UK Law Case
Summary |
Perrin and another v.
Northampton Borough Council and others at the Royal Courts of Justice,
19th December 2007.
This case is an appeal
against an earlier judgement (click
here for link). [Thanks
go to Dealga O'Callaghan for this
reference.] |
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IN THE SUPREME COURT OF
JUDICATURE
COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
TECHNOLOGY & CONSTRUCTION COURT
(HIS HONOUR JUDGE PETER COULSON QC)
HT-06-27
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Royal Courts of
Justice
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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19/12/2007 |
B e f o r e :LORD JUSTICE WALL
MR JUSTICE BLACKBURNE and SIR JOHN CHADWICK
____________________
Between:
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PERRIN and another |
Claimants/ Respondents |
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- and - |
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NORTHAMPTON BOROUGH
COUNCIL |
Defendant/Appellant |
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and others |
Defendants |
____________________
Mr James Findlay and Mr Ryan Kohli (instructed by Sharpe
Pritchard, Elizabeth House, Fulwood Place, London WC1V 6HG) for the
Appellant
Mr Graham Eklund QC and Mr Robin Green (instructed by Gaston Whybrew,
886 The Crescent, Colchester Business Park, Colchester, Essex CO4
9YQ) for the Respondents
Hearing date: 19 July 2007
____________________
HTML VERSION OF JUDGMENT
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Sir John Chadwick:
- This is an appeal from an
order made on 26 September 2006 by His Honour Judge Peter
Coulson QC, sitting in the Technology and Construction Court, on
the hearing of a preliminary issue in proceedings brought by Ms
Alison Perrin and Mr William Ramage. The defendants to those
proceedings are the appellant, Northampton Borough Council, and
the claimants' neighbours, Mr Frederick Shephard and his wife,
Mrs Sandra Shephard. Mr and Mrs Shephard took no part in the
hearing of the preliminary issue and they are not parties to
this appeal.
- The claimants are the owners and
occupiers of property at Great Billing, Northamptonshire, known
as 19 Elwes Way. Mr and Mrs Shephard own adjoining property,
known as 35 Church Walk. Within the curtilage of 35 Church Walk
there are two mature oak trees. Those trees are the subject of a
tree preservation order made by Northamptonshire County Council
on 6 June 1974.
- The purpose of a tree preservation
order (as the statutory term suggests) is to protect the tree or
trees in respect of which it is made from operations which might
be expected to cause damage or destruction: in particular, to
protect the tree from cutting down, uprooting, topping or
lopping without the consent of the local planning authority. But
the protection is not absolute: the provisions now enacted as
section 198(6)(b) of the Town and Country Planning Act 1990 have
the effect that no tree preservation order shall apply to the
cutting down, uprooting, topping or lopping of any trees ". . .
so far as may be necessary for the prevention or abatement of a
nuisance."
- For the purposes of the
preliminary issue before the judge (but not otherwise) it was to
be assumed: (a) that one of the two oak trees to which I have
just referred was causing a nuisance by root encroachment into
19 Elwes Way; (b) that the nuisance could be abated or prevented
by the cutting down, uprooting, topping or lopping of the tree;
and (c) that the nuisance could also be abated or prevented by
works other than the cutting down, uprooting, topping or lopping
of the tree. Examples of such other works were the underpinning
of the dwelling house on 19 Elwes Way or the erection of a
concrete root barrier. On the basis of those assumed facts the
preliminary issue to be determined was whether, for the purposes
of section 198(6)(b) of the 1990 Act, in determining whether
cutting down, uprooting, topping or lopping of a tree may be
necessary for the prevention or abatement of a nuisance, it is
irrelevant that there are other possible works that could
prevent or abate the same nuisance.
- At paragraph [78] of his judgment,
[2006] EWHC 2331 (TCC), the judge concluded that "the
possibility that other engineering works could be carried out is
irrelevant to the proper operation of s.198(6)(b)". He went on
to say this:
"[78] . . . Whilst it would, I think, be wrong for me to
express the view that, in every conceivable case that might
arise under s.198(6)(b), the existence of possible
engineering works will always be irrelevant, for the reasons
which I have set out above, I consider that, in the vast
majority of cases, the fact that alternative engineering
schemes are available would indeed be irrelevant to the
proper operation of the exemption. "
To the extent that that observation was intended to qualify
his conclusion in the present case, it was not reflected in the
order which the judge made. The answer to the preliminary issue,
as it appears in the order of 26 September 2006, is an
unqualified affirmative.
- The effect of the judge's order,
in cases where the facts are such as those assumed in the
present case - that is to say, in cases where nuisance by root
encroachment could be abated or prevented either by something
done to the tree itself which (but for the exemption contained
in section 198(6)(b) of the 1990 Act) would contravene the tree
preservation order or by some other works not involving the
cutting down, uprooting, topping or lopping of the tree – is
that, for the purposes of the exemption, it can always be said
to be "necessary" to do something to the tree itself: no matter
how major that something might be nor how minor the other works.
At the least, if the judge were correct, it can be said, in "the
vast majority" of such cases, that it is "necessary" to do
something to the tree itself; notwithstanding that the nuisance
could be abated or prevented by other works. The result must be
that, in such cases, a tree preservation order provides only the
limited protection to which the judge referred at paragraphs
[71] and [77] of his judgment: "the cutting down, uprooting,
topping or lopping of the tree must be the minimum necessary to
abate or prevent the nuisance."
- That, if I may say so, is a
surprising conclusion. If it is appropriate (as the judge
accepted) to ask what is the minimum that needs to be done to
the tree itself in order to abate or prevent the nuisance, why
should it be irrelevant to ask whether (having regard to other
possible means of abating or preventing the nuisance) anything
needs to be done to the tree itself? Common sense suggests that
the task in such cases should be to identify and evaluate the
various possible means of abating or preventing the nuisance –
whether by doing something to the tree itself or by other works
– and then to ask, in the light of that evaluation, whether it
is, indeed, necessary to do something to the tree, and (if so)
what.
- Permission to appeal to this Court
was granted by Lord Justice Rix on 17 November 2006. He was told
that the appeal raised a very important issue for local planning
authorities and others anxious to protect valued trees. It was
said that the conclusion which the judge reached was contrary to
the practice and long held understanding of many local planning
authorities.
The legislation
- The tree preservation order in the present
case was made under section 60 of the Town and Country Planning
Act 1971. That section, so far as material, was in these terms:
"60(1) If it appears to a local planning authority that it
is expedient in the interests of amenity to make provision
for the preservation of trees or woodlands in their area,
they may for that purpose make an order (in this Act
referred to as a 'tree preservation order') with respect to
such trees, groups of trees, or woodlands as may be
specified in the order; and, in particular, provision may be
made in any such order –
(a) for prohibiting (subject to any exemptions for which
provision may be made by the order) the cutting down,
topping, lopping or wilful destruction of trees except
with the consent of the local planning authority, and
for enabling that authority to give their consent
subject to conditions; . . . "
Legislation in those terms had been introduced in the Town
and Country Planning Act 1947 (as section 28(1)(a)); and
re-enacted in the Town and Country Planning Act 1962. The
provisions are now contained in sub-sections (1), (2) and (3)(a)
of section 198 of the Town and Country Planning Act 1990. It is
an offence to act in contravention of a tree preservation order:
section 210 of the 1990 Act.
- Section 198(6) of the 1990 Act
is in these terms:
"198(6) Without prejudice to any other exemption for which
provisions may be made by a tree preservation order, no such
order shall apply –
(a) to the cutting down, uprooting, topping or lopping
of trees which are dying or dead or have become
dangerous, or
(b) to the cutting down, uprooting, topping or lopping
of any trees in compliance with any obligations imposed
by or under an Act of Parliament or so far as may be
necessary for the prevention or abatement of a
nuisance."
An exemption in those, or substantially similar terms, had
been included in the 1947 Act and each of the two subsequent
Acts.
- Section 174 of the 1971 Act –
now re-enacted as section 203 of the 1990 Act – provided that
the matters for which provisions might, under section 60 of the
1971 Act, be made by a tree preservation order included the
payment by the local planning authority, subject to such
exceptions and conditions as may be specified in the order, of
compensation in respect of loss or damage caused or incurred in
consequence of the refusal of any consent required under the
order, or of the grant of any such consent subject to
conditions.
The 1974 tree preservation order
- As I have said, the tree
preservation order in the present case was made on 6 June 1974
by Northamptonshire County Council. The order (No 147 of 1974)
was confirmed by the Secretary of State on 21 February 1975. It
was taken over by Northampton Borough Council ("the Council")
when that authority became the local planning authority.
