[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Cotswold District Council v Secretary of State for Communities And Local Government & Anor [2013] EWHC 3719 (Admin) (27 November 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2013/3719.html Cite as: [2013] EWHC 3719 (Admin) |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
CO/3626/2013 CO/7880/2013 |
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT BIRMINGHAM
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
____________________
Cotswold District Council |
Applicant |
|
- and - |
||
Secretary of State for Communities and Local Government Fay and Son Limited And Between: |
First Respondent Second Respondent |
|
Cotswold District Council |
Applicant |
|
- and - |
||
Secretary of State for Communities and Local Government Hannick Homes and Development Limited And Between: The Queen on the application of Cotswold District Council - and- |
First Respondent Second Respondent Claimant |
|
Secretary of State for Communities and Local Government Hannick Homes and Development Limited |
Defendant Interested Party |
____________________
Mr R Kimblin (instructed by The Treasury Solicitor) for the Secretary of State (First Defendant) (in all cases)
Miss M Cook (instructed by Coffin Mew LLP) for the Second Defendant in the first case
Mr Peter Goatley (instructed by Davies & Partners) for the Second Defendant in the second case
Hearing dates: 6th & 7th November 2013
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Lewis :
THE PLANNING FRAMEWORK
The Legislation
"(2) In dealing with such an application the authority shall have regard to
(a) the provisions of the development plan, so far as material to the application,
(b) any local finance considerations, so far as material to the application, and
(c) any other material considerations."
"(6) If regard is to be had to the development plan for the purpose of any determination to be made under the planning Acts the determination must be made in accordance with the plan unless material considerations indicate otherwise".
"To boost significantly the supply of housing, local planning authorities should:
- use their evidence base to ensure that their Local Plan meets the full, objectively assessed needs for market and affordable housing in the housing market area, as far as is consistent with the policies set out in this Framework, including identifying key sites which are critical to the delivery of the housing strategy over the plan period;
- identify and update annually a supply of specific deliverable sites sufficient to provide five years worth of housing against their housing requirements with an additional buffer of 5% (moved forward from later in the plan period) to ensure choice and competition in the market for land. Where there has been a record of persistent under delivery of housing, local planning authorities should increase the buffer to 20% (moved forward from later in the plan period) to provide a realistic prospect of achieving the planned supply and to ensure choice and competition in the market for land;
- identify a supply of specific, developable sites or broad locations for growth, for years 6-10 and, where possible, for years 11-15;
- for market and affordable housing, illustrate the expected rate of housing delivery through a housing trajectory for the plan period and set out a housing implementation strategy for the full range of housing describing how they will maintain delivery of a five-year supply of housing land to meet their housing target; and
- set out their own approach to housing density to reflect local circumstances."
"Housing applications should be considered in the context of the presumption in favour of sustainable development. Relevant policies for the supply of housing should not be considered up-to-date if the local planning authority cannot demonstrate a five-year supply of deliverable housing sites."
"Great weight should be given to conserving landscape and scenic beauty in National Parks, the Broads and Areas of Outstanding Natural Beauty, which have the highest status of protection in relation to landscape and scenic beauty. The conservation of wildlife and cultural heritage are important considerations in all these areas, and should be given great weight in National Parks and the Broads."
"Planning permission should be refused for major developments in these designated areas except in exceptional circumstances and where it can be demonstrated they are in the public interest. Consideration of such applications should include an assessment of:
- the need for the development, including in terms of any national considerations, and the impact of permitting it, or refusing it, upon the local economy;
- the cost of, and scope for developing elsewhere outside the designated area, or meeting the need for it in some other way; and
- any detrimental effect on the environment, the landscape and recreational opportunities, and the extent to which that could be moderated. "
THE FACTS
"The proposed development would fundamentally conflict with adopted Development Plan policies aimed at restricting residential development on land which, like the appeal site, lies outside any settlement boundary and inside an AONB. However, Paragraph 49 of the National Planning Policy Framework states that relevant policies for the supply of housing should not be considered up-to-date if the local planning authority cannot demonstrate a five-year supply of deliverable housing sites. This involves firstly establishing the housing requirement for the next five years, and then going on to assess whether sufficient deliverable sites are available to meet that need."
