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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Wiltshire Council v Cooper Estates Strategic Land Ltd [2019] EWCA Civ 840 (16 May 2019) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2019/840.html Cite as: [2019] PTSR 1980, [2020] 2 All ER 106, [2019] WLR(D) 294, [2019] JPL 1370, [2019] EWCA Civ 840 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Mr David Elvin QC (sitting as a Deputy High Court Judge)
CO/5866/2017
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE FLOYD
and
LORD JUSTICE HENDERSON
____________________
WILTSHIRE COUNCIL |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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COOPER ESTATES STRATEGIC LAND LTD |
Respondent |
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- and - |
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RICHARD GOSNELL ROYAL WOOTTON BASSETT TOWN COUNCIL |
Interested Parties |
____________________
Mr Gregory Jones QC & Mr Philip Petchey (instructed by Blake Morgan LLP) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 8th May 2019
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Lewison:
Introduction and background
"a significant number of the inhabitants of any locality, or of any neighbourhood within a locality, have indulged as of right in lawful sports and pastimes on the land for a period of at least 20 years"
"If regard is to be had to the development plan for the purpose of any determination to be made under the planning Acts the determination must be made in accordance with the plan unless material considerations indicate otherwise."
"The planning system should be genuinely plan-led. Succinct and up-to-date plans should provide a positive vision for the future of each area; a framework for addressing housing needs and other economic, social and environmental priorities; and a platform for local people to shape their surroundings."
"Where planning has dealt with an 'if' issue, the Review would argue that that issue should not be re-opened. Thus, where the possibility of TVG registration has been considered as part of planning, the Review would contend that granting planning permission should then provide protection from TVG registration for the duration of that permission. Such an approach would enable all the relevant issues to be weighed together, rather than the merits of TVG registration being considered in isolation, as is the case now."
"The greens registration system works entirely independently of the planning system. There is increasing concern that it is being used in some parts of the country as a mechanism to prevent development proposed and approved through the planning system."
"The designation of land as Local Green Space through local and neighbourhood plans allows communities to identify and protect green areas of particular importance to them. Designating land as Local Green Space should be consistent with the local planning of sustainable development and complement investment in sufficient homes, jobs and other essential services. Local Green Spaces should only be designated when a plan is prepared or updated, and be capable of enduring beyond the end of the plan period."
"The Local Green Space designation should only be used where the green space is:
a) in reasonably close proximity to the community it serves;
b) demonstrably special to a local community and holds a particular local significance, for example because of its beauty, historic significance, recreational value (including as a playing field), tranquillity or richness of its wildlife; and
c) local in character and is not an extensive tract of land."
"Policies for managing development within a Local Green Space should be consistent with those for Green Belts."
The Commons Act 2006
"(1) The right under section 15(1) to apply to register land in England as a town or village green ceases to apply if an event specified in the first column of the Table set out in Schedule 1A has occurred in relation to the land ("a trigger event").
(2) Where the right under section 15(1) has ceased to apply because of the occurrence of a trigger event, it becomes exercisable again only if an event specified in the corresponding entry in the second column of the Table occurs in relation to the land ("a terminating event")."
"4. A development plan document which identifies the land for potential development is adopted under section 23(2) or (3) of the 2004 Act."
i) An application for planning permission in relation to the land is publicised;
ii) A draft of a development plan document which identifies the land for potential development is published for consultation;
iii) A proposal for a neighbourhood development plan which identifies the land for potential development is published by a local planning authority for consultation;
iv) A neighbourhood development plan which identifies the land for potential development is made.
"In July 2011 the Government published a consultation on the registration of new town and village greens ("greens") due to increasing concerns about the impact of such applications on the planning system. The Government places great importance on the planning system to support efficiency, effectiveness and growth. This is partly why the Government committed to delivering the Penfold review recommendation to reduce the impact of the greens registration system on the planning system. The Penfold review looked into whether non-planning consents discourage or delay investment in development projects."
The facts
The Wiltshire Core Strategy
"Core Policy 1
Settlement Strategy
The Settlement Strategy identifies the settlements where sustainable development will take place to improve the lives of all those who live and work in Wiltshire.
The area strategies in Chapter 5 list the specific settlements which fall within each category.
Principal Settlements
Market Towns
Outside the Principal Settlements, Market Towns are defined as settlements that have the ability to support sustainable patterns of living in Wiltshire through their current levels of facilities, services and employment opportunities.
Market Towns have the potential for significant development that will increase the jobs and homes in each town in order to help sustain and where necessary enhance their services and facilities and promote better levels of self containment and viable sustainable communities.
The Market Towns are: Amesbury, Bradford on Avon, Calne, Corsham, Devizes, Malmesbury, Marlborough, Melksham, Tidworth and Ludgershall, Warminster, Westbury, and Royal Wootton Bassett."
