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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> JA PYE (Oxford) Ltd v South Gloucestershire DC & Ors [2001] EWCA Civ 450 (29 March 2001) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2001/450.html Cite as: [2001] EWCA Civ 450, [2001] 14 EGCS 149, [2001] 2 PLR 66, [2001] JPL 1425, [2001] NPC 66 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
CHANCERY DIVISION (THE VICE CHANCELLOR)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL Thursday 29th March 2001 |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE PETER GIBSON
and
LORD JUSTICE LATHAM
____________________
JA PYE (OXFORD) LTD |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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SOUTH GLOUCESTERSHIRE DC & OTHERS |
Respondent |
____________________
Smith Bernal Reporting Limited, 190 Fleet Street
London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7421 4040, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
John Howell, QC & Jonathan Seitler (instructed by Sharp Pritchard for the Respondents)
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
LORD JUSTICE LATHAM:
"Whether on the hypothesis that there was no connection between the development permitted on Pye's land and the construction of the link road to the west of the land (as contended in the affidavit of Ian Southgate sworn on the 1st March 1999) [the Councils] are nevertheless entitled to succeed on their counterclaim."
"In reaching that decision the Learned Judge failed to apply the principles established by the House of Lords in Tesco Stores -v- Secretary of State [1995] 1WLR 759 to the effect that a planning obligation offered in such circumstances was no more than an attempt to buy planning permission and was ultra vires because it was Wednesbury unreasonable"
"1. This agreement and undertaking is conditional upon the grant of planning permission on Planning Application K448/12 and shall be binding on the parties in the event of such planning permission being granted.........
3. If it appears to the company and the County Council either that the company is unlikely to be able to acquire such of the land shown edged green on the first plan as is required for the works in accordance with clause 4 hereof or that such acquisition is unlikely to proceed in sufficient time for the timetable outlined below to be fulfilled the County Council shall use its best endeavours to acquire the said land to that end and the company shall repay to the County Council such reasonable expenses including the purchase price thereof as the County Council shall actually have incurred in those endeavours irrespective of whether the said land has been acquired by the County Council.
4. Within three years after the grant of planning permission in accordance with Clause I hereof the company shall construct and dedicate to the public the Link Road being a vehicular highway with associated footways and ancillary works from Victoria Road to Bath Road .......
6. The company shall neither cause nor permit to be developed and brought into use more than 40 per centum by area of the land (designated for industrial use) prior to the dedication to public vehicular traffic of the Link Road ......"
"Although the planning authorities are given very wide powers to impose "such conditions as they think fit", nevertheless the law says that those conditions, to be valid, must fairly and reasonably relate to the permitted development. The planning authority are not at liberty to use their powers for an ulterior object, however desirable that object may seem to them to be in the public interest."
"It follows that the conditions imposed must be for a planning purpose and not for any ulterior one, that they must fairly relate to the development permitted. Also they must not be so unreasonable that no reasonable planning authority could have imposed them."
"For my part I accept the submission of Mr Gray that, upon the true construction of s. 52 of the Town and County Planning Act 1971, the powers of a planning authority under that section are not controlled by the nature or extent of its powers under s. 29 of the Act of 1971; and I reject the submission advanced for the plaintiffs that those powers are so controlled. The extent of the s. 52 powers is to be determined by reference to the words there used having regard to the context. In particular they give power to a planning authority to enter into an agreement with the owner of the land "for the purpose of restricting or regulating the development or use of land." If such an agreement is required by a planning authority, and the requirement is made for such a purpose, with due regard to relevant considerations, and is not unreasonable (see the first and third requirements stated in Newbury District Council -v- Secretary of State for the Environment [1981] AC 578 at 618), such requirement is not ultra vires merely because the purpose could not be validly achieved by the imposition of a condition under s. 29 of the Act of 1971. The two statutory powers are distinct and the exercise of either of these distinct powers has separate consequences and is subject to different procedures.If such an agreement is required, and the land owner agrees to enter into it, the validity of the agreement depends upon the same primary test, namely whether it was made "for the purpose of restricting or regulating the development or use of the land"."
"The same test, so it is claimed, falls to be applied to a planning obligation for the purpose of deciding whether it amounts to a material consideration in connection with an application for planning permission. The parallel, however, cannot be exact. No doubt if a condition is completely unrelated to the development for which planning permission is sought it will not be lawful. But this case is not concerned with the lawfulness of Tesco's planning obligation, and there may be planning obligations which have no connection with any particular proposed development. Further in Good -v- Epping Forest District Council [1994] 1 WLR 376 the Court of Appeal held that an agreement under s. 52 of the Town and Country Planning Act 1971, the predecessor of s. 106 of the Act of 1990, might be valid notwithstanding that it did not satisfy the second of the Newbury tests. So I do not think that reference to the Newbury case is particularly helpful for the purpose of deciding whether a particular planning obligation is material to the determination of a planning application with which the obligation is associated."
"An offered planning obligation which has nothing to do with the proposed development, apart from the fact that it is offered by the developer, will plainly not be a material consideration and could be regarded only as an attempt to buy planning permission. If it has some connection with the proposed development which is not de minimis, then regard must be had to it. But the extent, if any, to which it should affect the decision is a matter entirely within the discretion of the decision maker and in exercising that discretion he is entitled to have regard to his established policy."
"But the use of the Newbury tests in relation to planning obligations can cause confusion unless certain points are borne clearly in mind.First, the Newbury case was concerned with the validity of a condition and there is a temptation to regard a planning obligation as analogous to a condition. But s. 70(2) does not apply to planning obligations. The vires of planning obligations depends entirely upon the terms of s. 106. This does not require that the planning obligation should relate to any particular development. As the Court of Appeal held in Good -v- Epping Forest District Council [1994] 1WLR 376 the only tests for the validity of a planning obligation outside the express terms of s. 106 are that it must be for a planning purpose and not Wednesbury unreasonable. Of course it is normal for a planning obligation to be undertaken or offered in connection with an application for planning permission and to be expressed as conditional upon the grant of that permission. Once the condition has been satisfied, the planning obligation become binding and cannot be challenged by the developer or his successor in title on the ground that it lacked a sufficient nexus with the proposed development."
"It is I suppose theoretically possible that a Secretary of State or Local Planning Authority may say in terms that he or it thought that a proposed development was perfectly acceptable on its merits but nevertheless thought that it was a good idea to insist that the developer should be required to undertake a planning obligation as the price of obtaining his permission. If that should ever happen, I should think that the courts would have no difficulty in saying that it disclosed a state of mind which was Wednesbury unreasonable."
LORD JUSTICE PETER GIBSON: I agree.
LORD PHILLIPS MR: I also agree