- The 1974 order was made in the
form (or substantially in the form) prescribed by regulation 4
of the Town and Country Planning (Tree Preservation Order)
Regulations 1969 (SI 1969/17). In particular, article 2 of the
1974 order provided that, subject to the provisions of the order
and to the exemptions specified in the second schedule (which
are not material in the present case), no person shall, except
with the consent of the authority and in accordance with the
conditions, if any, imposed on such consent, cut down, top, lop
or wilfully destroy or cause or permit the cutting down,
topping, lopping or wilful destruction of any tree, or comprised
in any group of trees, specified in the first schedule; and
article 5 of the order provided that, where the authority
refused a consent under article 2, they might certify that the
tree or trees (in respect of which consent was refused) had an
outstanding or special amenity value. The importance of that
latter provision lay in the proviso to article 9. That article –
reflecting section 174 of the 1971 Act – provided that a person
who had suffered loss or damage in consequence of a refusal of
consent should be entitled to compensation from the authority:
but that entitlement was subject to the proviso that no
compensation should be payable in respect of loss or damage
suffered by reason of a refusal of consent in the case of any
trees which were the subject of a certificate in accordance with
article 5.
The application for consent
- The order of 29 June 2006
(directing the trial of a preliminary issue on assumed facts)
had required the parties to agree a joint statement of agreed
facts (in addition to the assumed facts). In the light of that
agreed statement I should add to the facts that I have already
set out: (i) that, on 26 April 2004, the insurance agent acting
for the claimants' insurers sought consent from the Council to
fell the oak tree whose roots were said to be the cause of the
nuisance; (ii) that consent was refused by notice dated 21 June
2004; (iii) that, on the same day (21 June 2004), the Council
certified, under article 5 of the 1974 order, that the tree had
outstanding amenity value; and (iv) that an appeal to the
Secretary of State from the Council's refusal of consent was
dismissed by letter dated 24 January 2005.
- When refusing consent to fell
the oak tree the Council gave as their reasons:
"1. The tree proposed for removal is a tall, broad-spreading
and healthy specimen and should have a long potential safe
useful life expectancy. Together with an adjacent oak tree
of similar age, it forms Group G4 of the tree preservation
order. The group stands in the garden of a house overlooking
the open valley that defines the western edge of the old
core of the village of Great Billing. The group forms a
handsome and prominent feature in views along and over the
valley, part of which is a public park, and is also an
amenity to the village and its conservation area (within
which the trees stand), particularly in views from the
direction of the Parish Church of St Andrew. Consequently
the removal of the tree would have a significantly
detrimental impact on the amenity of a wide area and its
enjoyment by the public.
2. The removal of the tree is not justified by the evidence
which has been submitted in support of the application in
that it has not been demonstrated beyond reasonable doubt
that the damage evident at 19 Elwes Way is the result of
settlement caused by the tree proposed for removal. Absent
evidence includes:
(i) Live roots uncovered beneath the foundations of the
house in the vicinity of structural damage and that can
be unequivocally identified as originating from the tree
proposed for removal;
(ii) Monitoring data relating to the structural damage
extending over a period of not less than 18 months to
establish whether the damage is of a progressive or
cyclical nature;
(iii) Data to demonstrate that the oak tree contributed
to, or caused the recent onset of the damage rather than
other local phenomena, e.g. normal seasonal fluctuations
in soil volume acting on shallow foundations, leaking
drains, newly established vegetation.
3. Since the evidence submitted in support of the
application does not demonstrate beyond reasonable doubt
that the structural damage is the result of the root
activity of the oak tree, the amenity considerations are
considered to outweigh the reasons for the tree's removal."
- It must be kept in mind, first,
that – in making the application for consent – the applicant
must be taken to have accepted that it was not necessary to fell
the tree in order to prevent or abate the nuisance. If it were
necessary to fell the tree for the prevention or abatement of
the nuisance the 1974 order would have no application: section
198(6)(b). There would be no need to seek consent under article
2 of the order. Second, that the application was for consent to
fell the tree: there was no application (so far as appears from
the statement of agreed facts or from the refusal notice) for
consent to carry out works of topping or lopping: in particular,
there was no application for consent to cut the encroaching
roots. Third, that the factors which the local planning
authority may take into account in deciding whether to grant or
refuse consent under a tree preservation order are not the same
as the factors which would lead to a decision that it was, or
was not, necessary for the prevention or abatement of a nuisance
to cut down, uproot, top or lop a tree in respect of which a
tree preservation order had been made. Indeed, as I have pointed
out, it is only in cases where it is not necessary to carry out
the proposed operations to the tree in order to prevent or abate
the nuisance that the question whether to grant or refuse
consent to those operations can arise.
- In those circumstances it is not
at all surprising that the Council did not address either (i)
the question whether (if the structural damage to 19 Elwes Way
was, indeed, caused by encroachment by roots of the oak tree
proposed for removal) there were works (other than operations to
the tree itself) which would abate or prevent the nuisance or
(ii) the question whether there were operations to the tree
itself, short of felling, which would abate or prevent the
nuisance. The Council's decision turned on the question whether
the evidence to support the conclusion that the tree was the
cause of the damage was sufficiently cogent (to the standard of
"beyond reasonable doubt") to justify the removal of a tree of
outstanding amenity value.
- The certificate of outstanding
amenity value, also issued on 21 June 2004, rehearsed much of
the first reason in the refusal notice. In addition the Council
expressed the view that the tree proposed for removal was the
more significant component of the group of two trees comprising
Group G4 of the 1974 order. It was said that: "The two trees
appear to have grown up in a longstanding synergistic
relationship with regard to amenity and wind resistance. Removal
of the first tree would expose the second tree, a specimen that
appears to be of less vigour, to clearer sight and potential
wind damage for which it would be likely to prove inadequately
developed". The Council went on to point out that the effect of
the certificate was to remove their liability to pay
compensation for any loss or damage suffered as a result of
their decision to refuse consent to felling.
- The insurers' agents appealed to
the Secretary of State against both the refusal of consent and
the certificate. In determining those appeals the First
Secretary of State relied on, and appended to his decision
letter of 24 January 2005, the report of his inspecting officer
(Mr D H Thorman BSc FArborA) made following a site visit on 3
December 2004. The First Secretary of State accepted the
inspecting officer's conclusions that the oak tree "has a
significant amenity value because of its prominence in the
landscape, age, size, historical associations and conservation
value as an old Oak tree with a long life expectancy to come".
He accepted that the tree merited outstanding status. The
decision letter continued:
"Whilst the Secretary of State accepts that the criteria for
suspecting tree related subsidence damage to 19 Elwes Way
are satisfied and there are indications that the appeal Oak
is implicated, the evidence is not sufficient to justify
felling a tree of such high amenity value, particularly as
there is an alternative engineering solution to the removal
of the appeal Oak."
- The reference, in that passage
of the decision letter, to the existence of "an alternative
engineering solution" was prompted, no doubt, by paragraph 17 of
the inspecting officer's report. It is, I think, helpful to set
that paragraph in context:
"15. The appellant's claim that on the 'balance of
probabilities' the appeal oak is the probable cause of
foundation movement, is reasonable. However, that approach
to tree management may apply where the suspect tree is of no
particular value, either to the owner or to the community.
In this case, the tree has a very high value in landscape
amenity, conservation and historical terms, as outlined
above. The tree therefore merits more than a 'balance of
probabilities' assessment, so a more thorough investigation
that includes level monitoring over a suitable period would
be most appropriate.
16. Notwithstanding the above, there are alternatives to
managing either the tree or the building. The tree is at
nearly 14m distant from the house at 19 Elwes Way, so it
would be reasonable to conclude that its root spread beneath
the foundations is at the outer periphery. In such a case,
and if the movements are only seasonal, it is possible to
reduce the effects on the building by pruning the tree
sufficiently to reduce water uptake significantly. There are
disadvantages of this approach, one of which is that trees
normally respond to heavy pruning by vigorous re-growth, and
pruning is then required to be repeated. However, the appeal
oak is of considerable age, and it would likely take some
time to restore what would be lost in terms of leaf area.
The other disadvantage of pruning is the alteration of crown
size and shape that would decrease its visual impact in the
landscape.
17. The other alternative is an engineering solution, i.e.
underpinning. This may be costly, but in this case, the cost
would not compare with the value of the appeal tree. Even if
it were to proved conclusively that the oak tree is
implicated in damage to the building, the preferred solution
in this case would be to stabilize the building on adequate
foundations, rather than lose the tree, or even to lose part
of the crown by pruning. The value of this tree in terms of
its position in the landscape, to conservation and local
history is immeasurable, so an alternative remedy to felling
is paramount."
- The First Secretary of State
dismissed both the appeal against the refusal of consent to fell
and the appeal form the article 5 certificate. There was no
appeal from his decision. The claimants chose, instead, to
commence these proceedings.
