[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Wychavon District Council v Rafferty & Ors [2006] EWCA Civ 628 (27 April 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2006/628.html Cite as: [2006] EWCA Civ 628 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
IN THE COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
(MR JUSTICE NEWMAN)
Strand London, WC2 |
||
B e f o r e :
(Sir Andrew Morritt)
LORD JUSTICE TUCKEY
SIR PETER GIBSON
____________________
WYCHAVON DISTRICT COUNCIL | Claimant/Respondent | |
-v- | ||
(1) WISDOM RAFFERTY | ||
(2) JANE RAFFERTY | ||
(3) DAWN CONNORS | Defendants/Appellants |
____________________
Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited
190 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7404 1400 Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
MISS SAIRA SHEIKH (instructed by Messrs Sharpe Pritchard, London) appeared on behalf of the Respondent
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
"1. The use of the existing vehicular field gated access in association with the proposed development involving additional vehicles slowing down, waiting and making turning manoeuvres on the carriageway of the adjoining Class II Road, B4084, together with restricted visibility in an easterly direction measured at the X distance of 2.4 metres would be likely to compromise the safe movement of traffic and the safe use of the road by others. As such the proposal is contrary to policy H18 of the local Adopted Wychavon District Local Plan and policy GB2 of the Revised Wychavon District Local Plan (Proposed Modifications Stage).
2. The application site is not within a defined settlement boundary nor reasonably close to service facilities. As such, users of the proposed development would be highly reliant upon the use of private motor vehicles to travel to and from the site. As such the proposal is contrary to policy T2 of the West Midlands Spatial Strategy, policies SD.4 and D.18 of the Worcestershire County Structure Plan and policy COM7 of the Revised Wychavon District Local Plan (Proposed Modifications Stage).
3. The applicants have not demonstrated clear ties to the Cropthorne area or Wychavon District as a whole. As such, there is no overriding need for any additional gypsy site to be provided at the proposed location. The proposal is therefore contrary to policy H18 of the Adopted Wychavon District Local Plan and policy COM7 of the Revised Wychavon District Local Plan (Proposed Modifications Stage)."
"14. In the light of the good prospects of success of the planning appeal, the lack of an alternative site for the family and the very real need for stability, most especially for the three boys, the Court is asked to grant the application and either set aside or vary the terms of the extant injunction pending the outcome of the planning appeal, thereby allowing the family to remain on the land."
No alternative was stated.
"40. Summary. I have taken account of the reasons why the family moved on to the land but, in my judgment, contrary to the submission advanced, this is a case in which the injunction should continue in order to prevent the future breach of planning control which the request for variation necessarily gives rise to. I am not persuaded that the merits of the planning appeal are so weighty and favourable that the enforcement of planning control should be suspended. I am not persuaded that in the near future, having regard to the evidence I have heard, as to the availability of the site at Cleave Prior, that the availability of sites within the area is such a rare event that no site will become available within a reasonable period of time, but in any event Miss Connors [Dawn] and the children can take accommodation under the homelessness provisions of the Housing Act. In my judgment, so far as there is an interference with article 8 rights, the overriding need is for the integrity of the planning regime to be upheld in the circumstances of this case. In my judgment, it would not be disproportionate for Miss Connors [Dawn] and the children to be required to leave the site.
41. That leaves me to turn to the particular position of Mr and Mrs Rafferty. They of course have no proprietary interest in the site. It has to be said they are not likely to qualify for priority treatment under the homelessness provisions, but nevertheless it is not a case in which the evidence can justify the court concluding that there is absolutely no prospect of the local authority being able to provide them with accommodation, either in bricks and mortar or within a reasonable time on an authorized site within the District Council area. The degree of interference in my judgment with their rights and their contact with their grandchildren and their daughter is not disproportionate to the need to maintain the planning regime. My conclusion therefore is that the application to vary the injunction is refused and it only remains for the court to deal with penalty in connection with the contempt."
"... section 187B of the 1990 Act conferred on the court an original and discretionary, not a supervisory, jurisdiction, to be exercised with due regard to the purpose for which it was conferred to restrain actual or threatened breaches of planning control; that it was inherent in the injunctive remedy that its grant depended on the court's judgment of all the circumstances of the case; that, although the court would not examine matters of planning policy and judgment which lay within the exclusive purview of the authorities responsible for administering the planning regime, the court was not obliged to grant relief because a planning authority considered it necessary or expedient to restrain a planning breach; that the court would have regard to all, including the personal, circumstances of the case, and, since section 6 of the 1998 Act required the court to act compatibly with a Convention right as so defined, and having regard to the right guaranteed in article 8, the court would only grant an injunction where it was just and proportionate to do so; and that, accordingly, the planning authorities' applications would be determined on that basis ..."
"Thus it could never be appropriate for the court to hold that planning permission should not have been refused or that an appeal against an enforcement notice should have succeeded or (as in Hambleton [1995] 3 PLR 8) that a local authority should have had different spending priorities. But the court is not precluded from entertaining issues not related to planning policy or judgment, such as the visibility of a development from a given position or the width of a road. Nor need the court refuse to consider (pace Hambleton) the possibility that a pending or prospective application for planning permission may succeed, since there may be material to suggest that a party previously unsuccessful may yet succeed, as the cases of Mr Berry and Mrs Porter show. But all will depend on the particular facts, and the court must always, of course, act on evidence."
