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England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> London Borough of Barnet v Barnet Football Club Holdings Ltd [2004] EWHC 519 (Ch) (13 February 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2004/519.html Cite as: [2004] EWHC 519 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
sitting as a Deputy Judge of the High Court
____________________
THE MAYOR AND BURGESSES OF | ||
THE LONDON BOROUGH OF BARNET | Claimant | |
- and - | ||
BARNET FOOTBALL CLUB HOLDINGS LIMITED | Defendant |
____________________
Andrew Hunter (instructed by Clintons) for the Defendant
Hearing dates : Monday 12 January 2004 - Friday 16 January 2004
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Crown Copyright ©
The Deputy Judge:
Introduction
i) The first is a Transfer, on Land Registry Form TR1, dated 27 March 2002 and executed under the seal of Barnet LB. The Transfer was signed by Bamet LB's Mayor and by the Borough Solicitor, Mr Jeff Lustig. The other party to the Transfer was the Defendant, Bamet Football Holdings Ltd ("Holdings"). On behalf of Holdings the Transfer was signed by Mr Tony Kleanthous as a director, as well as by Holdings' Secretary.ii) The second is a Supplemental Deed also dated 27 March 2002. The Deed, sometimes referred to as "the Overage Deed", was executed in the same way as the Transfer.
"(2) Except with the consent of the Secretary of State, a council shall not dispose of land under this section, otherwise than by way of a short tenancy, for a consideration less than the best that can reasonably be obtained."
"(2) Where under the foregoing provisions of this Part of this Act ... a local authority purport to ... dispose of land, then-
(a) in favour of any person claiming under the authority, the ... disposal so purporting to be made shall not be invalid by reason that any consent of a Minister which is required thereto has not been given ... and
(b) a person dealing with the authority or a person claiming under the authority shall not be concerned to see or enquire whether any such consent has been given or whether any such requirement has been complied with."
The Transfer and Deed
"The Transferee to the intent and so as to bind the property hereby transferred ... covenants with the Transferor ... that for the period of ten years from the date hereof the Transferee and those deriving title under it will not use the land hereby transferred or any part of it for any purpose other than for the playing of Association Football by Barnet Football Club and for purposes ancillary thereto."
i) There are three recitals. These identify the Contract and the Transfer and add that:"It was agreed in the course of negotiations leading to the Contract that the parties should enter into this Supplemental Deed the provisions of which are supplemental to the Contract and the Transfer"ii) There are various definitions in clause 1. These include a definition of "the Cut-Off Period", which is to have the meaning given in clause 7.1. There is a definition of "Open Market Value", which is to have the meaning given in the schedule; and "Further Consideration" is defined as "the additional consideration calculated in accordance with the schedule". Finally there is a definition, in clause 1.6, of the expression "Permanently Relocate". This is to mean:
"the Football Club [that is Barnet Football Club Ltd] playing its first team Association Football fixtures at a site or sites other than [the Underhill Ground] for a continuous period in excess of ten years or having the settled intention of doing so for the foreseeable future"iii) Clause 2.1 asserts that:
"By reason of the covenant restricting the use of the [Underhill Ground] contained in the Transfer the amount of the consideration to be paid for the initial acquisition of the [Underhill Ground] was [£10,000]"iv) Clause 2.2 needs to be set out in full. It reads as follows (emphasis added):
"During the subsistence of this Agreement the Vendor at the request in writing of the Purchaser ("the Purchaser's Request") and upon prior payment of the Further Consideration will at the Purchaser's expense enter into a deed varying the covenants imposed by the Transfer (a "Deed of Variation") to such extent only as shall be in accordance with the terms of this Agreement SAVE THAT the Purchaser will not be required to pay the Further Consideration in the event that the Football Club Permanently Relocate to a stadium built by the Purchaser or a direct subsidiary company within the borough boundaries of the London Borough of Barnet for the time being the said stadium to have a minimum of 6,000 seats and to be constructed to meet the then prevailing standards required by the English Football Association PROVIDED ALWAYS that the provisions of this clause will only be of effect (a) in the event that the Football Club Permanently Relocate to a stadium with facilities at least equivalent to that which it enjoys at the date hereof and (b) if planning permission is granted in respect of the [Underhill Ground] as an exception to Green Belt policy or the Green Belt designation in respect of the Property is removed."v) Clause 2.3 is also important. It provides as follows (emphasis added):