These proceedings
- These proceedings were commenced
by the issue of a claim form on 31 January 2006. The defendants
to that claim, as issued, were the Council and Mr Shephard: Mrs
Shephard was added as a defendant, by amendment, on 19 May 2006.
The claimants sought a declaration that "for the purposes of
section 198(6) Town & Country Planning Act 1990 (i) the tree [on
the Shephards' property] is causing subsidence by root
encroachment into the Claimants' land and (ii) it is necessary
to cut down the tree to prevent and/or abate that nuisance".
They sought (in the event that Mr and Mrs Shephard refused to
allow the tree to be cut down) damages for nuisance and an
injunction. Paragraph 7 of the particulars of claim contained
the assertion that "as a matter of law, in determining whether
cutting down the tree is necessary for the purposes of [section
198(6) of the 1990 Act], the possibility that other works (such
as underpinning) might be carried out is irrelevant". It is
likely, as it seems to me, that that assertion, with its
reference to the possibility of underpinning, was included in an
attempt to meet the suggestion, in the First Secretary of
State's decision letter of 24 January 2005, that an alternative
engineering solution to the perceived nuisance could be found.
- Although Mr and Mrs Shephard
were joined as defendants to the proceedings, the judge noted
that the real dispute was not between the claimants and their
neighbours. In a schedule of reasons attached to a (provisional)
pre-emptive costs order which he made on 20 December 2006, Lord
Justice Rix recorded that (as he must have been told) the
claimants and Mr and Mrs Shephard share common insurers. The
real dispute was between those insurers and the Council. That
reality is reflected in a consent order, made at or about the
same time as the order of 26 June 2006 by which the court
directed the preliminary issue, staying proceedings between the
claimants and Mr and Mrs Shephard on terms. Those terms
provided: (i) that Mr and Mrs Shephard would arrange for the
removal of the oak tree as soon as they were permitted by the
Council to do so; (ii) that the cost of those works of removal
would be borne by the claimants' insurers; (iii) that no claims
for damages existing as at the date of the consent order would
be pursued against Mr and Mrs Shephard; but (iv) that the
claimants were not prevented from bringing a fresh claim for
damages against Mr or Mrs Shephard in respect of damage arising
thereafter "which either the Second or Third Defendant could
lawfully have avoided by felling or carrying out other works to
the said Tree".
- The Council served a defence on
or about 17 July 2006. It was admitted that the claimants'
property at 19 Elwes Way had suffered damage; but it was not
admitted that that damage was caused by the oak tree. Paragraphs
5 and 6 of the defence contained averments (i) that it was not
necessary to cut down the tree in order to prevent or abate a
nuisance (if any) from encroaching roots and (ii) that "other
methods would be capable of achieving the prevention or
abatement of such nuisance that may exist, which methods include
installation of a root barrier and/or pruning and/or cutting
localised roots and/or underpinning". Paragraph 7 of the defence
put in issue the claimants' contention that, in determining
whether cutting down the tree is necessary for the purposes of
section 198(6) of the 1990 Act, the possibility that other works
(such as underpinning) might be carried out was irrelevant.
The judge's reasons
- The preliminary issue came
before the judge on 7 September 2006. In his judgement,
delivered on 26 September 2006,
[2006] EWHC 2331 (TCC), he noted, at paragraph [4] that it
was common for local authorities to refuse permission to lop or
fell trees protected by tree preservation orders on the grounds
that other works could be carried out instead. He posed the
question: "Is such an approach a legitimate interpretation of s.
198(6)(b) of the 1990 Act?". He went on to say this:
"[5] It is also instructive to stand back from these
particular provisions of the 1990 Act and to note the effect
on the claimants of the first defendant's stance in this
case. At common law, a house owner whose property is damaged
by the encroachment of roots belonging to a neighbour's tree
has a claim against that neighbour in nuisance. As we shall
see, in certain circumstances, that would render the
neighbour liable for the costs of underpinning the property
damaged by the tree roots. In the present case, the first
defendant is contending that the costs of any such
underpinning work that may be necessary should be borne by
the claimants themselves, the owners of the property that
has been damaged. Thus it is the effect of the first
defendant's position in this case that, because this tree is
the subject of a particular type of TPO, the claimants'
ordinary rights at common law are effectively extinguished,
and they can make no claim for the costs of any necessary
underpinning works. Again it is necessary for me to
determine whether that is a legitimate interpretation of the
1990 Act."
The judge returned to that theme at paragraph [79] of his
judgment. He observed that the conclusion which he had reached
at paragraph [78] (to which I have already referred) provided a
solution which was not only workable but fair. He went on:
"[79] . . . There is not, and should not be, any significant
difference between the position of a householder whose
property is undermined and damaged by tree root encroachment
from a tree that is not the subject of a TPO, and a
householder whose property is undermined and damaged by
roots from a tree that is protected by a TPO. The whole
point of s.198(6)(b) is that, where there is actionable
nuisance, the TPO will not apply to whatever cutting down,
uprooting, topping or lopping of the tree is necessary to
abate or prevent that nuisance. One of the difficulties for
the first defendant in the present case is that it was the
inevitable consequence of their construction of s.198(6)(b)
that, despite the existence of actionable nuisance, the
claimants here would have had to pay for the costs of
underpinning the foundations of their house. This was, on
the first defendant's case, the direct result of the TPO and
the certificate. That seemed to me not only unfair but, much
more importantly, unsupported by any provision of the 1990
Act, and, for the reasons which I have given, contrary to
s.198(6)(b)."
Those passages, as it seems to me, mis-state the Council's
stance in the present dispute.
- There is nothing in the material
which I have seen to suggest that the Council has taken any
stance on the question who (as between the claimants and Mr and
Mrs Shephard) should bear the cost of any works - whether those
be operations to the tree itself (pruning or cutting localised
roots) or other works (the installation of a root barrier or
underpinning) – which may be done to prevent or abate the
nuisance (if any). The Council's stance, as it appears from the
material before this Court, is: (i) that it is not necessary to
fell the tree in order to prevent or abate a nuisance; (ii)
that, because it is not necessary to fell the tree for that
purpose, it would contravene the 1974 order if the tree were
felled without the Council's consent; (iii) that consent to
felling has been refused, for the reasons given in the refusal
notice of 21 June 2004; and (iv) that, having regard to the
article 5 certificate issued on 21 June 2004, there can be no
claim against the Council for compensation in respect of the
refusal of consent to fell. It is clear, as it seems to me, that
the Council has not taken a stance (on the pleadings in these
proceedings) on the question whether it is necessary, in order
to abate or prevent the nuisance, to carry out operations to the
tree itself (pruning or cutting localised roots) which stop
short of felling or removing the tree; and that the Council has
not indicated whether (if such lesser operations to the tree
itself are not necessary, in the context of section 198(6)(b) of
the 1990 Act) consent to those operations would be granted or
refused on an application under article 2 of the 1974 order. So
far as I am aware, no such application has been made.
- The judge set out his
conclusions at paragraphs [72] to [77] of his judgment. In
summary, he held:
(1) The principal purpose of section 198 of the 1990 Act was
to preserve trees through the mechanism of tree preservation
orders: the exemptions in section 198(6) must be carefully
construed so as to ensure that the principal purpose of the
legislation was not frustrated.
(2) The determination of the question as to whether the
lopping or felling of the tree is necessary to abate or prevent
a nuisance was a question of fact. That question was to be
determined on "the everyday sensible approach of a prudent
citizen looking at the tree in question and deciding in his own
mind whether he can properly say [that lopping or felling is
necessary to abate or prevent a nuisance]". He took that test
from the judgment of Mr Justice Farquharson in Smith v Oliver
[1989] 2 PLR 1, 3E-F.
(3) In order to trigger the exemption under section
198(6)(b), the nuisance in question must be actionable in law.
There must be actual or imminent damage, not just the "pure
encroachment" of roots or branches into or over the adjoining
land.
(4) The word "necessary" in section 198(6)(b) provided a
simple link between the cutting down, uprooting, topping or
lopping of the tree and the prevention or abatement of the
nuisance. It governed the extent of the operations that were to
be carried out to the tree, and nothing more.
(5) The cutting down, uprooting, topping or lopping of the
tree must be the minimum necessary to abate or prevent the
nuisance. If the actionable nuisance could be abated or
prevented by, say, lopping, then the uprooting of the tree
would not be covered by the section 198(6)(b) exemption and
would be an offence under section 210 of the 1990 Act.
- On the basis of those
conclusions – and, in particular, the conclusion that the word
"necessary" governed the extent of the work to the tree and
nothing more – the judge rejected the submission that, in
order to determine whether work to the tree ("lopping, felling
or the like") was necessary under section 198(6)(b), it was
appropriate to consider alternative engineering solutions or the
other factors advanced by the Council (which the judge had set
out at paragraph [51] of his judgment). He rejected, also, the
submission that the mere fact that alternative engineering
solutions might be available to abate or prevent the nuisance is
or can be relevant to the proper operation of the section.
- There is no challenge on this
appeal to the conclusions which I have summarised as (1), (2),
(3) and (5). Although, for my part, I have some doubt whether it
is possible to draw a distinction, for the purposes of section
198(6)(b) of the 1990 Act, between what the judge described as
"actionable nuisance" and "pure encroachment" of roots –
conclusion (3) - it is unnecessary to resolve that doubt in the
present case. In reaching that conclusion the judge preferred
the submissions advanced on behalf of the Council to those of
the claimants; notwithstanding support for the latter by Mr
Mynors in his monograph The Law of Trees, Forests and
Hedgerows (2002). The claimants do not seek to reopen the
point in their respondents' notice. The appeal turns on whether
the judge was correct in his conclusion – conclusion (4) – that
the word "necessary", in the context of section 198(6)(b) of the
1990 Act, governs the extent of the work to the tree and no
more.
- The judge reached that
conclusion for the reasons which he set out at paragraphs [53]
to [58] of his judgment. At paragraph [53] he said this:
"[53] The first and obvious point to make is that the word
'necessary' in s.198(6)(b) provides a simple link between a
range of possible works to the tree itself and the
prevention or abatement of a nuisance: if any of those
lopping/felling works to the tree are necessary to prevent
or abate an actionable nuisance, then such works are
permissible because 'no TPO shall apply'. The section does
not say that cutting down or lopping must be 'reasonably
necessary in all the circumstances' or that lopping or
felling must be necessary 'having regard to the nature of
the tree, the other available methods of preventing or
abating the nuisance, the financial implications of the
works, the financial standing of those involved, the nature
of the amenity and the degree of the nuisance'. In other
words, as a simple matter of construction, the section is
concerned only with allowing such cutting down or lopping
works as may be necessary to prevent or abate an actionable
nuisance. Accordingly, I accept Mr Green's principal
submission that 'necessary' here refers to the extent of the
cutting down, uprooting, topping or lopping required to
abate or prevent the nuisance, and nothing more."
- It was for that reason, as the
judge observed at paragraph [54], that the various factors set
out in a list advanced on behalf of the Council – to which I
have already referred and which the judge had summarised at
paragraph [51] of his judgment - were not factors which arose
for consideration in determining whether it was necessary to
carry out any operations on the tree itself. He went on to say
this:
"[54] . . . As the Court of Appeal made plain in [Pabari
v Secretary of State for Work and Pensions and another
[2004] EWCA Civ 1480;
[2005] 1 All ER 287], the Court must not qualify the
word 'necessary' by reference to what might be regarded as
reasonable. The word 'necessary' instead requires a high
degree of exigency. The link in s.198(6)(b) is between the
nuisance and the works to the tree itself. I can therefore
find no reason why, as a matter of construction, the matters
listed by Mr Findlay can be relevant. In many ways, the
lengthy list of matters which Mr Findlay relied on is akin
to the minute scrutiny of all the mortgage options and
continuing remortgage options which, in Pabari, the
Court of Appeal expressly ruled was not encompassed by the
word 'necessarily'. The same point can be made in answer to
Mr Findlay's argument that, under certain provisions of the
Trades Descriptions Act 1968 and the Health and Safety at
Work Act 1974 to which he referred, the court is obliged to
consider a whole range of matters when looking at what is
practicable or diligent. But each of the provisions that he
relied on from these statutes was expressly qualified in a
way that made such an approach entirely understandable: 'reasonable
precautions', 'all due diligence', 'reasonably
practicable', and so on. There is no such qualification
here. Those other statutory provisions, therefore, did not
assist the first defendant; their qualified language only
served to confirm my view that a consideration of a wide
range of other factors is not appropriate under s.198(6)(b),
which contains no such qualifications."
- It was for that reason, also,
that the judge rejected the submission – which he described as
being at the core of the Council's submissions - that
alternative engineering schemes, "such as the underpinning of
the house affected by the tree roots, or the installation of a
concrete root barrier below the ground", must be considered
before it could be concluded that any works to the tree itself
were necessary. He said this:
"[55] . . . But it seems to me that that argument ignores
the fact that s.198(6)(b) only identifies works to the tree:
it makes no reference to the possibility of any other works,
that do not involve the tree, that might prevent or abate
the nuisance. It is a rule of statutory construction that
where a statutory proposition might have covered a number of
matters, but in fact mentions only some of them then, unless
those mentioned are merely examples, the rest are to be
taken as having been excluded from the proposition: see
Bennion's Statutory Interpretation (Butterworth's,
2002) Part XXVIII, Section 390, page 1072. Cutting down,
uprooting, topping or lopping of trees are all referred to
in s.198(6)(b); no mention is made of engineering works in
the ground or to the foundations of building affected. It is
therefore reasonable to conclude that they have been
excluded from the working of the section."
- The judge found confirmation for
his view that works other than operations to the tree itself
were excluded from consideration under section 198(6)(b) of the
1990 Act in "a consideration of what s.198(6)(b) is intended to
achieve". He identified the statutory purpose at paragraph [56]
of his judgment:
"[56] . . . It is allowing a person to carry out works to
the tree itself which, if the exemption at 198(6)(b) did not
apply, would be a criminal offence pursuant to s.210. It is
permitting the uprooting or lopping of an otherwise
protected tree; it is making something lawful that would
otherwise be unlawful. Compare that with the underpinning of
the foundations or the installation of a concrete root
barrier, on which the first defendant seeks to rely here. Ms
Perrin and Mr Ramage were always entitled, provided that
they could afford it, to underpin their house or install a
concrete root barrier. That would be engineering work that
would be carried out on their own land, without directly
affecting their neighbour's tree. There is therefore no need
for s.198(6)(b) to make mention of the possibility of such
work, because it would always be lawful for such work to be
carried out. It would make a nonsense of s.198(6)(b) to
argue that the works which it was permitting (lopping,
felling, etc) could only be carried out following a detailed
analysis of the possibility of carrying out other works,
which are not mentioned in the Act, which would not directly
affect the tree and which were never at any time rendered
unlawful by the Act in any event."
- The judge found further support
for his view in the claimants' submissions that section
198(6)(b) of the 1990 Act must be interpreted in a way which
would make it simple for a member of the public (or, more
specifically I think, to a neighbouring owner) to decide whether
he could resort to self-help in a case where his property was
suffering (or threatened with) damage from encroaching tree
roots or branches. As he put it, the section must not be
"unworkable". He said this:
"[57] In addition, I accept Mr Green's submission that it
would be impossible for a member of the public, who wanted
to avail themselves of the protection provided by
s.198(6)(b), to decide whether or not uprooting or lopping
was necessary if such a decision turned on the myriad
factors outlined by Mr Findlay and summarised in paragraph
51 above. Mr Green made the telling point that, unlike, say,
the provision under review in Pabari, which would be
decided by a member of the Child Support Agency (and, on
appeal, by a child support appeal tribunal, then a
Commissioner and, on a further appeal, by the Court),
s.198(6) involves no such decision-making structure. It is
an exemption provided to members of the public to allow
them, in certain limited circumstances, to take steps to
deal with a tree otherwise protected by a TPO. In my
judgment, the section would be unworkable if a member of the
public had to weigh up all of the factors listed by Mr
Findlay before coming to a clear view as to whether or not
the works to the tree were necessary. Indeed, I consider
that some of the matters that have been identified by Mr
Findlay would be quite incapable of sensible evaluation by a
member of the public, no matter how well informed. For
example, it would simply not be open to them to say with any
conviction that the tree in question either had or had not a
particularly high amenity value. Accordingly, given the
injunction in Pabari that the word 'necessary' has to
be interpreted sensibly and practically, and that what is
necessary to abate or prevent the nuisance is a matter of
fact to be determined by 'the everyday sensible approach of
a prudent citizen' (Smith v Oliver), I conclude that
the section could not be sensibly applied by those whom it
is seeking to help if Mr Findlay's long list of factors all
had to be taken into account in determining whether lopping
or felling the tree was necessary to abate or prevent a
nuisance.
[58] The point about the unworkability of s.198(6)(b) in
such circumstances is further confirmed when it is
remembered that s.198(6), amongst other things, provides a
defence to the statutory offence of damaging a tree under
s.210. As is made clear in Part XVII, section 271, pages
705-709 of Statutory Interpretation, a person cannot
be guilty of an offence except under clear law. It would, I
think, be impossible to operate s.198(6)(b) in a clear and
coherent way if it was to be suggested that a man was guilty
of an offence if he cut down a tree protected by a TPO in
circumstances where the nuisance which he was anxious to
prevent or abate might have been dealt with by the carrying
out of expensive underpinning work instead. The section does
not say that, and I do not believe that it can be
interpreted as such."
