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England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Kerr, R (On the Application Of) v Cambridge City Council (Rev 1) [2011] EWHC 1623 (Admin) (24 June 2011) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2011/1623.html Cite as: [2011] EWHC 1623 (Admin), [2011] JPL 1570 |
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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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The Queen on the application of Mr Robert Kerr |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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Cambridge City Council |
Defendant |
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Mr H. Ali |
Interested Party |
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Mr Hugh Richards (instructed by Ms Victoria Watts, Solicitor, Cambridge City Council) for the Defendant
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Crown Copyright ©
Judge Anthony Thornton QC:
Introduction
Factual Background
(1) The basis of challenge
(2) Previous history
"10. No development shall commence until a written plan for the day-to-day management of the community house has been submitted to and approved in writing by the local planning authority. The use of the community house shall be carried out in accordance with the approved management plan.
Reason: To ensure that there is no intensification in the use of the building and to protect the amenity of the adjoining residential properties."
(1) The conditions imposed by the 2005 and 2006 permissions included conditions limiting the number of people who could use the Centre at any one time, the permitted hours of use and requiring the submission of a management scheme for approval. These had never been adhered to and the resulting noise and disturbance were unacceptable in the quiet residential area in and around Darwin Drive.
(2) Contrary to the basis on which planning approvals had previously been granted, many of those using the Centre came from outside the immediate area and arrived by car rather than, as had been stated by the applicant of those earlier applications, on foot. This caused unacceptable congestion, additional traffic noise and a significant increase in the shortage of on-street parking places.
(3) These difficulties would be further enhanced by an extended ground floor premises since its use would inevitably draw more users from a yet further enhanced catchment area who would generate even more noise, disturbance and traffic-related problems.
(4) The applicants had shown, in the five years of use of the Centre, a flagrant disregard of the conditions imposed on them, particularly in their failure ever to submit a management plan or to adhere to the previously imposed conditions of use. Thus, any conditions in any permission granted as a result of this application would not, as experience had shown, be followed or managed.
"The proposed extension is unacceptable because it would increase the size, scale and intensity of the existing community centre, which is in close proximity to neighbouring residential dwellings and situated on what is a relatively quiet residential street, to a level which is over and above what is reasonably acceptable to maintain the residential character and amenity of the area. This would be likely to have a significant adverse impact on the residential amenities currently enjoyed by occupiers, by reason of the comings and goings of visitors, some of which are likely to arrive by car, and the gathering of members before and after prayers and other events. In so doing, the proposed development fails to respond positively to the site context and would not make a positive contribution to the character of the area in terms of its impact on existing residential amenity. The development is therefore contrary to Cambridge Local Plan 2006 policies 3/4 and 3/7."
Significantly, although the report summarised the objections of local residents including those of Mr Kerr, there was no reference to the particular objections that the applicant had always disregarded the conditions limiting the use of the premises and had never produced or followed a management plan which those conditions had required.
(3) The meeting of the planning committee
(1) Members of the public or applicants or their agents who wanted to speak about an application could do so if they had, in the case of members of the public, already submitted a written representation on an application and had notified the Committee Manager by 12.00 noon on the day before the meeting. Applicants or their agents were entitled to address the meeting without first having submitted a written representation because their case would have previously been set out with the application.
(2) Each speaker would be allowed three minutes in which to make their representation.
(3) If more than one person wanted to make a representation about the same application, they should choose someone to act as a spokesperson. When several people wished to speak on the same application but wished to raise different issues, the chair might agree to those speakers making representations. In these circumstances, less time might need to be given to each speaker.
(4) When speaking, the member of the public addressing the Committee should keep to his or her three minutes or whatever other time had been agreed, should keep to the planning issues raised by the application, should highlight the main points that it was wished should be raised and should be as brief and concise as possible.