"14.15 Nevertheless, for the purpose of reporting on this appeal, I am obliged to arrive at a conclusion on the Council's current ability to demonstrate a five year supply of housing land. For the reasons set out above I hold the housing requirement figure contained in the Structure Plan to be so out of date as to be unfit for that purpose, and while I recognise the local GCC projections will have a valuable role to play as part of the overall evidence base for the district's emerging Local Plan, I consider that it would be premature to rely upon them at this early stage in that process.
14.16 I conclude that the District's five year housing requirement figure is likely to lie somewhere between the 2,022 dwellings derived from draft RSSW Proposed Changes, and the 3,199 dwellings derived from the most recently published DCLG national household projections. Since I have insufficient evidence to inform any attempt at assessing whereabouts within that range the actual requirement might lie, I will use the figure at the lowest end of the spectrum.
14.17 I need to make it absolutely clear that this conclusion should not be confused with an endorsement of that figure as representing the objectively assessed housing need for the district. My decision to use the draft RSSW figure is made on the premise that if a five year housing supply cannot even be demonstrated against the lowest credible housing requirement, then it clearly does not exist. That is the same premise that informed my findings in the Moreton in Marsh appeal: the Council was unable to demonstrate a five year supply against the Structure Plan housing requirement, and since the evidence of the more recently published projections suggested that the housing requirement was likely to increase rather than decrease, that could only worsen the shortfall in housing provision.
14.18 I can understand local residents' frustration with the amount of time taken up at the inquiry (and consequently in this report) in dealing with complex considerations of housing supply. The approach I am here obliged to adopt is a product of the wholly unsatisfactory circumstances that arise when a local planning authority fails to keep its Development Plan up to date, such that its housing requirement must instead be deduced from the best of the evidence made available to the decision maker."
"14.19 Before moving on to consider housing supply, it is necessary to have regard to the second bullet point at paragraph 47 of the Framework. This explains that local planning authorities should not only be able to identify sufficient sites to provide five years worth of housing against their housing requirements, but also an additional buffer of 5%, to ensure choice and competition in the market for land. It goes on to state that where there has been a record of persistant under delivery of housing, this buffer should be increased to 20%.
14.20 "Persistent under delivery" is not further defined in the Framework, or elsewhere. In an appeal decision concerning Sellars Farm in Stroud, the Inspector held that completions over the past five years were the most relevant to a consideration of the Council's delivery record. On the basis that the Framework requires the assessment of future housing delivery to look forward five years, looking back five years to assess the record of past delivery, seems to me a reasonable approach. The Inspector in that case concluded that a total shortfall of around 360 dwellings, during a period affected by recession, did not amount to a record of persistent under delivery. I note CDC's contention that it has a better performance record than that, in terms of its shortfall over the past five years.
14.21 My attention was also drawn to an appeal decision at Siddington, of particular relevance since it is within the Cotswold District. The Inspector noted that there was under delivery in 7 out of the last 10 years, with an identified shortfall of 89 dwellings over the period 1991-2012; and that in terms of housing completions, the target has not been met for eight out of the past ten years. She went on to state that the difficulties with housing delivery in the District have extended to the period well before the current economic downturn, and that on two measures looking back over the past 10 years, the Council's record is one of under delivery. The Council has not here put forward any evidence that contradicts those findings, and I have no reason to doubt their accuracy.
