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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Morland, R (on the application of) v Persimmon Homes (Wessex) Ltd [2006] EWHC 1243 (Admin) (12 May 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2006/1243.html Cite as: [2006] EWHC 1243 (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 MORLAND | CLAIMANT | |
-v- | ||
WEST WILTSHIRE DISTRICT COUNCIL | DEFENDANT | |
and | ||
PERSIMMON HOMES (WESSEX) LTD | INTERESTED PARTY |
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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)
The defendant was not represented and did not attend
MR MARK LOWE QC appeared on behalf of the Interested Party
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Crown Copyright ©
"application under section 73 to continue development without complying with condition 14 of 95/00943 and condition 16 of 01/0021 (to allow construction for a new primary school in the rural buffer)."
That takes us back to the parent outline permission, 95/00943. That is dated 16 March 1998, and permitted the following description of development -
"Residential development including affordable homes distributor roads and link roads district centre including new community uses and comprising A1 A2 A3 D1 and D2 uses primary school extension public open space B1 employment uses and surface water works together with ancillary works ..... "
The formal part of the permission stated:
"The council hereby grants planning permission for the above development to be carried out in accordance with the application and accompanying plans subject to the following condition(s)."
Seventeen conditions were set out, most of which are not relevant for present purposes, but condition 16 was in these terms:
"In order to ensure that the shopping centre is designed to serve the daily requirements of the Westbury Leigh development area, the range of goods and services provided at the centre shall be restricted to food and ancillary convenience items, a bank and/or post office, a public house/restaurant, a hot food takeaway shop and a recycling bank. The district centre may also include an element of ancillary residential development. Full details of all the uses in the district centre shall be submitted as reserved matters pursuant to condition 01 and should be carried out only in accordance with the approved details. The scale of retail provision shall not be greater than the level of local shopping facilities provided for in Policies E3 and SP5 of the West Wiltshire district plan."
Condition 19 in the outline permission dated February 2003 is in similar but not identical terms:
"In order to ensure that the shopping centre is designed to serve the daily requirement of the Westbury Leigh development area, and does not have an adverse impact on Westbury town centre, the scale of retail provision shall not be greater than the level of local shopping facilities provided for in policies H3 and SP5 of the West Wiltshire District Plan and Policies H13 and SP6 of the West Wiltshire District Plan 1st Alteration (Revised Deposit). Full details of all the uses in the district centre shall be submitted as reserved matters pursuant to conditions 1, 2 and 3 and shall be carried out in accordance with the approved details. The range of goods and services provided at the district centre shall be restricted to food and ancillary convenience items, a bank and/or post office, a public house/restaurant, a hot food takeaway shop, and a recycling bank. The district centre may also include ancillary residential development."
"Proposed local centre uses for residential development, comprising community centre, day nursery (siting), doctors' surgery (siting) and associated car parking, 71 dwellings, 23 affordable flats and public open space."
One of the points made by the claimant in his application for judicial review was that 71 dwellings could not reasonably be described as being "ancillary residential development" in terms of either condition 19 of the 2003 outline permission or the original condition 16 of 16 March 1998 outline permission. Mr Lowe confirmed that that was not the interested party's contention. Rather, the interested party's contention was a more fundamental one, namely that the parent outline permission, 01/01995/FUL, properly construed, permitted retail, community and residential development and that relocation of that residential development was not in any way fixed by anything in the permission, including the master plan.
(To applicant) Mr Morland, I do not know if you have incurred any expenses, have you?