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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Gardner, R (on the application of) v Harrogate Boroug Council & Ors [2008] EWHC 2942 (Admin) (19 November 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2008/2942.html Cite as: [2009] JPL 872, [2008] EWHC 2942 (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 MICHAEL GARDNER | Claimant | |
v | ||
HARROGATE BOROUGH COUNCIL | Defendant | |
MR AND MRS ATKINSON | Interested Parties |
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Mr Martin Carter (instructed by Barker Titleys) appeared on behalf of the Interested Parties
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MR JUSTICE SULLIVAN:
Introduction
Factual background
"No special justification for a dwelling in the particular location has been given and the development would be outside the built up confines of Kirkby Malzeard in the countryside where it would seriously and adversely harm the character and natural beauty of the Nidderdale AONB [Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty] and consequently the development would be contrary to North Yorkshire County Structure Plan Policies E1 and H7 and Harrogate District Local Plan Policies C1, C15 and H7."
"In the absence of exceptional circumstances to justify it, the development is contrary to policy. If members are minded to approve them, then they need to consider what are the factors in this situation which make it different from the other similar applications which are likely to be brought in the future."
"1. It was considered that there would be a visual improvement in the area if the caravan was removed, and an appropriate designed dwelling constructed in its place.
2. The caravan was not located on a designated site and it is not thought the proposal would cause any detriment to the visual amenity of the Nidderdale AONB."
"1. The siting of the proposed dwelling is outside the development limit for Kirkby Malzeard in the open countryside. There is inadequate special justification for a dwelling in the particular location and consequently the development would be contrary to North Yorkshire Structure Plan Policy H5, Harrogate District Local Plan Policy H7 and Kirkby Malzeard Village Design Statement Policies SPC2 and SPC3.
2. The proposed siting and design including the vehicular access and extent of parking does not reflect the character of traditional buildings in the locality; is not adjacent to an existing group of buildings or significant trees; is not in an inconspicuous location; is not accompanied by an integral landscaping scheme; and would seriously and adversely harm the character of the area and the natural beauty of the Nidderdale AONB and consequently the development would be contrary to North Yorkshire County Structure Plan Policy E1 and Harrogate District Local Plan Policies C1, C2, C11, C15, HD20, A1, H18 and the Kirkby Malzeard Village Design Statement Policy BD1."
"The test, the courts have held, is not just actual bias but the appearance of bias; whether a fair minded and informed observer, with knowledge of the facts, would conclude that there was a real possibility of bias."
In a footnote, the Ombudsman referred, inter alia, to the case of Porter v Magill [2002] 2 AC 357. The conclusions in the Ombudsman's report that are relevant for present purposes are contained in paragraphs 59 to 63 and are as follows:
"59. The Members Code of Conduct says that a Councillor must not use his position improperly to confer on or secure for himself or anyone else any advantage or disadvantage. Councillors who belong to a political group must declare a personal interest in any planning application by a member of the same political group. Provided that interest is not also prejudicial they can then take part in the meeting and vote. All the Councillors who were members of the same political party as Councillor Atkinson should therefore have declared an interest at both the April and September 2005 meetings.
60. The Code and recent case law have defined what amounts to a prejudicial interest. To paraphrase, the only Councillors who should have considered and voted on the application were those whose relationship with Councillor Atkinson would not lead a member of the public to think that their decision, because of that relationship, would be biased.
61. The Chairman of the Area Committee, Councillor Simms, was in the habit of driving Councillor Atkinson to and from Council meetings, a journey which will have taken over 30 minutes each way. Sharing cars in a rural community is a courtesy, apart from making good economic sense. However, over time this brought the two into sufficiently close contact for fellow Councillors to express unease amongst themselves, for one Councillor to make a complaint to the Chief Executive of the Council, for another Councillor to suggest that Councillor Simms should take no further part in consideration of Councillor Atkinson's planning applications, for a member of the public to make a complaint to the Standards Board and for another member of the public to make a complaint to me.
