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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Moore v Secretary of State for Communities and Local Government & Anor [2012] EWCA Civ 1202 (18 September 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2012/1202.html Cite as: [2012] EWCA Civ 1202 |
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ON APPEAL FROM
FRANCES PATTERSON QC
(SITTING AS A DEPUTY HIGH COURT JUDGE)
CQ/8793/2011
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE LONGMORE
and
LORD JUSTICE SULLIVAN
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SHEILA MOORE |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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SECRETARY OF STATE FOR COMMUNITIES AND LOCAL GOVERNMENT (1) SUFFOLK COASTAL DISTRICT COUNCIL (2) |
Respondents |
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Mr. G Lewis (instructed by Treasury Solicitor) for the First Respondent
Hearing date: 16th July 2012
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Sullivan:
Introduction
"Class C3. Dwellinghouses
Use as a dwellinghouse (whether or not as a sole or main residence) by -
(a) a single person or by people to be regarded as forming a single household;(b) not more than six residents living together as a single household where care is provided for residents; or(c) not more than six residents living together as a single household where no care is provided to residents (other than a use within Class C4)."
Factual background
The Inspector's Decision
"6. I accept that the description 'leisure accommodation' might encompass a wide range of different forms of occupation of the property, some of which may constitute a material change of use, and others not. However, I consider holiday accommodation is one such purpose, since holidays are clearly leisure time.
7. I also accept that the allegation might be framed in a number of ways - and it is quite reasonably suggested for the appellant that it might be described as a 'use as a holiday dwelling'.
However, the formulation used is clear, it covers the particular use to which the property is put, and it is obviously understood by the appellant whose business it is.
8. I do not find the formulation used in the notice either misconceived or unintelligible. The alleged breach has occurred as a matter of fact, and the appeal on ground (b) therefore fails."
"within the particular kind of building that should be described as a 'dwelling house' - that is, following the test set out in the case of Gravesham Borough Council v Secretary of State for the Environment [1984] P & CR 142 - it ordinarily affords the facilities required for day-to-day existence."
"Such use falls squarely within the definition of Use Class C3(a)."
"....in determining whether a material change of use has taken place it is necessary to look at and compare the character of the current allegedly unlawful use with that of the actual previous lawful use."
"13. As now used the house is advertised as accommodating up to 18 people with an additional 2 on a sofa-bed. It is let generally for short periods of 3, 4 or 7 nights, and it is apparent that there have been quite regular bookings in each of the years from 2008 to 2010, with occupation on as many as about 175 nights per year. In 2009 there were slightly over 40 separate bookings. I note that many of these are 3-night bookings over weekends.
14. I accept that if the building is only occupied for short periods it is not disqualified from being a dwellinghouse. Furthermore, even if as large a group as 20 people occupy it, they could conceivably be a family or regarded as a single household.
15. The appellant says that residents come to the house as a pre-formed group for a pre-determined period, and have a family or other relationship which pre-disposes them to occupy the house as a single household. While it is possible that large family gatherings take place at the appeal property, there is no specific evidence to support the frequency of this, and I would expect such events to be rare. From what I have read, particularly from occupiers of nearby dwellings, numerous different groups visit the property for various reasons. There has been a yoga group of some 15 people, and a cycling group of some 20 people. There are probably many who come for countryside holiday activities, and it appears there are also many who come for reunions, parties, or celebrations of one sort or another. Such reasons for coming together largely arise from participants' shared interests, but do not establish these groups as single households.
16. A result of the current use is that new groups arrive at, and leave the property relatively frequently, often arriving on a Friday and leaving on a Monday. A new group may then arrive on a Monday and leave on a Friday, presumably with cleaners arriving at the changeover. Furthermore, it appears that groups often travel in a number of separate vehicles, as shown by a number of photographs and in third parties' written statements."
"21. In summary, I consider there are a number of distinct differences between the current use and use of the appeal property as a family dwellinghouse. Notably, the pattern of arrivals and departures, with associated traffic movements; the unlikelihood of occupation by family or household groups; the numbers of people constituting the visiting groups on many occasions; the likely frequency of party type activities, and the potential lack of consideration for neighbours.
25. Overall, as a matter of fact and degree, I consider the use of the property as part of the appellant's holiday letting business results in a use of the dwellinghouse that is quite different in character from that of a private family dwellinghouse. I consider this change in character has resulted in a material change of use of the property that is development requiring planning permission under the provisions of Section 55(1) of the Act. No planning permission has been obtained, nor is this any form of permitted development. There has therefore been a breach of planning control, and the appeal on ground (c) must fail."