"If at any time within the Cut-Off Period the Football Club shall enter into liquidation whether compulsory or voluntary (save for the purpose of amalgamation or reconstruction) or has a receiver appointed of its undertaking then the Vendor will at the Purchaser's expense and upon prior payment of the Further Consideration enter into a Deed of Variation to such extent only as shall be in accordance with the terms of this Agreement"vi) Clause 3 deals with the contents of the Deed of Variation which could be required pursuant to clauses 2.2 and 2.3. This is to be in the form agreed between the parties and, in default of such agreement, to be settled by leading conveyancing counsel appointed by agreement or by the President of the Law Society. Surprisingly the Deed contains no express guidance as to what should be included in the Deed of Variation; but in view of the provisions dealing with the assessment of the Further Consideration, the contemplation must be that the extent of the modification of the restrictive covenant would depend, at any rate in part, upon what was proposed to be done with the Underhill Ground during the remainder of the ten-year period.
vii) Clause 4 provides for the ascertainment of the Further Consideration in accordance with the schedule and for its payment. Broadly speaking the Further Consideration is to be 60% of the excess of the "Open Market Value" of the Underhill Ground over and above £10,000. The Open Market Value is itself to be agreed between the parties or settled by an expert and is to be the best price at which the freehold of the Underhill Ground could have been sold for cash consideration by private treaty assuming (a) vacant possession, (b) that "the state of the market levels of values and any other circumstances were on any earlier assumed date of exchange of contracts the same as on the date of the Purchaser's Request" and (c) that "the relevant Deed of Variation has already been entered into".
viii) Clause 7 is headed "Cut-Off Period". The first words of sub-clause 7.1 are, "This Agreement shall endure for a period of 10 years from the date hereof." The remainder of that sub-clause provides further that "on the expiration of the said period all the provisions of this Agreement shall cease to operate and be of no effect..."; and sub-clause 7.2 provides for Barnet LB, if requested, to cooperate with Holdings at the end of the ten-year period in doing whatever might be needed to "discharge" the Underhill Ground, but "without prejudice to the continuing effect of all the provisions contained or referred to in the Transfer."
i) The first, and obvious feature, is that the Deed's life, like that of the restrictive covenant, is limited to ten years. After that time the Underhill Ground will be free of the restrictive covenant; and no further amount is to be paid to Barnet LB pursuant to the Deed, This ten-year cut-off is central to the arrangements and "sticks out like a sore thumb" (to use the language of Mr David Stephens, one of the witnesses called by Barnet LB).ii) The second is that the payment of any further amount by Holdings to Barnet LB is in effect optional. Payment is to be made only if Holdings wishes to have the restrictive covenant modified or released before the lapse often years. Even then there are circumstances in which there can be no obligation resting on Holdings to pay for the modification or release, namely on the Club's permanent relocation to a stadium within Barnet.
The Parties
The back ground
"The immediate concern is to secure the tenure of the Club at Underhill and to satisfy the detailed requirements of the Football League, whilst simultaneously looking for an alternative site for the Club in the longer term. This was the preferred choice for both parties."
and
"The existing lease at Underhill will be. assigned to another company, with the clear understanding that, should the Club relocate within the borough, the Club would be entitled to the full marriage value which would be exclusively used for the development of the alternative site. Alternatively, if the Club relocate outside the borough, the situation would be as it exists now, in that the normal commercial marriage value would apply."
and
"Both sides expressed their strong commitment to all of the above issues, which would allow the Club to secure itself within the London Borough of Barnet, a decision that will be welcomed by all parties... The Chairman for his part made it very clear that he, together with the fans, desperately wants the Club to stay in the borough."