62. The association between Councillor Simms and Councillor Atkinson furthermore was not confined to Council business. Church functions, political events, village gatherings and mutual friends brought the two families together, on average, once a fortnight. Councillor Simms, whose casting vote was decisive in Councillor Atkinson's favour, had a clear prejudicial interest and, by failing to acknowledge and declare it, he breached the Code of Practice. Without Councillor Simms' votes Councillor Atkinson's application would have been defeated. The involvement of Councillor Simms in both decisions was maladministration.
63. It is open to Members to reach a decision other than that recommended by the officers, but they must do so for sound planning reasons. The Members who supported the officers felt the weight of argument was heavily in their favour - and they had substantial national and local policies to back them up. By comparison, there is no evidence that the three who voted contrary to the officers' recommendation gave significant weight to any of the policies, but based their decision simply on the grounds that a house would look better than a caravan - which was not on a designated site - and the house would not, in their view, be detrimental to the visual amenity of the AONB."
"To consider what action it should take to cancel the planning permission which was improperly obtained. The Council accepts that this may require an order of the court. In the meantime, the Council has agreed that any consideration of reserved matters under the current planning permission will be dealt with in the light of this report ..."
"The decision made in September 2005 was clearly improper and should not be allowed to stand. An application for judicial review, if successful, would lead to the court quashing the outline planning permission. This would enable the authority, if the applicant requires, to reconsider the application on its merits in accordance with the law and the Council's policies."
Apparent bias - the correct legal test
The court's approach to the Ombudsman's report
The Standards Board's report
"My investigation is concerned solely with whether Councillor Simms breached the Council's Code of Conduct, and issues such as the weight to be given to planning policies play no part in my considerations. Nor do I consider whether the decision might have been flawed by bias. Those matters are outside by jurisdiction and do not influence my findings. I do not comment on them."
"The Code does not define a 'friend', but the Adjudication Panel for England (in the case referenced APE 0211) stated that:
'A friend can be defined as someone well known to another and regarded with liking, affection and loyalty by that person.
In the Tribunal's view, this definition, which requires the presence of four elements, does assist in drawing the line between friends, acquaintances or friendly acquaintances. Where each of the four elements is present, the Tribunal is satisfied that the relationship is such that its existence should be declared in the public interest.'"
"5.27. Councillor Simms regularly drives Councillor Atkinson to and from Council meetings, a round trip of around 40 miles. Both members live in a rural area and Councillor Atkinson's house lies between Councillor Simms' home and the Council offices.
5.28. Councillor Simms' wife and Councillor Atkinson's husband are both involved in their respective parish churches as wardens. Councillor and Mrs Simms, and Councillor and Mr Atkinson share a mutual friend, Mr Rhodes.
5.29. Councillor Simms and Councillor Atkinson have known each over directly only since Councillor Atkinson became a member of the Council in 2002, and it was at this point that the mutual connections with Mr Rhodes and their partners being churchwardens came to light.
5.30. Councillor Simms and Councillor Atkinson come into contact outside Council business a couple of dozen times a year, at political, church and village social functions.
5.31. Councillor Simms and Councillor Atkinson have seen each other socially three of four times since she became a member of the Council in 2002, at large-scale local social events, often attended by hundreds of people.
5.32. Councillor Simms has visited Councillor Atkinson's house on two or three occasions since 2002, attending fundraising events, and she has never visited his house.
5.33. I am concerned by the apparent incompatibility between Councillor Simms' statement, recorded by the Ombudsman, that he and Councillor Atkinson come into contact over twenty times in a year, and Councillor Simms' and Councillor Atkinson's statement to my investigator that they have seen each other socially only three or four times in the last five years.
5.34. In my view, however, this contradiction is explained by the difference between 'coming into contact' and meeting socially. It is likely that two people living relatively close together and being members of the same local authority and political group as well as actively involved in the local community will, as a matter of course, come into contact with some frequency, even outside formal Council business, whereas meeting socially indicates a degree of friendship.
