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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Royal London Mutual Insurance Society Ltd, R (On the Application of) v Secretary of State for Communities And Local Government [2013] EWHC 3597 (Admin) (16 October 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2013/3597.html Cite as: [2013] EWHC 3597 (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 ROYAL LONDON MUTUAL INSURANCE SOCIETY LIMITED | Claimant | |
v | ||
SECRETARY OF STATE FOR COMMUNITIES AND LOCAL GOVERNMENT | Defendant |
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WordWave International Limited
A Merrill Communications Company
165 Fleet Street London EC4A 2DY
Tel No: 020 7404 1400 Fax No: 020 7404 1424
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Mr D Forsdick (instructed by Treasury Solicitor) appeared on behalf of the Defendant
Ms Saira Kabir Sheikh (instructed by TREASURY SOLICITOR) appeared on behalf of the interested party.
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Crown Copyright ©
Background
"The demolition of the buildings on the sites of 124/138 and 172 Bromley Road, SE6 and the construction of a non-food retail park comprising 5 units totalling 6,736m sq together with a new access from Bromley Road, 313 customer parking spaces, a service yard with 35 staff parking spaces with access from Aitken Road, together with two areas of land reserved for use by Initial Laundry."
"The retail consent shall be for non-food sales only in bulky trades normally found on retail parks which are furniture, carpets, DIY, electrical goods, car accessories, garden items and such other trades as the council may permit in writing."
"29. The Appellant reminded me that it is the meaning of the words used that is decisive, not what the intention of the Council might have been. A weakness of the condition in achieving its purpose is the failure to link the restriction on the good sold to the rights in the Use Classes Order. This failure opens the door to the argument that condition 3 was apt to achieve no more than to delimit or circumscribe the ambit of the permitted use. However, as the Council brought out, on a fair interpretation the use of the word 'only' fulfils the job of the phrase 'and for no other purpose', more especially when the condition is read in its entirety. When read alongside the reason and in the context of the permission as a whole, the condition prevents the exercising of rights under the Use Classes Order. On the reasoned arguments presented, there is the something more required by the test in Dunoon.
Conclusion
30. For the reasons given above the Council's refusal to grant a certificate of lawful use or development in respect of an open Class A1 retail use at Bromley Road Retail Park, 138 Bromley Road, Catford was well-founded and the appeal should fail. I will exercise accordingly the powers transferred to me in section 195(3) of the 1990 Act as amended."
Legal framework.
"192. Certificate of lawfulness of proposed use or development.
(1) If any person wishes to ascertain whether—
(a) any proposed use of buildings or other land; or
(b) any operations proposed to be carried out in, on, over or under land,
Would be lawful, he may make an application for the purpose to the local planning authority specifying the land and describing the use or operations in question.
(2) If, on an application under this section, the local planning authority are provided with information satisfying them that the use or operations described in the application would be lawful if instituted or begun at the time of the application, they shall issue a certificate to that effect; and in any other case they shall refuse the application."
"(2)On any such appeal, if and so far as the Secretary of State is satisfied -
(a) in the case of an appeal under subsection (1)(a), that the authority's refusal is not well-founded, or
(b) in the case of an appeal under subsection (1)(b), that if the authority had refused the application their refusal would not have been well-founded,
He shall grant the appellant [a certificate under section 191 or, as the case may be, 192] accordingly or, in the case of a refusal in part, modify the certificate granted by the authority on the application.
(3) If and so far as the Secretary of State is satisfied that the authority's refusal is or, as the case may be, would have been well-founded, he shall dismiss the appeal."
"(i) that the action is not within the powers of this Act, or
(ii) that any of the relevant requirements have not been complied with in relation to that action".
"(5)On any application under this section the High Court—
(a) may, subject to subsection (6), by interim order suspend the operation of the order or action, the validity of which is questioned by the application, until the final determination of the proceedings;
(b) if satisfied that the order or action in question is not within the powers of this Act, or that the interests of the applicant have been substantially prejudiced by a failure to comply with any of the relevant requirements in relation to it, may quash that order or action."
"Subject to the provisions of this Order, where a building or other land is used for a purpose of any class specified in the Schedule, the use of that building or that other land for any other purpose of the same class shall not be taken to involve development of the land."
Class A1 of the Use Classes Order provides:
"Use for all or any of the following purposes -
(a) for the retail sale of goods other than hot food".
