A new Code, intended to support the government's vision for the UK's digital future, came into force on 28 December 2017. Among other measures, the new Code restricts the ability of landowners to charge premium prices for the use of their land by basing the consideration paid on the underlying value of the land. At the time, the government said that it expected the new Code to deliver significant cost reductions to the telecoms sector while ensuring that site providers receive fair payment for the use of their land.
The three recent cases have prompted some strident commentary from judges on the conduct of both parties, while some questions remain outstanding. The cases are Cornerstone Telecommunications Infrastructure Ltd (CTIL) v Keast (8 April 2019); Evolution (Shinfield) LLP & others v British Telecommunications plc (15 April 2019); and CTIL v Central Saint Giles & Clarion Housing Association (7 June 2019).
CTIL v Keast
The dispute in this case involved a mast site established before 2007, when it was leased to Vodafone. The Vodafone lease is protected by the 1954 Landlord and Tenant Act (1954 Act). The contractual term of the lease expired in 2015, but Vodafone remains in occupation of the site.
The judge in the case was required to consider four preliminary issues:
Was CTIL entitled to seek Code rights notwithstanding the continuation of the Vodafone lease?
Judgment on this issue has been stayed pending a related appeal, and will be eagerly awaited as many telecoms operators occupy their sites under business tenancy protection under the 1954 Act which will not apply once they obtain a new Code agreement. However, a number have applied for Code rights whilst their 1954 Act rights still subsist.
Site providers have argued that operators should not be able to maintain 1954 Act protections while at the same time seeking Code rights, which would allow them to pay less by way of consideration determined under new Code principles. It remains to be seen which way the tribunal will decide.
Was there a mismatch between the rights which CTIL sought in the reference and the rights it sought in a previous reference?
This argument was given short shrift by the judge, who described the notion that the site provider could have been misled by the discrepancy as "fanciful". However, it is worth pointing out as the argument is an example of some of the alarmist tone being used by site providers, who have sought to rely on this as a means of invalidating the notice and requiring the operator to start again.
An operator should be careful to seek all the rights it wants the tribunal to grant as part of its submission. Should the site provider be in fact misled, pressurised or inconvenienced by the operator's notice, as it attempted to argue in this case, then in the words of the judge: "this is a matter which may be relied upon by the tribunal in the exercise of its discretion as to what are the appropriate terms to be imposed upon the occupier of the land".
Was CTIL seeking Code rights over 'electronic communications equipment' which the tribunal was unable to confer?
This argument turned on whether CTIL was unable to seek Code rights over land already containing electronic communications apparatus (ECA), such as a mast or concrete base, as the definition of 'land' in the Code excludes ECA.
This argument was rejected by the judge, who said that the prohibition "does not mean that it is impossible to acquire Code rights over land where ECA is present". Here, CTIL had "applied for Code rights over land, not over ECA". ECA "installed pursuant to Code rights, however firmly affixed to land, does not by virtue only of that attachment become land in accordance with the common law".
The judge did, however, make slightly puzzling comments about whether it was permissible for an operator to acquire Code rights over land containing ECA where it was not in 'friendly relations' with the rival operator. According to the judge, such a request would be "pointless" as any rights granted "would not enable the claimant either to use or to remove the ECA; it would be trespassing upon and interfering with another's goods if it did so".
The Code regulates the legal relationship between Code operators and occupiers of land. It does not create or regulate legal relationships between Code operators, which are a matter of private contract subject to regulation by Ofcom. In particular, it is not the policy of the law to give Code operators access to each other's equipment on favourable terms.
Was CTIL seeking rights which are not Code rights, and which the tribunal could not confer?
This was another argument by the site provider that by seeking rights which the tribunal was unable to confer, the operator invalidated its application and therefore had to start again. This was dismissed by the judge as a blatant attempt to obstruct government policy of permitting the rollout the telecommunications network by increasing costs and making the operator jump through all manner of hoops.
The site provider argued that certain terms such as would be found in a typical lease should be outside of the jurisdiction of the tribunal to consider - such as warranties, the right of the operator to install a generator and the right to restrict the site provider's access to the site.
The limits on the tribunal's jurisdiction to grant such rights were rejected: the judge agreed with CTIL that "all the terms of the draft agreement are in principle within the jurisdiction ... but all are a matter of discretion. They may or may not be granted in due course, but none of them is out of bounds". However, although the operator was successful in this case, the tribunal warned that operators "should not count [their] chickens. All the draft terms can be considered as a matter of discretion, and the claimant may have an uphill struggle to persuade the tribunal that some of them are appropriate".
Evolution (Shinfield) LLP & others v British Telecommunications Plc
This was an interesting case over which party bears the cost of relocating ECA. A consortium of developers sought an order from the tribunal to remove a telecoms cabinet from a publicly-maintained footway at a roundabout near a village south of Reading. The cabinet belonged to BT, and was properly installed by BT in 2011 under its street works rights under the previous Code. It contained fibre optic cables and other ECA and was connected to ducts, cabling and joint boxes running beneath the footway. As a result of planning permission for a new housing development, the BT cabinet now lies on the route of a proposed new exit from the roundabout, and must be relocated so that the redevelopment can proceed.