5.35. The evidence of Councillor Atkinson and Councillor Simms is largely consistent in this respect, in that both recalled only three or four occasions when they met in a social context, some of these occurring at Councillor Atkinson's home, but in all cases the events appear to have been of relatively significant scale and not events that would be limited to a circle of friends.
5.36. I consider it to be a particularly relevant fact in this respect that Councillor Simms was not invited to Councillor and Mr Atkinson's recent event celebrating their anniversary, which involved 120 invitees.
5.37. In applying the criteria for friendship set out by the Adjudication Panel for England, I first consider whether Councillor Atkinson is well-known to Councillor Simms. In my view, a combination of factors must be considered, the length of time for which two people have known each other, the frequency of contact between them, the nature of that contact, and the extent of the knowledge each has of the other.
5.38. Councillor Simms and Councillor Atkinson have known each other for five years, and come into contact quite frequently, but the nature of that contact is only occasionally social and even then in the context of large gatherings. I do not consider that Councillor Atkinson and Councillor Simms have any particular knowledge of one another beyond that which would characterise acquaintances.
5.39. I consider that Councillor Simms does regard Councillor Atkinson with a degree of liking, as he would be unlikely to regularly share his car with someone for whom he had no liking. I do not consider however that the evidence of Councillor Simms or Councillor Atkinson indicated any particular affection between them, or loyalty beyond what would be reasonable for political colleagues.
5.40. I do not consider that the nature of the relationship between Councillor Simms and Councillor Mrs Atkinson is such as to constitute a friendship for the purposes of the code of conduct."
Mrs Atkinson's evidence
"In my view, however, this contradiction is explained by the difference between 'coming into contact' and meeting socially. It is likely that two people living relatively close together and being members of the same local authority and political group as well as actively involved in the local community will, as a matter of course, come into contact with some frequency, even outside formal Council business, whereas meeting socially indicates a degree of friendship."
Detailed submissions
(i) Councillor Simms' membership of the same political group as Councillor Atkinson, together with his failure to declare, contrary to the members' Code of Conduct, his personal interest arising from that membership.
(ii) Their shared transport to and from Council meetings and site visits, including to and from the two Committee meetings that discussed Mr and Mrs Atkinson's planning application. The fact that such car sharing was done for environmental purposes was neither here nor there.
(iii) Their social contact outside the Council. The descriptions by the Board and the Ombudsman of such contact differed somewhat, but even on the Board's analysis, they came into contact on a couple of dozen times a year.
(iv) The various concerns that had been expressed by fellow councillors and members of the public as to their relationship.
(v) The conflict between Councillor Simms' views and that of certain other Conservative Councillors, and the strong views of the Council's planning officers and other councillors as to the merits of the planning application. The Ombudsman had noted that the approach taken by Councillor Simms did not accord with the correct approach to be taken to such applications.
(vi) The fact that Mrs Atkinson had copied Councillor Simms into correspondence relating to possible planning enforcement action in a letter dated 24 March 2004.
(vii) The fact that Councillor Simms had stated that he had had "his ear bent" about the application.
(viii) Councillor Simms' subsequent withdrawal in April 2006 from the Committee's consideration of the second planning application that had been made by Mr and Mrs Atkinson on the basis that he had a prejudicial interest in the application.
Conclusions
"4.118. Councillor Simms stated that he had declared a prejudicial interest at the 26 April 2006 DCC meeting because a fellow member and political colleague had advised him that a member of the public might consider the friendship to be close.
4.119. Councillor Simms stated to my investigator that he had not previously considered the issue of how interests might be perceived by the public, as opposed to his own perception, but in the light of the comments his colleague, Councillor Nash, had made to him, he now considered that on that basis he may have had a prejudicial interest in Councillor Atkinson's planning application. Councillor Simms emphasised that this was on the basis of knowledge and information he did not have at the time to the 2005 meetings, but with hindsight, he considered it might have been more appropriate for him to declare a prejudicial interest at the time."