(1) The committee would have been under the same misapprehension as CCC's Chief Executive. She wrote to Mr Kerr in response to his complaint following the meeting that he had been prevented from addressing the committee. In the letter, the Chief Executive accepted that he should have been allowed to address the committee and that he had been erroneously considered as one who had not previously been registered to speak at the meeting. She also stated that CCC had considered returning the application to the planning committee for reconsideration, which could have been done since this decision was made before the permission had been formally promulgated. However, it was decided not to take this course and to confirm the decision that had been taken, in part because Mr Kerr could only have made points previously made in his written representations and those points were already before the committee. This was erroneous. The correct position was that Mr Kerr could have made any relevant point even if he had not himself referred to that point in his previously submitted written representations.
(2) The committee would also have thought, as the Chief Executive did, that all relevant points that could be made in opposition to the application had been addressed by the planning officer in the detailed recommendation before the committee that recommended rejection. In fact, very relevant objections, which Mr Kerr might well have placed at the forefront of his oral objections, had not been referred to by the planning officer. This is dealt with further in paragraphs 23 and 24 below.
(3) The committee would also have taken into account that the only speaker from the public, who had already addressed them, was someone they had understood represented the local resident's association. That speaker had already addressed them and had strongly supported the application. In fact, that person should not have been permitted to address the committee since she had not registered as a speaker, she was not recorded as being the applicant's agent, she had not previously submitted a written representation and she was not a prominent local resident representing the local resident's association but was someone with an interest in supporting the applicant since she was speaking on behalf of the Bangladeshi House Officer's Association.
(4) The delay in starting judicial review proceedings
Delay in starting judicial review -
Procedural error
(1) He had put forward substantial objections to the grant of planning permission to the effect that the proposed extension to the premises would inevitably cause an unacceptable intensification of the use of the site as an Islamic Centre with a consequent enhancement of the noise and disturbance to nearby residents and an unacceptable increase in both traffic and parking in the narrow residential street where the Centre is situated. Further, the present intensity of use had, from the outset, greatly exceeded what had originally been provided for in the existing planning conditions.
(2) This unacceptable increase and yet further increase in noise and disturbance would not be satisfactorily controlled and prevented by the use of a management plan because past history showed that the applicant was not prepared to produce or operate such a plan or to keep its use within the limits required by CCC with regard to the numbers of users at any one time, the confining of users to those living in the immediate locality, the hours during which the Centre could be used and the assurances repeatedly provided by the Centre that all its users would travel to and from the Centre on foot without the use of transport.
(3) These reasons had, in the main been adopted by the planning officer and by him in his written objections. However, he intended to supplement and explain them in his oral representations, particularly as the planning officer had not fully explained them in the report to the committee.
(4) The committee wrongly and unfairly refused to allow him to address them because they wrongly concluded that he had no entitlement to address them and because he would not have been allowed to put before them anything that was not in his written representations or in the planning officer's report.
(5) This unfairness was compounded by the committee permitting a supporter of the Centre to address them although that person had no entitlement to address them and was erroneously taken to be speaking on behalf of local residents when she was in fact speaking on behalf of an organisation which promoted Islamic Centres generally.
(6) The committee did not in fact consider several of the salient points that he was wanting to rely on as reasons why permission should be refused.
(7) The committee was asked to reconsider its decision at a time when it could have reconsidered the permission since his request was made before the decision was promulgated. However, the committee, through the Chief Executive, refused that reasonable request on erroneous grounds in concluding erroneously that Mr Kerr had suffered no prejudice.
"94. The question of whether what the District Council did or omitted to do involved any procedural unfairness is however closely bound up with the question of whether there was any actual prejudice to the claimant. In the absence of some prejudice, there is in general no procedural unfairness because there is no such concept as a technical breach of natural justice. This was explained, for example, in Malloch v Aberdeen Corporation [1971] 1 WLR 1578 at 1595B to C by Lord Wilberforce. He said:
'The appellant has first to show that his position was such that he had, in principle, a right to make representations before a decision against him was taken. But to show this is not necessarily enough, unless he can also show that if admitted to state his case he had a case of substance to make. A breach of procedure, whether called a failure of natural justice, or an essential administrative fault, cannot give him a remedy in the courts, unless behind it there is something of substance which has been lost by the failure.'