14.22 Turning to the evidence presented in this current case, the Council and the appellant have both adopted the approach of measuring past completions against the annualised Structure Plan requirement. Last year saw 538 housing completions, which provided some compensation for the fact that in each of the four preceding years delivery had fallen short of the requirement. It was short by a very wide margin in 2009/2010, which saw only 177 completions. Since the Structure Plan requirement is itself an average annual target, I consider it reasonable to allow for some fluctuations above and below that figure, by looking at the average annual completions over the last five years. On that basis the Council's completions rate, at 291 dwellings per year, also falls short of its own housing requirement.
14.23 A further consideration is that it would not be fair, in the context of assessing the Council's record of delivering housing, simply to ignore the fact that delivery here is being measured against a housing requirement that was artificially low; being based (as I have discussed at length above) on projections that were out of date. That being the case, the resulting shortfall in housing delivery will in real terms have been considerably greater than that calculated by measuring completions against the Structure Plan requirement.
14.24 Taking all of this into account, I conclude that there has been persistent under-delivery of housing in the Cotswold district, and so an additional buffer of 20% should be added. This increases the five year housing requirement figure derived from the draft RSSW to 2,426 dwellings over the next five years."
"While I consider that the proposed development would not harm the setting of the historic town of Tetbury, I find that it would detract from the significance of Highfield Farmhouse, a designated heritage asset. It would also harm the AONB through replacing open fields with built development, thereby resulting in the loss of some of the natural beauty of the landscape. But importantly, in terms of the harm that would be caused to the AONB, I have not been provided with any evidence to suggest that there is anything other than very limited scope indeed to provide housing within the District on sites that are not part of the AONB. Moreover, there is a clear and pressing need for more housing; locally, in terms of the severe shortfall that currently exists in the Cotswold District, and nationally, in terms of the need to get the economy growing. In my view, these amount to exceptional circumstances, where permitting the proposed development can reasonably be considered to meet the wider "public interest", in the terms of the framework."
"104. A residual requirement left over from the structure period demonstrates that the lesser figure of 307.5 which took on board the principle of exporting housing need was not met, albeit the annual average delivery over the last four years was 312. That figure has been distorted by an exceptional delivery of 538 completions in 2011/2012 notwithstanding the economic downturn but in 2008/2009 the number of completions was 303. Following the general approach of the Inspector in the Sellars Farm case, I would be reluctant in the circumstances to conclude persistent under-delivery on those most recent figures, bearing in mind those economic difficulties. Moreover, while I note from the council's housing trajectory that although there were only 209 completions in 2007/2008, the equivalent figure for 2006/07 was 316 and in that year the monitoring of the trajectory indicated 8.5 dwellings above the cumulative requirement to have been achieved. Excluding the most recent and exceptional delivery figure, the annual average for the period would be 247 completions per annum (1,235 dwellings over 5 years). However, the council's 5 year supply calculation in CD 11 and the evidence of Mr Lewis, at paragraph 2.20, indicates that over the structure plan period as a whole (1991-2011) the accumulated shortfall would be only 89 dwellings.
105. In considering whether there has been a record of persistent under delivery, it seems to me appropriate to consider adopted policy applying at the time (i.e. the structure plan requirement up to 2011), rather than speculations about future policy requirements, and to consider also the broader outcome rather than to focus on particular years where the annualised requirement has either not been met or has been exceeded. It seems to me that, notwithstanding the recent economic difficulties, the overall delivery has been sufficiently close to the structure plan requirement to avoid categorisation as a record of persistent under-delivery, as the appellant would have me conclude. The Council's Residential Land Monitoring Statistics (CD12) show graphically the degree of annual fluctuation over the long run. I am not persuaded that it is necessary to apply the 20% buffer that the Framework requires in circumstances of persistent under-delivery.
106. That conclusion, however, is based on a policy requirement that should, for the reasons I have given, now be regarded as defunct. I am not persuaded that the past is a reliable guide to the future. In the absence of a definitive current policy requirement, figure based on projected needs are more pertinent. It is clear that some of the projection bases used in the discussions on this matter would result in very significant shortfalls against the requirement to demonstrate a five year supply of deliverable sites and therefore the overall policy requirement in the context of objectively assessed needs must be resolved at the earliest opportunity if repeated disagreements at appeals over which figures to use are to be avoided."
"56. In summary, I consider that in the continued absence of any more recent Development Plan document setting out an updated figure, the housing requirement contained in the Structure Plan here remains, as it did in the Moreton in Marsh appeal, a useful starting point for considering the district's housing supply position. But it is not reasonable to rely on that requirement alone, updated solely to incorporate previous shortfall in provision. As explained in the Framework, in its predecessor PPS 3, and in my report on the Moreton in Marsh appeal, it is necessary also to take account of up-to-date evidence provided by recent forecasts and projections. The evidence of all of the more recent forecasts and projections suggests that the districts housing requirement is higher than that derived by projecting forward the Structure Plan requirement. When assessed against the requirement figures derived from each of these more recent projections, the Council does not have a sufficient supply of sites to provide five years worth of housing.
57. I therefore conclude that it was unreasonable for the Council to maintain that it could demonstrate a five year supply of deliverable housing sites. "
"The choice of one figure rather than another by the Cotswold District Council is not so much "defiance" of the Secretary of State as recognition that, at present, there is no figure being imposed pending the Council's resolution of an adequately tested policy figure upon which to base the necessary calculation of five year supply. Councils have the facility to decide for themselves, albeit on the expectation of deploying a defensible basis. Using the structure plan as a starting point is not wholly indefensible, notwithstanding the recent appeal decisions, and I have therefore concluded that it is misguided rather than inherently unreasonable. I am not obliged to follow other Inspectors if the evidence is sufficiently persuasive not to, but in this case it was not."
"45. In view of all the above considerations, the circumstances of the appeal and having regard to the intentions of the Circular taken as a whole, I consider the balance to be marginally in favour, on this occasion, of the council's conduct in relation to this matter in these appeal proceedings being considered not unreasonable in the sense intended by the advice contained within it.
46. For the above reasons, I consider that unreasonable behaviour resulting in unnecessary expense, as described in Circular 03/2009, has not been demonstrated and I therefore conclude that an award of costs is not justified."
THE ISSUES
(1) Did the inspector, and therefore the Secretary of State, misconstrue paragraph 47 of the Framework and, in particular the meaning of "persistent under delivery of housing " in the Highfields and Berrells Road appeals?
(2) Did the Secretary of State in reaching his decisions in the Highfield and the Berrells Road appeals, fail to have regard to a material consideration, namely the reasoning of the inspector in the Kemble appeal?
(3) Did the Secretary of State err (a) in failing to have regard to the letter from the Chief Planning Officer dated 6 July 2012 which indicated that local planning authorities were entitled to use what was decribed as "option 1" figures or (b) in his approach to footnote 11 to the Framework in the assessment of deliverable sites or (c) in disregarding Local Plan Policy 19 or (d), in relation to Highfield, in his interpretation or application of paragraph 116 of the Framework?
(4) Was the decision of the Secretary of State to accept the recommendation of the inspector to make a partial award of costs in the Berrells Road appeal irrational?
(5) Did the Secretary of State in reaching his decision to make a partial award of costs in Berrells Road appeal, fail to have regard to a material consideration, namely the decision of the inspector on costs in the Kemble appeal?
DISCUSSION
The Proper Interpretation of Paragraph 47 of the Framework
"….. policy statements should be interpreted objectively in accordance with the language used, read as always in its proper context".
"That is not to say that such statements should be construed as if they were statutory or contractual provisions. Although a development plan has a legal status and legal effects, it is not analogous in its nature or purpose to a statute or a contract. As has often been observed, development plans are full of broad statements of policy, many of which may be mutually irreconcilable, so that in a particular case one must give way to another. In addition, many of the provisions of development plans are framed in language whose application to a given set of facts requires the exercise of judgment. Such matters fall within the jurisdiction of planning authorities, and their exercise of their judgment can only be challenged on the ground that it is irrational or perverse ( Tesco Stores Ltd v Secretary of State for the Environment [1995] 1 WLR 759 , 780 per Lord Hoffmann). Nevertheless, planning authorities do not live in the world of Humpty Dumpty: they cannot make the development plan mean whatever they would like it to mean."
