Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-rdxmf Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-22T09:21:01.507Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Re St Paul, Woldingham

Southwark Consistory Court: Petchey Ch, 26 June 2012 Telecommunications installation – licence fees

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  13 December 2012

Ruth Arlow*
Affiliation:
Chancellor of the Diocese of Norwich
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Type
Case Notes
Copyright
Copyright © Ecclesiastical Law Society 2013

The petition of the team vicar and churchwardens sought a faculty to permit (1) the installation of telecommunications equipment (a mobile phone ‘base station’) in the bell chamber of a church and (2) the team vicar and PCC to enter into a licence agreement with New Edge Telecommunications (Net) Limited (NET) to maintain and operate and use the equipment. The proposed licence agreement was for a period of 20 years with an annual fee of £5,000, which was to be reviewed every five years to reflect the fee payable in the open market. Local opinion was divided on the proposals. A number of objections, including one from the governors of the local primary school, were received. Following Re Emmanuel Church, Bentley [2006] Fam 39, the court would not apply stricter requirements relating to health and safety risks than those of the Government and local planning authorities. The relevant policy in the National Planning Policy Framework was that local planning authorities ‘should not seek … to determine health safeguards if the proposal meets International Commission guidelines for public exposure’. The proposal in the petition met those guidelines. Accordingly, the health concerns that were raised by objectors did not provide a basis for refusing the petition. Objections that the equipment would facilitate the transmission of pornography could not be sustained in the light of Re St Peter and St Paul, Chingford [2007] Fam 67. As to the proposed licence agreement, the chancellor was concerned that NET was effectively a monopoly purchaser of the right to put telecommunications equipment in churches. In practice, the petitioners were not in a position to sell the right to install the equipment to anyone other than NET so that their bargaining power was constrained. The annual fee of £5,000 was near the bottom of the scale in the chancellor's experience but it was the best price that could be achieved in an imperfectly operating market. That being so, the chancellor identified as a matter of concern the adequacy of the way in which market value would be assessed at the five-yearly reviews of the licence fee. The fact that, as a result of provisions in the Telecommunications Code (Schedule 2 to the Telecommunications Act 1984), the equipment might well remain in place beyond the 20-year term of the licence, possibly even without a further faculty, meant that in the future the licence fee payable might become very small in real terms. Accordingly, while the chancellor did envisage granting a faculty as sought, it would not be granted until he had received satisfactory answers to the concern he had raised. [Alexander McGregor]