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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Swale Borough Council v The First Secretary of State & Anor [2005] EWHC 290 (Admin) (04 March 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2005/290.html Cite as: [2005] EWHC 290 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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SWALE BOROUGH COUNCIL |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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THE FIRST SECRETARY OF STATE Mr R. LEE |
Defendants |
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Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited, 190 Fleet Street
London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7421 4040, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
P. Copell (instructed by The Treasury Solicitors) for the First Defendant
R. Green (instructed by Clarke Kiernan) for the Second Defendant
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Crown Copyright ©
The Hon. Mr. Justice Evans-Lombe :
"2 Where there has been a breach of planning control consisting in the change of use of any building to use as a single dwelling house, no enforcement action may be taken after the end of the period of four years beginning with the date of the breach."
"For the purpose of this Act uses and operations are lawful at any time if –
(a) No enforcement action may then be taken in respect of them (whether because they did not involve development or require planning permission or because the time for enforcement action has expired or for any other reason); and
(b) They do not constitute a contravention of any of the requirements of any enforcement notice then in force."
"20 Initially the barn was probably used for agricultural and other storage, and the evidence suggests that an element of residential use was first introduced during Mr Bennett's ownership of the site. It was during this period that the mobile homes were first introduced and by the end of it they were so firmly attached and incorporated into the building that they were in essence part of its structure rather than freestanding mobile homes. However, the evidence before me indicated that Mr Bennett's use was sporadic and casual and did not amount to use of the building as a dwelling house. In contrast Mr Colby's evidence suggest that, for a period of almost a year he occupied the building on just that basis. That evidence was not substantially undermined during cross examination or by contrary evidence and I attach due credence to it. I am satisfied that residential use of the building began during his occupation.
21 Mr Lee acquired the site in 1996 but didn't live in the building straight away. Indeed for two or three years the mobile home on the site and the barn appear to have provided residential accommodation for several people at various times, sometimes both being occupied and occasionally neither. This erratic pattern of use probably accounts for the various observations of the site recorded by the Council and possibly the failure of the appellants' agent to refer to residential use in planning applications and letters during this period. However once initial repairs were carried out the barn appear to have been fitted and available for residential use from then onwards. The Council acknowledges its residential use from 2000 to the present day. There is no substantial evidence that, since Mr Colby's occupation, the barn was used for any purpose other than residential except, from time to time, for minor storage connected with the use of the site as a whole.
22 I have taken into account Miss Champion's evidence and the lack of reference to residential use in some planning applications and correspondence. However during part of the relevant period the appellant had a difficult and complicated personal life, and I accept that these factors affected both his use of the site, and the control he was able to apply to the works being carried out there. I have no doubt that the barn was in full time residential occupation in 1995/6 and again from 2000 onwards. In the period of 1997 – 1999 the evidence indicates substantial work on the barn to complete its conversion to residential purposes, as well as on the remainder of the site. The appellant and several other people were involved in this work and frequently lived and slept in the barn for substantial periods. I am aware of no evidence of any intention to abandon the residential use of the barn. Indeed the main intention appears to have been to improve it to allow for full time occupation as the appellants home.
23 I have borne in mind the meaning of residential use described in paragraphs 18 and 19 above, and that failure to occupy the building for a period, with no other use being introduced does not often mean that residential use has ceased. I conclude, on the balance of probability, that residential use of the barn as a ingle dwelling house began more than four year prior to date of submission of the LDC application and has continued since then without significant break."
"28. I accept Mr Corner's point that an enforcement notice can lawfully be issued notwithstanding that at the moment of issue the activity objected to is not going on - because it is the week-end or the factory's summer holiday, for instance. The land would still be properly described as being used for the objectionable activity. However, I would reject Mr Hockman's submission that enforcement action can be taken once the new activity which resulted from the material change in the use of land has permanently ceased. I accept that there will be borderline cases when it is not clear whether the land is being used for the objectionable activity. These are matters of judgment for others."
"I am aware of no evidence of any intention to abandon the residential use of the barn. Indeed the main intention appears to have been to improve it to allow for full time occupation as the appellant's home."
And at the beginning of paragraph 23 where the Inspector says:-
"I have borne in mind the meaning of residential use described in paragraph 18 and 19 above, and that failure to occupy a building for a period with no other use being introduced does not often mean that residential use has ceased."
"There is no need to demonstrate that a use has been in continuous existence throughout a ten-year period. Unless there has been a clear-cut change in planning circumstances, such as a grant of planning permission for an alternative use, the introduction of another use incompatible with the original use or an indication of a deliberate intention to abandon the original use then the use will survive throughout ten years."
"This evidence was garnered to demonstrate a material change of use to a general aviation airfield some considerable time after I consider that it took place. Its overall effect is to reinforce my conviction that at no time was the airfield use abandoned after the Sky-ads operation ceased. Panton and Farmer makes it clear that once a use had ceased, its resumption would not amount to a material change of use unless that use had been abandoned. The result is that land can have a dormant use even though the unauthorised activities may not be functioning for significant periods of time…Overall, I can find no clear evidence of abandonment of the airfield use since the Sky-ads operation ceased in 1983-4. As a consequence, I find, as a matter of fact and degree, that the airfield operation of 1983 is not materially different from the present usage of the site which has therefore continued for more than ten years."
"36. The reasons for a decision must be intelligible and they must be adequate…The reasoning must not give rise to a substantial doubt as to whether the decision-maker erred in law, for example by misunderstanding some relevant policy or some other important matter or by failing to reach a rational decision on relevant grounds."
"8 Mr Green's submission in support of the appeal can be encapsulated in the simple proposition that it does not follow from the fact that the caravans are not part of a building that heir use is not part of the use of the building.
9 Although it is easy to understand how the inspector came to overlook that proposition it seem to me to be clear and unassailable. Non operational development involves the making of a material change in the use of land. That includes a building. The space enclosed by a building is necessarily the area whose use determines the use of the building. In my judgment the use of caravans positioned within a building must be part of the use of the building, and will be material to, if not determinative of, the question whether the use of the building is, or is not, used as a single dwelling house. Of course if a caravan is merely stored within a building, its use may be ancillary to the use of the building, or independent of that use. Where however, its use is residential, and such use is in conjunction with the use of the building, it must constitute a part of the use of the building. It is on that basis that the test which the inspector set out correctly in paragraph 14 of his decision letter, namely whether the building affords the facilities required for day to day private domestic existence, must be judged. Of course, if the caravan were regularly moved, that would lead to a different conclusion than if they are, although not fixed in reality, in fact permanently stationed to provide the facilities for the use made of the space enclosed by the walls and roof of the building."