Value
The relevant events
i) The first was for Barnet LB to sell the freehold to the Club "without any restrictions", the vendor receiving 100% of the marriage value. On this basis Mr Stephens suggested a price of approximately £5.4 million.ii) The second was for Barnet LB to sell the freehold subject to a covenant restricting use to Association Football. However Mr Stephens contemplated that within 20 years such a covenant might be open to modification under section 84 of the Law of Property Act 1925. He therefore contemplated that after 20 years the Club would have the Underhill Stadium free from restriction. He placed a price of approximately £1.3 million on the freehold if sold on this basis, being the full residential development value of the land discounted back for 20 years deferral.
iii) His third option was for the freehold to be sold subject to the restrictive covenant, but with a provision "that if the land is sold freehold or long leasehold for any purpose other than the playing of Association Football then the Council will be entitled to a payment of £5,577,600" (that being his assumed value of the land for residential development) with an adjustment by reference to any change in the Retail Price Index. On the basis of this option the price for the land would be £10,000.
i) First, Mr Slyper pointed out to Mr Stephens that what he proposed for option 3 was objectionable in that it did not take account of the fact that the land was at present designated Green Belt. His provision requiring the payment of over £5 million in the event of a sale would trigger the payment whatever the planning status of the land at the time of sale, even though the prospect of obtaining planning permission for development might only be, say, 33%. To back up this argument Mr Slyper described the approach which the inland Revenue Valuation Officer had taken towards certain Green Belt land owned by a Strettons client which appears to have resulted in the land being valued at 25% of residential development value (50% reduction to reflect risk of change of use not being allowed with a further 50% reduction to reflect the risk that the type of development permitted might not be the most profitable possible).ii) Second, the marriage value split was discussed. As to this, Mr Stephens' position remained that in the event of the Club relocating outside Barnet it should be Barnet LB which would obtain the whole of marriage value, although it seems that he was willing for Barnet LB to share the marriage value if the Club remained within Barnet.
i) (by para 8.4.1) that the price was to be £10,000,ii) (by para 8.4.2) that on the holding company building a new stadium facility within the borough and Barnet FC moving to that facility as its permanent ground (that is, remaining and playing at the new facility for at least ten years), the full value arising from the sale of the land at Underhill was to "be entirely for the benefit of the holding company",
iii) (by para 8.4.3) that (emphasis added)
"If Barnet FC relocates to a stadium outside the borough or just leaves Underhill stadium (or a new stadium within 10 years) or ceases to exist, and the Underhill Stadium is sold, the holding company will be entitled to 40% of the net proceeds of sale in excess of the [£10,000] price (subject to appropriate index linking) and the Council will be entitled to 60%", andiv) (by para 8.4.4) that
"there will be provision in the transfer for the holding company to allow Barnet FC to play at the Underhill Stadium whilst it remains the Club's main ground".
"...Barnet FC did want a 50/50 share of the net proceeds but in the officers opinion this would not have properly reflected the fact that the lease is a wasting asset and therefore the terms would not have satisfied Section 123 requirements." In other words, the exempt report was drawing attention to the fact that for the Council to sanction a 50/50 split rather than a 60/40 split and to complete a sale on that basis would involve a contravention of the prohibition in section 123(2) of the 1972 Act in the absence of approval by the Secretary of State. So far from being invited to consider sanctioning such a split as an alternative to a 60/40 split, the Cabinet was being told that it could not.
i) The first is that the documents contained no express reference to a restrictive covenant being placed on the Underhill Ground on its sale by Barnet LB. On the other hand the fourth element, that in paragraph 8.4.4, was self-evidently aimed at securing for the Club the right to continue playing at the Underhill Ground, unless and until some alternative was developed: given that this was supposed to be by way of "provision in the transfer", it was likely to be achieved by some type of covenant, whether positive or restrictive.ii) The second, it seems to me, is that what was set out in paragraph 8.4.3 of the document, that containing the third limb of the terms of the proposed sale, was plainly intended to cover any case not covered by the second. That is to say, the third limb was intended to provide for Barnet LB to have a share of any development profit on a sale of the Underhill Ground in any circumstances where there had not been a permanent relocation of the Club within Barnet. It cannot have been contemplated by Mr Stephens that there could be a sale of the Underhill Stadium at an uplifted price reflecting the marriage value in circumstances which were not regulated by one or other of the second and the third limbs: it must have been expected by him that on any such sale the case would either be within the second limb or within the third limb and could not be anything else.