Planning conditions
"33. Although the submissions focused on the Sevenoaks and Hulme cases, a number of other authorities were put before me, including some that were not considered in Hulme's case, and which Mr Lockhart-Mummery said he had been informed by counsel in that case had not been cited to the court. I first summarise my understanding of the effect of the authorities put before me on the construction of a planning permission (and of the conditions in it): -
(1) As a general rule a planning permission is to be construed within the four corners of the consent itself, ie including the conditions in it and the express reasons for those conditions, unless another document is incorporated by reference or it is necessary to resolve an ambiguity in the permission or condition: R v Ashford DC, ex p Shepway DC [1998] PLCR 12 at 19 (Keene J); Carter Commercial Developments v Secretary of State [2002] EWCA Civ 1994 at [13] and [27] (Buxton and Arden LJJ); Sevenoaks DC v First Secretary of State [2004] EWHC 771 (Admin) at [24] and [38](Sullivan J); R (Bleaklow Industries) v Secretary of State for Communities and Local Government [2009] EWCA Civ 206 at [27] (Keene LJ); R (Midcounties Co-operative Limited) v Wyre Forest DC [2010] EWCA Civ 841 at [10] (Laws LJ).
(2) The reason for the strict approach to the use of extrinsic material is that a planning permission is a public document which runs with the land. Save where it is clear on its face that it does not purport to be complete and self-contained, it should be capable of being relied on by later landowners and members of the public reading it who may not have access to extrinsic material: Slough Estates v Slough Borough Council [1971] AC 958 at 962 (Lord Reid); Carter Commercial Developments v Secretary of State at [28] (Arden LJ); R (Bleaklow Industries) v Secretary of State for Communities and Local Government [2009] EWCA Civ 206 at [27] (Keene LJ); Barnet v Secretary of State [2009] EWCA Civ 476 at [16] - [21] (Keene LJ, approving Sullivan J at first instance); R (Midcounties Co-operative Limited) v Wyre Forest DC [2010] EWCA Civ 841 at [10] (Laws LJ).
(3) It follows from (2) that in construing a planning permission: -
A. The question is not what the parties intended but what a reasonable reader would understand was permitted by the local planning authority, and
B. Conditions must be clearly and expressly imposed, so that they are plain for all to read.
As well as the cases cited at (2), see Sevenoaks DC v First Secretary of State [2004] EWHC 771 (Admin) at [38] and [45] (Sullivan J).
(4) Conditions should be interpreted benevolently and not narrowly or strictly (See Carter Commercial Development Ltd v Secretary of State for the Environment [2002] EWHC 1200 (Admin) at [49], per Sullivan J) and given a common-sense meaning: see Northampton BC v First Secretary of State [2005] EWHC 168 (Admin) at [22](Sullivan J).
(5) A condition will be void for uncertainty only 'if it can be given no meaning or no sensible or ascertainable meaning, and not merely because it is ambiguous or leads to absurd results': Fawcett Properties v Buckingham County Council [1961] AC 636, 678 per Lord Denning. In Hulme's case Elias LJ stated this was an application of the benevolent construction principle.
(6) If there is ambiguity in a condition it has to be resolved in a common sense way, having regard to the underlying planning purpose for it as evidenced by the reasons given for its imposition: Sevenoaks DC v First Secretary of State [2004] EWHC 771 (Admin) per Sullivan J at [38] accepting the submission at [34].
(7) There is no room for an implied condition in a planning permission. This principle was enunciated in Trustees of Walton on Thames Charities v Walton and Weighbridge District Council (1970) 21 P & C R 411 at 497 (Widgery LJ), in the following terms:
'I have never heard of an implied condition in a planning permission and I believe no such creature exists. Planning permission enures for the benefit of the land. It is not simply a matter of contract between the parties. There is no place, in my judgment, within the law relating to planning permission for an implied condition. Conditions should be express, they should be clear, they should be in the document containing the permission.'.
This principle also precludes implying an obligation by way of an addition to an existing condition: Sevenoaks DC v First Secretary of State [2004] EWHC 771 (Admin) at [45] (Sullivan J).
(8) Where planning permission containing conditions has been granted in a decision by an Inspector allowing an appeal, and a condition is ambiguous, it is possible to construe it in the context of the decision letter as a whole: Hulme case at [13(a)]. Doing this does not involve impermissible 'implication' from an extrinsic source, but is best described as a question of 'construction': Hulme's case at [37]. In Hulme's case, Elias LJ stated at (at [37]) that even 'if it can be described as an implied condition it is very different in nature from that envisaged in the Trustees of Walton case.'
(9) In the context of what suffices to exclude the operation of the UCO: -
A. A grant of planning permission for a stated use is a grant of permission only for that use, but could not, in itself, be sufficient to exclude the operation of the UCO because if it did the operation of the UCO would be curtailed in a way which could not have been intended: Dunoon Developments Limited v Secretary of State for the Environment [1992] JPL 936 at 107 (Sir Donald Nicholls V-C).
