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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Sevenoaks District Council, R (on the application of) v First Secretary of State & Anor [2004] EWHC 771 (Admin) (22 March 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2004/771.html Cite as: [2004] EWHC 771 (Admin), [2005] JPL 116, [2004] 14 EGCS 141, [2005] 1 P & CR 13 |
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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 SEVENOAKS DISTRICT COUNCIL | (CLAIMANT) | |
-v- | ||
THE FIRST SECRETARY OF STATE | (FIRST DEFENDANT) | |
PEDHAM PLACE GOLF CENTRE LIMITED | (SECOND DEFENDANT) |
____________________
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)
MS K SELWAY (instructed by the Treasury Solicitor) appeared on behalf of the FIRST DEFENDANT
MR R TURRALL-CLARKE (instructed by Stephens & Scown Solicitors) appeared on behalf of the SECOND DEFENDANT
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Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE SULLIVAN:
Introduction.
Background.
"Prior to the commencement of the development hereby permitted details of all proposed engineering works associated with the laying out of golf courses including the creation of greens, bunkers, tees, ponds or lakes shall be submitted to and approved in writing by the District Planning Authority."
"In order that the Council may be satisfied as to the details of the proposals in the interests of the visual amenities of the area."
"Details of the means of access from the A20 shall be submitted to, and approved by, the Local Planning Authority prior to the commencement of any works on the site. Thereafter, the access shall be completed in accordance with the approved details prior to the commencement of any other works."
"In order that the District Planning Authority may be satisfied as to the details of the proposals given no such details have been submitted."
"On 6th June 1990, planning permission was granted for a golf course club house, driving range and pitch and put course, subject to conditions. One of those conditions was that details of engineering works should be submitted and approved by the Council prior to commencement of works. Works should be carried out pursuant to this condition in accordance with such approved details. Details of engineering works were approved, under reference SE/93/0185 on 29th July 1993. The relevant approved plans were numbered 80171/45 - 110 received by the Council in February 1993. It appears to the Council that the condition has not been complied with, because engineering works, namely the construction of earth bunds, have not been carried out in accordance with the approved details contained in plan numbers 80171/45 - 110."
"While the notice as issued is far from satisfactory it is not beyond correction."
"10. The appellants' case rests quite simply on the basis that they did what the condition required them to do - they submitted the required details which were subsequently approved by the council. The way Bunds A-E have been constructed may not be in strict accordance with the approved details but it is not a breach of condition 12. Words cannot be introduced later to give a condition efficacy. That is a contractual not a public law concept.
"11. The council say that it is reasonable to imply a compliance requirement to give condition 12 efficacy. In any event the relevant approval of details ... referred to in the notice, rectifies the omission by requiring that 'the development shall be carried out in accordance with the approved details'. This refers to all the details permitted under the permission and not just the internal access road.
"12. My starting point is that condition 12 is clear on its face. There is no ambiguity in the words or phrasing. It has a clear and ascertainable meaning. It requires that before development commences details of certain engineering works - it is common ground that this includes bunds A-E - should be submitted and approved by the council in writing. In requiring that prior approval it is entirely efficacious and, as a condition, it seeks to do no more than that. If the council are right that more can be inferred, how is the recipient of the permission to know exactly what extra to infer? It might just be compliance with the plans or it might be completion by a certain stage; there could be other possibilities. An enforcement notice with its ultimate sanction of criminal proceedings cannot be founded on such guesswork."
"17. The council have drawn my attention to a recent appeal decision of a colleague in which he deals with a condition which was said to be seriously flawed in that it did not require the development to be carried out in accordance with the approved details. The Inspector said, 'In my view the latter requirement, while frequently imposed, can reasonably be implied from the condition and does not render it invalid'. That aspect of that appeal concerned whether there was a condition precedent which had not been complied with and the key point was whether or not it was an invalid condition. I agree with the Inspector that failure to include a specific requirement for the development to be carried out in accordance with the condition does not render it invalid. I do not believe that the Inspector was saying that an enforcement notice alleging a breach of such a condition through failure to implement the details as approved could be founded on such a condition. If he was, I respectfully disagree."
"20. It is not unusual for planning authorities to draw up conditions that require a permission to be implemented in strict accordance with the approved plans or that the details to be submitted should be so implemented. In the case of condition 12 they did not. Whether that was intentional - to allow a degree of latitude in implementation - or an oversight is not known. I note that there are other conditions on the same outline planning permission that are explicit about implementation of details to be approved; others are not and adopt a wording similar to condition 12.
"21. Unfortunately for the council, I do not see how it can be argued that these particular engineering operations constitute a failure to comply with condition 12 since it does not require Bunds A-E to be constructed in accordance with the approved details or the approved details to be implemented in a specific way or by a specific stage in the development. It is one thing to anticipate or expect a scheme to be implemented in accordance with the approved plans; it is quite another to allege in an enforcement notice that a condition that does not require that has been breached. The basis of an appeal under section 174(2)(c) is that the matters alleged do not constitute a breach of planning control. I conclude that condition 12 has been complied with; details were submitted and approved. What has been done does not constitute the breach of planning control alleged in Notice B."
" ... seriously flawed in that it does not require the development to be carried out in accordance with the approved details."
"In my view the latter requirement, while frequently imposed, can reasonably be implied from the condition and does not render it invalid. No appeal was made against the conditions."
"If a planning authority attend a quite major inquiry on the basis of one notice withdrawn and the other invalid they can expect to face an order for costs. They did not take sufficient care in deciding to issue the notices and in preparing them."
"9. I do not agree with the appellants that notice B is fundamentally flawed to the extent that it is invalid and not correctable. However, I have found that there has been no breach of the condition in question. Costs do not follow the decision in planning appeals but in this case it should have been clear from the outset that as a matter of planning law and common sense interpretation that an allegation that there had been a breach of the condition because the works had not been carried out in accordance with the condition could not have been founded on condition 12 of SE/90/0053. The council took the view that there was an implied requirement in condition 12 in order to give the condition efficacy but provided no reasonable justification in planning law or practice for such an approach. As I indicated in my appeal decision it is one thing to anticipate that the implementation of details will take place in accordance with the approval, it is quite another to allege that a condition that does not require that on its face has been breached."
"The council issued two notices in the alternative; indicating, subject to correction, one under each limb. I make no criticism of this as a general approach since in some cases both might be correct or later evidence might show that one is correct and the other not. In this case I have concluded above that there was unreasonable behaviour on the part of the council leading to the withdrawal of Notice A. The council's approach to the Notice B allegation was fundamentally flawed from the outset and they provided no reasonable justification for their allegation that what had taken place was a breach of condition 12. Thus the appellants incurred unnecessary expense in appealing both notices as a result of the council's unreasonable behaviour."
Submissions.
"The use of the building shall be confined to the manufacture of potato crisps or any use within Class III of the Town and Country Planning (Use Classes) Order 1948."
"The use of the building shall be confined to the manufacture of potato crisps or any other use within Class III of the Town and Country Planning (Use Classes) Order 1948."
"I quite agree that the county council have not expressed their conditions clearly, and I think that greatly to be regretted. This public body have the very important duty of granting permission for a development. Having regard to the fact that apparently, once the permission has been granted and action has been taken upon it, it is very difficult, if not impossible, to withdraw it - I think it very important that the authority should take the greatest care to see that their conditions are quite clear to everybody; the ambiguity of this permission is the cause of all this unfortunate litigation.
"On the other hand, this is a novel Act which imposes quite new duties and conditions and limitations on the rights of the individual. It seems to me that in a case of this kind the Court must do its best to have regard to the common sense of the transaction, and to the real intention and meaning of the parties rather than criticise minutely the precise words used. When they are regarded in that light I myself have no doubt whatever that both the company and the county council regarded this as a condition that the manufacture of potato crisps should not go beyond the use described in Class III."
"It has to be remembered that the Planning Acts are intended to protect amenities. Owners of property cannot in these days use their property to their own private advantage without regard to the amenities of the neighbourhood. When the planning authority gave this permission they clearly intended to protect the amenities. The reasons said so. It would be unfortunate if the amenities of a small country town like Oakham came to be taken away owing to a slip in omitting the word 'other' in the wording of a condition when the parties knew perfectly well that the amenities were intended to be preserved. It is a case where a strict adherence to the letter would involve an error in substance. The substance of the condition is that the building shall be used as a light industrial building, but not as a general industrial building."
"The third case to which I was referred is Penwith District Council v Secretary of State for the Environment [1986] JPL 432. The case concerned a decision in regard to the establishment of an amusement centre in the St Ives conservation area within Penwith District Council's area. The Secretary of State's inspector appears to have allowed the appeal subject to a condition. The condition was:
"Before the development hereby permitted is commenced a scheme shall be agreed with the Local Planning Authority to cover the following points: A. Noise insulation. B. Shopfront type. C. Opening hours."
