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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Jelson Ltd v Secretary of State for Communities and Local Government & Anor [2018] EWCA Civ 24 (19 January 2018) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2018/24.html Cite as: [2018] EWCA Civ 24 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
PLANNING COURT
MR JUSTICE GREEN
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
Lord Justice Lindblom
and
Lord Justice Peter Jackson
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Jelson Ltd. |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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Secretary of State for Communities and Local Government Hinckley and Bosworth Borough Council |
Respondents |
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for the Appellant
Mr Hereward Phillpot Q.C. and Ms Sasha Blackmore (instructed by the Government Legal Department) for the First Respondent
Ms Thea Osmund-Smith (instructed by Hinckley and Bosworth Borough Council) for the Second Respondent
Hearing date: 17 October 2017
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Lindblom:
Introduction
The issue in the appeal
Government policy and guidance
The inspector's decision letter
"5. In order to boost significantly the supply of housing local planning authorities are required to use their evidence base to ensure that their Local Plan meets the full, objectively assessed needs (OAN) for market and affordable housing in the housing market area. The Hinckley and Bosworth (H&B) Core Strategy … was adopted in 2009, predating the publication of [the NPPF] in 2012. The [core strategy] target is to deliver 9000 dwellings up to 2026, that is, 450 units per annum. This requirement, however, is derived from the revoked East Midlands Regional Plan, the dwelling targets in which were based on 2004 household projections. The [core strategy] requirement is not the OAN and is not, therefore, consistent with [the NPPF]."
A footnote (footnote 1) to the first sentence of that paragraph confirmed that the inspector had in mind the policy in paragraph 47 of the NPPF. In paragraphs 6 and 7, she explained her understanding of the concept of "OAN":
"6. The starting point for the calculation of OAN is demographic calculations based on the most recent, available population projections. This is made clear in paragraph 159 of [the NPPF] which states that the strategic housing market assessment (SHMA) should identify the scale and mix of housing and the range of tenures that the local population is likely to need over the plan period which meet household and population projections, taking account of migration and demographic change. The Council, together with the other Leicestershire district and borough councils and Leicester City Council, commissioned a SHMA which was published in June 2014 [namely, the Leicester and Leicestershire Strategic Housing Market Assessment, prepared by GL Hearn Ltd. and Justin Gardner Consulting ["the SHMA"]].
7. Demographic calculations result in the total number, expressed as a range, of people and households likely to live in the Borough during the plan period, regardless of the type of dwelling which they might desire or require. The latter needs, for example the numbers requiring housing for families; for older people; for those with low mobility; or for those who cannot afford market housing, are the products of separate and different calculations and assessments. In theory they are included within the total population arising from population projections and a demographic methodology and should be consistent with them."
In paragraph 8 she referred to a dispute between Jelson and the council over the approach to "OAN":
"8. A main area of dispute between the parties is whether affordable housing need should be fully met by the OAN. The appellant's view is that the OAN arising from the SHMA is a constrained or policy-on figure and that, consequently, the upper end of the range is not properly identified. On the other hand, the Council concurs with the guidance set out in the Planning Advisory Service's technical advice note on the matter. This describes those factors which should not contribute to OAN as being 'below the line'; they are matters which should not be included in the OAN calculation but which should be taken into account at a later stage when formulating provision targets. The technical advice note argues that affordable housing need is not measured in a way that is directly comparable with OAN and should not be a constituent of it; affordable housing should thus be below the line and a policy consideration."
A footnote (footnote 3) identifies the document referred to in the third sentence of that paragraph as the second edition of the Planning Advisory Service's "Objectively Assessed Need and Housing Targets" Technical Advice Note, published in July 2015. The inspector then went on, in paragraph 9, to refer to the salient figures in the SHMA:
"9. Based on demographic-led household projections the SHMA concluded that the bottom end of the OAN range for H&B up to 2031 was 375. Due to the mechanism by which the vast majority of affordable housing is delivered, that is as a percentage of all residential schemes over a threshold of units (and subject to viability), it might be necessary to increase the number of dwellings required overall in order to maximise the provision of affordable housing. This measure, which is referred to in [the] PPG, is a policy decision and thus appropriately calculated outside of OAN. In H&B the number of homes needed for supporting proportionate economic growth was identified through the SHMA as 467 and the affordable housing need as 248 per annum. In order to support the provision of additional affordable housing and a growth in employment/labour supply, therefore, the top end of the range was put at 450; that is therefore a policy-on figure."
The relevant passage in the PPG is identified in a footnote (footnote 4) as paragraph 2a-029-20140306. Two further footnotes confirm that Table 84 in the SHMA ("OAN Conclusions, 2011-31") was the source of the figures of "467" for "the number of homes needed for supporting proportionate economic growth", and "248" for "the affordable housing need", per annum (footnote 5), and "450" as "the top end of the range" (footnote 6). Turning next to the "OAN Range" of "375" to "450" in Table 84 in the SHMA, the inspector said this, in paragraph 10:
"10. There is no dispute that there is a significant need for affordable housing in Hinckley and in Burbage. The most recent analysis is in the SHMA which puts the figure at about 250 dpa. In increasing the demographically produced figure of 375 up to 450, a 20% uplift, specifically to provide for affordable housing and economic growth, the OAN properly takes account of that need."
