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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> George Wimpey UK Ltd., R (on the application of) v First Secretary of State & Anor [2004] EWHC 2419 (Admin) (22 September 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2004/2419.html Cite as: [2004] EWHC 2419 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
THE ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand London WC2 |
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B e f o r e :
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THE QUEEN ON THE APPLICATION OF GEORGE WIMPEY UK LIMITED | (CLAIMANT) | |
-v- | ||
(1) FIRST SECRETARY OF STATE | ||
(2) CASTLE MORPETH BOROUGH COUNCIL | (DEFENDANTS) |
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Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited
190 Fleet Street London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7404 1400 Fax No: 020 7831 8838
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
MR TIMOTHY MORSHEAD AND MR JEREMY BLUNDELL (for judgment only) (instructed by the Treasury Solicitor ) appeared on behalf of the DEFENDANT
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Crown Copyright ©
(1) What was the extent of the shortfall in housing supply in Castle Morpeth?
(2) Were Areas 2, 3 and 4 of the appeal site "previously developed land" within the scope of those words in PPG3?
Housing Land
"Land at Southgate Wood has been allocated throughout the plan period for housing development. As part of the review of housing allocations under PPG3 (Housing), part of the site has been confirmed as being available through the Council's Urban Capacity Study. This is the site of the former County Council Business Centre. The remainder of the previous allocation (which extends round the rear of County Hall and is bounded by the Catchburn) is a greenfield site on the edge of the settlement. Considering the current availability of brownfield land in Morpeth, the release of such greenfield sites cannot be justified. However, this site does have some potential to meet some of the longer term development needs of the Town, but this decision would be taken in the context of the availability of brownfield land at that time, the progress towards meeting Structure Plan Housing Targets and the need to avoid an oversupply of land."
"To summarise the position with regard to allocations in Policy H2, the Council admit that the 70 houses allocated at Hadston 2A will not be built and that not all permissions will be implemented. In addition, I consider that the development of the Lairage to be in serious doubt resulting in the loss of the estimated 25 houses here. Add this to the accepted shortfall of 60 dwellings at St George's Hospital and the projected deficit of 34 and the shortfall would be at least 189 dwellings. Should the Council permit the appellant's application to redevelop the disused business centre this would reduce the deficit by 8. However, if one accepts the appellant's assumption that 10 per cent of permitted sites will not be developed this would increase the deficit by a further 36 dwellings [34] leading to a deficit at the end of the plan period of over 200 dwellings."
In light of the above, I am not persuaded that these sites would come forward before the end of the plan period and, for that reason, they would not assist the Council in meeting the requirements of Policy H1 of the Structure Plan or RPG1."
"The Council do not dispute and I see no reason to question the appellant's confidence that if permitted, the development could provide a significant number of houses within the plan period. To my mind, the potential net increase of 159 dwellings (187 minus the allocation of 28 on the disused business centre) would make a significant contribution to meeting the Structure Plan target. It would also, in my view, assist the Council in achieving the objectives set out in RPG1. I conclude, therefore, that the proposal is necessary to meet the housing needs of the Borough."
"Given my conclusions regarding the brownfield status of the site and the Council's acceptance that it is suitable for housing, I see no reason to hold back development pending a review of the Local Plan. In addition, in my view, the Local Plan at paragraph 30.16.9 makes provision for the development of the whole of the site subject to, amongst other things, progress towards meeting the Structure Plan target."
" ... the emerging Structure Plan proposal is consistent with the judgment he has made about preferring to attach more weight to the monitor and manage approach than to the threat of a shortfall. Proper consideration under the monitor and manage approach would be foreclosed if Areas 2 and 3 were released by this appeal. The Secretary of State also notes that the Council's urban capacity study includes several previously developed sites in Morpeth which appear to be preferable to Areas 2 and 3 on an application of the sequential criteria."