"71. In exercising its power the court must not re-assess matters which are the subject of a planning judgment. But that does not mean that the factors which have been considered by the authority in making their planning judgment may not be properly taken into account by the court in deciding whether or not to grant this particular remedy. In looking at the factors which weighed with the authority the court is not embarking upon a reassessment of what was decided as matter of planning judgment but entering upon the different exercise of deciding whether the circumstances are such as to warrant the granting of the particular remedy of an injunction.
72. ...
73. Accordingly in my view section 187B(2) allows and has always allowed the court in the exercise of its discretion in granting an injunction to weigh up the public interest in securing the enforcement of planning policy and planning decisions against the private interests of the individuals who are allegedly in breach of planning control. In particular I would hold that it is open to the court to consider questions of hardship, particularly as regards health, arising out of the effect on such individuals of a grant of an injunction."
"In stating that the judge should not come to a decision on the planning merit of the case I think that Simon Brown LJ was intending to give effect to the principle stated by Lord Hoffmann in Tesco Stores, at p 780G,and was not considering the unusual type of case suggested by Mr George. In my opinion the judge is not precluded from deciding some factual issue, such as that instanced by counsel. But I think that such cases would be rare and I consider that a judge should be alert to ensure that he does not embark on the determination of an issue which would, in reality, involve him in the assessment of planning considerations which lie within the ambit of the functions of the local planning authority."
"In deciding whether or not to grant an injunction under section 187B the court does not turn itself into a tribunal to review the merits of the planning decisions that the authority, or the Secretary of State, has taken. The purpose of the injunction would be to restrain the alleged breach of planning controls and the court could not in my opinion properly refuse an injunction simply on the ground that it disagreed with the planning decisions that had been taken. If the court thought that there was a real prospect that an appeal against an enforcement notice or a fresh application by the defendant for the requisite planning permission might succeed, the court could adjourn the injunction application until the planning situation had become clarified. But where the planning situation is clear and apparently final the court would, in my opinion, have no alternative but to consider the injunction application without regard to the merits of the planning decisions."
"25. In our judgment, the judge's decision to suspend the injunction pending the determination of the planning application did not take proper account of the vital role of the court in upholding the important principle that the orders of the court are meant to be obeyed and not to be ignored with impunity. The order itself indicated to the defendants the correct way in which to challenge the injunction. It contained an express provision giving the defendants liberty to apply, on prior notice, to discharge or modify the order. The proper course for the defendants to take, if they wished to challenge the order, was to apply to the court to discharge or vary it. If that failed, the proper course was to seek to appeal. Instead of even attempting to follow the correct procedure, the defendants decided to press on as originally planned and as if no court order had ever been made. They cocked a snook at the court. They did so in order to steal a march on the Council and to achieve the very state of affairs which the order was designed to prevent. No explanation or apology for the breaches of the court order was offered to the judge or to this court.
26. The practical effect of suspending the injunction has been to allow the defendants to change the use of the land and to retain the benefit of occupation of the land with caravans for residential purposes. This was in defiance of a court order properly served on them and correctly explained to them. In those circumstances there is a real risk that the suspension of the injunction would be perceived as condoning the breach. This would send out the wrong signal, both to others tempted to do the same and to law-abiding members of the public. The message would be that the court is prepared to tolerate contempt of its orders and to permit those who break them to profit from their contempt.
27. The effect of that message would be to diminish respect for court orders, to undermine the authority of the court and to subvert the rule of law. In our judgment, those overarching public interest considerations far outweigh the factors which favour a suspension of the injunction so as to allow the defendants to keep their caravans on the land and to continue to reside there in breach of planning control."
"28. We would add that the defendants would have attracted more sympathy from the court for their plight, if they had embarked on their plans to purchase and establish a caravan site, so that they could integrate with the community, by taking steps to obtain a site which had a reasonable prospects of being granted planning permission, by following the proper procedures for obtaining the necessary permission and by awaiting the outcome of the planning application, instead of taking the law into their own hands, flouting orders of the court and asking the court to suspend the injunction in order to relieve them of the consequences of their unlawful conduct."
"A person who takes action in breach of the injunction in the knowledge that he is in breach may apply to the court to vary the injunction for the future. He should acknowledge that he is in breach and explain why he took the action knowing of the injunction. The court will then take account of all the circumstances of the case, including the reasons for the injunction, the reasons for the breach and the applicant's personal circumstances, in deciding whether to vary the injunction for the future and in deciding what, if any, penalty the court should impose for a contempt committed when he took the action in breach of the injunction. In the first case the court will apply the principles in South Bucks and in Mid Bedfordshire."
"The principles in South Bucks are irrelevant to the question whether or not a person is in breach of an injunction and/or whether he is in contempt of court, because the sole question in such a case is whether he is in breach and/or whether he is in contempt of court. It should be noted that neither appellant applied to the judge for an order varying the injunction for the future. It follows that the judge had no proper opportunity in each case to apply those principles to the case before her."
"7. In my judgment there is one cardinal rule. The judge's reasons should make clear to the parties why he has reached his decision. Where he has had to balance competing factors it will usually be possible to explain why he has concluded that some have outweighed others. Even where the competition is so unequal that the factors speak for themselves it is desirable to say so."
ORDER: Application for permission to appeal granted; appeal dismissed with costs against the Legal Services Commission; detailed assessment of the appellant's publicly funded costs; counsel to lodge a draft minute of order.