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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 >> Wet Finishing Works Ltd, R (On the Application Of) v Taunton Deane Borough Council [2017] EWHC 1837 (Admin) (20 July 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2017/1837.html Cite as: [2017] WLR(D) 497, [2018] PTSR 26, [2017] EWHC 1837 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
PLANNING COURT
2 Redcliff Street Bristol BS1 6GR |
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B e f o r e :
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The Queen (on the Application of Wet Finishing Works Limited) |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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Taunton Deane Borough Council |
Defendant |
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Strongvox Homes |
Interested Party |
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Ms Jacqueline Lean (instructed by Law and Governance – Shape Partnership Services) for the Defendant
Mr Zack Simons (instructed by Ashfords LLP) for the Interested Party
Hearing date: 20th June 2017
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Singh :
Introduction
Factual Background
Material Legislation
"(1) This section applies, subject to subsection (4), to applications for planning permission for the development of land without complying with conditions subject to which a previous planning permission was granted.
(2) On such an application the local planning authority shall consider only the question of the conditions subject to which planning permission should be granted, and –
(a) if they decide that planning permission should be granted subject to conditions differing from those subject to which the previous permission was granted, or that it should be granted unconditionally, they shall grant planning permission accordingly, and
(b) if they decide that planning permission should be granted subject to the same conditions as those subject to which the previous permission was granted, they shall refuse the application. …
(4) This section does not apply if the previous planning permission was granted subject to a condition as to the time within which the development to which it related was to be begun and that time has expired without the development having been begun. … "
"(1) Any person interested in land in the area of a local planning authority may, by agreement or otherwise, enter into an obligation (referred to in this section … as 'a planning obligation'), enforceable to the extent mentioned in subsection (3) –
(a) restricting the development or use of the land in any specified way:
(b) requiring specified operations or activities to be carried out in, on, under or over the land;
(c) requiring the land to be used in any specified way; or
(d) requiring a sum or sums to be paid to the authority … on a specified date or dates or periodically. …
(3) Subject to subsection (4) a planning obligation is enforceable by the authority … -
(a) against the person entering into the obligation and
(b) against any person deriving title from that person. …
(11) A planning obligation shall be a local land charge and for the purposes of the Local Land Charges Act 1975 the authority by whom the obligation is enforceable shall be treated as the originating authority as respects such a charge. …"
"An applicant for planning permission must give requisite notice of the application to any person (other than the applicant) who on the prescribed date is an owner of the land to which the application relates …"
24. Article 15 of the Order provides that:
"(1) An application for planning permission must be publicised by the local planning authority to which the application is made in the manner prescribed by this Article. …
(2) In the case of an application for planning permission for development which - …
(b) does not accord with the provisions of the development plan in force in the area in which the land to which the application relates is situated … the application must be publicised in the manner specified in paragraph (3).
(3) An application falling within paragraph (2) … must be publicised in accordance with the requirements in paragraph (7) and by giving requisite notice –
(a) by site display in at least one place on or near the land to which the application relates for not less than 21 days; and
(b) by publication of the notice in a newspaper circulating in the locality in which the land to which the application relates is situated. …
(5) In a case to which paragraphs (2), (4) or (4A) do not apply, the application must be publicised in accordance with the requirements in paragraph (7) and by giving requisite notice –
(a) by site display in at least one place on or near the land to which the application relates for not less than 21 days; or
(b) by serving the notice on any adjoining owner or occupier. …
(7) The following information must be published on a website maintained by the local planning authority –
(a) the address or location of the proposed development;
(b) a description of the proposed development; …
(c) the date by which any representations about the application must be made, which must not be before the last day of the period of 14 days … beginning with the date on which the information was published;
(d) where and when the application may be inspected;
(e) how representations may be made about the application; …"
25. Article 20 of the Order provides that:
"(1) Paragraph (2) applies in relation to an application –
(a) Made pursuant to section 73 of the 1990 Act (determination of application to develop land without conditions previously attached); …
(2) Before granting planning permission on an application in relation to which this paragraph applies, the local planning authority must consult such authorities or persons falling within a category set out in the Table in Schedule 4 as the local planning authority consider appropriate."
