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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> First Secretary of State & Anor v Hammersmatch Properties Ltd [2005] EWCA Civ 1360 (16 November 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2005/1360.html Cite as: [2005] EWCA Civ 1360 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION – ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
THE HONOURABLE MR JUSTICE COLLINS
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LADY JUSTICE SMITH
and
SIR CHRISTOPHER STAUGHTON
____________________
THE FIRST SECRETARY OF STATE & ANR |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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HAMMERSMATCH PROPERTIES LTD |
Respondents |
____________________
MR R GRIFFITHS QC & MR S WHALE (instructed by Thomas Eggar) for the Respondents
Hearing date : 20 October 2005
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Crown Copyright ©
LORD JUSTICE PILL:
The appeal site
The Secretary of State's decision
"Firstly, whether the proposed development is an appropriate use of employment land, having regard to local planning policies, and secondly, whether there is a need for the proposed development in this location, having regard to the sequential approach to leisure development set out in national and local planning policies."
"In his report, the [local plan] inspector recommended that the Council's proposed policy EMP3, which said that retail and leisure uses are unacceptable in the designated Employment Areas, be deleted. He replaced this with a modified policy EMP2 which, as well as permitting proposals for Class B use in designated employment areas, subject to certain criteria, added the following paragraph: 'Proposals for any other uses in the designated employment areas will only be permitted where it can be clearly demonstrated that the existing land or premises are no longer required to meet future employment requirements and business and community needs'. The same criteria also applied. In accepting this change the Council now propose to insert the text, 'should generally be resisted and' after, 'in the designated areas' and before, 'will only be permitted'."
"… asks District Councils to secure 'planned regeneration, particularly through redevelopment, including mixed use schemes to make more efficient use of employment land and buildings. Although this plan is not being progressed because of pending Development Framework changes and the emerging Regional Spatial Strategy for the East of England, its policies are a material consideration, not least because they are based on recent studies on employment land requirements."
"Policy EMP3 – Mixed Use Development Site east of the railway station in Welwyn Garden City.
The site within Employment Area EA1 (as defined on the Proposals Map) is identified as an opportunity area for planned regeneration for mixed use development comprising primarily employment, housing, leisure and rail-related uses. Development of the site shall be in accordance with the criteria in Policy EMP2 and other relevant policies of the Plan relating to the uses proposed. Development shall also comply with a Development Brief to be approved by the Council as supplementary planning guidance. The Development Brief shall include the minimum quantum of Class B [business and industrial] floor space to be provided on the site."
The site has been described as the Chinacorp site. The inspector stated that the policy "not only results in the loss of a sizeable chunk of employment land, significantly reducing any existing surplus, it will also allow new leisure uses such as this closer to Welwyn town centre".
"15. In any case it seems to me from the wording used that policy 14 of both the Structure Plan and its Review intended any future loss of existing employment land to be identified through the Local Plan process in the same way as the Chinacorp site. This follows the cautious approach the Local Plan Inspector supports. This is what I consider planned regeneration to mean and not the piecemeal redevelopment of parts of individual buildings as proposed here. It is true that the proposal satisfies all of the criteria in policy EMP2 and would itself provide employment. It might also provide the kick-start required to regenerate the complex as a whole. But the level of employment from the proposed change of use would be much lower than if the building was refurbished for business use and a kick-start could also be provided by an imaginative business use scheme.
16. For the above reasons it cannot be said that it has been clearly demonstrated that the existing land or premises is no longer required to meet future employment requirements and business and community needs as required by policy EMP2 of the Local Plan Review. As the proposed change of use would be to Class D2 in the Town and Country Planning (Use Classes) Order, 1987, nor would the proposal comply with policy EMP2 of the currently adopted Local Plan.
17. This leads me to the conclusion on the first issue that the proposed development is not an appropriate use of employment land, having regard to local planning policies."
"8. Policy CLT2 of the plan Review states that the preferred location for new leisure facilities is in the District's two town centres. If there are no suitable sites available at the centres, but there is a clear need for the facility, the Council may consider proposals on a sequential basis in line with Planning Policy Guidance: Town Centres and Retail Developments (PPG6). This would also be subject to certain criteria, including that the facility would not adversely affect the vitality and viability of the two town centres, and that the site is easily accessible by passenger transport, walking and cycling."
"The appeal site is 150m outside of the 500m walking distance set out in Appendix A of Planning Policy Guidance: Town Centres and Retail Developments (PPG6) and it was conceded that it is therefore an out of centre site using the sequential approach. The appellant has not identified any suitable alternative sites in the town centre or edge of centre locations, but The Local Plan Review Inspector has identified possible options for sites or leisure use in both."
"In the light of this I do not see why part, or the entire [Chinacorp] site should not become available within a reasonable amount of time. This being so I see no reason why it, or one of the other sites I have listed in the more sequential preferable locations should not be used for a Health and Fitness Club in preference to the appeal site."
The inspector stated that the appeal site was not a "preferred" location for a leisure facility.
"In the circumstances, I have come to the conclusion on the second issue that there is not a need for the proposed development in this location, having regard to the sequential approach to leisure development, set out in national and local planning policies."
The judgment below
"In any event, it is apparent that nowadays there is a much greater and growing emphasis on the need for exercise and fitness and clubs such as the one proposed are more and more popular. I note that a welfare centre has recently been constructed in the Royal Courts of Justice for those who wish to have access to such a facility in the building."
"He [the inspector] could not in my view have reasonably concluded, as he had to do in the light of his findings on need, that more than one of the sites was capable of providing a suitable alternative."
The judge stated that he regarded the inspector's finding that the appeal site was not "a preferred location for a leisure facility and would not comply with Policy CLT2" as "plainly wrong".
"The inspector's conclusion that the proposed development was not an appropriate use of employment land, having regard to local planning policies, is not justified by the reasons he gives nor by the evidence put before him."
"It is in truth difficult to see how on the material before him and having regard to the unimpugned findings he made, the inspector could reasonably have decided that permission should not be granted. But all I can do is to quash his decision and remit the case for reconsideration in the light of this judgment."
Submissions
Discussion
(a) Where land is designated in the development plan for employment use, its retention for future employment needs is a legitimate planning consideration.
(b) There is also a demand (and a need) for health and fitness facilities but, not only is the extent of the need not quantified, there is no suggestion in the planning policies that it overrides the need to keep land for future employment use.
(c) There is a specific planning policy, EM3, for mixed use development on the Chinacorp site. The site is 16 hectares in extent, a large one in this context. It is identified as an opportunity area for planned (as distinct from piecemeal) regeneration for mixed use development, including for leisure purposes. That will meet, or at least partly meet, the need and, as a town centre site, will best meet the policies in PPG6 and CLT2.
(d) The inspector has also identified other town centre sites where the need, or part of it, could be met. While there is ample room for argument as to whether and when the need can be met on those sites, it is not irrational to regard them as possibilities. As with the Chinacorp site, they are possibilities which, in PPG6 terms, are preferable to the appeal site. With respect to Oaklands, the inspector stated that he had considered the time scale.
(e) Paragraph 1.9 of PPG6 provides that "if a developer is proposing an out-of-centre development the onus will be on the developer to demonstrate that he has thoroughly assessed all potential town centre options."
Conclusion
"The threshold of irrationality for purposes of judicial review is a high one. This is because responsibility for making the relevant decision rests with another party and not with the court. It is not enough that [the court] might, if the responsibility for making the relevant decision rested with [it], make a decision different from that of the appointed decision-maker. To justify intervention by the court, the decision under challenge must fall outside the bounds of any decision open to a reasonable decision-maker."
The same test is appropriate upon an application under section 288 of the 1990 Act.
LADY JUSTICE SMITH:
SIR CHRISTOPHER STAUGHTON:
"The unattractive, industrial building is about 75 years old and said to be functionally obsolescent. It has been largely empty for about 5 years and unsuccessful attempts have been made to let it for the whole of this period…I agree that without refurbishment the building is unlikely to be let before the current lease expires in 2009."