"The Secretary of State appreciates that the Council's own figures (updated to June 2003) predict a shortfall of 34 dwellings against the Local Plan's target. However, he regards this shortfall as insignificant both in absolute terms and, moreover, in light of the emerging Structure Plan notwithstanding the relatively early stage of that plan. Even if he had not taken the view that the shortfall is insignificant, the Secretary of State's view would nevertheless have been that a shortfall of 34 dwellings was of insufficient weight to justify the proposed development of 187 dwellings on the appeal site."
"The Secretary of State notes that the Local Plan describes the appeal site, including Areas 2 and 3, as showing some potential to meet some of the longer-term development needs of the town. The Secretary of State makes clear that he expresses no view on that assessment. But he takes the view that any decision to release Areas 2 and 3 for their long-term potential should be taken in light of the circumstances that prevail when longer-term development needs fall to be assessed."
"The Secretary of State attaches significant weight to the question of housing need but does not accept that it is possible to conclude that there will be insufficient land to meet the Structure Plan target. Rather, he has had regard to the Local Plan and emerging Structure Plan and considers that there is no need for the development of 187 houses at this time and, given the policy in RPG1 that there should be a reduction in the rate of the construction of new dwellings, that need for development on such a scale may not arise. If however need does arise, the Secretary of State considers that there may be sequentially preferable previously developed sites in the Borough."
"29. Local planning authorities in preparing development plans should adopt a systematic approach to assessing the development potential of sites, and the redevelopment potential of existing buildings, deciding which are most suitable for housing development and the sequence in which development should take place.
30. In identifying sites to be allocated for housing in local plans and UDPs, local planning authorities should follow a search sequence, starting with the re-use of previously-developed land and buildings within urban areas identified by the urban housing capacity study, then urban extensions, and finally new development around nodes in good public transport corridors. They should seek only to identify sufficient land to meet the housing requirement set as a result of the RPG and strategic planning processes. In doing so they do not need to consider all the land in their area: they should not extend the search further than required to provide sufficient capacity to meet the agreed housing requirement."
"The Secretary of State agrees with the Inspector that whether the development of the whole of the appeal site is required to meet the Borough's need for new housing is a major consideration in determining this appeal, but he considers that this issue is heavily dependent upon whether or not the site as a whole consists of previously developed land. The Secretary of State is of the opinion that whether the proposal satisfies PPG3 and the value of the appeal site as open space under PPG17 are also important considerations."
Previously developed land
"Previously-developed land is that which is or was occupied by a permanent structure (excluding agricultural or forestry buildings), and associated fixed surface infrastructure. The definition covers the curtilage of the developmentı. Previously developed land may occur in both built-up and rural settings ...
The definition excludes land and buildings that are currently in use for agricultural or forestry purposes, and land in built-up areas which has not been developed previously (e.g. parks, recreation grounds, and allotments - even though these areas may contain certain urban features such as paths, pavilions and other buildings). Also excluded is land that was previously developed but where the remains of any structure or activity have blended into the landscape in the process of time ...
ıThe Curtilage is defined as the area of land attached to a building. All of the land within the curtilage of the site (as defined above) will also be defined as previously-developed. However, this does not mean that the whole area of the curtilage should therefore be redeveloped. For example, where the footprint of a building only occupies a proportion of a site of which the remainder is open land (such as at an airfield or a hospital) the whole site should not normally be developed to the boundary of the curtilage. The local planning authority should make a judgment about site layout in this context, bearing in mind other planning considerations, such as policies for the protection of open space and playing fields or development in the countryside, how the site relates to the surrounding area, and requirements for on-site open space, buffer strips, landscaped areas, etc."
I point out that the definition of previously developed land ends at the end of the second sentence of the footnote. The rest of the footnote deals with how a site should be developed where not all of the land, although within the curtilage, has in fact previously had buildings on it.
"65. Some of the land to the south of County Hall is mown but for the most part it comprises rough grassland. There is no physical demarcation between the site and County Hall which dominates this part of the appeal site. There is a line of fence posts along the boundary of Areas 2 and 3 but the wire fence has been trampled down and it does not form a clear boundary. The pond, Catch Burn and the woodland belt form strong, clear boundaries to the land to the south of County Hall.
66 ... However, whilst there is no dispute that part of the site was used as a football pitch, this use ceased over 5 years ago and it is not allocated or protected as such in the Local Plan. The land is used for informal recreation but it is in private ownership and to my mind cannot be classed as a park or recreation ground.
67. This area is not actively used by the County Council. However, there is nothing in Annex C to PPG3 to support the Council's contention that land must be in operational use for it to be in the curtilage of a building. The boundaries of this part of the site coincide with those shown on the planning permission for County Hall. The football pitch was provided for and used by County Council staff and to my mind, the appeal site is historically linked by association and use to County Hall. It can, in my view, be defined as being attached to the building and so lies within the curtilage of County Hall. It follows, therefore, that the whole of the site can be classed as previously developed land as defined in Annex C to PPG3."
"16. Areas 2 and 3 are open areas that have not been developed. They have no functional, physical or other connection to any buildings(sic) or buildings. Therefore they cannot be classed as previously developed land.
17. The Secretary of State has considered the factors relied-on by the appellants and by the Inspector. He finds none of them to be persuasive. The fact that Areas 2 and 3 were acquired and held in reserve in case the County Council's needs expanded does not, in the Secretary of State's view, produce the result that they should be regarded as attached to any existing building or buildings. At best, it shows that the land was held for the prospect of future attachment; and, in any event, the putative buildings for County Council purposes on these areas would have produced a distinct curtilage or curtilages. The Secretary of State notes that Area 2 was formerly used as a football pitch by employees of the County Council, but that this use and therefore any functional link to County Hall it might have implied ended five years ago. Since then, local residents have used Areas 2 and 3 for the purposes of informal recreation. The Secretary of State attaches weight to this as indicating that even if Areas 2 and 3 may once have had a loose association with any building or buildings on the County Hall site, that association has been severed. The fact that the land where the main County Hall buildings are located is not part of the appeal site further demonstrates that any link between these two areas has been severed. The Secretary of State considers that development on land adjacent to a site does not determine whether the site itself is previously developed land.
18. Even if (contrary to the Secretary of State's view) a historical link "by association and use to County Hall" continues to exist, the Secretary of State's view is that this does not produce a sufficient attachment for the purposes of his policy in Annex 'C' of PPG3. He does not attach significant weight to the fact that Areas 2 and 3 formed part of the site for which the County Council obtained planning permission, because no development has occurred on Areas 2 and 3, nor does he place weight on the red line drawn on a planning application or permission as a reliable guide to a building's curtilage.
19. Moreover, it appears from the evidence before the Secretary of State that the County Council's employees' use of the land for playing football never extended to Area 3. Therefore any functional link between Area 2 and County Hall that might be implied from its former use for recreation by those working in County Hall never extended to Area 3. Although the fence between Areas 2 and 3 no longer remains, except as a line of posts, the Secretary of State disagrees with the Inspector that its existence is a matter of little weight: its presence reinforces the lack of any link, even an historical one, between Area 3 and County Hall ..."
"(5) If, after the close of an inquiry, the Secretary of State -
(a) differs from the Inspector on any matter of fact mentioned in, or appearing to him to be material to, a conclusion reached by the Inspector; or
(b) takes into consideration any new evidence or new matter of fact (not being a matter of government policy);
and is for that reason disposed to disagree with a recommendation made by the Inspector ..."
"What is within the curtilage is a question of fact in each case, and for myself I cannot feel that this comparatively expensive piece of pasture ought to be so regarded, particularly where, as here, it was clearly divided off physically from the house and garden right from the start and certainly at all material times."
"The whole problem is a question of mixed fact and law but depends very largely on the facts. Provided a piece of land satisfies the concept of being an appurtenance, it is a question of fact and circumstance whether it is an appurtenance."
"In my judgment, for the reasons which I have given, this piece of land does not satisfy the concept of being an appurtenance but what the position will be in other cases will depend first upon the question of law whether the piece of land in question does satisfy that concept, and secondly whether on the facts of the particular case it ought to be regarded as an appurtenance.
For these reasons I would allow the appeal, discharge the declaration that has been made and substitute the counter-declaration which I have read."
"What then is meant by the curtilage of a property? In my judgment it is not sufficient to constitute two pieces of land parts of one and the same curtilage that they should have been conveyed or demised together, for a single conveyance or lease can comprise more than one parcel of land, neither of which need be in any sense an appurtenance of the other or within the curtilage of the other.
Nor is it sufficient that they have been occupied together. Nor is the test whether the enjoyment of one is advantageous or convenient or necessary for the full enjoyment of the other. A piece of land may fall clearly within the curtilage of a parcel conveyed without its contributing in any significant way to the convenience or value of the rest of the parcel.
On the other hand, it may be very advantageous or convenient to the owner of one parcel of land also to own an adjoining parcel, although it may be clear from the facts that the two parcels are entirely distinct pieces of property. In my judgment, for one corporeal hereditament to fall within the curtilage of another, the former must be so intimately associated with the latter as to lead to the conclusion that the former in truth forms part and parcel of the latter.
There can be very few houses indeed that do not have associated with them at least some few square yards of land, constituting a yard or a basement area or passage way or something of the kind, owned and enjoyed with the house, which on a reasonable view could only be regarded as part of the messuage and such small pieces of land would be held to fall within the curtilage of the messuage.
This may extend to ancillary buildings, structures or areas such as outhouses, a garage, a driveway, a garden and so forth. How far it is appropriate to regard this identity as parts of one messuage or parcel of land as extended must depend on the character and the circumstances of the items under consideration. To the extent that it is reasonable to regard them as constituting one messuage or parcel of land, they will be properly regarded as all falling within one curtilage; they constitute an integral whole."
"The terrace has not been taken out of the curtilage by the changes which have taken place, and remain so closely related physically or geographically to the mill as to constitute with it a single unit and to be comprised within its curtilage in the sense that those words are used in this subsection."
I note that because of the emphasis Mr Morshead placed on the context of the examination of this issue.
Open space
"79. ... To my mind, the provision of these formal spaces with guaranteed public access would compensate for the loss of the current, informal arrangement.
80. ... There is nothing to show that the football pitch would [not] be reinstated should this appeal be dismissed. To this extent, I afford limited weight to the planning obligation but I am mindful that the proposed facilities at Morpeth Common are supported by the Council's Playing Pitch Strategy and the Sports Council. Indeed, the Council accept that the proposed contribution to new sports pitches and changing rooms would be a benefit ..."
"21. He notes that Sports England withdrew their objection to the application; but he agrees with the Inspector that the provision of new football pitches at Morpeth Common, which precipitated the withdrawal of their objection, should be given only limited weight for the reasons given by the Inspector. The Secretary of State does not consider that new football pitches would compensate for the existing use made of Areas 2 and 3 by local residents for informal recreation. The Secretary of State does not agree with the Inspector that the provision of smaller areas of formal open space within the proposed development would compensate for the loss of amenity to local residents as they would be both significantly smaller and different in character than the existing open space."
"I for my part, understand the Court there [in an earlier case of re Minty] to have been deciding no more than that conduct, albeit falling short of misconduct deserving of moral condemnation, can be so unreasonable as to justify an order for indemnity costs. With that I respectfully agree. To my mind, however, such conduct would need to be unreasonable to a high degree; unreasonable in this context certainly does not mean merely wrong or misguided in hindsight. An indemnity costs order made under Rule 44 (unlike one made under Rule 36) does, I think, carry at least some stigma. It is of its nature penal rather than exhortatory."