Use as a dwellinghouse - the authorities
"I would agree that, if that is what the Inspector is saying, it would be wrong, because not every residential use is necessarily a use as a private dwelling-house. To my mind, however, what is said reads quite clearly as being merely a double description. If the house is occupied by one family, etc., the use is residential and in accordance with permitted use as a private dwelling-house. In my judgment, what was being found as fact here was that the character of the user from the planning point of view had not been changed by the fact that the premises were being occupied not only by the owner and his family but also by his friends or by members of his office staff or by paying tenants during the periods that I have indicated.
If that is right, it is a finding of fact, and all that this court has to ask itself is: was it a finding of fact that could reasonably have been made on the evidence before the inspector. It is common ground, as I understand it, that the question for determination in the context of this appeal is whether the character of the use of this dwelling-house as a private residence has been changed so substantially as to amount to a material change of use. It is a question of fact and degree. It is a decision that is based on the particular facts of this case that I have recited. This is not a case that lays down, as I see it, any principle. The Inspector was not dealing with a house that was constantly being let in short holiday lettings. She was dealing with a house that was being occupied by the owner, by the owner's friends and by the owner's staff on a non-paying basis, with, superadded to that, a period in the aggregate of 10 weeks in the year during which it was let as a rent to single households. I think that she was wholly entitled to reach the conclusion that the character of this dwelling-house and its use was not materially changed by the succession of occupiers over the period that I have mentioned in the categories that I have described. As I have said, I do not consider that she was seeking to propound any proposition of law in her paragraph 42.She was making the legitimate findings of fact on which to base her conclusion that there had been no material change of use."
"I also agree that the method of taking the evidence in this case has left some matters of fact unclear that might have come out and turned out very differently from the way they did had they been open to further probing and questioning. It is not to be thought that, in a case like this where the lettings had a different character from that concluded by the Inspector here, there would not be a material change of sue. It depends entirely on the facts, as Diplock LJ said in Wilson v West Sussex County Council: 'Considerations which are relevant are planning considerations....' and these vary from case to case."
"Suppose that a London-based company requires a succession of employees to be based one at a time for four months in a location far distant from London. Suppose that the company buys a house and makes it available to each employee and his family for his tour of duty. It would still be a dwelling-house. Take a holiday cottage subject to time-share with a number of owners each enjoying the right to occupy it for two particular weeks each year. That would still be a dwelling-house.
What have these examples in common? All are buildings that ordinarily afford the facilities required for day-to-day private domestic existence."
"The units are all self-contained, with no apparent connection between them, and each is supplied with the facilities necessary for daily life, including living, sleeping and eating space, kitchens, bathrooms and WC's. Each unit has a small area of open air amenity space defined by hedges or fences, usually at the front. There is a communal car park for the 10 units, apart from which there are no communal areas. Council tax is charged on the property by four separate assessments, one of which covers the main house and the 10 units. The units are available to the public on short lets, including weekend and mid-week breaks, with the longest letting being for three or four months. They are managed as one entity, the income being deposited in one account. Cleaning is provided at changeovers and a maid can be employed at an extra charge for cleaning on an hourly basis. Linen, including towels, is provided. Breakfast hampers are provided for guests at an extra charge, but other than that no meals area provided. None of the units is used for staff accommodation."
"The "cottages", apartments or whatever description is applied to them certainly have the physical attributes of self-contained dwellings now. However, they are not used in the normal sense as independent residential units. Their use for holiday accommodation is, in my opinion, materially different to a use of premises by a household as the long term home of the person or persons comprising that household. Put in simple terms, no one lives in these cottages and has not done so since 1985. This requires no definition of legal principle; it is a common sense conclusion derived from the facts of this case..."
"In my judgment, McCullough J's approach to the meaning of "dwellinghouse" was entirely correct. Although we were not referred to any of the many other decisions on the meaning of that word in other areas of the law, I am confident that an examination of them would reveal no requirement that before a building can be so described it must be occupied as the permanent home of one or more persons or the like. Nor do 10 self-contained units of residential accommodation which would otherwise be properly described as 10 single dwelling houses cease to be used as such because they are managed as a whole for the commercial purpose of holiday or other temporary lettings. Accordingly, I am satisfied that the Secretary of State applied an incorrect test in this case and that if he had applied the correct test, he could only have properly concluded that the 10 units are being used as 10 single dwellinghouses within section 171B(2) of the Act."
The grounds of appeal
Discussion
Ground 1
Ground 2
Conclusion