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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Winfield v Secretary of State for Communities & Local Government [2012] EWCA Civ 1415 (07 November 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2012/1415.html Cite as: [2013] JPL 455, [2012] 46 EG 120, [2012] EWCA Civ 1415, [2013] 1 WLR 948, [2012] WLR(D) 311 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT, QUEEN'S BENCH
DIVISION, ADMIN COURT (Supperstone J)
Ref: C0/10385/2011
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
Vice President of the Court of Appeal, Civil Division
LORD JUSTICE ELIAS
and
SIR STEPHEN SEDLEY
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WINFIELD |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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SECRETARY OF STATE FOR COMMUNITIES & LOCAL GOVERNMENT |
Respondent |
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WordWave International Limited
A Merrill Communications Company
165 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2DY
Tel No: 020 7404 1400, Fax No: 020 7404 1424
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Mr James Strachan (instructed by Treasury Solicitor) for the Respondent
Hearing date : 11 October 2012
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Maurice Kay :
"An advertisement displayed on a site that has been used continually for the preceding ten years for the display of advertisements without express consent."
The Inspector's decision
"3. …This appeal is in relation to a claim that the use of the land for displaying advertisements has become lawful for planning purposes, and therefore incapable of being enforced against under section 172 of the Town and Country Planning Act 1990.
…
5. The wooden framework upon which the current advertisement has been displayed has no life of its own. Its sole purpose is to support the advertisements and I regard it as an intrinsic part of it. …
6. …I have no reason to dispute that signs first appeared on the land in 1997 and I saw that the land is still to this day being used for the display of advertisements for the appellant's nearby retail premises. It is clear from the photographic evidence that the number and location of signs has changed from time to time. The critical issue is whether within the ten year period necessary to establish lawfulness there has been any material break in the use of the land for the purposes of displaying advertisements. This has to be determined as a matter of fact and degree.
7. …The appellant also says that the signs have been removed from time to time at the request of the Council, but that the requests were usually verbal. He assumes that any paperwork would be contained in an enforcement file, but has been told by the Council that no such file exists.
…
10. …It is clear from the appellant's reference to his expectation that there would be an enforcement file containing relevant paperwork that the 'request' from the Council for him to take down the advertisements was the result of enforcement investigations. The appellant had no desire to remove the advertisements, but clearly did so under threat of further action by the council if he did not. After a few weeks, when the dust had settled, he would re-establish the advertisement display.
11. It is clear to me that the appellant's actions in moving the advertisements when required to do so by the Council were intended to remedy the breach of control taking place at the time, thereby avoiding any further action by the Council. As a matter of fact and degree, the removal of the advertisements under such circumstances, for however short a period, represented a material break in the use of the land for displaying advertisements. When the use recommenced some time later, a new breach of control would then have occurred and the ten year clock would start afresh. The appellant's evidence is not sufficiently precise and unambiguous for me to determine that, on the balance of probability, the land has been used for the necessary ten year period, uninterrupted by any break in the use in order to stay off enforcement action by the Council. I conclude that the Council's decision not to issue a LDC was well-founded, but not for the reasons they give. Nevertheless a LDC cannot be issued and the appeal therefore fails."
The grounds of appeal
"The judge erred in concluding that the Inspector's failure to consider the issue of deemed consent under Class 13 of the 2007 Regulations was immaterial as he would have inevitably have found that the appellant's use of the site was not continual."
The Class 13 point
"I see no good reason for supposing that Parliament was ignorant of the difference in meaning between 'continuous' and 'continual' or intended to overlook them. On the contrary, it seems to me plain that the word 'continually' was precisely chosen and that Class 13 was intended to encompass advertising which was 'regularly occurring' (another meaning given to 'continual' by the Shorter Oxford Dictionary) irrespective of whether it was uninterrupted, provided only and always that it had existed since April 1, 1974.
Assume a site which has been regularly used to display advertisements over the 24 year period in question, but that from time to time within that period, for whatever reason, there has been an occasional period, perhaps of some months, when the site has not been used for that purpose. It would, to my mind, be surprising if a deemed consent were denied to such a site because of such interruptions in the use. Again the matter is ultimately one of fact and degree, and I would, therefore, reject the appellant's arguments upon this information … "
Does this reasoning avail the appellant in the present case?
"In contrast with the type of situation under consideration in Moran, (occasional non-use by the landowner), where the local planning authority requires an advertising activity to cease with a threat of enforcement action, and the landowner complies contrary to his will, the use is not merely interrupted, it ceases. Subsequent resumption of the same activity constitutes … a new chapter in the planning history."
He later added (at paragraph 15):
"There would be a lacuna in the statutory system of planning control if compliance with threatened enforcement action, with resumption constituting a fresh breach of planning control, was sufficient to break the ten year immunity period for the purposes of section 171B of the 1990 Act, but not necessarily sufficient to prevent deemed consent arising under Class 13."
And (at paragraph 16):
"That finding as to a material breach applies necessarily, in my view whether one is considering section 171B or Class 13 because of its character, namely that of cessation because of a local authority threat of action. The consequence is a new chapter in planning history. In my view, whether one is considering continual use or continuous use, the result must necessarily be the same. The use in question as ceased and the resumption is a new breach of planning control."
"Advertisement"
"'Advertisement' means any word, letter, model, sign, placard, board, notice, awning, blind, devise or representation, whether illuminated or not, in the nature of, and employed wholly or partly for the purposes of, advertisement, announcement or direction, and (without prejudice to the previous provisions of this definition) includes any hoarding or similar structure used or designed, or adapted for use, anything else principally used, or designed or adapted principally for use, for the display of advertisements, and references to the display of advertisements shall be construed accordingly."
"There is a degree of circularity in this definition … if one asks, what is an advertisement, the answer is, at least in part, something that is 'in the nature of, and employed wholly or partly for the purposes of, advertisements'. In this respect the definition of an advertisement is like the definition of the proverbial elephant. One knows an elephant (or advertisement) when one sees it because it is in the nature of an elephant (or advertisement)."
"In my view, regard must be had to the words 'employed, wholly or partly, for the purposes of advertisement, announcement or direction, …that being so, the structure must be employed wholly or partly continually for those purposes to fall within the definition of 'advertisement' in the Act."
That is essentially the approach urged upon us on behalf of the Secretary of State.
Conclusion
Lord Justice Elias:
"must have been conceived as periods during which the planning authority would normally have been expected to discover an unlawful building operation or use and after which the general interest in proper planning control should yield and the status quo should prevail."
Sir Stephen Sedley: