[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Fiske, R (On the Application Of) v Test Valley Borough Council (Rev1) [2023] EWCA Civ 1495 (15 December 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2023/1495.html Cite as: [2023] EWCA Civ 1495 |
[New search] [Printable PDF version] [Help]
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
KING'S BENCH DIVISION
PLANNING COURT
HHJ Jarman KC (sitting as a Judge of the High Court)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
(Senior President of Tribunals)
LORD JUSTICE COULSON
and
SIR LAUNCELOT HENDERSON
____________________
THE KING (on the application of CHALA ALICE FISKE) |
Claimant/ Appellant |
|
- and - |
||
TEST VALLEY BOROUGH COUNCIL |
Defendant/Respondent |
|
- and - |
||
WOODINGTON SOLAR LIMITED |
Interested Party |
____________________
Robin Green and Robert Williams (instructed by Sharpe Pritchard LLP) for the Respondent
The Interested Party did not appear and was not represented
Hearing date: 10 October 2023
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Sir Keith Lindblom, Senior President of Tribunals:
Introduction
The main issue in this appeal
The 2017 permission
The 2021 permission
The planning officer's reports to committee
"3.1 The proposals are associated with a previous application for a Solar Farm at the site which was granted Planning Permission by Test Valley Borough Council (reference: 15/02591/FULLS) on 4th July 2017. Condition applications have both been made and approved at the time of report writing in respect of the original Planning Permission. An NMA application has also been approved in respect of the 2015 application. This related to changes to the scheme associated with changes to the inverters proposed to be used as part of the development. …
Development of 15/02591/FULLS commenced on Monday 15th June 2020 with construction works taking place from the Tuesday (16th June 2020), the implementation of the development had been substantially completed by 22nd June 2020."
"5.7 Conservation – No Objection
Permission for a solar farm in the current location was granted under application 15/02591/FULLS (see previous comments). This application relates to a small section of the area considered under that application and is for various amendments, including additional solar panels and a substation.
An amended heritage appraisal has now been provided.
An additional site visit has been undertaken by Design and Conservation to consider the current proposals[.]
It is considered that the area subject to the application in question is sufficiently screened by the landscape, topography and vegetation so as to not be visually prominent in the settings of any of the nearby heritage assets. Any glimpsed views would be exceptionally limited and would be incidental and therefore would not adversely affect the significance of the assets in this instance.
… ."
"6.13 Following the grant of [the 2017 permission], the applicant found that the DNO substation incorporated into the design of the permitted development would not be able to become operational as the drawings had been based on connection with 33Kv overhead lines. Consequently, a S73 application (Ref 19/00401/VARS) ("the VARS") was submitted to revise the permitted scheme to include a DNO substation that would connect with overhead powerlines for 132Kv. The substation infrastructure for this conversion is significantly larger with more extensive impact. The VARS was granted consent but following a JR challenge by our client the Council agreed to have this quashed.
Instead of submitting a new S73 application, the applicant has chosen to submit a full stand-alone application for the 132Kv DNO complex.
This cannot be granted consent if there is no solar farm for it to connect with. The development permitted by the original Permission remains conditional upon details being submitted for a DNO that connects to a 33Kv grid. No details can be submitted and approved for a [33kV] grid since the grid needs a 132Kv connection. Our letter of 6 February 2020 detailed the legal position in respect of the problem discharging Condition 15 of the Permission.
Accordingly, the applicant should have submitted either a revised new full application for the whole solar farm with a 132 Kv DNO or a new S73 application."
"8.6 The applicant has worked with technical partners and various specialists including Ethical Power Connections Ltd and the DNO Scottish and Southern Energy (SSE) Power Distribution, to finalise the construction detail of the Solar Farm and the means by which the renewable energy generated will be exported to the local electricity network. It is proposed the renewable energy generated by the Solar Farm will connect to the 132kV overhead line which crosses the Woodington site. Given the principle of siting a solar farm in this location have [sic] previously been established by the original grant of planning permission which has been implemented, and the current proposals ensure the site can function, it is considered that it is essential for these proposals to be located within the countryside and as such the development is considered to accord with Policy COM2 of the RLP. "
"8.7 …
The selection of the site and the use of the agricultural land for use as a solar farm has been assessed under the previous application 15/02591/FULLS and this application has since been implemented in June 2020. …".
"8.60 …
…
Comments have been received in respect of the 2019 s.73 permission (Ref: 19/00401/VARS) … which was granted consent but following a JR challenge has been quashed. It has been suggested that the current application cannot be granted consent if there is no solar farm for it to connect with. However Planning Application 15/02591/FULLS is an extant permission which provides the solar farm which the substation will connect to. This remains unaffected by the quashing of the 2019 s.73 permission. It is noted that the information submitted and approved under the previous application condition process for the substation is not adequate for the grid connection, however this does not result in application 15/02591/FULLS being unable to provide the solar panel arrays and associated works which this application seeks to link to."
