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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Dudley Muslim Association v Dudley Metropolitan Borough Council [2015] EWCA Civ 1123 (05 November 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2015/1123.html Cite as: [2015] EWCA Civ 1123 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT, CHANCERY DIVISION
MR DAVID HALPERN QC (SITTING AS A HIGH COURT JUDGE)
CH20120240
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE TREACY
and
LADY JUSTICE GLOSTER
____________________
DUDLEY MUSLIM ASSOCIATION |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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DUDLEY METROPOLITAN BOROUGH COUNCIL |
Respondent |
____________________
MR TIMOTHY MORSHEAD QC & MS GALINA WARD (instructed by Sharpe Pritchard LLP) for the Respondent
Hearing dates : 28 & 29 October 2015
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Lewison:
"Meeting a 2008 deadline is more difficult given the loss of some 18 months through the current planning process and I undertook to explore if the Council would be prepared to extend the deadline to 2010, if not 2012 as you desire."
"There have been a number of delays over the last three years due to factors beyond your control and the original deadline for completing the development which was December 2008, now looks unrealistic. Accordingly, the Council accepts that a new target date needs to be set once planning permission is resolved."
"In addition we understand from a copy of the an [sic] Andrew Sparke (Chief Executive) letter to the DMA dated the 14th April 2005 that he was going to explore the possibility of extending the current deadline of 2008 for the land transfer to 2010 if not 2012. Could you please confirm what the present situation is."
"We deferred a decision on a subsequent request to extend the deadline pending the outcome of the planning application. Since the decision of the Development Control Committee was to refuse the application, we do not think that it would be appropriate to revise the timetable bearing in mind that the original decision to impose a development timetable was based on the need to avoid having a sterile and undeveloped site in an important part of Dudley Town Centre.
The Council will, of course, listen to any submission that you wish to make on this issue but, as you may know, there is already interest in the site from at least one other developer."
"The [DMA] were prevented from complying with the said covenant by the Council itself by refusing Planning permission to the [DMA] to comply.
The [DMA] has the right to submit a full Planning application by the end of July 2011 and have every intention of doing so."
"In or about March 2005 the [Council's] officers (Messrs Polychronakis and Andrew Sparke) led the [DMA] (Dr Khurshid Ahmed) to believe that the [DMA] should not be concerned with clause 2 (3) (c) of the Lease as this would be unlikely to be enforced against the [DMA] and that there was no need for the [DMA] to seek a formal variation of the clause on purchasing the freehold."
"In deciding to exercise the covenant to re-transfer to the Council … the Hall Street Site … the Council acted unfairly, unreasonably, in breach of the [DMA's] legitimate expectation and by an abuse of power."
"xviii. On 8th August 2006 Mr Ahmed met with Mr Sparke and further concerns about the delays in the planning process and the completion deadline imposed by the covenant. Mr Sparke gave assurances that the deadline would be revisited after planning issues had been resolved…
xix. By a letter dated 13th September 2006 [Mr Sparke] wrote to [Dr Ahmed] and stated [the letter is then quoted].
xx. That letter of 13th September provides a clear representation from the Chief Executive of the [Council], who had the actual or ostensible authority to speak on behalf of the [Council] upon which the [DMA] was entitled to rely and did rely.
xxiv. Following the rejection of the first outline application, Mr Polychronakis wrote to the [DMA] on 8th May 2007 stating [the letter is then summarised]. That carried the clear implication that any decision upon the extension of time under the Transfer would be dictated pending the outcome of the planning process. In consequence, if planning issues were resolved in favour of the proposed development, the extension of time requisite to carry out the development of the mosque and community facilities would be forthcoming."
"(ii) In the circumstances of this case it would be unfair and represent an abuse of power for the [Council] to seek to resile from the position that it had adopted and conveyed to the [DMA].
