Mr Marcic chose not to avail himself of this route [complaint to the Director]. Instead, he issued a writ claiming an injunction and damages for nuisance. Section 18(8) does not exclude any remedies "available in respect of [an] act or omission otherwise than by virtue of its constituting … a contravention [of a duty enforceable under section 18]". It follows that if the failure to improve the sewers to meet the increased demand gives rise to a cause of action at common law, it is not excluded by the statute. The question is whether there is such a cause of action."
Lord Justice Jonathan Parker:
L Lord Justice Moses :
"that a significant volume of water entering (the barracks) was not returning as waste water to the sewers."
It was, apparently unknown to the MOD, lost through leakage.
"the volume of clean water entering the (barracks) did not equate to the volume of water being discharged into the sewers."
This mistake was denied in the defence but this court is, apparently, required to assume, for the purpose of determining the relevant preliminary issues, that a mistake of fact had been made. This is said to be the result of Thames Water not suggesting that there was no basis for the MOD's restitutionary claim (paragraph 6 of the judgment). I am bemused. Firstly, it remains beyond my understanding as to how it can be said there was any mistake of fact whatever. Pill LJ has said that the litigation has been distorted by Thames Water's acceptance. The salutary effect of his courtesy should restrain me from expressing my reluctance at being compelled to accept the absurd.