The statutory planning code
"Material considerations"
"26. [Cooke J.] took as a starting point the words of Lord Greene MR in Associated Provincial Picture Houses Ltd v Wednesbury Corpn [1948] 1 KB 223, 228: 'If, in the statute conferring the discretion there is to be found expressly or by implication matters which the authority exercising the discretion ought to have regard to, then in exercising the discretion it must have regard to those matters.' He continued: 'What has to be emphasised is that it is only when the statute expressly or impliedly identifies considerations required to be taken into account by the authority as a matter of legal obligation that the court holds a decision invalid on the ground now invoked. It is not enough that it is one that may properly be taken into account, nor even that it is one which many people, including the court itself, would have taken into account if they had to make the decision …' [emphasis added by Carnwath L.J.].
27. In approving this passage, Lord Scarman noted that [Cooke J.] had also recognised, that: '… in certain circumstances there will be some matters so obviously material to a decision on a particular project that anything short of direct consideration of them by the ministers … would not be in accordance with the intention of the Act.' (In re Findlay at p 334.)
28. It seems, therefore, that it is not enough that, in the judge's view, consideration of a particular matter might realistically have made a difference. Short of irrationality, the question is one of statutory construction. It is necessary to show that the matter was one which the statute expressly or impliedly (because 'obviously material') requires to be taken into account 'as a matter of legal obligation'."
The incompatibility of planning permissions
"There is, perhaps surprisingly, not very much authority on this point which one would think could often arise in practice, so I venture to start at the beginning with the more elementary principles which arise. In the first place I have no doubt that a landowner is entitled to make any number of applications which his fancy dictates, even though the development referred to is quite different when one compares one application to another. It is open to a landowner to test the market by putting in a number of applications and seeing what the attitude of the planning authority is to his proposals.
Equally it seems to me that a planning authority receiving a number of planning applications in respect of the same land is required to deal with them even though they are mutually inconsistent one with the other. Of course, special cases will arise where one application deliberately and expressly refers to or incorporates another, but we are not concerned with that type of application in the present case.
In the absence of any such complication, I would regard it as the duty of the planning authority to regard each application as a proposal in itself, and to apply its mind to each application, asking itself whether the proposal there contained is consistent with good planning in the factual background against which the application is made.
I do not regard it as part of the duty of the local planning authority itself to relate one planning application or one planning permission to another to see if they are contradictory. Indeed I think it would be unnecessary officiousness if a planning authority did such a thing. They should regard each application as a proposal for a separate and independent development, and they should consider the merits of the application upon that basis. … ."
"For this purpose I think one looks to see what is the development authorised in the permission which has been implemented. One looks first of all to see the full scope of that which has been done or can be done pursuant to the permission which has been implemented. One then looks at the development which was permitted in the second permission, now sought to be implemented, and one asks oneself whether it is possible to carry out the development proposed in that second permission, having regard to that which was done or authorised to be done under the permission which has been implemented."
"… This was certainly a common sense decision, and, in my judgment, correct in law. The Pilkington problem is not dealt with in the planning legislation. It was, therefore, necessary for the courts to formulate a rule which would strengthen and support the planning control imposed by the legislation. And this is exactly what the Divisional Court achieved. There is, or need be, no uncertainty arising from the application of the rule. Both planning permissions will be on a public register: examination of their terms combined with an inspection of the land will suffice to reveal whether development has been carried out which renders one or the other of the planning permissions incapable of implementation."
"43 … What mattered, as [Lord Widgery] made clear, was whether it was physically possible to carry out the development authorised by the terms of the unimplemented permission. That depends upon (a) the terms of the unimplemented permission and (b) what works have actually been done. It would not make sense to have regard to the terms of the permission under which development has already taken place, as a central theme of the judgment is that mere inconsistency between the two permissions does not prevent the second permission from being implemented. What must be shown is that development in fact carried out makes it impossible to implement the second permission in accordance with its terms.
…
45 In essence, the principle illustrated in the Pilkington case is that a planning permission does not authorise development if and when, as a result of physical alteration of the land to which the permission relates, it becomes physically impossible to carry out the development for which the permission was granted (without a further grant of planning permission). Unlike a doctrine of abandonment, this principle is consistent with the legislative code. Indeed, as Lord Scarman observed in Pioneer Aggregates at p 145C, it serves to "strengthen and support the planning control imposed by the legislation". Where the test of physical impossibility is met, the reason why further development carried out in reliance on the permission is unlawful is simply that the development is not authorised by the terms of the permission, with the result that it does not comply with section 57(1)."
"68 In summary, failure or inability to complete a project for which planning permission has been granted does not make development carried out pursuant to the permission unlawful. But (in the absence of clear express provision making it severable) a planning permission is not to be construed as authorising further development if at any stage compliance with the permission becomes physically impossible."
"74 In our view, that is indeed the legal position where, as here, a developer has been granted a full planning permission for one entire scheme and wishes to depart from it in a material way. It is a consequence of the very limited powers that a local planning authority currently has to make changes to an existing planning permission. But although this feature of the planning legislation means that developers may face practical hurdles, the problems should not be exaggerated. Despite the limited power to amend an existing planning permission, there is no reason why an approved development scheme cannot be modified by an appropriately framed additional planning permission which covers the whole site and includes the necessary modifications. The position then would be that the developer has two permissions in relation to the whole site, with different terms, and is entitled to proceed under the second."
The judgment in the court below
Did the council err in law?
Section 31(2A) of the Senior Courts Act 1981
Unfairness or procedural irregularity
Conclusion
Lord Justice Coulson:
Sir Launcelot Henderson: