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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Test Valley Borough Council v Fiske [2024] EWCA Civ 1541 (10 December 2024) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2024/1541.html Cite as: [2024] EWCA Civ 1541, [2024] WLR(D) 561 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
KING'S BENCH DIVISION
PLANNING COURT
Mr Justice Morris
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE WILLIAM DAVIS
and
LORD JUSTICE HOLGATE
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TEST VALLEY BOROUGH COUNCIL |
Appellant |
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- and – |
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CHALA FISKE |
Respondent |
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James Burton (instructed by Blake Morgan LLP) for the Respondent
The Interested Party did not appear
Hearing date : 10 October 2024
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Crown Copyright ©
LORD JUSTICE HOLGATE :
Introduction
(1) they are inconsistent in a material way with the operative part of the original permission ("restriction 1");
(2) if they make a "fundamental alteration" of the development permitted by the original permission, reading that permission as a whole ("restriction 2").
Statutory framework
"for regulating the development or use of any land under the control of the applicant (whether or not it is land in respect of which the application was made) or requiring the carrying out of works on any such land, so far as appears to the local planning authority to be expedient for the purposes of or in connection with the development authorised by the permission"
This provision extends the power to impose conditions in respect of the site the subject of an application for planning permission (the "application site" conventionally shown on an application plan edged in red) to other land outside the application site but within the applicant's control (conventionally shown edged in blue).
"73 Determination of applications to develop land without compliance with conditions previously attached
(1) This section applies, subject to subsection (4), to applications for planning permission for the development of land without complying with conditions subject to which a previous planning permission was granted.
(2) On such an application the local planning authority shall consider only the question of the conditions subject to which planning permission should be granted, and—
(a) if they decide that planning permission should be granted subject to conditions differing from those subject to which the previous permission was granted, or that it should be granted unconditionally, they shall grant planning permission accordingly, and
(b) if they decide that planning permission should be granted subject to the same conditions as those subject to which the previous permission was granted, they shall refuse the application."
Factual background
"Installation of a ground mounted solar park to include ancillary equipment, inverters, substation, perimeter fencing, CCTV cameras, access tracks and associated landscaping Woodington Farm, Woodington Road, East Wellow" (emphasis added)
and the "approved plans" include:
Site location plans – Ref. nos. H.0357_01-D and H.0357_24-C Site layout – Ref. No. H.0357_06-H ("site layout version H") Drawing DIS000 "Typical Single 33kV GRP Housing Switchgear"
"Prior to the commencement of the development hereby permitted, full details of the proposed siting, external materials, external lighting and mean of access/enclosure for the sub-station, as shown on drawing DIS000, shall be submitted to and approved in writing by the Local Planning Authority. Implementation shall be in accordance with the approved details."
"Installation of substation, ground mounted solar panels, ancillary equipment, infrastructure and access associated with Planning Permission reference: 15/02591/FULLS."
and the "approved plans" include:
Site location plan – H.035_Rev A Site layout – Plan Ref No. H.0357_06 – Version P ("site layout version P") Block Plan Ref. No. H.0357_45 – Version C
"Variation of condition 2 (Approved Plans)… of Planning permission 15/02591/FULLS (installation of a ground mounted solar park to include ancillary equipment, inverters, substation, perimeter fencing, CCTV cameras, access tracks, and associated landscaping) to allow alterations to layout and design of the site that include a reduction in the number of solar arrays, re-provision and increased provision of conservation areas, replacement of central inverter with string inverters, alterations to alignment of security fences and permissive paths, rationalisation (reduction) of a number of internal access tracks."
and the approved plans include:
Site location plans – Ref. nos. H.0357_01-G and H.0357_24-F Site layout plan – Ref. No. H.0357_06V ("site layout version V").
(1) The site layout plan for the 2022 permission (the subject of condition 2) does not show any development within the central site of about 6ha the subject of the 2021 permission;
(2) Accordingly, the 2022 permission does not grant planning consent for any development authorised by the 2017 permission within that central site, in particular the solar arrays to the west of the 132kV overhead line, the 132 kV DNO substation and the 33kV substation;
(3) The number of solar arrays is reduced;
(4) The provision of "conservation areas" is increased;
(5) The central inverter is replaced by string inverters;
(6) The number of internal access tracks is reduced.
"The primary purpose of the s 73 permission under challenge (the 2022 Permission) was to remove any physical inconsistency between the solar park permitted in 2017 and the 2021 Permission. It did so by removing development from the area covered by the 2021 Permission; by amending the approved plans under condition 2 so they did not include a 33kV substation; and by omitting a condition which had originally been attached requiring details (including siting) of the substation to be provided. The intended effect of the 2022 Permission was to allow the solar park and the 2021 substation to be built out, and operate, in tandem."
