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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Snelling & Anor v Burstow Parish Council [2013] EWCA Civ 1411 (12 November 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2013/1411.html Cite as: [2013] 47 EG 129, [2014] WLR 2388, [2014] 1 WLR 2388, [2013] WLR(D) 433, [2013] EWCA Civ 1411 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE, CHANCERY DIVISION
Miss Vivien Rose QC (sitting as a Deputy Judge of the Chancery Division)
HC12C00065
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE TREACY
and
LORD JUSTICE CHRISTOPHER CLARKE
____________________
SUSAN SNELLING ROY MERISON |
Claimants/Appellants |
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- and - |
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BURSTOW PARISH COUNCIL |
Defendant/Respondent |
____________________
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Ms Estelle Dehon (instructed by Hedley's Solicitors) for the Respondent
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Patten :
"All Allotments which shall be made to the Churchwardens and Overseers under this Act shall be held by the Churchwardens and Overseers of the Poor for the Time being in the same Manner and with the same legal Powers and Incidents as if the same Allotments were Lands belonging to the Parish, but in trust nevertheless for the Purposes for which the same shall be allotted…"
"... the allotment wardens of any field gardens may, with the approval of the Inclosure Commissioners, sell all or any part of the allotment vested in them, and out of the proceeds of such sale purchase any fit and suitable land in the same parish or neighbourhood: Provided, that the land so purchased shall be held in trust for the purposes for which the allotment so sold as aforesaid was allotted, and for no others; and provided, that the Inclosure Commissioners shall not sanction any such sale as aforesaid unless and until it shall be proved to their satisfaction that land more suitable for the purposes for which the allotment proposed to be sold was allotted may and will be forthwith purchased; and the proceeds of any such sale shall be paid to the Inclosure Commissioners, and shall remain in their hands until such purchase of other land as aforesaid."
"The legal interest in all property vested either in the overseers or in the churchwardens and overseers of a rural parish, other than property connected with the affairs of the church, or held for an ecclesiastical charity, shall, if there is a parish council, vest in that council, subject to all trusts and liabilities affecting the same, and all persons concerned shall make or concur the making such transfers, if any, as are requisite for giving effect to this enactment."
"Where any Act constitutes any persons wardens for allotments, or authorises or requires the appointment or election of any wardens committee or managers for the purpose of allotments, then, after a parish council for the parish interested in such allotments comes into office, the powers and duties of the wardens, committee, or managers shall be exercised and performed by the parish council, and it shall not be necessary to make the said appointment or to hold the said election, and for the purpose of section sixteen of the Small Holdings Act, 1892, two members of the parish council shall be substituted for allotment managers or persons appointed as allotment managers."
"An Act to consolidate the enactments with respect to Small Holdings and Allotments in England and Wales".
But it also confers a number of new powers and duties on borough, urban district and parish councils to provide and manage allotments. These include a duty under s.23 to provide a sufficient number of allotments for the "labouring population" in the event of a shortfall in the number of available allotments on private land; a power under s.25 to purchase or lease land for use as allotments including a power of compulsory purchase; and in sections 27 and 28 provisions governing the allocation and letting of allotments. "Allotments" are defined in s.61(1) of the Act as including field gardens.
"(1) "Where the council of any borough, urban district, or parish are of opinion that any land acquired by them for allotments or any part thereof is not needed for the purpose of allotments, or that some more suitable land is available, they may, with the sanction of the county council, sell or let such land otherwise than under the provisions of this Act, or exchange the land for other land more suitable for allotments, and may pay or receive money for equality of exchange.
(2) The proceeds of a sale under this Act of land acquired for allotments, and any money received by the council on any such exchange as aforesaid by way of equality of exchange, shall be applied in discharging, either by way of a sinking fund or otherwise, the debts and liabilities of the council in respect of the land acquired by the council for allotments, or in acquiring, adapting, and improving other land for allotments, and any surplus remaining may be applied for any purpose for which capital money may be applied; and the interest thereon (if any) and any money received from the letting of the land may be applied in acquiring other land for allotments, or shall be applied in like manner as receipts from allotments under this Act are applicable."
"33. (1) The allotment wardens under the Inclosure Acts 1845 to 1882, having the management of any … allotments or field gardens … may, by agreement, with the council … transfer the management of that land to the council, upon such terms and conditions as may be agreed upon with the sanction, as regards the allotment wardens of the Board, and thereupon the land shall vest in the council.
(2) All trustees within the meaning of the Allotments Extension Act 1882, required or authorised by that or any other Act to let lands in allotments to cottagers, labourers, journey men or others in any place, may if they think fit, … sell or let the land to the council…upon such terms as may be agreed…
(3) Where, as respects any rural parish, any Act constitutes any persons wardens of allotments, or authorises or requires the appointment or election of any wardens, committee, or managers for the purpose of allotments, the powers and duties of the wardens, committee, or managers shall, subject to the provisions of this Act, be exercised and performed by the parish council, or, in the case of a parish not having a parish council, by persons appointed by the parish meeting, and it shall not be necessary to make the said appointment or to hold the said election.
(4) The provisions of this Act relating to allotments shall apply to land vested in, or the management whereof has been transferred to, a council under this section or the corresponding provision of any enactment repealed by this Act in like manner as if the land has been acquired by the council under the general powers of this Part of this Act."
"Where a local authority has purchased land for use as allotments the local authority shall not sell, appropriate, use, or dispose of the land for any purpose other than use for allotments without the consent of the Minister of Agriculture and Fisheries after consultation with the Minister of Health, and such consent shall not be given unless the Minister is satisfied that adequate provision will be made for allotment holders displaced by the action of the local authority or that such provision is unnecessary or not reasonably practicable, and where such consent is obtained the sanction of the county council under section thirty-two of the Small Holdings and Allotments Act 1908, shall not be required."
"Where a local authority has purchased [or appropriated] land for use as allotments the local authority shall not sell, appropriate, use, or dispose of the land for any purpose other than use for allotments without the consent of the Minister of Agriculture and Fisheries and such consent [may be given unconditionally or subject to such conditions as the Minister thinks fit, but] shall not be given unless the Minister is satisfied that adequate provision will be made for allotment holders displaced by the action of the local authority or that such provision is unnecessary or not reasonably practicable."
"25. The drafting of section 33 of the SH&A Act 1908 contains a number of puzzles. The relationship between the power in subsection (1) for allotment wardens under the Inclosure Acts 1845 to 1882 voluntarily to transfer the management of the land to a council and the provision in subsection (3) whereby the powers and duties of persons constituted wardens of allotments are transferred by the operation of statute to the council is unclear. Subsection (3) is limited to rural parishes, whereas subsection (1) applies to all borough, urban district or parish councils. This would appear to leave outwith section 33(4) a class of allotments in urban parishes where the wardens do not choose to transfer the management to the council. This casts doubt on the Council's assertion that section 33 was intended to sweep up into the new 1908 regime all land at that time held by councils for the purposes of allotments. However, of course, this lacuna did not in fact exist because all the powers of management of allotment wardens had already been transferred to parish council by section 6(1)(c)(iii) and/or section 6(4) of the LGA 1894. It appears that the powers, the transfer of which section 33(1) and (3) purported to deal with, no longer existed at the time section 33 was enacted. Why subsections (1) and (3) were thought necessary is not at all clear - the draftsmen of the legislation were clearly aware of the existence of section 6 of the LGA 1894 since subsections (3) and (4) (but not subsection (1)(c)(iii)) were repealed by the Schedule to the SH&A Act 1908.
26. Despite the difficulty of construing these provisions, I accept the Council's submission that, as regards allotments which came under the management of the parish council by virtue of section 33(4) of the SH&A Act 1908, they were intended to be governed, and governed exclusively, by the powers set out in sections 26 onwards of that Act. The enactment of the power of sale in section 32 of the SH&A Act 1908 was intended to apply to all allotments acquired under that Act or treated as acquired by it pursuant to section 33(4) of the SH&A Act 1908. That power did to that extent repeal the power set out in section 27 of the Commons Act 1876. There is nothing in the legislation to support the contrary contention that Parliament intended that section 27 of the Commons Act 1876 should continue to apply to field gardens enclosed under the Inclosure Act 1845 and that the power in section 32 of the SH&A Act 1908 should apply only to other kinds of allotments operated by the Council."
"32. If section 8 of the Allotments Act 1925 had referred to land 'acquired' for use as allotments instead of 'purchased', then it would have been clear that Parliament intended that allotments which came into the control of the parish council by virtue of section 33(4) of the SH&A Act 1908 were now to be subject to the requirement for the consent of the Minister. The fact that section 8, as originally enacted, expressly referred to Ministerial consent replacing the county council's consent under section 32 of the SH&A Act 1908 shows that section 8 was intended to apply to the exercise of the power of sale under section 32 of the SH&A Act 1908. As it is, section 8 of the Allotments Act 1925 referred to only one of the methods available to the parish council for acquiring land under powers in the SH&A Act 1908 – purchasing but not taking on lease or, for example acquiring compulsorily. Should this be taken to indicate that section 8 was intended to apply only to land which was actually purchased under section 25 of the SH&A Act 1908 and not to land acquired by the exercise of any other power under that Act or by the operation of section 33(4) of that Act? I do not consider that the wording has that effect because that would largely defeat the purpose of section 33(4). The purpose of that section was, as stated, to ensure that allotments that came under the control of the council by operation of the preceding section 33(1), (2) and (3) or by operation of a repealed provision should be treated in the same way as land 'acquired' by the council under its general powers for the purposes of the provisions of that Act, including the power of sale under section 32.
33. The fact the wording of section 33(4) of the SH&A Act 1908 provides that land is to be treated as acquired by the Council under its general powers only for the purpose of applying 'the provisions of this Act' rather than for all purposes does not assist the Claimant. As I have said, the relevant power of sale is the power under section 32 of that Act and section 8 of the Allotments Act 1925 is an ancillary provision supplementing that earlier power of sale."
"if there is an inescapable logical contradiction between the earlier and the later statute, the former is repealed by implication. But the contradiction asserted must be inescapable; so that where (as here) an implied repeal is said to be based on the construction of the later statute, that construction must be shown to be the only rational interpretation which is available."
"a repeal by implication is only effected when the provisions of a later enactment are so inconsistent with or repugnant to the provisions of an earlier one that the two cannot stand together…..Unless two Acts are so plainly repugnant to each other that effect cannot be given to both at the same time a repeal will not be implied and special Acts are not repealed by general Acts unless there is some express reference to the previous legislation, or unless there is a necessary inconsistency in the two Acts standing together."
"The general rules which are applicable to particular and general enactments in statutes are very clear, the only difficulty is in their application. The rule is, that wherever there is a particular enactment and a general enactment in the same statute, and the latter, taken in its most comprehensive sense, would overrule the former, the particular enactment must be operative, and the general enactment must be taken to affect only the other parts of the statute to which it may properly apply."
Lord Justice Christopher Clarke :
Lord Justice Treacy :