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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Westminster City Council v Secretary of State for Communities And Local Government & Anor [2015] EWCA Civ 482 (19 May 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2015/482.html Cite as: [2015] EWCA Civ 482 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Mr Justice Supperstone
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE RICHARDS
and
LADY JUSTICE GLOSTER
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Westminster City Council |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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(1) Secretary of State for Communities and Local Government (2) Oriol Badia - and - Property Investment (Developments) Limited |
Respondents Interested Party |
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Cain Ormondroyd (instructed by The Government Legal Service) for the First Respondent
Alex Goodman (instructed by Oriol Badia) for the Second Respondent
Richard Turney (instructed by Public Access Scheme) for the Interested Party, which submitted written representations but did not appear at the hearing of the appeal
Hearing date : 29 April 2015
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Richards :
"Within the last 10 years and without the benefit of planning permission, the material change of use of the Property, from a hotel (class C1) to a mixed use hotel and hostel (sui generis)."
The lessee of the premises, Equity Point Holdings Ltd, through its chief executive, Mr Oriol Badia, appealed under section 174 of the Town and Country Planning Act ("the 1990 Act") against the enforcement notice. By a decision dated 13 January 2013, an inspector appointed by the Secretary of State allowed the appeal under ground (b), namely that the matters alleged in the notice had not occurred, and under ground (c), namely that those matters (if they occurred) did not constitute a breach of planning control. The council then appealed to the High Court under section 289 of the 1990 Act against the inspector's decision. The council's appeal was dismissed by Supperstone J, against whose order the council now brings a further appeal to this court, with permission granted by Laws LJ.
The legal framework
"Subject to the provisions of this Order, where a building or other land is used for a purpose of any class specified in the Schedule, the use of that building or that other land for any other purpose of the same class shall not be taken to involve development of the land."
"Class C1: Hotels
59. The C1: Hotels use class remains unchanged from the original 1987 Order (as amended by SI 1994/724 which removed hostels from this classification). The C1: Hotels class includes not only hotels, but also motels, bed and breakfast premises, boarding and guest houses. These are premises which provide a room as temporary accommodation on a commercial, fee-paying basis, where meals can be provided but where residential care is not provided .
Hostels
60. Hostels were excluded from the Use Classes Order in 1994 and are therefore sui generis.
61. There is no definition of 'hostel' within planning law. A hostel usually provides overnight or short-term accommodation which may be supervised, where people (including sometimes the homeless) can usually stay free or cheaply. Hostels may provide board, although some may provide facilities for self-catering. The element of supervision should not be relied upon as a determining factor but as a factor to take into account in consideration of the use class of the premises .
62. The question of whether a premises is a hostel or another use is a matter of judgement to be determined on a fact and degree basis. In 1985, in the High Court judgment in the case of Panayi v Secretary of State for the Environment and Hackney LBC [(1985) 50 P&CR 109] ..., it was argued that the presence and use of some of the features below combined were sufficient to distinguish the use of the premises as that of a hostel:
- The presence of dormitories and/or communal or shared facilities.
- The use of the premises in accommodating specific categories of people, e.g., the young, or the homeless.
- Whether the premises are serviced and/or supervised.
- Whether payment is made by the local authority.
- Whether payment is on a nightly basis.
- Whether the residents are transient in the sense that they are 'placed' in the accommodation whilst awaiting accommodation elsewhere.
- The requirements of fire or safety certificates indicating the type of usage.
- The display of such notices or other indicators which may indicate the type of usage: e.g., fire certificates, public fire notices of use for staff and guests."
" [In] modern English usage, it meant a building in which people either lived or stayed which provided communal facilities. The sleeping accommodation was often, although not by any means always, in dormitories rather than single rooms and provided shared cooking, eating and recreational facilities. It was of the essence of a hostel that its accommodation was relatively basic and inexpensive, but in any sense the word was not a term of art in relation to the duration of the stay. It embraced institutions if that was a correct categorisation which covered the whole range from long-term accommodation, as for instance a students' hostel or a nurses' hostel where one normally would have expected that people were staying at least for a term, often for a year at a time or more, to, for instance, a youth hostel which by definition was occupied by transients people who were staying for a day or two at the most.
[A] hostel used as transient accommodation had many of the characteristics of a hotel, people coming and going, people booking in and checking out, people arriving and leaving."
The issues in the appeal to this court
The inspector's decision
"14. A dormitory is defined as a sleeping room with several beds, especially in a school or institution On this basis it appears that any room with more than two beds can be a dormitory and given that the majority of the rooms contain bunk beds and can be occupied by 4, 6 or 8 people I take the view that they are dormitories. Therefore 55 of the 68 rooms at the premises can be said to be dormitories.
15. Each room has a shower/bathroom that is shared by the occupants. This means that in the dormitories washing and w.c. facilities are shared by between 4 and 8 people depending on the size of the room and the number of people occupying it. As a matter of fact these facilities are therefore shared.
17. There have been and may still therefore be communal laundry and cooking facilities. There is also a common room in the basement and an internal courtyard where occupiers can gather and socialise, albeit within specified times."
"22. The premises are supervised to some extent because there is a doorman, staff patrol at night and the groups of young people have adults with them. There have been a large number of complaints made by nearby residents about noise and disturbance and the Appellant has produced a number of management procedures relating to patrolling the premises during the night, groups, coach arrivals, the doorman and servicing.
23 There are a vast number of signs telling occupiers what they can and cannot do, particularly with regard to times they can use the common areas and telling them not to make a noise ."
"29. On the basis of these characteristics and the evidence it seems to me that there are some elements of a hostel use. However, given the manner in which the premises are used, no part of the premises is exclusively used as a hostel and no part is exclusively used as a hotel because the same rooms can be used for both purposes. Indeed on occasions, depending on bookings, any hostel-type use may be minimal compared to the hotel use and vice versa. I am therefore not persuaded that as a matter of fact there is a mixed use of the premises as alleged. But even if there is a mixed use I have to consider whether it results in a breach of planning control, that is, whether there has been a material change in the use of the premises."
"30. As I have said above, there is a fine line between a hotel and a hostel use and it seems to me that there are features described above that could distinguish a hostel use such as dormitories, bunk beds, guest laundries and kitchens, but those features could also be found in hotels , particularly budget hotels which was how Mr Badia described the use of the whole of the premises.
31. All the occupants of the premises, whether in the dormitories or the private rooms, have access to the common room, the courtyard and other common parts of the premises; all occupants have to check-in and check-out; there is a receptionist; breakfast is provided; rooms are cleaned; there is a luggage room. Whether they stay in a private room or a dormitory, the occupants stay on a temporary commercial fee paying basis, predominantly for tourist purposes.
32. I found the evidence relating to the booking system to be extremely confusing and confused .
33. But if one person books a dormitory for eight people, or eight individual people book beds in that dormitory, it seems to me that there would be no difference in the character of the use. Each person would be an occupant of the premises; he/she would use the same facilities; and he/she would be staying there on the same basis as the others, probably as a tourist.
34. The premises are marketed as budget accommodation and as such they attract people who are seeking that type of accommodation which could include students who travel in groups, families on a budget and backpackers.
35. Mr Gareh, the freehold owner of the appeal site, provided evidence that the hotel operated under different managements from about 1966 until its closure in 1993. The hotel had 70 rooms and it had occupancies in excess of 300 guests over the summer and on special occasions such as Christmas and the 1966 World Cup. The hotel specialised in group bookings and family accommodation and made 'extensive use of z-beds or sliding beds to provide extra bed spaces and we moved these around the rooms according to demand'. Before it closed the hotel was run by Starcrown Hotels and their brochure advertised '70 large bedrooms they range from singles through doubles to the most original luxurious split level suites' and the brochure goes onto describe facilities such as colour televisions and telephones in all rooms, a lounge, a restaurant and a bar.
36. The current facilities are different from those in the past in that the accommodation is basic, the private rooms and dormitories and sparsely furnished and the decoration is minimal. There is, however, a vast range of service and accommodation that falls within the Class C1 use from such places as Claridges to a motel in a service station on a motorway and I find that the premises provide 'temporary accommodation on a commercial fee paying basis'.
38. Although the category of the people who stay at the premises may have changed and their numbers may have increased from when the hotel was previously in operation, as a matter of fact and degree I consider that the current use of the premises has not altered the character of the use to such an extent so as to amount to a material change of use for which planning permission is required ."
The judgment of Supperstone J
The first issue: mixed hotel and hostel use?
The second issue: "material" change of use?
"25. M and WR rightly accept that it is permissible to consider off-site effects when assessing whether [a material change of use] has been established. In assessing whether there is a change of character in the use, its impact of the use on other premises is a relevant factor. It is necessary, on the particular facts, to consider both what is happening on the land and its impact off the land when deciding whether the character of the use has changed."
Conclusion
Lady Justice Gloster :
Lord Justice Longmore :