- Having reached the conclusion,
for the reasons which he had set out at paragraphs [53] to [58]
of his judgment, that, as a group, the various factors advanced
by the Council as matters to be taken into account were not
matters "relevant for the proper operation and application of
s.198(6)(b) of the 1990 Act", the judge went on, at paragraphs
[60] to [71] of his judgment to consider the relevance of each
of those factors individually. Before addressing those later
paragraphs, it is convenient to set out the judge's summary of
those factors:
"[51] . . . Assuming an actionable nuisance, [counsel]
submitted that lopping/felling works to the tree would only
be 'necessary' following a consideration of all other
alternative engineering schemes, such as the underpinning of
the foundations and the installation of a concrete root
barrier; the practical implications of the implementation of
either the works to the tree or the engineering works in the
ground (such as underpinning or the installation of the root
barrier); the cost of the works to the tree and the
comparative costs of any alternative engineering scheme; the
financial position of the individuals concerned, including
the owners of the property affected and the owners of the
tree; whether or not the individuals concerned had effective
and valid insurance; the nature, scope and extent of the
amenity provided by the tree that is the subject of the TPO;
and the extent of the actionable nuisance that had been
established."
The judge addressed those factors under four heads: (i)
amenity, (ii) the existence of alternative schemes, (iii)
financial considerations and (iv) extent of the nuisance.
- Under the first of those heads
the judge held that the particular value of, or amenity level
provided by, the tree had no relevance to the determination of
the question (posed by section 198(6)(b) of the 1990 Act)
whether the proposed operations (cutting down, uprooting,
topping or lopping) were necessary for the prevention or
abatement of a nuisance. He pointed out (correctly, in my view)
that the fact that that would be a matter which could properly
be taken into account by the authority (and by the Secretary of
State) in the context of an application for consent to carry out
operations to the tree itself was not inconsistent with that
conclusion. He said this:
"[61] Whatever might be appropriate under the consent
procedure, there is nothing in s.198(6)(b) which permits any
sort of consideration of the amenity level provided by the
tree. I do not consider that a sort of sliding scale, which
I understand is sometimes used by local authorities when
considering applications to fell, and which considers the
particular amenity value of the tree in question, is
permissible or relevant under s.198(6)(b). After all,
s.198(6) only applies to a tree that is the subject of a
TPO. The section therefore assumes that the tree is of
sufficient importance and amenity value to be the subject of
a protection order in the first place. But that is all. If
the necessary exemption is made out under s.198(6) then the
tree can be cut down, uprooted, topped or lopped, no matter
what amenity value it is said to supply."
He observed that it would be "quite impossible" for a person
whose property was subject to a nuisance from encroaching roots
"to endeavour to work out a sliding scale in which the level of
amenity provided by the tree is balanced against the imminent
danger of the collapse of part of his house."
- Under the second head, the judge
reaffirmed his view that "the mere fact that an actionable
nuisance could be prevented or abated by the carrying out of
engineering works in the ground or to the affected property does
not automatically mean that cutting down, uprooting, topping or
lopping will not be necessary under s.198(6)(b)". He developed
further the reasons which led him to that view:
"[64] First, as I have already pointed out, that is not what
the section says. The section provides a simple link between
works to the tree and the prevention or abatement of a
nuisance. It makes no reference to the need for a
consideration of any other alternative schemes or ways in
which the nuisance might otherwise be prevented or abated.
[65] Secondly, I believe that it would make a nonsense of
the whole exemption at s.198(6)(b) if lopping or felling
could always be avoided if alternative schemes could be
shown to exist. The vast majority of cases of tree root
damage could be dealt with by the expensive underpinning of
the foundations of the property concerned, or the
installation, often deep into the ground, of a concrete root
barrier. Thus, if the mere existence of an alternative
solution is enough to determine that lopping or felling will
not be necessary under s.198(6)(b), the exemption would, as
a matter of practicality, never apply. It would therefore be
rendered of no effect at all.
[66] Alternative solutions, such as underpinning or the
installation of concrete root barriers, will almost always
exist. They are, however, not relevant to s.198(6)(b).
Permission is not necessary for such engineering works to be
carried out; neither is a criminal offence committed if such
works are carried out. What the section is concerned with is
the works to the tree itself for which, but for the
exemption, the person carrying out the work would be
committing a statutory offence."
The Council have made it clear in this Court that the judge
was mistaken if he thought (as his observations in paragraph
[65] suggest) that they were seeking to advance the contention
that the mere existence of an alternative solution is, of
itself, enough to determine that lopping or felling will not be
necessary under section 198(6)(b) of the 1990 Act. That is not –
and, they say, never was – their contention. Their case is that
the existence of an alternative solution is a factor to be taken
into account when determining whether lopping or felling is
necessary.
- Under the third head the judge
observed that "inevitably linked to the question of alternative
schemes is the question of their cost". He expressed the view
that complex engineering works to foundations – or the
installation of a concrete root barrier in the ground - would
always cost considerably more than the "relatively modest" cost
of employing a competent tree surgeon to carry out operations to
the tree itself: it would, be wrong for the owner of a house
affected by an actionable nuisance to be required (by the
existence of the tree preservation order) to carry out "much
more expensive work" to abate or prevent the nuisance than (in
the absence of the order) would have been necessary. He went on
to say this:
"[68] In addition, as Mr Findlay accepted, if the question
of the costs of the various putative schemes are relevant,
then it is inevitable that consideration also has to be
given to the financial standing of the owner of the tree
and, on the other hand, the owner of the property that is
affected by the tree. Such matters are extremely variable.
Again, one asks rhetorically: How can a person who wants to
avail himself of the remedy provided by s.198(6)(b) possibly
work out what is necessary by reference to his and/or his
neighbour's financial standing? It could mean that works
which are 'necessary' one day would, as a result of a
lottery win over a weekend, be rendered 'unnecessary' the
following Monday. Again, it seems to me that this approach
would make the section unworkable.
[69] The financial standing of those with an interest in the
works to the tree or some other alternative scheme is
inevitably going to be linked to their insurance position.
Again, therefore, if Mr Findlay was right, work which,
taking one view of the insurance position, was necessary
might, because of a change in the insurance position, be
rendered unnecessary. Again, it seems to me that these
considerations are far removed from the clear and simple
position set out in s.198(6)(b)."
- Under the fourth head the judge
began by rejecting the contention that the extent of the
nuisance was a factor to be taken into account under section
198(6)(b) of the 1990 Act. As he put it, at paragraph [70] of
his judgment: "Again, as a matter of the construction of the
section, I do not think that this is a relevant consideration. .
. . [It] seems to me that it has nothing whatsoever to do with
the separate operation of s.198(6)(b). All that is required is
an actionable nuisance in order to trigger the works to the
tree". But he then went on (at paragraph [71]) to accept that
the extent of the nuisance was "highly relevant to the precise
nature of the cutting down, uprooting, topping or lopping work
that it is necessary to carry out to the tree". He accepted
that, "on a proper construction of the section, the cutting
down, uprooting, topping or lopping had to be the minimum
necessary to prevent or abate the nuisance": so, "if the
actionable nuisance could have been prevented or abated by some
topping or lopping of the branches of the tree, but instead the
house owner uprooted the entire tree, then he would have gone
outside the exemption provided by s.198(6)(b) and would have
committed an offence under s.210".
This appeal
- I expressed the view, earlier in
this judgment, that this appeal turns on whether the judge was
correct in his conclusion that the word "necessary", in the
context of section 198(6)(b) of the 1990 Act, governs the extent
of the operations to be carried out on the tree and no more.
The judge reached that conclusion at paragraph [53] of his
judgment. He reached that conclusion on the basis of "the first
and obvious point" which he identified in that paragraph. If the
judge were correct to reach that conclusion for the reason that
he gave in paragraph [53], his conclusion that the existence of
alternative engineering solutions was irrelevant does not need
whatever support can be obtained from the later paragraphs of
his judgment. But, if the reasoning in paragraph [53] is flawed,
the conclusion that the existence of alternative engineering
solutions was irrelevant cannot, on analysis, be supported by
the later paragraphs. It is appropriate, therefore, to begin by
examining the reasoning in paragraph [53].
- The object and effect of
sub-section (6) of section 198 of the 1990 Act is to disapply a
tree preservation order made under sub-section (1) in the
circumstances described in paragraphs (a) or (b): in particular,
to exempt from a prohibition against cutting down, topping,
lopping or uprooting a of tree, imposed pursuant to sub-section
(3)(a), (a) cases in which the tree is dying or dead or has
become dangerous and (b) cases in which the tree is to be cut
down, uprooted, topped or lopped (i) in compliance with an
obligation imposed by or under an Act of Parliament or (ii) so
far as may be necessary for the prevention or abatement of a
nuisance.