"13.25 As to whether or not the difficulties of delivering housing during a period of recession should have any bearing on assessing whether a 20% buffer is needed, the appellant rightly points out that "economic circumstances" form no part of national policy, as set out in paragraph 47 of the framework. Similarly, while Councils have a responsibility to ensure that there is a sufficient supply of deliverable sites available, they have little control over actual delivery of the housing for which they have granted planning permission. It may therefore be perceived as somewhat unfair to require a 20% buffer in circumstances where a Council has done all it can to provide sufficient deliverable sites, and the under-delivery of housing in its area is demonstrably due to the state of the market, rather than an inadequate land supply.
13.26 Be that as it may, my interpretation of the evidence provided in the current case is that it provides a strong indication, for the reasons set out above, that there has been persistent under-delivery of housing in the Cotswold district. An additional buffer of 20% should therefore be added. This increases the five year housing requirement figure derived from the draft RSSW to 2,426 dwellings over the next five years."
The Duty to Have Regard to Material Considerations
"matters so obviously material to a decision on a particular project that any thing short of direct consideration of them by the ministers … would not be in accordance with the Act."
"26. It is quite correct that the Matalan decision, if it had been brought to the inspector's attention, would have been a relevant consideration. It did not create any kind of binding precendent, but nevertheless the inspector would have taken it into account if he had known about it. The fatal flaw in this limb of the claimant's case, however, is that the Matalan decision was not drawn to the inspector's attention until after he had given his own decision. As a general principle a decision-maker does not err in law if he fails to take into account relevant matters which are not drawn to his attention and of which he is unaware. There is abundant authority for the proposition that a planning inspector's duty to take into account relevant decisions of his colleagues only extends to decisions drawn to his attention: see Rockhold ltd v Secretary of State for the Environment [1986] JPL 130 at 131; Barnet Meeting Room Trust v SOSE [1990] 3 PLR 21 at 28A to B; North Wiltshire DC v SOSE [1992] JPL 955 at 960; R v SOSE, Chiltern DC, ex parte David Baber [1996] JPL 1034 at 1037 to 1038, and 1040.
27. In my view the earlier decision of Hollis v Secretary of State for the Environment [1982] P&CR 351, upon which Mr Kolinsky relies, does not support the opposite conclusion. Mr Kolinsky submitted that the duty of planning officers to be consistent with one another was an onerous one. Accordingly it was their duty to take into account relevant decisions of colleagues, whether or not such decisions were cited in argument. This duty could be performed by carrying out a computer check of the database of all inspectors' decisions.
28. To my mind this is an unsound argument. It flies in the face of both principle and authority, as previously mentioned. Furthermore, if correct, the proposition of law advanced by Mr Kolinsky would impose a wholly intolerable burden upon the planning inspectorate. It should be borne in mind that there are some 400 planning inspectors, all engaged upon producing decisions. It is the duty of an inspector to decide cases, not to carry out extensive research on behalf of the parties."
That general approach is also reflected in the decision of London Borough of Hounslow v Secretary of State for Communities and Local Government and Kapoor [2009] EWHC 1055 at paragraph 18.
The Other Challenges to the Highfield and Berrells Road Decisions.
"there is a clear and pressing need for more housing; locally in terms of the severe shortfall that currently exists in the Cotswold District … and, nationally, in terms of the need to get the economy growing… In my view, these amount to exceptional circumstances, where permitting the proposed development can reasonably be considered to meet the wider "public interest", in the terms of the Framework.
The Costs Decision
Conclusion