95. The same point is made in the Lichfield Securities case at paragraphs 22 to 26. I note in particular what Sedley LJ said at paragraphs 22, 24 and 25:
'22. We have no difficulty in accepting that LDC's failure to bring LSL and Williams into a single process of consultation, however brief, about the best formula for apportioning the road infrastructure costs was unjustified and was potentially unfair, in the circumstances, to LSL. But potential unfairness is not enough. It has been authoritatively said that there is no such thing as a technical breach of natural justice: R v Chief Constable of the Thames Valley Police, ex parte Cotton [1990] IRLR 344 per Stocker LJ at para. 53. Before treating this as a universal axiom, however, it is necessary to have regard to what Bingham LJ said at para. 60: "This is a field in which appearances are generally thought to matter"; and to consider how the two propositions would fit together in a case where, say, a defendant has been denied a chance to speak in mitigation before being sentenced, even though he cannot show that he would have had anything useful to say. What can be more confidently said is that in the field of public administration, absent some mandatory procedural scheme, it is the combination of process and impact which must be shown to have been unfair if a public law challenge is to succeed. ..
.
24. Coming back to the question of substantive unfairness, in our view LDC have failed entirely to show that the formula favouring Williams was the only feasible outcome of an open consultation process. ...
25. But that does not conclude the question of fairness. Mr Mole and Mr Lowe submitted that, even if LDC's conduct is open to the criticism that it was poor public administration, it did not cross the legal boundary between the fair and the unfair. We do not agree. ... The only remaining question is whether LSL, expertly advised and represented as they were, had sufficient information, advice and resources to make up the leeway and to submit anything they wished to the planning committee at its decisive meeting on 1 April: in other words, whether there was in the end any substantive unfairness to them.'"
Discussion
(1) The planning officer's summary of Mr Kerr's complaints, as set out in his report, was incomplete. There was little if any reference to the applicant's previous breaches of the two earlier planning permissions with respect to the non-production of a management plan and the disregard of the restrictions on use in respect of numbers of users, hours of use and the confining of the Centre's use to those who were locally based and who travelled to the Centre on foot. Furthermore, there was little reference to the need to consider deferring the grant of planning permission, if this was to be granted at all, until a management plan had been produced and agreed whose terms were comprehensive enough to ensure compliance with, and long-term monitoring of, the Centre's use.
(2) Mr Kerr was deprived of the opportunity to address the committee and the committee took that decision by taking account of matters that it should not have done, particularly that he would be confined to matters contained in his written representations if he was permitted to speak, that the case for local residents had already been provided by their representative who had just addressed the committee and that anything relevant that he wished to say had already been placed before them by his representations and the planning officer's report.
(3) The committee permitted one oral representation to be made by someone who was not entitled to speak at all and who was, in reality, a firm advocate for the applicant's case although she was erroneously thought to be putting the case for local residents.
(4) The committee, in its deliberations, did not consider or address Mr Kerr's objections relating to the previous history of breaches, the inevitable further intensification of that misuse once the extension to the premises had been completed and was in use, the total failure to produce or comply with a management plan and the need to defer granting planning permission until a robust management plan had been produced and agreed which the planning committee could be satisfied would be complied with in the future.
Other grounds
Other findings
(1) The grant of full planning permission 09/0731/Ful is quashed.
(2) If the defendant wishes to appeal, the time for applying to Judge Thornton for permission to appeal is extended until Friday 15 July 2011 and for lodging an application for permission to appeal and a notice of appeal with the Court of Appeal is extended until Friday 22 July 2011.
(3) Mr Kerr is to recover his costs of the judicial review which are summarily assessed in the sum of £3,750. That sum is to be paid to Mr Kerr by the defendant by 15 July 2011.
Judge Anthony Thornton QC