- For convenience I set out
paragraph [53] again; numbering the sentences for ease of
identification:
"[53] [1] The first and obvious point to make is that [i]
the word 'necessary' in s.198(6)(b) provides a simple link
between a range of possible works to the tree itself and the
prevention or abatement of a nuisance: [ii] if any of those
lopping/felling works to the tree are necessary to prevent
or abate an actionable nuisance, then such works are
permissible because 'no TPO shall apply'. [2] The section
does not say that cutting down or lopping must be
'reasonably necessary in all the circumstances' or that
lopping or felling must be necessary 'having regard to the
nature of the tree, the other available methods of
preventing or abating the nuisance, the financial
implications of the works, the financial standing of those
involved, the nature of the amenity and the degree of the
nuisance'. [3] In other words, as a simple matter of
construction, the section is concerned only with allowing
such cutting down or lopping works as may be necessary to
prevent or abate an actionable nuisance. [4] Accordingly, I
accept Mr Green's principal submission that 'necessary' here
refers to the extent of the cutting down, uprooting, topping
or lopping required to abate or prevent the nuisance, and
nothing more. "
- The judge was plainly correct to
say, as he did in the first limb of the first sentence of
paragraph [53] of his judgment, that "the word 'necessary' in
s.198(6)(b) provides a . . . link between a range of possible
works to the tree itself and the prevention or abatement of a
nuisance". I have omitted the word "simple" from that citation.
I find it impossible to discern what, if anything, that word
adds to the proposition: in particular I do not read the phrase
"a simple link" as having the meaning "simply a link" in that
context. One feature of the "link" between the range of possible
works to the tree itself and the prevention or abatement of a
nuisance is described in the second limb of the first sentence
of paragraph [53]: "if any of those lopping/felling works to the
tree are necessary to prevent or abate an actionable nuisance,
then such works are permissible because 'no TPO shall apply'".
Again, as it seems to me, that proposition is plainly correct:
but the proposition throws no light on the question whether
lopping/felling works to the tree can be said to be "necessary"
if there are other works (not involving operations on the tree
itself) which would (of themselves) suffice to prevent or abate
the nuisance. The judge described a further feature of the link
at paragraph [76] of his judgment: "the cutting down, uprooting,
topping or lopping of the tree must be the minimum necessary to
abate or prevent the nuisance". As he said, that proposition
reflected his construction of the word "necessary". There can be
no quarrel with that proposition. But, again, the proposition
throws no light on the question whether any works to the tree
can be said to be necessary if there are other works (not
involving operations to the tree itself) which would suffice to
prevent or abate the nuisance.
- In the second sentence of
paragraph [53] of his judgment the judge pointed out, correctly,
that section 198(6)(b) "does not say that cutting down or
lopping must be 'reasonably necessary in all the circumstances'
or that lopping or felling must be necessary 'having regard to
the nature of the tree, the other available methods of
preventing or abating the nuisance, the financial implications
of the works, the financial standing of those involved, the
nature of the amenity and the degree of the nuisance'".
Although, at first sight, he might be taken to be drawing a
distinction between the phrase "in all the circumstances" and
the phrase "having regard to the nature of the tree, the other
available methods of preventing or abating the nuisance, the
financial implications of the works, the financial standing of
those involved, the nature of the amenity and the degree of the
nuisance", I do not think that that was the judge's intention.
He was, I think, using the latter phrase as illustrative of the
circumstances which might fall within the former: having in mind
the "whole host of factors" advanced on behalf of the Council
which he had just listed at paragraph [51] of his judgment. The
real distinction is between "necessary in all the circumstances"
and "reasonably necessary in all the circumstances". The reality
of that distinction was emphasised by this Court in Pabari v
Secretary of State for Work and Pensions ([2004]
EWCA Civ 1480, [39], [58];
[2005] 1 All ER 287, 297f, 301g-h), in
passages to which the judge had referred at paragraphs [49] and
[50] of his judgment.
- The judge was plainly correct to
note that the test under section 198(6)(b) of the 1990 Act was
"necessary", not "reasonably necessary". But the fact that it is
the stricter test of necessity (rather than the looser test of
reasonable necessity) that must be applied does not lead to the
conclusion that, in applying the stricter test, regard is not to
be had to all the circumstances: see the observations of Lord
Justice Dyson in Pabari (ibid, [55] to [59]; 300j-302b).
Nor does that conclusion follow from the fact that the statutory
test does not include the phrase "in all the circumstances". The
absence of that phrase from the provisions of paragraph 4(1)(a)
of Schedule 3 to the Child Support (Maintenance Assessments and
Special Cases) Regulations 1992 (SI 1992/1815 – the provisions
under consideration by this Court in Pabari - was not
regarded as significant and did not inhibit the Court from
giving consideration to relevant circumstances (ibid,
[57] and [58]; 301e-j). The point to which the judge drew
attention in the second sentence of paragraph [53] of his
judgment – although of significance in identifying the
strictness of the test to be applied - throws no light on the
question whether any works to the tree can be said to be
necessary if there are other works (not involving operations to
the tree itself) which would suffice to prevent or abate the
nuisance.
- It follows, in my view, that the
judge was wrong to think that the point to which he had drawn
attention in the second sentence of paragraph [53] of his
judgment provided any foundation for the proposition in the
third sentence of that paragraph: "In other words, as a simple
matter of construction, the section is concerned only
with allowing such cutting down or lopping works as may be
necessary to prevent or abate an actionable nuisance". There
could be no quarrel with the proposition that: "the section is
concerned with allowing only such cutting down or lopping
works as may be necessary to prevent or abate an actionable
nuisance". That is the proposition which the judge endorsed in
the passage at paragraph [77] of his judgment to which I have
referred: a passage which was said by the judge himself to
reflect his construction of the word "necessary". But it is
clear that it was not that latter proposition that the judge had
in mind when he expressed himself as he did in the third
sentence of paragraph [53]. That can be seen from his conclusion
in the fourth sentence of that paragraph: "Accordingly, I accept
Mr Green's principal submission that 'necessary' here refers to
the extent of the cutting down, uprooting, topping or lopping
required to abate or prevent the nuisance, and nothing
more" [emphasis added].
- For those reasons I would hold
that the judge's reasoning in paragraph [53] of his judgment is
flawed: that reasoning provides no support for the conclusion
that the existence of alternative engineering solutions is
irrelevant to the determination of the question whether the
cutting down, uprooting, topping or loping of a tree is
necessary for the prevention or abatement of a nuisance.
- Nor, in my view, can the judge's
conclusion be supported on the basis of the later paragraphs of
his judgment. In relation to the reasoning in paragraphs [54]
and [55] it is unnecessary to say more than that the judge
himself based his rejection of the Council's submissions
(summarised in those paragraphs) on the conclusion that he had
already reached in paragraph [53]. That is made in clear in the
opening words of paragraph [54]: "For that reason". It is made
clear in the fourth and fifth sentences of that paragraph: "The
link in s.198(6)(b) is between the nuisance and the works to the
tree itself. I can therefore find no reason why, as a matter of
construction, the matters listed by Mr Findlay can be relevant".
And it is again made clear in the second sentence of paragraph
[55]: "But it seems to me that that argument ignores the fact
that s.198(6)(b) only identifies works to the tree: it makes no
reference to the possibility of any other works, that do not
involve the tree, that might prevent or abate the nuisance". The
premise on the basis of which the judge rejected the submissions
to which he referred in paragraphs [54] and [55] was that his
view of the effect of section 198(6)(b) of the 1990 Act - as a
matter of construction – was correct. If that view is not
supported by the reasoning in paragraph [53], the reasoning in
paragraphs [54] and [55] provides no support for it. To hold
otherwise would involve a circularity of reasoning.