The judgment in the High Court
The grounds of appeal
(1) The judge was wrong to decide that any conflict between the conditions of a s.73 permission and the operative part of the permission it amends is ultra vires s.73;
(2) The judge was wrong to conclude that the omission of the 33kV substation from the s.73 permission in 2022 was a "fundamental" alteration of the development authorised by the 2017 permission. Furthermore, that omission could not even be treated as a "substantial" alteration of that development;
(3) The judge was wrong to conclude that the appellant failed to have regard to the omission of the substation when it decided to grant the 2022 permission;
(4) Assuming that (3) is established, the judge was wrong to conclude under s.31(2A) of the 1981 Act that if the appellant had taken the omission of the substation into account, it was not highly likely that it would still have granted the planning permission.
Grounds (1) and (2)
The appellant's submissions
(1) The statutory scheme does not prevent a condition from cutting down the scope of a permission, provided that it satisfies the criteria for the validity of a condition stated in Newbury;
(2) There is no dichotomy between the "operative part" of a planning permission and its conditions. What is permitted is defined not just by the words of grant but also by those conditions;
(3) If Finney does suggest that any conflict between a condition and the description of development in the grant is impermissible, "it goes too far". Neither authority, nor the reasons in the judgment of Lewison LJ at [41], support that proposition;
(4) Likewise, Cadogan v Secretary of State for the Environment (1992) 65 P & CR 410, does not support that proposition. Although Glidewell LJ stated at p.413 that:
"It is established law that a condition on a planning permission will not be valid if it alters the extent or indeed the nature of the development permitted"
the appellant says that no supporting authority was cited, the meaning of this test is unclear and it should not be applied literally.
Analysis of the legislation
"A permission under s.73 can only take effect as an independent permission to carry out the same development as previously permitted, but subject to new or amended conditions" (emphasis added)
Analysis of the case law
"the planning permission is unclear and Wednesbury unreasonable on its face as it does not grant planning permission for the excavation of the cabling trench route to the south."
"In my judgment, there is nothing unusual or unlawful about the defendant's way of proceeding or its grant of planning permission. The wording of the permission is clear, but it has to be read in conjunction with the conditions attached to it. Condition 20 expressly removes the southern cabling route from the main site to Aberbeeg. There is nothing ambiguous in the language used. It is clear and not confusing. Using conventional principles of construing a planning permission a planning consent was granted for the photovoltaic park, as applied for, but without the southern track which was removed from the planning permission. The reason why that was done is clearly set out in the reason for condition 20 so that a reasonable reader is left in no doubt as to what has happened and why."
"A condition may have the effect of modifying the development proposed by the application provided that it does not constitute a fundamental alteration in the proposal."
I note in passing that for no apparent reason (but perhaps echoing the submission of the claimant's counsel) the judge referred to "fundamental alteration" instead of "substantial alteration".
"Faced with the imposition of such a condition there can be little doubt that Marks & Spencer would have replied to the local planning authority: "Whilst you have purported to grant planning permission for one variety store the condition negates the effect of that permission. You may not lawfully grant planning permission with one hand and effectively refuse planning permission for that development with the other by imposing such an inconsistent condition." If that was the extent of the council's powers in response to the application in 1998, as in my judgment it was, I do not see how the council can claim to be entitled to impose such a fundamentally inconsistent condition under s.73. It is true that the outcome of a successful application under s.73 is a fresh planning permission, but in deciding whether or not to grant that fresh planning permission the local planning authority,
"... shall consider only the question of the conditions subject to which planning permission should be granted." (See s.73(1) and Powergen above.)
Thus the council is able to impose different conditions upon a new planning permission, but only if they are conditions which the council could lawfully have imposed upon the original planning permission in the sense that they do not amount to a fundamental alteration of the proposal put forward in the original application. I bear in mind that the variety superstore was but one element of a very large mixed use scheme, nevertheless it is plain on the evidence that it was an important element in the mix and this is reflected in the retail implications of its removal." (emphasis added)
"Whatever the planning merits of this new proposal, which can, of course, be incorporated into a new "full" application, I am satisfied that the council had no power under s.73 to vary the conditions in the manner set out above. The variation has the effect that the "operative" part of the new planning permission gives permission for one variety superstore on the one hand, but the new planning permission by the revised conditions takes away that consent with the other."
"Thus the variation had the effect that the operative part of the new planning permission gave their permission for one variety superstore but the new planning permission by the revised conditions would take away that consent.
14. Thus, Arrowcroft (supra) in my judgment does no more than make the clear point that it is not open to the council to vary conditions if the variation means that the grant (and one has therefore to look at the precise terms of grant) are themselves varied."
(1) A s.73 permission cannot vary the operative part of an earlier permission;
(2) A condition cannot be imposed on a s.73 permission which is directly contrary to the operative part of that earlier permission;
(3) Even if a proposed variation of a condition does not infringe (1) or (2), that variation must not make a fundamental alteration to the proposal for which the earlier permission was granted.
(1) The ratio of Arrowcroft was in [33], which was followed by Collins J in Vue and by Singh J in Wet Finishing Works;.
(2) However, Arrowcroft is not authority for the proposition in Vue at [14] (i.e. restriction (1) in the present case). Paragraph [14] did not form part of the ratio of Vue;
(3) The proposition in Vue at [14] is inconsistent with the ratio of Wet Finishing Works. The latter should be followed.
These differences of view in the High Court all arose because of unfortunate disagreements about the meaning of [33] of the judgment in Arrowcroft. It follows from the analysis I have set out above, that Collins J in Vue was correct and the judgments in Wet Finishing Works and Finney in the High Court were, with respect, incorrect, as previously confirmed by the Court of Appeal in Finney.
"The question is one of statutory interpretation. Section 73(1) is on its face limited to permission for the development of land "without complying with conditions" subject to which a previous planning permission has been granted. In other words the purpose of such an application is to avoid committing a breach of planning control of the second type referred to in s.171A. As Circular 19/86 explained, its purpose is to give the developer "relief" against one or more conditions. On receipt of such an application s.73(2) says that the planning authority must "consider only the question of conditions". It must not, therefore, consider the description of the development to which the conditions are attached. The natural inference from that imperative is that the planning authority cannot use s.73 to change the description of the development. That coincides with Lord Carnwath JSC's description of the section as permitting "the same development" subject to different conditions. Mr Hardy suggested that developers could apply to change an innocuous condition in order to open the gate to s.73, and then use that application to change the description of the permitted development. It is notable, however, that if the planning authority considers that the conditions should not be altered, it may not grant permission with an altered description but subject to the same conditions. On the contrary it is required by s.73(2)(b) to refuse the application. That requirement emphasises the underlying philosophy of s.73(2) that it is only the conditions that matter. It also means, in my judgment, that Mr Hardy's suggestion is a misuse of s.73." (emphasis added)
"If the inspector had left the description of the permitted development intact, there would in my judgment have been a conflict between what was permitted (a 100 metre turbine) and what the new condition required (a 125 metre turbine). A condition altering the nature of what was permitted would have been unlawful. That, no doubt, was why the inspector changed the description of the permitted development. But in my judgment that change was outside the power conferred by section 73 ."
(1) Section 73 is limited to applications to develop land without complying with conditions attached to a permission previously granted (s.73(1)). Parliament has empowered a LPA to grant a s.73 permission without any of the conditions to which the original permission was subject. What the planning authority may consider is limited by s.73(2). Parliament has expressly provided for specific situations where the power may not be used (s.73(4) and (5)). But it has not restricted the power to vary or remove conditions previously imposed to non-substantial or non-fundamental alterations;
(2) Parliament has inserted s.96A into the TCPA 1990, allowing for an application to be made to alter both a grant of planning permission and the conditions imposed, subject to a restriction to non-material amendments. In addition, the new s.73B will allow for the grant of a new permission "not substantially different" from an existing permission. If Parliament had wished to prohibit the imposition under s.73 of conditions which make a "fundamental" or "substantial" alteration to a permission without changing the operative part, it would have said so in the legislation;
(3) The power in s.73 is subject to the restriction that it may not result in a permission, the operative part and/or the conditions of which are inconsistent with the operative part of the earlier permission, either in terms of the language used or its effect. No justification has been identified for imposing restriction (2) as an additional limitation on the power of s.73, in the light of the statutory purpose of that provision;
(4) Parliament has provided what it considers to be adequate procedural protections for the consideration of s.73 applications, including consultation and an opportunity for representations to be made;
(5) Although a substantial or fundamental alteration may be sought under s.73, that does not dictate the outcome of the application. The planning authority has ample jurisdiction to determine the planning merits of any such application.
Grounds 3 and 4
Lord Justice William Davis
Lord Justice Dingemans