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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Colver, R (on the application of) v Secretary of State for Communities and Local Government & Anor [2008] EWHC 2500 (Admin) (09 October 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2008/2500.html Cite as: [2008] EWHC 2500 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
THE ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand London WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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THE QUEEN ON THE APPLICATION OF COLVER | Claimant | |
v | ||
(1) SECRETARY OF STATE FOR COMMUNITIES AND LOCAL GOVERNMENT | ||
(2) ROCHFORD DISTRICT COUNCIL | Defendants |
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Mr J Maurici (instructed by the Treasury Solicitor) appeared on behalf of the First Defendant
The Second Defendant was not represented and did not attend
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Introduction
"Change of use from open leisure purposes to a mixed use for open leisure purposes and for the stationing of a caravan for purposes of human habitation..."
As corrected, the enforcement notice required the appellant to:
"Cease using the land for the stationing of a caravan for purposes of human habitation, remove the caravan and all items brought onto the land in association with that use..."
The decision letter
"The appeal site was purchased by Mrs Meredith in about 1930 and was used as a leisure plot for her family at weekends and during holiday periods. Initially, the family camped on the site storing equipment in a shed. There is no dispute that the site had a lawful use for open leisure purposes since that was the existing use on the Appointed Day. In the 1960s the family began to bring a caravan onto the site for overnight stays and from sometime in the 1970s this was left permanently on the site for that purpose. At this point in time, the Council says that an additional use was introduced; that being the use of the site for the storage of a caravan. The Appellant on the other hand considers that additional use to be the stationing of a caravan for human habitation."
"... a material change of use occurred in the 1970s, when the caravan became permanently stationed on the land, from use of the site for open leisure purposes to a mixed use for open leisure purposes and for the stationing of a caravan for human habitation."
"13... as it is the statement of a member of the family who actively used the site and it was prepared contemporaneously with the relevant provisions of the Act coming into force. In that statement, Mr Meredith says 'There is now a shell of a caravan on the site.' The Appellant argues that such a description does not necessarily mean that the caravan was incapable of occupation, but the world 'shell' conjures up a specific image of an empty case and I can see no reason why Mr Meredith would have used such a description had the caravan remained fitted out and capable of human habitation. In that same statement he goes on to say that he visits the site every 3 to 6 months and allows a neighbour to graze animals on the land in return for acting as a caretaker for the property. He does not say that he stayed overnight in the caravan on any of those visits and indeed it seems highly unlikely that he would have, given his description of it as a shell. His permanent address in Dagenham was near enough to enable him to travel comfortably to and from the site in a single day. The fact that he was at that time relying on a neighbour to act as a caretaker suggests that these occasional visits were simply by way of a periodic check on the property."
"To my mind the most telling evidence in this matter is that provided in the statement of Mr Meredith dated 20 August 1992 which gives a strong indication that the use of the site for the stationing of a caravan for human habitation had ceased for some time with only the shell of a caravan remaining. That being the case, the unauthorised use having ceased and there being no activity on the land against which the local planning authority could have taken enforcement action, it could not have become lawful when the provisions of the amended s191 and the new s171B of the 1990 Act came into force on 27 July 1992. The use of the site would by that time have reverted to the lawful single primary use for open leisure purposes. I have had regard to all other documentation submitted in evidence, including aerial and other photographs of the site, but find nothing to lead me to a different conclusion. The unlawful use did not resume until May 2001 and thus a later 10 year period cannot be demonstrated."
"I do not agree with the Council's view that, following cessation of use for human habitation, the caravan was subsequently stored on the site. When it ceased to be occupied, the structure appears simply to have been left there and that, to my mind, is not a functioning storage use. The burden of proof in this case rests with the Appellant and the evidence that I have indicates, on the balance of probability, that on the date when the notice was issued it was not too late to take enforcement action in respect of the breach of planning control alleged, that is the stationing of a caravan for human habitation. The appeal on ground (d) fails."
Submissions and conclusions
"A 'storage' use suggests a degree of activity, in that an item not immediately needed is kept in a convenient place until it is required."
Whether the land was being used for the storage of the caravan following the cessation of its use for human habitation was very much a question of fact and degree for the Inspector. She was provided with photographs of the site in January 2001 which show that, in her words, the land had become "very overgrown so that the structures [including the caravan] were not a prominent feature of the site": see paragraph 35.
"There is no dispute that both the siting of a caravan for human habitation and associated operational development comprising the hardstanding and timber building are inappropriate in the Green Belt. They are thus, by definition, harmful."
Even though a caravan could be stationed on the land for purposes incidental or ancillary to its use for open leisure purposes, the use of that caravan for human habitation introducing a residential use into the green belt, would be inappropriate development and, by definition, harmful to the green belt.
"The stationing of a caravan on this site for human habitation results in a loss of openness and a change in the nature of the site from one which contributes to the predominant rural undeveloped character of the area to one with a more urban nature resulting from the presence of the mobile home and the domestication of the site arising from the residential use, including the extensive formal hardstanding to the front and the large timber building to the rear."
The Inspector acknowledged that "the remains of two caravans [one of which was the 'shell' referred to earlier in the decision letter] were left on site following cessation of use by the Meredith family", but concluded:
"35... their being left there provides no justification for the siting of a caravan for active use for human habitation which has resulted in a material change to the character of the site."
Postscript