- The reasoning in paragraph [57]
of the judgment provides no support for the judge's conclusion
in paragraph [53]. That is because the reasoning in paragraph
[57] is itself flawed. The judge pointed out, correctly, in the
third sentence of paragraph [57], that section 198(6)(b) of the
1990 Act "is making something lawful that would otherwise be
unlawful". He pointed out (again correctly) that the
underpinning of the foundations or the installation of a
concrete root barrier would be works which the claimants could
lawfully carry out on their own land without reliance on section
198(6)(b). So, he concluded, there was "no need for s.198(6)(b)
to make mention of the possibility of such work, because it
would always be lawful for such work to be carried out". But he
went on: "It would make a nonsense of s.198(6)(b) to argue that
the works which it was permitting (lopping, felling, etc) could
only be carried out following a detailed analysis of the
possibility of carrying out other works, which are not mentioned
in the Act, which would not directly affect the tree and which
were never at any time rendered unlawful by the Act in any
event". But non sequitur. Works which do not affect the
tree are not prohibited by a tree preservation order: such works
are not mentioned in section 198(6)(b) for the obvious reason
that they do not require exemption from any prohibition in an
order made under section 198(1) or any of its statutory
predecessors. It does not follow from the fact that works which
do not require exemption are not mentioned in a provision which
confers exemption in respect of works which do that the
possibility of carrying out the former cannot be relevant in
determining whether the latter are, indeed, within the
exemption. In particular, it does not follow that the existence
of an alternative engineering solution which would or might
prevent or abate the nuisance is not relevant in determining
whether operations to the tree itself should be taken out of the
scope of the tree preservation order as "necessary" in the
context of that section.
- At paragraphs [57] and [58] the
judge accepted the claimants' submission that section 198(6)(b)
of the 1990 Act "would be unworkable if a member of the public
had to weigh up all the factors listed [in paragraph [51] of his
judgment] before coming to a clear view as to whether or not
works to the tree were necessary"; and that "the section could
not sensibly be applied by those who it is seeking to help if
[the Council's] long list of factors all had to be taken into
account in determining whether lopping or topping the tree is
necessary to abate or prevent a nuisance." That consideration
was given additional force (in the judge's view) by the fact
that breach of the prohibition in a tree preservation order was
an offence. There was a need to interpret section 198(6)(b) in a
way which made it simple for a person affected by encroaching
roots or branches to decide whether he could cut down a tree
which was the subject of a tree preservation order.
- For my part I am not persuaded
that Parliament intended to encourage those affected by the
encroaching roots or branches of trees which were the subject of
tree preservation orders to resort to self-help in reliance on
section 198(6)(b) of the 1990 Act. It is a striking feature of
the section that it does not have the effect of disapplying the
prohibition against cutting down, uprooting, topping or lopping
a protected tree in a case where the tree is causing damage only
to property of the owner of the land on which the tree stands.
That is because damage to the property of the tree owner cannot
be said to be damage caused by nuisance: in the sense in which
that concept is ordinarily understood in English law. So if a
protected tree standing in A's garden causes subsidence damage
to A's house, A cannot rely on section 198(6)(b): he cannot cut
down, uproot, lop or top the tree in order to prevent or abate
that damage. The judge was wrong to say, at paragraph [79] of
his judgment, that: "There is not . . . any significant
difference between the position of a householder whose property
is undermined and damaged by roots from a tree that is not the
subject of a TPO, and a householder whose property is undermined
and damaged by roots from a tree that is protected by a TPO". If
the householder is the owner of the tree there is a very
significant difference. In the former case he can cut down,
uproot, lop or top the tree without consent: in the latter case,
he must seek consent from the local planning authority. Absent
consent, his only remedy is to claim compensation from the
authority.
- Section 198(6)(b) of the 1990
Act – so far as material in the present context – is limited in
its application to cases in which a protected tree standing on
A's land causes damage to the property of his neighbour, B. So,
if a protected tree in A's garden causes subsidence damage to
B's house, both A and B may (so far as may be necessary for the
prevention or abatement of the nuisance suffered by B, but not
further or otherwise) cut down, uproot, top or lop the tree in
reliance on section 198(6)(b).
- It is pertinent to have in mind
that nothing in section 198(6)(b) of the 1990 Act authorises B
to go onto A's land for the purpose of preventing or abating a
nuisance. Save in exceptional circumstances, B's remedy in self
help is limited, under the general law, to cutting roots and
branches on his own land: as Lord Cooke of Thorndon pointed out
in Delaware Mansions Limited v Westminster City Council
[2001] UKHL 55, [12];
[2002] 1 AC 321, 328B-C. In so far as the nuisance
cannot be abated or prevented by cutting roots or branches on
B's land or (by agreement with A) by operations to the tree on
A's land, B's remedies (under the general law) are (i) to seek
an injunction requiring A to abate or prevent the nuisance by
something done on A's land (which might be the cutting down,
uprooting, topping or lopping of the tree), (ii) to seek an
order for damages against A in respect of the damage suffered
(including the prospective cost of remedial works) or (iii) to
carry out remedial or preventative works on his own land and
seek to recover the costs of those works from A: see the
Delaware Mansions case. Absent the ability to rely on
section 198(6)(b) of the 1990 Act, the existence of a tree
preservation order may restrict what A can do to the tree on his
own land; and so may restrict B's ability to obtain an
injunction. But there is nothing in section 198, as it seems to
me, which alters B's remedies under heads (ii) or (iii). There
is no substance in the argument that, unless section 198(6)(b)
of the 1998 Act is interpreted in such a way that it is simple
for B to decide whether he can cut down a protected tree, B will
be deprived of an effective remedy.
- By restricting what A can do to
the tree on his own land, a tree preservation order may restrict
A's ability to abate or prevent the nuisance on B's land. In
that context, it may be said that there is a need for section
198(6)(b) of the 1990 Act to be interpreted in such a way that
it is simple for A to decide whether he can cut down a protected
tree; so that he can avoid or limit his liability to B for
damages under heads (ii) and (iii). But it is necessary to keep
in mind that A cannot rely on section 198(6)(b) in order to
prevent or abate damage to his own property. It is not difficult
to envisage circumstances in which the same protected tree
causes subsidence damage both to A's house and to B's house.
Parliament plainly intended that, in such a case and subject to
obtaining the consent of, or compensation from, the local
planning authority, A is left to bear his own loss: a risk
which, in the ordinary way, he will cover by insurance. In those
circumstances it is not self-evident why Parliament should have
wished to encourage A to carry out operations to the tree in
order to abate or prevent damage to B's house, so relieving A
from his liability in damages. It is difficult to see why –
subject (again) to obtaining the consent of, or compensation
from, the local planning authority – Parliament was not content
that A should be left to bear that loss also: a risk which,
again in the ordinary way, he will cover by insurance. So
although it may be said that there is a need for section
198(6)(b) to be interpreted in such a way that it is simple for
A to decide whether he can cut down a protected tree – and so
avoid or limit his liability to B - there is no reason to think
that Parliament had that need in mind when enacting section
198(6)(b) of the 1990 Act (and its statutory predecessors) in
the terms that it did.
- In that context it is to be
borne in mind that the expectation that a refusal of consent
will give rise to a claim for compensation has been a feature of
the legislation since tree preservation orders were first
introduced by the 1947 Act: section 28(1)(d) of that Act was the
statutory predecessor of section 203 of the 1990 Act. The
restriction on the right to compensation (in the case of trees
having an outstanding or special amenity value) must be seen as
an exception to the norm under the statutory scheme; and that
exception did not survive the introduction of a new model order
in the schedule to the Town and Country Planning (Trees)
Regulations 1999 (SI 1999/1892). The underlying principle is
that a tree preservation order is made for the benefit of the
inhabitants of the locality – or, as it is put in the
legislation, because "it is expedient in the interests of
amenity" – and that it is therefore appropriate that a landowner
affected by such an order (whether the tree is on his land or on
the land of his neighbour) should be compensated out of public
funds.
- The better view, as it seems to
me, is that Parliament intended that section 198(6)(b) should be
interpreted in a manner which gave proper weight to the word
"necessary". It intended that a protected tree should remain
protected unless there was a real need to lift that protection.
Effect is given to that intention by reading the expression "so
far as may be necessary for the prevention or abatement of a
nuisance" as "if and so far as may be necessary for the
prevention or abatement of a nuisance".
- For my part I find it difficult
to see how the expression can be read in any other way. I posed
the question, at the beginning of this judgment: why, if it were
appropriate to ask what is the minimum that needs to be done to
the tree itself in order to prevent or abate the nuisance,
should it be irrelevant to ask whether anything needs to be done
to the tree itself. The true meaning of the expression "so far
as may be necessary for the prevention or abatement of a
nuisance" can be tested by much the same question: how can it be
determined what is the minimum that needs to be done to the tree
itself in order to prevent or abate the nuisance without first
asking whether anything needs to be done to the tree itself. In
my view the answer to that question is obvious: it is impossible
to determine what is the minimum that needs to be done to the
tree without first deciding that something needs to be done. The
construction favoured by the judge requires a different answer:
it is not necessary to decide that something needs to be done,
it is enough that something done to the tree would prevent or
abate the nuisance. If satisfied that something done to the tree
would prevent or abate the nuisance, then all that is required
is to ask what is the minimum which, if done, would prevent or
abate the nuisance. That construction, as it seems to me, fails
to give proper weight to the word "necessary" in the expression
"so far as may be necessary for the prevention or
abatement of a nuisance". The statutory test requires that
whatever is done to the tree itself is necessary: it is
not enough that whatever is done is sufficient.