It is common ground that Schedule 4 is not relevant to the present case. The Table in that Schedule sets out various public bodies which may have to be consulted under the above provision.
"(2) Each local planning register authority must keep, in two parts, a register ("the Register") of every application for planning permission relating to their area.
(3) Part 1 of the Register must contain in respect of each such application … made or sent to the local planning register authority and not finally disposed of –
(a) a copy … of the application together with any accompanying plans and drawings;
(b) a copy (which may be photographic or in electronic form) of any planning obligation … proposed or entered into in connection with the application;
(c) a copy (which may be photographic or in electronic form) of any other planning obligation … entered into in respect of the land the subject of the application which the applicant considers relevant; and
(d) particulars of any modification to any planning obligation … included in Part 1 of the Register in accordance with sub-paragraphs (b) and (c) …
(4) [This relates to what Part 2 of the Register must contain] …
(10) Subject to paragraph (11), every entry in the Register must be made within 14 days of the receipt of an application, or of the giving or making of the relevant direction, decision or approval as the case may be. …
(12) The Register must either be kept at the principal office of the local planning register authority or that part of the Register which relates to land in part of that authority's area must be kept at a place situated in or convenient to that part. …
(14) Where the Register kept by a local planning register authority under this Article is kept using electronic storage, the authority may make the Register available for inspection by the public on a website maintained by the authority for that purpose." (Emphasis added)
Procedural matters
(a) The decision was procedurally unfair because the Council did not consult the Claimant in respect of the section 106 agreement it entered into with the Interested Party on 11 November 2016 ("the First Ground");
(b) The decision was ultra vires the Defendant's powers under section 73 of the 1990 Act on the basis that there was a "fundamental alteration" from the permission it had granted on 3 April 2012 ("the Second Ground").
(1) The Claimant has had plenty of time and opportunity to consider what grounds it wished to raise. Although the initial grounds were drafted when the Claimant was acting in person, it has since had access to legal advice and it was represented by counsel at the hearing before Dingemans J.
(2) At that hearing no mention was made of any suggested statutory basis for the duty of consultation. Indeed, Ms Lean informed me that it was common ground that there was no statutory basis for such a duty. What was relied on was the common law and nothing else. See also in this regard para. 31 of the Defendant's detailed grounds of defence.
(3) Dingemans J was careful to limit the grounds on which permission was granted, after a contested permission hearing. He was clearly concerned that there should not be a more wide-ranging attack launched when a substantive hearing took place.
(4) On the face of Article 40(3)(b) it does not in truth impose a duty of consultation at all. As will be seen from the material provisions of the Order, it is Article 20 which imposes a duty of consultation – but it is common ground that that provision does not apply to this case, since it requires consultation of the public bodies which are set out in the Table in Sch. 4. At the hearing before me this necessitated further enquiries by me and further research by counsel, which eventually led to arguments based on other provisions in the Order, none of which had been foreshadowed in the Claimant's Amended Grounds or skeleton argument. This is the kind of exercise which the order made by Dingemans J was intended to avoid.
(5) The issue of interpretation raised has potentially wider implications for other cases. There is some authority on the issue in R (Police and Crime Commissioner for Leicestershire) v Blaby DC [2014] EWHC 1719 (Admin), at para. 80, where Foskett J said:
"Whilst I have had very little opportunity to give this issue mature consideration, I find it difficult to find within Article 36(3)(b) [of the DMPO 2010, whose counterpart now is Article 40(3)(b) of the DMPO 2015] an obligation that 'travelling drafts' of a section 106 agreement should be placed on the register."
I would be required to take a different view from Foskett J. I am unwilling to do so in circumstances where, again, there been little time for mature consideration and I have not had the benefit of full argument on all sides.
(6) In any event, the new argument seeks to prove too much. If correct, it would lead to a general requirement of consultation of (presumably) the public generally or at least a wider class of persons than the Claimant alone. That is not what the present case is actually about. What the Claimant in fact argues is that, in the light of the particular history and circumstances of this case, it was unfair for the Defendant to enter into a new section 106 agreement in 2016 without consulting it first. The Claimant does not need to rely on the DMPO to make that argument. That is the argument which it was granted permission to argue by Dingemans J under the heading of "procedural fairness."
The Grounds of Challenge
"Prior to the enactment of (what is now) section 73, an applicant aggrieved by the imposition of the conditions had the right to appeal against the original planning permission, but such a course enabled the local planning authority in making representations to the Secretary of State, and the Secretary of State when determining the appeal as though the application had been made to him in the first instance, to 'go back on the original decision' to grant planning permission. So the applicant might find that he had lost his planning permission altogether, even though his appeal had been confined to a complaint about a condition or conditions.
It was this problem which section 31A, now section 73, was intended to address …
While section 73 applications are commonly referred to as applications to 'amend' the conditions attached to a planning permission, a decision under section 73(2) leaves the original planning permission intact and unamended. That is so whether the decision is to grant planning permission unconditionally or subject to different conditions under paragraph (a), or to refuse the application under paragraph (b), because planning permission should be granted subject to the same conditions.
In the former case, the applicant may choose whether to implement the original planning permission or the new planning permission; in the latter case, he is still free to implement the original planning permission. Thus, it is not possible to 'go back on the original planning permission' under section 73. It remains as a baseline, whether the application under section 73 is approved or refused, in contrast to the position that previously obtained."
The Second Ground of Challenge
"It must always be a question of fact and degree whether a particular condition is such as to take away the substance of the permission, in which event that condition may be invalid. In this case, however, the development sought is the construction of an oil refinery and all else is ancillary to that purpose. Of course, if the condition had been such as to render the oil refinery unworkable that would be a different case, but the second respondents' acceptance of the condition is evidence that it certainly is not this case." (p.79).
"is able to impose different conditions upon a new planning permission, but only if they are conditions which the council could lawfully have imposed on the original planning permission in the sense that they do not amount to a fundamental alteration of the proposal put forward in the original application." (para. 33, emphasis added).
46. An insight into what Sullivan J had in mind when he referred to a "fundamental alteration" can be gained from his consideration of the facts of that case at paras. 32-33 and para. 35. In the latter paragraph he said:
"… The variation has the effect that the 'operative' part of the new planning permission gives permission for one variety superstore on the one hand, but the new planning permission by the revised conditions takes away that consent with the other."
The First Ground of Challenge
"… The starting-point is that, if a decision-maker intends to take a decision which affects a person's rights, the duty to act fairly (in earlier parlance 'natural justice') will usually be required by public law, which will imply such a duty into a statutory scheme even when none is expressly laid down: see e.g. Lloyd v McMahon [1987] AC 625, at 702-3 (Lord Bridge of Harwich)."
"It was recognised as long ago as Schmidt v Secretary of State for Home Affairs [1969] 2 Ch 149, at 171, that, even when, strictly speaking, there is no right at stake, there will be certain expectations which the law will protect, and which therefore are legitimate expectations. In Schmidt Lord Denning MR gave the example of 'a foreign alien':
'He has no right to enter this country except by leave: and, if he is given leave to come for a limited period, he has no right to stay for a day longer than the permitted time. If his permit is revoked before the time limit expires, he ought, I think, to be given an opportunity of making representations: for he would have a legitimate expectation of being allowed to stay for the permitted time.' (Emphasis in original)"
"If a licence to carry on a certain activity is revoked before the end of its term, the duty to act fairly may be implied by law."
I mentioned in the same paragraph what Lord Diplock had described as his class b(i) in Council of Civil Service Unions v Minister for the Civil Service [1985] AC 374, at 408, that is a decision which affects someone:
"by depriving him of some benefit or advantage which … he has in the past been permitted by the decision-maker to enjoy and which he can legitimately expect to be permitted to continue to do until there has been communicated to him some rational grounds for withdrawing it on which he has been given an opportunity to comment …"
Relief
Conclusion