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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Residents Against Waste Site Ltd v Lancashire County Council & Anor [2007] EWHC 2558 (Admin) (07 November 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2007/2558.html Cite as: [2007] EWHC 2558 (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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RESIDENTS AGAINST WASTE SITE LTD |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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LANCASHIRE COUNTY COUNCIL GLOBAL RENEWABLES LTD |
Defendant Interested Party |
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WordWave International Limited
A Merrill Communications Company
190 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7404 1400, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
David Elvin QC and Charles Banner (instructed by Lancashire County Council) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 20 -21 September 2007
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Irwin :
Factual Background and Chronology
Standing
" .the only reasonable conclusion is that the claimant was incorporated by members of the unincorporated Residents Against Waste Site solely for the purpose of limiting their exposure to costs."
He cites some text from the RAWS website, where the message he said is clear:
"We can limit our own liability by becoming a company limited by guarantee."
"I have taken some time on this issue because I am concerned to see that even the clear decision in the World Development Movement case, affirming as it does a strong line of modern authority and restoring as it turns out a powerful line of older authority, does not appear to have stopped attempts, some of them successful, to elevate the question of standing at the leave stage above the elementary level of excluding busybodies and trouble makers and to demand something akin to a special private interest in the subject matter. Such an argument may depending on the issue be insufficient even at the substantive hearing to exclude an applicant. At the leave stage it is, in my respectful view, entirely misconceived.
Public law is not at base about rights, even though abuses of power may and often do invade private rights; it is about wrongs that is to say misuses of public power; and the courts have always been alive to the fact that a person or organisation with no particular stake in the issue or the outcome may, without in any sense being a mere meddler, wish and be well placed to call the attention of the court to an apparent misuse of public power. If an arguable case of such misuse can be made out on an application for leave, the court's only concern is to ensure that it is not being done for an ill motive. It is if, on a substantive hearing, the abuse of power is made out, that everything relevant to the applicant's standing will be weighed up, whether with regard to the grant or simply to the form of relief."
" .with the intention that its members would not be liable in costs should the proceedings fail"
and that in such circumstances as a matter of public policy, the Court should not accord standing to such a company. The learned Judge refused to draw the adverse inference in that case, but concluded that on the evidence there, the company had been formed to achieve a proper formal and legal structure to administer the funds of the action group in question and manage its affairs properly and to enable the group to represent the community in a more formal and acceptable way. The Judge went on to say this:
"In my view the incorporation of a local action group ought not to be a bar to the bringing of an application for judicial review. Technically, it may be said, the company does not have a relevant interest of its own; but in substance it represents the interests of local residents who, many of whom, do have a relevant interest. Incorporation has a number of advantages, some of which motivated the incorporation of the action group in this case. It is true that another advantage is the avoidance of substantial personal liability of members for the costs of unsuccessful legal proceedings. But that should not preclude the use of a corporate vehicle, at least where incorporation is not for the sole purpose of escaping the direct impact of an adverse costs order (and possibly even where it is for that purpose). The costs position can be dealt with adequately by requiring the provision of security for costs in a realistically large sum. In the present case, security was ordered in the sum of £15000. Whether that was sufficient may be open to doubt, given the sheer size of the case it is, however, the right approach in principle."
"To avoid the time and expense of making an application to the court, I am instructed to accept this offer without prejudice to our right to apply to the court at a later date for the security to be increased if there is any change in circumstances."
No further application for security has been made.
Lack of Promptness
"Promptness is not to be considered in the abstract. One is concerned with the practical implications of any lack of promptness. The interested parties could not reasonably have been expected to halt their multi million pound contracts in response to [tentative indications that proceedings may be issued]"
In the instant case, the Interested Party and Defendant did not halt their contracts in response to the actual issue of proceedings and there is no evidence on which I can find safely that they would in fact have done so had the proceedings been issued three or four weeks earlier.
The Substantive Grounds of Challenge
Ground 1 "The relevant objectives"
"The competent authorities shall discharge their specified functions, in so far as they relate to the recovery or disposal of waste, with relevant objectives."
"For the purposes of this Schedule the following objectives are relevant objectives in relation to the disposal or recovery of waste (a) ensuring that waste is recovered or disposed of without endangering health and without using processes or methods which could harm the environment and in particular without (i) risk to water, air, soil, plants or animals; or (ii) causing nuisance through noise or odours."
"An objective in my judgment is something different from a material consideration. I agree with Richards J that it is an end at which to aim, a goal. The general use of the word appears to be a modern one. In the 1950 edition of the Concise Oxford Dictionary the meaning now adopted is given only a military use: "towards which the advance of troops is directed". A material consideration is a factor to be taken into account when making a decision and the objective to be attained will be such a consideration, but it is more than that. An objective which is obligatory must always be kept in mind when making a decision even while the decision-maker has regard to other material considerations. Some decisions involve more progress towards achieving the objective than others. On occasions, the giving of weight to other considerations will mean that little or no progress is made. I accept that there could be decisions affecting waste disposal in which the weight given to other considerations may produce a result which involves so plain and flagrant a disregard for the objective that there is a breach of obligation. However, provided the objective is kept in mind, decisions in which the decisive consideration has not been the contribution they make to the achievement of the objective may still be lawful. I do not in any event favour an attempt to create a hierarchy of material considerations whereby the law would require decision-makers to give different weight to different considerations."
"The proposal would not result in unacceptable [emphasis added] adverse impacts on people or the environment by reason of noise, odour, dust or traffic."
See the Grounds paragraph 21. Indeed, throughout the written and oral submissions of the Claimant, the approach was really consistent: the report to the Committee, the supporting documentation and, by extension, the decision of the LCC was couched in statements that environmental impacts of the kind which engaged the relevant objectives were "acceptable" or "not unacceptable"; levels of emissions were "at appropriate levels".
"All planning applications must be assessed against the policies of the development plan. Given the nature of this proposal it is important to consider it against the relevant objectives. The reports clearly assess the proposals against all the relevant development plan policies. These policies reflect the objectives of the framework. It was considered unnecessary to reiterate the objectives when they are so clearly reflected in the relevant policies."
"I take issue with the Claimant's approach to the Report to Committee. It was not balancing benefits from the proposals against the harm it (sic) might cause. Instead officers were satisfied that any potential problems associated with the proposal had been dealt with and that the proposal complied with the Plan Policies (drafted to embody the WFD Objectives) without generating unacceptable impacts. This was not a case where officers (with whom members agreed) considered that the benefits had to be set against breaches of policy in order to justify the ground of permission."
Ground 2: Routeing of Traffic
"Planning conditions are not an appropriate means of controlling the right of passage over public highways."
Conclusion