(iii) This is both procedurally and substantively unfair
i. The correspondence and course of dealing gives rise to the legitimate expectation that the [DMA] would be able to complete the development of the mosque notwithstanding the delays that had occurred.
ii. Those delays had been due primarily to the actions of the [Council] and where the primary purpose of the transaction and the proposed development was to seek to see the redevelopment of the Hall Street Site for a mosque and community facilities take place within a reasonable time.
iii. The … Council's course of dealings towards the [DMA] together with the correspondence between the parties, when considered in context, provide a clear promise supporting legitimate expectation that the [DMA] would be permitted to carry out the development within a reasonable timescale. For the [Council] to seek to resile from that position would be unfair and represent an abuse of power."
"(vi) Whilst the [Council], as local planning authority, has an independent statutory duty in deciding whether to grant planning permission for the proposed development of the Hall Street Site, it would be unfair, unreasonable, in breach of the [DMA's] legitimate expectations and an abuse of power to allow it to exercise the buy-back provision in the circumstances set out above and where the [Council]:
i. has caused substantial delay during the currency of the development period referred to in the Transfer;
ii. has asked for a planning application to be withdrawn, for its own political reasons;
iii. had accepted, by both its authorised officers and political leaders, that the time period would be extended by a reasonable period in order to allow the development to be carried out;
iv. has refused planning permission, contrary to its own professional officer's advice
v. has deferred making decision to buy back pending the resolution of the planning appeal and thence the High Court appeal, which were both resolved in favour of the [DMA]
vi. by exercising the buy-back clause is now seeking to prevent the prompt development of this land, meaning that the prominently located Hall Street Site would remain derelict for a longer period of time, the very consequence the covenant was intended to protect against."
"Thus, the mere fact that the party alleged to be in breach of contract is a public body plainly cannot, on its own, transform what would otherwise be a private law claim into a public law claim. There are, of course, circumstances where, in a contractual context, a public body is susceptible to public law remedies. However, where the claim is fundamentally contractual in nature, and involves no allegation of fraud or improper motive or the like against the public body, it would, at least in the absence of very unusual circumstances, be right, as a matter of principle, to limit a claimant to private law remedies."
"[42] However, it cannot be right that a claimant suing a public body for breach of contract, who is dissatisfied with the remedy afforded him by private law, should be able to invoke public law simply because of his dissatisfaction, understandable though it may be. If he could do so, it would place a party who contracts with a public body in an unjustifiably more privileged position than a party who contracts with anyone else, and a public body in an unjustifiably less favourable position than any other contracting party.
[43] Equally importantly, it appears to me that it would be wrong in principle for a person who would otherwise be limited to a private law claim to be entitled to base his claim in public law merely because private law does not afford him a sufficiently attractive remedy. It is one thing to say that, because a contracting party is a public body, its actions are, in principle, susceptible to judicial review. It is quite another to say that, because a contracting party is a public body, the types of relief which may be available against it under a contract should include public law remedies, even where the basis of the claim is purely contractual in nature."
"'The causes of action based on breach of statutory duty, abuse of a monopoly position and administrative impropriety are only relevant if the causes of action based on contract are rejected. If the causes of action based on contract are rejected, the other causes of action will only constitute attempts to obtain, by the declaration sought, specific performance of a non-existing contract. The exploitation and extension of remedies such as judicial review beyond their proper sphere should not be encouraged."
"…in order to attract public law remedies, it would be necessary for the applicant for judicial review to establish, at the very least, a relevant and sufficient nexus between the aspect of the contractual situation of which complaint is made and an alleged unlawful exercise of relevant public law powers."
"There is, of course, a considerable body of authority, cited by the judge, to the effect that it is impermissible for parties to private law contracts made with public bodies to proceed by way of judicial review in order to improve their contractual claim."
"I would endorse that approach and hold that Dr Krebs is to be confined to his contractual (private law) remedies what ever they may be. If he cannot show any breach of contract by the defendant, that is the end of the matter."
"(1) A contract for the sale or other disposition of an interest in land can only be made in writing and only by incorporating all the terms which the parties have expressly agreed in one document or, where contracts are exchanged, in each.
…
(5) … nothing in this section affects the creation or operation of resulting, implied or constructive trusts."