B. In general, to exclude the operation of the UCO, it is necessary for the local planning authority to do so by the imposition of a condition in unequivocal terms: Carpet Décor (Guildford) Ltd v Secretary of State for the Environment [1981] JPL 806 at 808 (Sir Douglas Frank QC)."
The Claimant's Challenge
Ground 1: Whether the inspector erred in her construction of Condition (3) and her conclusion that it excluded rights under the Use Classes Order (as amended), so that the Retail Park could not be used for unrestricted Class A1 use?
"As a general principle, where a local planning authority intend to exclude the operation of the Use Classes Order or the General Development Order, they shall say so by an imposition of a condition in unequivocal terms, for in the absence of such a condition it must be assumed that those orders will have effect by operation of law."
"... shall be limited to the display, sale and storage of new and used cars... that no heavy repairs, panel beating, cellulosing, crash vehicle repairs or lorry repairs shall be carried on and that no machine tools or noisy plant and equipment shall be installed in these buildings."
"Of course, it turned on the construction of the first condition and the effect of the word 'limited' in its context...
The terms of the condition do not exclude the operation of the General Development Order in this case. First, one should point out that the words used in condition 1 are clearly less emphatic than those used in the City of London case. Secondly, the appearance of the word 'limited' in its context is not conclusive against the operation of a General Development Order...
In other words, 'limited' ... is not addressed to the question of whether the planning permission should be excluded from the General Development Order of 1988 or [included] any statutory order at all. The purpose of the General Development Order was to give a general planning consent unless such consent was specifically excluded by the words of the condition."
The Vice Chancellor stated:
"Condition 1 delimited or circumscribed the ambit of the permitted use. The condition was not apt to achieve more. It was not apt to achieve more because it is not fairly apparent from the language of the condition, or the document read as a whole, that condition 1 was intended do more than this. If the condition fairly read its purpose was, but was only, to define the ambit of the condition granted. There was not explicit or implicit an intention to negative development pursuant to any existing or future Use Classes Order or General Development Order."
"The words 'for no other use' are clear. They have no sensibly discernible purpose than to prevent some other use which might otherwise be permissible without planning permission. The Use Classes Order is an obvious source of such a permission. I am satisfied that those words meet the test of being sufficiently clear for the exclusion of the Use Classes Order in relation to the free stance in question. The test is set out in Dunoon Developments."
"47. Thus a reasonable developer having this condition in his hand and saying to himself, 'What will I be able to do without risking some prosecution?' would, in my judgment, be able confidently to say to himself, 'I cannot open this store without first having prevented the site for which the permission is given from flooding; secondly, having ensured that the flood risk affecting that site is reduced to such a level that it will permit the development on that site in a way that there is no risk of unacceptable flooding; and thirdly, having ensured that I am not going to cause flooding elsewhere.' That is, in my judgment, the ordinary, natural meaning of the clause. It was correctly so identified by the judge."
Discussion
Ground two: Whether the First Defendant breached his duty to act consistently in the discharge of his planning functions by allowing the inspectorate to reach diametrically opposed conclusions on the same legal issue, and in effect, simultaneously?
"Unit 6, hereby approved, shall only be used for the sale of bulky goods, such as DIY articles, garden materials and goods, building and decorating materials and related equipment.
The reason for its imposition was:
"To enable the local planning authority to retain adequate control over the proposed use."
"... taken together, put simply, the condition and its reason seek to restrict sales to only bulky goods and to retain adequate control over the use and no more than that. The condition does not explicitly refer to the Use Classes Order. Acknowledging that it does not necessarily have to, its language does not implicitly exclude the operation of the Use Classes Order either. Condition (3)1 does not do what the council argues. On its face it only defines the ambit of the permission granted."
"...while each case needs to be judged on its merits, the parameters for considering such cases have already been established by the courts. All of this information was with the Council when the application was determined. This was clearly a case which should not have needed to come to appeal."
Legal framework
"One important reason why previous decisions are capable of being material is that like cases should be decided in a like manner so that there is consistency in the appellate process. Consistency is self-evidently important to both developers and development control authorities. But it is also important for the purpose of securing public confidence in the operation of the development control system. I do not suggest, and it would be wrong to do so, that like cases must be decided alike. An inspector must always exercise his own judgment. He is, therefore, free, upon consideration, to disagree with the judgment of another, but before doing so he ought to have regard to the importance of consistency and to give reasons for the departure from the previous decision."
Discussion