iii) The third point is that the third limb did not require for its applicability any time limit. Only one time limit was contemplated for either limb, this being that in order for "the holding company" to qualify for the 100% enjoyment of any re-sale profit the relocation of the Club within the Borough had to be "permanent", entailing that it had to last for a minimum of ten years.
i) First, Mr Slyper took objection to three points He did not take any objection to the point in paragraph 8.4.4, the requirement for the holding company to allow the Club to play at the Underhill Ground. Those he objected to were as follows:a) First, there was what he called the "ten-year rule" in the second limb. As to this he pointed out that the case should remain within the second limb, despite that rule, even in a case where the Club relocated more than once within Barnet.b) Second, he objected to the 60/40 split saying that "we still consider [the split] should be 50/50".c) Third, he said that the base figure for measuring any profit on sale of the Underhill Ground should either be £45,000 (plus index linking) to reflect the acquisition cost of both the leasehold and freehold interests, or "existing use value on the date of disposal".ii) Next, Mr Stephens immediately agreed to the first and third of these points, but not the 50/50 split.
iii) Finally Mr Slyper responded by e-mail on 3 July saying that "in the main the document does cover the matters agreed, although there are a few small amendments required ... and which I detail below". He did not detail anything about the split of profit. I shall revert to this point, but in my judgment it is significant. He did not stipulate for a time limit to be imposed for Barnet LB to be entitled to share in any profit on resale. What he did was to insist on the base figure for measuring profit being the existing use value; and he proposed various amendments to take account of his comment concerning the "ten-year rule", in particular to allow the Club to move out of Barnet temporarily while a new facility was being constructed within Barnet. One of these was to suggest an alteration to the text in relation to the third limb of the terms of sale quoted above.
"If Barnet FC permanently relocates to a stadium outside the borough or just leaves Underhill stadium (or a new stadium built at the Underhill location or elsewhere in the borough) within 10 years, or ceases to exist, and the Underhill Stadium is sold, the holding company will be entitled to 40% of the net proceeds of sale in excess of the base value of the facility as a football stadium and (sic) the time of disposal, with the Council being entitled to 60%. This provision would allow Barnet FC to move to a stadium outside the Borough to temporarily ground-share whilst a new stadium is being built at Underhill or elsewhere in the Borough."
i) First, the Cabinet Member's conclusion makes it clear, in my view, that Barnet LB is supposed to be obtaining a "proper share" of any future development value in circumstances where the Underhill Ground is sold and the Club no longer plays within the Borough: there is no time limit suggested for this. Moreover, the indication from that conclusion is that paragraph 8.4.2, where it applies, is supposed to be the only circumstance in which Barnet LB is not to obtain that share of development value.ii) This view is supported by the introductory paragraph of the Report, which explains (emphasis added) that the proposal under consideration is "to approve the sale of the freehold ... subject to the Council sharing in any future development value."
in) Third, the concluding words of paragraph 8.4.2 by themselves suggest that paragraph 8.4.3 (the paragraph which gives the share of value) is supposed to apply in any case where paragraph 8.4.2 does not, so that a ten-year cut-off in 8.4.3 would not be appropriate.
iv) Fourth, the ten-year time limit does not, as a matter of grammar, cover a case where after ten years the Club ceases to exist and the Underhill Ground is sold. And it is not at all clear that the ten-year limit is linked to a case where the Club relocates to a stadium outside the borough, rather than one where it "just leaves Underhill stadium". There could be some logic in such a distinction, if an aim was to discourage the purchaser from allowing the Club to leave the Borough.
v) Fifth, the last sentence in paragraph 8.4.3 is difficult to understand. Nothing in paragraph 8.4.3 has the effect of allowing 8.4.3 to be suspended in a case where the relocation outside Barnet is temporary pending the construction of a new stadium within Barnet.
"Unless Barnet FC has relocated to another suitable ground within the Borough and the holding company or its successor in title has provided and developed or will provide and develop that other ground, then on any sale of Underhill the sale proceeds division provisions will apply."
This summary, it seems to me, conveys that Mr Lustig did not think that the claw-back payment possibility had a ten-year time limit: in other words, he had not understood the draft DP Report to be recommending and seeking authority for any such time limit.
"The terms negotiated will achieve the following
(1) Realises a price for the freehold which reflects the current lease and the annual income.
(2) Ensures that Barnet FC can continue playing at the ground.
(3) Provides the Council with a proper share of any future development value if the Underhill Stadium is sold and Barnet FC no longer plays in the borough."
i) What had been paragraphs 11.4.2 and 11.4.3 were renumbered as 11.4.3 and 11.4.4 respectively.ii) The new paragraph 11.4.3, which dealt with the second limb of the sale proposals, was changed to require that the building of the new facility within Barnet (this being building that would be required for the purchasing holding company to avoid an obligation to share any value arising on a sale of the Underhill Ground), should be by the purchasing holding company "at its own cost". (By these words Mr Stephens intended, as he explained in evidence, to convey that the cost of the building should not fall on the Council.)
in) The new 11.4.4, which dealt with the third limb of the sale proposals (that which had previously been in 11.4.3) was now introduced by the word "Alternatively".
The rectification claim
i) that there was before the execution of the document to be rectified some previous accord between the parties manifested by some outward expression;ii) that the document to be rectified does not accurately set out the terms of that previous accord;
iii) that Barnet LB intended the document to carry out and not to vary those terms, mistakenly believing that the document did carry out those terms;
iv) that Holdings knew that Barnet LB had the mistaken belief;
v) that Holdings was guilty of some sharp practice in allowing Barnet LB to execute the document with that mistaken belief; and
vi) that the document if rectified as asked would accurately represent the terms of that previous accord or, in other words, the true intention of the parties as expressed in that accord.
"that burden ... is proof to a criminal standard, although under a different name, because that is the equivalent of being 'sure' (per Mr Justice Mustill in The Olympic Pride) and, I think, of 'convincing proof' (per the Court of Appeal in Jocelyne v Nissan (p 98))."
i) On the one hand actual knowledge of the precise mistake is not required in order to establish the fourth ingredient: "shut-eye" knowledge is certainly sufficient.ii) On the other hand the type of conduct which will suffice to establish the fifth ingredient is likely to depend, at least in part, on what the defendant knows or suspects. Where the defendant knows precisely what the mistake is, merely to execute the relevant document without pointing out the mistake to the other party may be sufficient: his fault will lie in having suppressed the fact that he has recognised the presence of the mistake. This was what happened in the Thomas Bates case. Where, however, the defendant suspects that there is something which the claimant would have wished to improve upon if he had thought of it, which may be the product either of a drafting mistake or of a failure in the decision making processes within the other party, but does not know which, more would be required, as it seems to me, to make the defendant's behaviour capable of being characterised as involving "sharp practice". For example the defendant may have sought to distract the other party from the mistake.
The Local Government Act 1972
"Purchasers in the market would have considered that redevelopment for residential purposes would be a realistic possibility if Barnet Football Club vacated the land. If this were to happen Barnet Football Club, or its Receiver or Liquidator (as appropriate), would then have joined with the freeholder with a view to selling for development at the best price achievable. The open market would currently appreciate that planning permission did not exist for residential purposes, that the site was zoned as Green Belt, and that Barnet Football Club would only seek to vacate if they could not redevelop on the site (with or without acquiring additional land) or if they could no longer function as a Football Club. Thus whilst buyers in the market would not have paid a price which reflected the residential development value they would have paid a price to reflect hope value."