"The proposition that an owner of land can be estopped from asserting that an agreement is void for want of compliance with the requirements of section 2 is, in my opinion, unacceptable. The assertion is no more than the statute provides. Equity can surely not contradict the statute."
"I have no difficulty with the proposition that in cases where government has made known how it intends to exercise powers which affect the public at large it may be held to its word irrespective of whether the applicant had been relying specifically upon it. The legitimate expectation in such a case is that government will behave towards its citizens as it says it will. But where the basis of the claim is, as it is here, that a pupil-specific discretion should be exercised in certain pupil's favour, I find it difficult to see how a person who has not clearly understood and accepted a representation of the decision-maker to that effect can be said to have such an expectation at all. A hope no doubt, but not an expectation."
"… if I allowed this amendment to the grounds of appeal I would be permitting DMA to advance a case that was not argued before the Master."
"However, for the reasons given above, I have concluded that the proposed amendments are not properly arguable…"
"(3) Furthermore, in deciding to refuse to set a new and realistic target date for the completion of the proposed development, despite planning permission having been resolved in the [DMA's] favour, and to seek to enforce the "stipulated date" of 31st December 2008 by its letter of 7th October 2010, the [Council] was abusing its powers by making an irrational and unreasonable decision and/or acting in a manner which was conspicuously unfair to the [DMA].
(4) The Master further erred in finding … that there was no basis upon which the DMA could make out a separate case based on an abuse of power and that it could not be said that the Council had acted in a manner which was conspicuously unfair."
"But to confine all fairness challenges rigidly within the MFK formulation—requiring in every case an unambiguous and unqualified representation as a starting point—would to my mind impose an unwarranted fetter upon the broader principle operating in this field: the central Wednesbury principle …that an administrative decision is unlawful if 'so outrageous in its defiance of logic or of accepted moral standards that no sensible person who had applied his mind to the question to be decided could have arrived at it'…. The flexibility necessarily inherent in that guiding principle should not be sacrificed on the altar of legal certainty.
'Unfairness amounting to an abuse of power' as envisaged in Preston and the other Revenue cases is unlawful not because it involves conduct such as would offend some equivalent private law principle, not principally indeed because it breaches a legitimate expectation that some different substantive decision will be taken, but rather because either it is illogical or immoral or both for a public authority to act with conspicuous unfairness and in that sense abuse its power. As Lord Donaldson MR said in R v ITC, ex p TSW: 'The test in public law is fairness, not an adaptation of the law of contract or estoppel'.
In short, I regard the MFK category of legitimate expectation as essentially but a head of Wednesbury unreasonableness, not necessarily exhaustive of the grounds upon which a successful substantive unfairness challenge may be based."
"Although fairness is a notion which can be applied to all kinds of activities its content will depend upon the context in which it is being used. Conduct which is perfectly fair between competing businessmen may not be fair between members of a family. In some sports it may require, at best, observance of the rules, in others ("it's not cricket") it may be unfair in some circumstances to take advantage of them. All is said to be fair in love and war. So the context and background are very important."
i) The document was not pleaded in the Amended Defence. Nor was there an allegation that the Council had been actuated by an improper purpose.
ii) There is no evidence about the document (although it is in the appeal bundle), or the discussion of the cabinet that led to the decision to enforce the terms of the transfer.
iii) Neither the document nor the argument featured before the judge.
iv) Neither the document nor the argument is mentioned in the grounds of appeal; and neither was mentioned at the hearing before Sir Stephen Sedley.
v) Neither the document nor the argument is mentioned in the written skeleton argument.
"… the Council's position remains that we do not feel Hall Street is an appropriate location for the proposed development and we will, indeed are, continuing to work pro-actively with representatives of the Dudley Mosque to identify an alternative site."
"After all, if any pleading whether by amendment or not, cannot meet the test of some real prospect of success, it is in danger of being struck out. In my judgment, however, the proper rule or guideline calls for a sliding scale: the later the amendment, the more it may require to commend it."
Lord Justice Treacy:
Lady Justice Gloster: