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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> New Dawn Homes Ltd v Secretary of State for Communities and Local Government [2016] EWHC 3314 (Admin) (20 December 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2016/3314.html Cite as: [2016] EWHC 3314 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
B e f o r e :
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NEW DAWN HOMES LIMITED |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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SECRETARY OF STATE FOR COMMUNITIES AND LOCAL GOVERNMENT |
First Defendant |
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NED WESTAWAY (instructed by Government Legal Department) for the Defendants
Hearing date: 6 December 2016
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Holgate :
Introduction
The grounds of challenge
Ground 1
On a true interpretation policy HOU13 does not provide for the aggregation of areas of land for development when applying the threshold for the provision of affordable housing and therefore the Inspector erred in law by treating each of the two development areas as forming part of a larger site.
Ground 2
If on a true interpretation policy HOU13 does allow the affordable housing threshold to be applied to aggregated areas of land, it only allows this to be done prospectively and not retrospectively. In other words, aggregation is only possible in relation to areas where a residential planning permission has yet to be granted. It does not allow the aggregation of land with other land on which a planning permission for residential development has already been granted.
General legal principles governing a challenge under section 288
The parties' cases in the planning appeal and the Inspector's decision
"7. The appellant argues that the two sites on which dwellings are being constructed should not be considered a larger whole for the purposes of seeking contributions towards affordable housing. In order to determine whether two sites are part of a larger whole for the purposes of the provision of affordable housing, my attention has been drawn to the High Court Judgment in respect of Westminster City Council v FSS and Branlord which suggested three ways in which a conclusion might be reached on the matter: whether they are in single ownership; whether they constitute a single site for planning purposes; and whether the proposals can be deemed to constitute a single development. I have attributed considerable weight to this approach in my consideration of the appeal before me.
8. In respect of the first point, whilst the majority of the two sites and the King's Head Inn are in single ownership, the appellant argues that the access point to the appeal site is in different ownership and therefore is an important consideration of whether the application proposal is part of a larger whole. However, in my experience, it is not uncommon for small parts of larger sits to fall under different ownership. I do not agree that the separate ownership of a relatively small area of land would, by itself, render the whole of the appeal site to fall in separate ownership to the King's Head Inn and the site to the north east for the purposes of the Branlord test. When viewed as a whole, the vast majority of the three sites are all in the same ownership.
9. With regard to the second point, the two housing sites and the King's Head Inn are physically independent of each other and they have their own access points. However, the two housing sites previously formed part of the car parking and amenity area for the public house. It is not in dispute that it was a single unit at the time. Therefore, I consider that they do form a single site for the purposes of planning, albeit it is split into three separate elements.
10. Turning to the third and final point, I note the appellant's contention that the two housing sites and the King's Head Inn site have their own accesses and are independent of each other with the two housing sites capable of being developed entirely separately from each other. However, when taking into account the dwellings on both sites would be of a very similar design and layout and are within close proximity of each other, albeit separated by the public house, they would be read as the same overall development of the King's Head Inn site. Furthermore, I noted during my site visit that the two sites are being constructed simultaneously and within the same building site perimeter with a single access point. Whilst my decision does not turn on this point, it does add weight to my findings that the two sites should be considered as part of a larger whole.
11. I accept that the two sites are windfall sites. However, I find that they are the subdivision of a larger site. Whether or not the overall King's Head Inn site was an allocated site, its boundaries can be simply defined. In addition, in my experience, it is not uncommon for allocated sites to have multiple access points, a factor which by itself is not determinative in considering it as a single site."
The Brandlord case
"I do not see that either should be viewed as providing a ready means of undermining the affordable housing policy."
The Court made no criticism of the Inspector's decision to use the three criteria upon which he based his decision, nor did it say that those three criteria were mandatory, or that there might not be other relevant criteria according to the circumstances of the case.
R (Orbital Shopping Park Swindon Ltd) v Swindon Borough Council
Whether aggregation needs to be dealt with in a development plan
Ground 1
"POLICY HOU13
THE OVERALL BOROUGH-WIDE TARGET FOR THE PROVISION OF AFFORDABLE DWELLINGS DURING THE PLAN PERIOD IS ABOUT 1320 DWELLINGS TO BE DELIVERED THROUGH THE LOCAL PLAN. THIS WILL BE SOUGHT WITHIN THE FRAMEWORK SET BY NATIONAL PLANNING POLICY GUIDANCE, GOVERNMENT CIRCULARS AND OTHER ADVICE.
THE BOROUGH COUNCIL WILL SEEK TO NEGOTIATE WITH DEVELOPERS ON ALLOCATED AND UNALLOCATED HOUSING SITES TO PROVIDE LOW COST MARKET AND/OR SUBSIDISED HOUSING THAT WILL BE AVAILABLE TO HOUSEHOLDS WHO CANNOT AFFORD TO RENT OR BUY HOUSES AVAILABLE IN THE EXISTING HOUSING MARKET.
IN ORDER TO ADDRESS THE DEMONSTRATED LACK OF AFFORDABLE HOUSING ACROSS THE BOROUGH, THE BOROUGH COUNCIL WILL SEEK TO NEGOTIATE WITH DEVELOPERS FOR THE PROVISION OF AN ELEMENT OF AFFORDABLE HOUSING ON SITES OF 15 OR MORE DWELLINGS OR ON SITES IN EXCESS OF 0.5 HECTARE. WITHIN SETTLEMENTS WITH A POPULATION OF 3,000 OR FEWER, THE THRESHOLD WILL BE DWELLINGS.
Reasoned Justification
The Tewkesbury Borough Housing Needs Survey (ORS 1998) identified a shortfall of social housing within the Borough of 551 dwellings 1998-2003. This figure was projected forward to arrive at a total of 1322 dwellings 1998-2011. The requirement for social housing is only one component of overall housing market requirements identified by the Housing Needs Survey. As the Local Plan will not provide sufficient affordable housing to meet needs during the plan period, in order to be realistic in terms of likely provision during the plan period, the requirement for social housing figure is used as a proxy for total affordable need. More updated information on affordable housing needs provided in the Ark Report (2000) confirmed that this target was reasonable.
Registered Social Landlords (RSLs) have a vital role in the delivery and management of affordable housing, although the Council as housing authority will also seek to harness the potential of other modes of delivery, as appropriate and through the use of targeted programmes. Where RSLs are not involved, planning decisions for affordable housing would need to include arrangements to control occupancy in accordance with advice set out in paragraph 12 of Circular 6/98. Housing requirements will vary across the Borough in relation to the operation of local housing markets and certain areas are influenced by the close proximity of Gloucester and Cheltenham and hope values. In all cases sites will be assessed in relation to the Housing Needs Survey, updated as appropriate by local surveys and other relevant information. Existing housing market partnership initiatives will be fostered and developed, so that the assessment and delivery of affordable housing in market areas, especially where they straddle administrative boundaries, will be more effective.
Affordable housing is defined in terms of the relationship between housing costs and household incomes rather than by specified tenures, and is housing that is provided at a cost which would be accessible to those households identified as being in housing need and currently excludeD from participating in the market because of their lack of resources. It can be provided as both housing for rent and as low cost home ownership (either as shared ownership, other forms of low cost home ownership, or low cost market housing for sale). Within the context of the local housing market in the Borough, affordable housing is defined as representing a home ownership at a price for a two bedroom property, equivalent to 2.5 times average household income in Gloucestershire for: (a) household comprising 1 full-time skilled manual worker and 1 part-time semi-skilled manual worker or, (b) a rent level equal to or less than the Housing Corporation rent cap. The appropriateness of the affordability definition will be kept under review; if necessary the Council will seek to bring forward an updated formula, either by means of Supplementary Planning Guidance or as part of a formal review of the Plan.
The guiding criteria for negotiations on the provision of affordable housing are set out in paragraph 10 of the Circular 6/98. Affordable housing will normally be subsidised to meet these affordability criteria. Where affordable housing needs can more effectively be met elsewhere other than on the potential development site under consideration (either on an alternative site or within a nearby settlement perhaps with a better range of facilities), then, exceptionally, the Borough Council may be prepared to negotiate ways of securing alternative provision elsewhere. There will also be other potential sources of supply that may help to meet the need for affordable dwellings, for example, making the best use of existing stock and/or conversions of existing buildings. The Housing Strategy Statement, combined with regular monitoring, has an important role to play in the overall approach to the provision of affordable housing. The Borough Council will seek to ensure that designs and layouts seamlessly integrate affordable housing and general market housing on sites.
In terms of the appropriate size threshold for windfall sites above which affordable housing contributions will be negotiated, Circular 6/98 advises schemes of 25 or more dwellings, or sites of 1 hectare or more. A lower threshold may be appropriate where local exceptional constraints can be justified, provided it is not less than 15 dwellings or 0.5 hectare. Within those settlements in rural areas with populations of 3000 or fewer, the local planning authority should adopt appropriate thresholds. Given the small number of large windfall sites which come forward in either the bigger parishes or those of less than 3000 population (a figure which is likely to further diminish as a consequence of the policies of this local plan), a relatively low threshold is appropriate in order to address part of the shortfall of identified housing needs particularly in those parts of the Borough where there is little scope for securing affordable accommodation by any other means. For this reason, the policy refers to a threshold of 15 dwellings, and 5 dwellings within smaller settlements. In all cases sites will be assessed against the detailed findings of the Housing Needs Survey, updated as appropriate by the Ark Report, local surveys and other relevant information.
An application for planning permission for development which forms part of a more substantial potential development on the same land or adjoining land, will be treated as an application for planning permission for the more substantial development. In respect of high-density specialist housing, neither the local plan policy nor government advice exempts specialist sheltered housing from affordable housing requirements. The Borough Council will consider the level of need for such housing in the area, and whether the proposed units will be affordable in terms of the definition of affordability. Further guidance will be contained in the proposed affordable housing SPG." (emphasis added)
"Policy HOU13 of the Tewkesbury Borough Local Plan to 2011 (the 'Local Plan') requires that for development in villages with a population of less than 3000 the threshold for affordable housing provision is five dwellings. The explanatory text to this policy states that an application for planning permission which forms part of a more substantial potential development on the same land or adjoining land will be treated as an application for planning permission for the more substantial development. I note the appellant's contention that this section of the explanatory text introduces a new policy provision. However, I do not agree with this view as it merely provides clarification that such sites will be considered as a more substantial development, which is also further expanded upon in the Tewkesbury Borough Council Affordable Housing Supplementary Planning Guidance (SPG). The requirement for affordable housing for development of more than five dwellings is clearly set out in the policy wording itself. Whilst Policy SD13 of the emerging Cheltenham Gloucester Tewkesbury Joint Core Strategy (JCS) includes a similar clarification within the actual wording of the policy, this does not necessarily mean its position in the explanatory text to Policy HOU13 is incorrect."
(i) A local plan must contain a written statement of the local planning authority's detailed policies for the development and use of land in its area. It may also contain such descriptive or explanatory material as the authority thinks appropriate (section 36(2) and (6) of PCPA 2004). Regulations require a local plan to contain a "reasoned justification" for the policies in the plan which must be set out so as to be readily distinguishable from the other contents of the plan (see regulation 7 of the Town and County Planning (Development Plan) (England) Regulations 1999 – SI 1999 No. 3280);
(ii) The supporting text of the local plan consists of a reasoned justification and any descriptive or explanatory material for a policy. Whereas that text is relevant to the interpretation of the policy to which it relates, it is not itself a policy or part of a policy, it does not have the force of policy and cannot be used to trump policy (paragraph 16);
(iii) That analysis remains the same even if the local plan expressly states that the supporting text indicates how the policies of the plan will be implemented (paragraph 16);
(iv) When determining whether a proposal does or does not accord with the local plan for the purposes of section 38 (6) of PCPA 2004, the correct focus is on the policies in the plan for the development and use of land. For example, it cannot be said that a proposal which is judged to accord with the policies of the local plan, is not "in accordance with the [development] plan" because it does not comply with an additional criterion contained solely in the supporting text (paragraph 16);
(v) Explanatory text or reasoned justification cannot operate independently so as, for example, to impose a "policy requirement" that the identified policies of the local plan do not contain (paragraph 17);
(vi) Because the reasoned justification or explanatory material may be used as an aid to the interpretation of a policy, it can have the effect of altering the interpretation of what that local policy would otherwise mean if considered in isolation (paragraph 18).
Thus, the reasoned justification can affect the correct interpretation of a requirement contained in the policy, but it cannot impose an additional requirement outwith the policy itself.
Ground 2
Conclusions