Conclusion
- For those reasons I would allow
this appeal and set aside the order of 26 September 2006.
Other matters
- It would add, unnecessarily, to
the length of this judgment – and serve little or no useful
purpose – if I were to address (other than in a summary manner)
each of the individual factors mentioned by the judge at
paragraphs [60] to [71] of his judgment. But the following
observations may be of some assistance:
(1) I have already made it clear that I differ from the judge
as to the relevance of alternative schemes (paragraphs [63] to
[66] of his judgment).
(2) I agree with the judge's view (at paragraphs [67] and
[68] of his judgment) that, if the existence of alternative
schemes is relevant, it is inevitable that account will need to
be taken of the costs of such schemes and of the ability of the
party on whom those costs will fall to meet them. To state the
obvious: if prevention or abatement of a nuisance could be
achieved either by operations to the tree itself or by works
other than operations to the tree itself and the landowner has
the resources to fund the former but not the latter, it may well
be that the operations to the tree itself are necessary because
the other works cannot, and will not in practice, be done. That
approach accords with the observations of Lord Justice Dyson in
Pabari (ibid, [58]). But I suspect that will
rarely be a determinative factor; given that the costs are
likely to fall not on the landowner but on his insurer (subject
to whatever claim to compensation there may be).
(3) I agree with the judge's view (at paragraph [70] of his
judgment) that it is enough that there exists some nuisance in
relation to the prevention or abatement of which it can be said
that operations to the tree itself are necessary; although, as I
have said, I do not find it necessary to decide whether the
nuisance must be actionable. It is, if I may say so, not open to
doubt that the extent of the nuisance is relevant to the works
that are necessary to prevent or abate it (paragraph [71] of the
judgment).
(4) I agree with the judge's view (at paragraph [62]) that it
would be unreal to expect "a home owner worried about a serious
crack in the side wall of his house and the actionable nuisance
being created by a tree in his neighbour's garden, to endeavour
to work out a sliding scale in which the level of amenity
provided by the tree is balanced against the imminent danger of
the collapse of part of his house". But, in practice, it will be
for the neighbour (A) rather than the home owner (B) to decide
whether to cut down the protected tree; or to pay damages in
respect of the costs of remedial or preventative works. I would
not rule out the possibility that, in determining whether it was
necessary to cut down the tree in a case where there was an
alternative engineering solution, the importance of the tree as
an amenity for the benefit of the locality could be a relevant
factor: I have little doubt that, in deciding between two
possible solutions (one of which would cost more than the
other), a tree owner would take account of the importance of the
tree as an amenity in relation to his own property.
- The judge indicated (at
paragraphs [28] and [39] of his judgment) that he could see no
reason why, as a matter of construction, danger or threat of
danger (for the purposes of section 198(6)(a) of the 1990 Act)
could not arise in a case where tree roots threatened to damage
the foundations of a neighbour's house. That was not a question
which he was required to decide by the preliminary issue, as
posed. There was no basis, on the assumed facts, for the
conclusion that, in this case, the tree in question had "become
dangerous" within the meaning of section 198(6)(a). In my view
it is not necessary – and would be inappropriate – for this
Court to address the question whether section 198(6)(a) is in
point in the present case. I should not be taken to accept that
it could be.
- I hope that it will not be
thought discourteous to the judge, whose order of 29 June 2006
had posed the preliminary issue which he then went on to
determine, if I say that it seems to me that this was a case in
which it would have been wiser to avoid the temptation of
seeking to save time and expense by a short cut. The declaration
sought by the claimants was that it was necessary to cut down
the tree to prevent or abate a nuisance, the existence of which
was not admitted. An affirmative answer to the preliminary issue
as posed was never likely to avoid a trial. Leaving aside the
dispute as to whether the tree was the cause of the damage to 19
Elwes Way, an affirmative answer to the issue as posed – whether
in determining whether cutting down, uprooting, topping or
lopping of a tree may be necessary for the prevention or
abatement of a nuisance, it is irrelevant that there are other
possible works that could prevent or abate the same nuisance –
would still leave for decision whether it was necessary to cut
down the tree (rather than to carry out some lesser operation).
So, if the claimants were to have the declaration which they
sought, it was always likely to be necessary to have a trial in
order to determine whether any (and if so what) operations to
the tree itself (short of cutting down) would be effective to
prevent or abate the nuisance. It was, if I may say so, an
illusion to think that determination of the preliminary issue as
posed would avoid investigation of the facts. And, if there were
to be an investigation of the facts, with expert evidence, it
would – I suspect – add little to the time and expense of such
an exercise if all the facts were the subject of that
investigation: so that, on an appeal (which, given that the
question posed as a preliminary issue was seen by both the
Council and the insurers as of general importance was always
likely) this Court would have been in a position to resolve the
real point which requires decision in this case: whether it was
necessary to carry out any operations to the tree itself and (if
so) whether those operations stop short of cutting down the
tree.
Mr Justice Blackburne
- I agree. In deference to the
very careful judgment of the judge below, I add a few
observations of my own.
- The appeal raises a short
question of construction of section 198(6)(b) of the Town and
Country Planning Act 1990: when determining whether, in respect
of a tree which is the subject of a tree preservation order, the
cutting down, uprooting, topping or lopping that tree "may be
necessary for the prevention or abatement of a nuisance" is it
permissible to take into account the fact that there may be
ways, other than cutting down, etc, which could prevent or abate
the nuisance?
- If, as is obviously the case,
the underlying purpose of the legislation is to preserve trees
which are the subject of tree preservation orders, it would seem
counterintuitive to that purpose, when considering what is the
minimum necessary that needs to be done in order to prevent or
abate a nuisance caused by a tree that is the subject of a tree
preservation order, to ignore altogether steps that may be taken
other than to the tree itself and, instead, focus simply on
works to the tree, albeit that the works to the tree are to be
the minimum necessary. Take the case of an overhanging branch
which, if it falls, will damage a structure on the neighbour's
land. Why should the legislation permit the lopping of the
branch which, let it be assumed, is the minimum work to the tree
(in the way of cutting down, uprooting, topping or lopping) to
prevent or abate the nuisance when, by the use of, for example,
a prop which will cause no damage to the tree, the imminent
danger can be avoided? Why should it be permissible to dig down
to cut an encroaching root which threatens to damage buildings
foundations on the neighbour's land but impermissible to
consider, having dug down to the roots, the insertion of a
barrier which would be as effective?
- In my judgment, the legislation
does not, either expressly or by necessary implication, require
so restrictive an approach to the operation of section
198(6)(b). I am not persuaded that any perceived need for ease
of establishing whether, in any particular circumstances, the
exemption provided by the section applies, should determine the
circumstances in which it applies. In agreement with the
judgment of Sir John Chadwick, I construe the expression "so far
as may be necessary for the prevention or abatement of a
nuisance" to mean "if and so far as may be necessary for
the prevention or abatement of a nuisance".
- Wrapped up in the preliminary
issue for decision by the judge was what is meant by "a
nuisance" in the subsection. For it is the existence of "a
nuisance" that triggers the exemption afforded by the subsection
from the operation of the tree preservation order. The judge
below considered (at paragraph [35]) that it meant a nuisance
"where damage has been caused or, if no action is taken to
prevent it, will imminently be caused". He described this as
"actionable nuisance". This was in contrast to what he described
(at paragraph [38]) as "pure encroachment of the branches or
roots over or into the adjoining land". There was no appeal
against this conclusion. Like Sir John Chadwick, I too entertain
doubts about the correctness of this conclusion.
- The concept of a nuisance caused
by overhanging branches or encroaching tree roots was, of
course, very long established by the time Parliament enacted (in
1947) the original statutory predecessor of what is now section
198(6)(b). It is, to say the least, surprising that if
Parliament intended that the expression involved some ingredient
over and above "pure encroachment" it did not say so, not least
when section 198(6)(a) refers to trees "which are dying or dead
or have become dangerous" (emphasis added).
- Once it is accepted that
measures, other than to the tree itself, may be considered to
prevent or abate a nuisance caused by the tree, it is certainly
arguable that it is no longer necessary to confine the meaning
of "nuisance" as used in the section to "actionable nuisance" in
the sense indicated by the judge. For, if the nuisance is no
more than what the judge referred to as "pure encroachment" and
if it is appropriate, as in my view it is, to consider whether
it is necessary to undertake remedial steps to the tree at all,
and if so, what minimum steps are necessary, it may be thought
that in the case of "pure encroachment", the exemption provided
by the section is most unlikely to be available. However, as the
point was not argued, it would not be appropriate to say more on
the point.
Lord Justice Wall
- I agree with both judgments and
do not wish to add anything.
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