In paragraph 11 she came to Jelson's contention that the figure of 980 for the "Annual Housing Need" in "Hinckley & Bosworth" in Table 48 in the SHMA ("Scale of Overall Housing Delivery to Meet Affordable Housing Need on Current Policy Basis Per Annum") should be taken as the higher of the figures in the "OAN" range:
"11. The appellant's view is that the top of the OAN range should be at least the 980 dwellings identified in the SHMA as the total amount of housing necessary to deliver the indicated housing need under current policy. This is clearly impractical and unreasonable; the corollary would be a requirement of 196,825 units in the HMA as a whole, a considerable, inconsistent and thus unjustifiable increase on the 75,000 or so dwellings calculated from household projections to be needed by 2031. The 980 figure identified in the SHMA is thus purely theoretical although it could be used as a pointer to further policy adjustments, such as a change in the percentage of affordable housing required. Significant issues in the area such as shortcomings in housing provision, including affordable housing, should be addressed through the Local Plan."
Further population projections had been published after the SHMA was produced. The inspector referred to these in paragraph 12:
"12. Since the SHMA was produced more recent population projections, for 2012, have been published. Analysis of them shows a need for 364 dpa in H&B derived from the total figure for Leicestershire. This is lower than the bottom end of the SHMA OAN but generally consistent with it. In my opinion the figure confirms the Council's approach and validates the [core strategy] housing provision of 450 dwellings which is about 24% above that needed to meet demographic increases."
In paragraph 13 she went on to consider the level of OAN at which the supply of housing land would be less than the "five-year supply of deliverable housing sites" required in NPPF policy:
"13. It is not my role in this decision to identify an alternative OAN. The appellant has calculated however that, all things being equal, the housing land supply would fall below five years where the OAN was 539 dpa. This figure would be a 44% uplift on the 375 demographically-led household projection which, to my mind, would represent a considerable number of additional affordable dwellings. If I had considered, therefore, that the 450 dph housing requirement was wanting it would still not have been necessary to increase it beyond the 539 threshold whereby a five year supply was not available."
In paragraphs 14, 15 and 16 she referred to three first instance judgments in the Planning Court in which national policy and guidance on "OAN" had been considered: Satnam Millenium Ltd. v Warrington Borough Council [2015] EWHC 370 (Admin), Oadby and Wigston Borough Council v Secretary of State for Communities and Local Government [2015] EWHC 1879 (Admin), and King's Lynn and West Norfolk Borough Council v Secretary of State for Communities and Local Government and Elm Park Holdings [2015] EWHC 2464 (Admin). In paragraph 15 she referred to the judgement of Hickinbottom J., as he then was, in Oadby and Wigston Borough Council:
"15. In respect of [Oadby and Wigston Borough Council] the Court found that the inspector had been entitled to exercise his planning judgement on all of the evidence before him. He had lawfully concluded that the range arising from the Leicestershire SHMA, the same document as is central to this case, was "policy on" and that it failed properly to reflect the affordable housing needs and the needs generated by economic factors. A significant difference between that case and the one before me here is that in Oadby and Wigston the Council's housing requirement figure of 80-100 dpa was well below the SHMA affordable housing need of 160 dpa."
In paragraph 16 she referred to Dove J.'s judgment in King's Lynn and West Norfolk Borough Council:
"16. The judgement in [King's Lynn and West Norfolk Borough Council] stated that [the NPPF] made it clear that affordable housing needs should be addressed in determining the full OAN, but neither it nor the PPG suggested that they had to be met in full by the full OAN. This judge disagreed with the conclusions of the [Oadby and Wigston Borough Council] judge."
Lastly in this part of her decision letter, she referred in paragraph 17 to the report of the inspector into Charnwood Borough Council's core strategy:
"17. The inspector undertaking the Charnwood [core strategy] examination concluded in September 2015, after a thorough assessment, that the Leicester and Leicestershire SHMA provided an up-to-date and robust assessment of housing needs in the HMA. He agreed that the OAN for the Housing Market Area (HMA) should be 4,215 dpa; the H&B OAN of 375-450 is a component of that overall figure. These conclusions further support the Council's position."
"29. Finally on the matter of deliverable sites, the Council's calculation of housing land supply is five years and ten months; an 'overprovision' (column h) of 461 units makes the period comfortably longer than five years. It thus provides for some slippage or non-delivery of the sites comprising the housing supply."
A footnote (footnote 19) refers to Table 1 in the proof of evidence of the council's planning witness, Mr Murphy, in which the figure of 450 dwellings per annum for housing need was used in the calculation of housing land supply.
"30. All in all I have found that the calculation of OAN takes account of the substantial need for affordable housing and is otherwise sound. In addition there is no record of persistent under delivery and a 5% buffer is adequate. The identification of sites contributing to the five year supply and the prediction of when and how many dwellings will be delivered is reasonable. I therefore conclude that there is sufficient housing land in H&B to meet housing needs for the following five years."
Was the inspector's approach to determining the housing requirement lawful?
"47. It is perfectly plain that when the documents are read fairly and in context TVBC never identified the figure of 834 dwellings a year as an overall FOAN figure (or indeed any figure greater than 588). The figure of 834 dwellings a year was produced as part of an assessment of the level at which the policy for the annual dwelling requirement would need to be set if, applying the assumption that 35% of all housing development carried out would be provided as affordable homes, the FOAN for affordable housing (292 dwellings a year) were to be achieved. In carrying out this assessment both the Inspector and TVBC were faithfully applying paragraph 029 of the PPG ... . They both rejected the notion of including 834 dwellings a year as a policy requirement in the local plan on grounds of lack of market demand and sustainability objections. But in so doing they were not rejecting 834 dwellings a year as a measure of FOAN. They did not misinterpret either the NPPF or the PPG. More to the point their approach could not possibly be criticised in law as being an irrational application of policy."
Conclusion
Lord Justice Peter Jackson
Lord Justice Rupert Jackson