"The condition, however, did not go on to say anything about the fact that the development should then be carried out in accordance with the scheme and that the amusement centre should be operated in accordance with the scheme. Mr Steel submitted that a condition of this sort was valueless. It might be (and he (Woolf J) did not propose to express a final conclusion on this) that with regard to noise insulation and shopfront type it was implicit in the decision that the development should be carried out in accordance with the scheme and that the condition had to be read in those terms. However, with regard to opening hours, that was not a practical approach. It would be of the greatest importance to the planning authority to be able to police the operation of this amusement arcade. That could require the service of an enforcement notice. An enforcement notice had to specify the breach of the condition which was relied upon. It was difficult to see how enforcement action could take place based on the condition proposed by the Inspector. That was so, no matter what one sought to read, by implication, into the condition, but in argument it was very undesirable that a condition, which might have to be enforced, should depend upon something being read into it. That would undoubtedly lead to arguments and problems when the matter came before the magistrates. A planning authority was entitled to expect that a decision which complied with the requirements of the Act would provide conditions which were reasonably practical to enforce. He had come to the conclusion that this condition did not comply with that standard. On that ground too, he regarded this application as being one which was entitled to succeed."
"I say at once that it is not entirely clear to me why Woolf J differentiated between noise insulation, shopfront type and opening hours but, granted that a distinction was drawn, he was left with a condition which simply said 'opening hours'. That is plainly totally uncertain and, in effect, meaningless. I regard this as another example of the Fawcett line of authorities. I therefore conclude, despite Mr Steel's arguments, that there is no independent head of challenge [practical difficulties in enforcement] such as he asserted."
"To my mind, it must be said that the document is to some extent ambiguous. If the word 'other' had been inserted after the word 'or' and the document had read 'or any other use', that would have made the matter perfectly clear; but, as it stands, I think it ambiguous in this way: the second part of the condition, 'or any use within Class III of the Town and Country Planning (Use Classes) Order', may, on the one hand, be regarded as setting up a separate condition, or, on the other hand, merely as applying that second part to the whole of the condition, including the manufacture of potato crisps. That being so - the document being ambiguous - it seems to me that we are required to regard it as a whole, and all the circumstances in which it came to be made."
"The whole of the difficulty was caused, as my Lord has said, by the fact that care was not taken in the office of the local planning authority to make clear the terms or conditions on which this permission was granted. The Town and Country Planning Act, 1947, is one of great importance to the public; and it had only come into operation a month or two before the application of the appellant company to the local planning authority. In those circumstances it was of the utmost importance that care should be taken in framing the permit, if granted, and in framing the conditions, if any, to be attached to it. If that had been done, much litigation and expense would have been avoided."
On page 59, Denning LJ said:
"The whole question in this case is whether permission was given subject to such a condition. I confess that the condition is not expressed as clearly as could be wished. I think it very important that a condition of this kind should be expressed in plain language so that any layman can understand it without having to look up the statutory instrument and interpret the terms of an Order. This condition was ambiguous ... "
"The first question which obviously arises is, what is the meaning of the words 'for the purposes of flood prevention'? Do they mean flood prevention on site or do they mean flood prevention on site as well as off site. In my judgment, the natural meaning of those words is flood prevention on this particular site for which permission is sought and given."
"The framing of conditions requires care, not least to ensure that a condition is enforceable. A condition, for example, requiring only that 'a landscape scheme shall be submitted for the approval of the local planning authority' is incomplete, since if the applicant were to submit the scheme, even if it is approved, the local planning authority is unlikely to be able to require the scheme to be implemented. In such a case the requirement that needs to be imposed is that landscape work shall be carried out in accordance with a scheme to be approved in writing by the local planning authority; and the wording of the condition must clearly require this."
"No development shall take place until full details of both hard and soft landscape works have been submitted to and approved in writing by the local planning authority and these works shall be carried out as approved." (My emphasis.)
Conclusions.
"The Minister concurs in the view of the legal assessor that enforcement action cannot be taken in respect of a breach of an implied condition."
"The courts have said on many occasions that it is only fair to a landowner that conditions attaching to planning permissions should be clear and explicit. Their effect is to work a forfeiture, and they have to be judged by the court's strict rules, as any other forfeiture. I have never heard of an implied condition in a planning permission, and I believe that no such creature exists. Planning permission enures for the benefit of the land. It is not simply a matter of contract between the parties. There is no place, in my judgment, within the law relating to planning permission for an implied condition. Conditions should be express; they should be clear; they should be in the document containing the permission."