He went on to say that he thought the "minimum price" which would have been achieved if the Club were not in the market themselves would have been in the region of £100,000. This figure, he said, could not be established as the product of a valuation calculation but was his estimate based on his knowledge of the market and perception of speculators operating within the market.
Mr. Maunder Taylor's evidence
i) In paragraph 6.4.4 of his report Mr Maunder Taylor stated that in his opinion "the principles of [the] formula calculation" in paragraph 8.4 of the revised draft Report to Cabinet "are clear and can be readily applied by a valuer in the event that the circumstances described arise"; and he added that the principles in that paragraph and 8.5 "do satisfy the requirements of" section 123 of the 1972 Act. However, when asked to consider those paragraphs in the course of his oral evidence he accepteda) that paragraph 8.5 is inaccurate in that there are circumstances in which on any construction of paragraph 8.4 those provisions do not give Barnet LB a share of any future development value; andb) that paragraph 8.4 is unclear in that, at the least, it is not obvious whether or not the ten-year time limit applies in a case where the Club "ceases to exist".ii) In paragraph 6.3.8 of his report Mr Maunder Taylor said:
"What has happened in the subject case is that the Defendant has paid existing use value subject to a formula by which they will pay additional value if and when:a) An appropriate planning permission is granted.b) Barnet Football Club are able to release possession of the subject land."Yet in my judgment, for the reasons I have explained, that is not a fair description of what has happened: the summary ignores the ten-year cut-off, and ignores the fact that the trigger for any further payment within that period is the making of a request by Holdings. What is more, Mr Shapiro had in paragraph 4.5 of his report (a report commented on and in some respects criticised by Mr Maunder Taylor) drawn attention to these two important features of the arrangement. Mr Maunder Taylor accepted that his own description was not accurate. He also said that these features, once appreciated, meant that the balance of advantage in the transaction was considerably in favour of Holdings.iii) Mr Maunder Taylor gave it as his understanding, in paragraph 6.3.18 of his report,
"that the purpose of the ten-year cut-off period takes into account that relocation or reconstruction of a stadium is already overdue and, at the date of the Agreement, it was expected that the problem would be resolved comfortably within that period."When giving his oral evidence Mr Maunder Taylor agreed that the word "might" was more appropriate than the word "would". In any event, the materials referred to by Mr Maunder Taylor in his letter as providing the basis for his understanding could not reasonably' support that understanding. By way of illustration he said that "It is in Section 4.5.16 of the Inquiry Report in which the introduction of the ten-year cut-off is proposed by" Barnet LB; but the relevant proposal was concerned only with the question when the Club's relocation within Barnet was to be considered as permanent (namely ten years from relocation) and in no way demonstrated an expectation on the part of Barnet LB that "the problem would be resolved comfortably within" ten years from the sale of the freehold. The three following paragraphs of the Inquiry Report made it plain that the ten-year relocation provision was distinct from the ten-year cut-off.
"the inability of the Council under the terms of the Transfer and Supplemental Deed to receive any part of the marriage value on redevelopment of the land after 10 years does have the effect that the disposal of the freehold reversion is for a consideration that represents the best that could reasonably be obtained."
Consequences of non-compliance with Section 123(2)
"The language of s.128(2) is perfectly clear and unambiguous: in favour of a person claiming under the council (and that includes [the third party] as lessee under the lease), the lease is not invalid even if a higher rent or greater consideration could have been obtained and the necessary consent of the minister was not obtained."
Lightman J went on to hold that the protection afforded by section 128(2) was available equally whether the disposition was sought to be impeached in proceedings for judicial review or any other proceedings. As he pointed out, the protection does not, of course, prevent examination of the legality of the conduct of a council in making a disposition. What it does, in the language of the Judge is:
"to protect the title of [the lessee] from exposure to risk of the invalidity of the lease by reason of the failure of the council to obtain a required consent and precludes the grant of any relief impugning the validity of, or setting aside, the lease on this ground."
Conclusion