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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> McCarthy & Anor v First Secretary of State & Anor [2007] EWCA Civ 510 (09 May 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2007/510.html Cite as: [2007] EWCA Civ 510, [2008] JPL 712 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
(HIS HONOUR JUDGE GILBART QC)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
and
SIR PAUL KENNEDY
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McCARTHY & ANR |
Appellants |
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- and - |
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FIRST SECRETARY OF STATE & ANR |
Respondents |
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THE RESPONDENT DID NOT APPEAR AND WAS NOT REPRESENTED.
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Crown Copyright ©
Sir Paul Kennedy:
"It emerges from the authorities: (a) article 8 is concerned to prevent intrusions in a person's private life and home and, in particular, arbitrary intrusions and that is the background against which alleged breaches are to be considered. (b) Respect for the home has an environmental dimension in that the law must offer protection to the environment of the home. (c) Not every loss of amenity involves the breach of article 8(1). The degree of seriousness required to trigger lack of respect for the home will depend on the circumstances but it must be substantial. (d) The contents of article 8(2) throw light on the extent of the right in article 8(1) but infringement of article 8(1) does not necessarily arise upon a loss of an amenity and the reasonableness and appropriateness of measures taken by the public authority are relevant in considering whether the respect required by article 8(1) has been accorded. (e) It is also open to the public authority to justify an interference in accordance with article 8(2) but the principles to be applied are broadly similar in the context of the two parts of the article. (f) When balances are struck, the competing interests of the individual, other individuals, and the community as a whole must be considered. (g) The public authority concerned is granted a certain margin of appreciation in determining the steps to be taken to ensure compliance with article 8. (h) The margin of appreciation may be wide when the implementation of planning policies is to be considered."
Then at paragraph 49 of the judgment Pill LJ said this:
"The concept of proportionality is inherent in the approach to decision making in planning law. The procedure stated by Dyson LJ in the Samaroo case, as stated, is not wholly appropriate to decision making in the present context in that it does not take account of the right, recognised in the Convention, of a landowner to make use of his land, a right which is, however, to be weighed against the rights of others affected by the use of land and of the community in general. The first stage of the procedure stated by Dyson LJ does not require, nor was it intended to require that, before any development of land is permitted, it must be established that the objectives of the development cannot be achieved in some other way or on some other site. The effect of the proposal on adjoining owners and occupants must, however, be considered in the context of article 8, and a balancing of interests is necessary. The question whether the permission has 'an excessive or disproportionate effect on the interests of affected persons' [the words of Dyson LJ at paragraph 20] is, in the present context, no different than the question posed by the inspector, a question which has routinely been posed by decision makers both before and after the enactment of the 1998 Act. Dyson LJ stated at page 1161, paragraph 26 that: 'It is important to emphasise that the striking of a fair balance lies at the heart of proportionality.'"
"I agree with Pill LJ that the process outlined in the Samaroo case [2001] UKHRR 1150, while appropriate where there is direct interference with article 8 rights by a public body, cannot be applied without adaptation in the situation where the essential conflict is between two or more groups of private interests. In such a situation, a balancing exercise of the kind conducted in the present case by the inspector is sufficient to meet any requirement of proportionality."
"It is clear from the passages above in the judgments of Pill LJ and Keene LJ that
a) One cannot simply read the two-stage test across into the planning context;
b) Provided that the decision maker carries out a proper balancing exercise the test of proportionality is met."
"The judge was right to reject the contention that a rigid two-stage test of proportionality, as referred to in Samaroo, has to be applied in the context of a planning decision of this kind. The attempt to distinguish Lough is unsustainable: the present case is equally one where a balance has to be struck between the interests of the land owner seeking to develop his land, the interests of neighbouring land owners and the wider interests of the community and the protection of the environment."
He went on to deal with the European dimension.
"In conclusion the Appellants submit that 'precedent effect' should only be taken into account as a material consideration in circumstances where there is evidence on which the basic conclusion that the grant of planning permission would result in it being difficult for the local planning authority to resist similar applications in the future."
"In my view the concerns about precedent are not merely generalised ones."
"If the grant of planning permission would be likely to encourage unauthorised development with identifiable harmful effects on the environment or highway safety, I see no reason in principle why a decision-maker should be obliged to close his eyes to that problem and treat it as an irrelevant consideration. The weight to be given to it (having regard inter alia to the effectiveness of powers to control unauthorised development) is, as the judge said, a matter for the decision-maker. The actual finding in this case that the grant of permission would be likely to have an adverse precedent effect was based on the specific circumstances of the case, which provided a solid basis for the finding, rather than on any generalised concerns or assumptions; and it does not follow that the decision in this case will have the wide-ranging consequences suggested in the applicants' skeleton argument."
"Similarly, I do not consider that a temporary 3 years permission, as the appellants request as an alternative, would be appropriate. There is insufficient certainty that the Council would identify sites for the occupants in that time period and a 3 year permission would give the appellants no incentive to seek alternative sites, leading inevitably to further protracted enforcement action in the future."
As to that, HHJ Gilbart said:
"Like the inspector the Secretary of State has considered the request of the appellants for a temporary planning permission for three years as an alternative to permanent planning permission. He has considered whether the temporary planning permission should be granted in the light of his policies in [there referred to]. The Secretary of State does not consider that temporary planning permission is justified, given that development would cause serious harm to the countryside which could not be mitigated by landscaping, and that there is insufficient certainty that the Council would identify sites for the occupants in that time period."
In other words, the approach adopted by the Secretary of State was one which was clearly sustainable. In my judgment, therefore, there is no substance in any of the points now sought to be argued and certainly not such substance as would give this appeal any realistic prospects of success.
Lord Justice Buxton:
Order: Application refused.