"The indicative figures also allow a flexible approach which will allow the council, including through the preparation of the Site Allocations DPD, and local communities preparing neighbourhood plans, to respond positively to opportunities without being inhibited by an overly prescriptive, rigid approach which might otherwise prevent sustainable development proposals that can contribute to delivering the strategic objectives of the plan."
"Core Policy 2
Delivery Strategy
In line with Core Policy 1, the delivery strategy seeks to deliver development in Wiltshire between 2006 and 2026 in the most sustainable manner by making provision for at least 178ha of new employment land and at least 42,000 homes distributed as follows
....
Within the defined limits of development
Within the limits of development, as defined on the policies map, there is a presumption in favour of sustainable development at the Principal Settlements, Market Towns, Local Service Centres and Large Villages.
Outside the defined limits of development
Other than in circumstances as permitted by other policies within this plan, identified in paragraph 4.25, development will not be permitted outside the limits of development, as defined on the policies map. The limits of development may only be altered through the identification of sites for development through subsequent Site Allocations Development Plan Documents and neighbourhood plans."
"Development will be supported in accordance with the Area Strategies and requirements in the development templates at Appendix A."
"Development in the Royal Wootton Bassett and Cricklade Community Area should be in accordance with the Settlement Strategy set out in Core Policy 1.
Over the plan period (2006 to 2026) approximately 1,455 new homes will be provided of which about 1,070 should occur at Royal Wootton Bassett."
"Housing in the main settlements will help improve their vitality and create a critical mass to deliver improvements in infrastructure. However, given that there are a number of existing outstanding housing commitments, no further strategic housing allocations are needed early in the plan period. Future growth should be brought forward in a balanced way to ensure infrastructure is delivered alongside housing."
"non-strategic growth should be brought forward in accordance with Core Policies 1 and 2 and phased throughout the plan period to deliver homes in a balanced manner that will enable infrastructure issues to be addressed"
Development plan documents
The judge's reasoning
" in the case of development plans these will generally be wider in their effects than a planning application and to be longer-lived since development plans are intended to apply for many years. The issue there is whether the plan identifies the land for potential development since in the case of a plan policies may be more or less specific and still be relevant in terms of the statutory mischief even if they are not specific to the land itself but are sufficiently directed to an area, or circumstances, which include the land that a registration application would fall within the statutory mischief of inhibiting future development."
"There is no reason in principle why identification could not be through the means of a variety of planning methods. Allocation would, perhaps, be the paradigm example but identification could be through preferred areas for development, opportunity areas, reserved areas etc. The fact that that identified area might contain constraints would be no surprise and was no reason for not regarding that area as identified for potential development. It did not need to allow any development in any location within the area of the application of the policy in order to identify it for potential development. If that were the case, the statutory purpose would be seriously undermined since many if not most sites are subject to some constraints, even if they are of the more mundane varieties such as design and highway capacity."
" the Core Strategy through CP1 and CP2 identifies an area of land which includes the Land (i.e. the boundary of Royal Wootton Bassett) and identifies it for potential development by creating a presumption in favour of development within the settlement boundary."
Identified for potential development
"[54] In my view, the concept of identifying an area as one of significant change, means establishing the principle of such change in a particular, defined area. Once this principle has been established the identification is complete. If a document is to be an area action plan it must be the document that achieves the identification. It must make the "primary identification", or, the "autonomous identification" of the area as one of significant change. The sense of the word "identifies" is plainly the ordinary English meaning of the transitive verb "to identify", namely to "[e]stablish the identity of; establish who or what a given person or thing is; recognize" (The New Shorter Oxford English Dictionary (1993).
[55] To construe the word "identifies" as if it meant "confirms the identification of" or "acknowledges" or "provides policy or guidance for" would be to rob it of its true sense in its statutory context."
"is a very broad concept, is not qualified, and is not to be equated with likelihood or probability."
"I do not consider that there is a concept of "balance" to be implied into paragraph 4 or s. 15C. These provisions have been overlaid on the scheme of the 2006 Act by the amendments made by the 2013 Act. Parliament undoubtedly intended to make a change in the law. The only balance, if such it is, is the one struck by Parliament through the provisions and seeking to protect future development opportunities against the effect of s. 15 applications. If those provisions apply, according to their language and purpose, then the right to apply is excluded. Their extent is defined primarily by the language used, supported by the mischief they sought to address. As a matter of language paragraph 4 applies and in my judgment this is reinforced by the purpose, namely to prevent a s. 15 application from hindering potential development of the land."
Lord Justice Floyd:
"There might be specific cases where the plan constraints do bear directly on the land and might on the facts preclude potential development, but this is not such a case. [Counsel] accepted that there were no constraints that applied to the land."
Lord Justice Henderson: