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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Choiceplace Properties Ltd v Secretary of State for Housing Communities And Local Government [2021] EWHC 1070 (Admin) (27 April 2021) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2021/1070.html Cite as: [2021] EWHC 1070 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
PLANNING COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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Choiceplace Properties Limited |
Claimant |
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Secretary of State for Housing Communities and Local Government |
Defendant |
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Barnet London Borough Council |
Interested Party |
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Mr Charles Streeten (instructed by Government Legal Department) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: Thursday 4th March 2021
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Dove:
Introduction
The Facts
"The development hereby permitted shall be carried out in accordance with the following approved plans:
Site Location Plan; Drawing no. P.01 Rev C; Drawing no. P.02 Rev C; Drawing no. P.03 Rev B; Drawing no. P.04; Drawing no. P.05; Drawing no. P.06 Rev A; Landscaping Scheme Drawing no. TH/A3/1497/LS; Arboricultural Impact Assessment & Method Statement by Trevor Heaps Arboricultural Consultancy Ltd Ref: TH 1497 dated 11th December 2017 including drawing no. TH/A3/1497/TPP; Sustainability Statement by Henry Planning; Planning statement by Henry Planning; Document titled "Holden Road, London, N12 8SP – Part M4(2) Category 2 Accessible and Adaptable Dwellings"
Reason: For the avoidance of doubt and the interests of proper planning and so as to ensure that the development is carried out fully in accordance with the plans as assessed in accordance with Policies CS NPPF and CS1 of the Local Plan Core Strategy DPD (adopted September 2012) and Policy DM01 of the Local Plan Development Management Policies DPD (adopted September 2012)."
"Drawing P.04 submitted by the Applicant to show the proposed street scene places the height of the proposed building between the ridge heights of the neighbouring properties - forming a stepped relationship in line with the gradient of the carriageway.
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On close examination, P.05 and P.06A provide spot heights for the existing and proposed ground level and both adjoining ridge heights and a scalable elevation (on P06A) for the proposed building – giving a resultant ridge height which would be taller than both neighbouring properties. This elevation is also consistent with the height of the proposed building as depicted in the approved elevations drawing (P.03). However, it is only by reading the two plans P.03 Rev B and P.06 Rev A together that the combined height of 58.8m can be appreciated. Instead, the "street scene" drawing (P.04) – the purpose of which is to show the height of the proposed building in relation to neighbouring properties – shows its height as being between the two neighbouring properties.
On P.04, it would appear that whilst the proposed building is shown as of a corresponding height when measured @ 1:200 (which is the given scale), nothing else has been provided to the same scale on that drawing.
Taking the point on the pavement to the front adjacent to the boundary with 157 (being 49.07) as a constant between P.04 and P.06A, then the ridge heights of 157 and 159 (on P.04) are both c2.2m higher than they are (with regard to the difference between the constant spot height and the given ridge heights on the topographical survey).
Furthermore, the ground level of the proposed building is c6.06m lower than it should be (with regard to the difference in levels between the existing and proposed topographical data on P.05 and P.06A).
When looking at the difference between the ridge line of the proposed building and that of No 159 on P.04, the proposed building is shown as being set 1.2m lower.
Effectively, the remainder of P.04 (other than the proposed building inserted into the street scene) has been stretched, giving the appearance that the height of the proposed building is between the ridge heights of Nos 157 and 159.
The legal opinion offered on behalf of the Applicant is effectively that because the discrepancies lie outside of the site, they are irrelevant – because those factors could change outside of their control.
However, the LPA demur that any approval is made with regard to the context provided by the Applicant at the time the decision is made. If the context is in fact materially different to that provided, it may mean that a different decision might have been reached (which might be to the advantage or disadvantage of the proposal).
The key point of P.04 is to show the relative proportions between the three properties. This is a material consideration. The street scene drawing limits the scaling of the proposed development by reference to those neighbouring properties. Notably, P.04 does not provide any annotated measurements itself – the only way to measure what is permitted by it, is by reference to the neighbouring properties."
"3. The problem is that while the proposed building is shown drawn to its correct height in all three plans, in the street scene (P.04), where the proposed building is shown sitting between its neighbours, the neighbouring buildings are shown as too large. With the slope of the ground shown and allowing for all three buildings to be excavated into their plots, the proposal appears to be slightly taller than No 157, which looks as if it is downhill, but lower than No 159 which is uphill. This is made clear on both street elevation views from the front and right side. The existing buildings have a similar relationship, although they are slightly lower in height than the proposal. The effect of the errors in scale are that the proposal will actually be taller than No 159 and significantly taller than No 157.
4. The question is therefore, whether the planning permission can be implemented lawfully. There is no doubt that the planning permission refers solely to the building to be erected and it would seem the building to be erected is shown accurately on all the plans. However, the plans are included within condition 1 which requires the development to be carried out in accordance with those plans. The issue is therefore could the Council enforce against a breach of that condition if the development were to go ahead?
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8. In my view the starting point is that when interpreting a condition it should be asked what a reasonable reader would understand the words to mean. In this case it is clear to me the development should be built in accordance with the plans. At its simplest this is impossible because to build it in accordance with P.03 and P.06 the building will not look like the building shown in P.04. In other words the plans are inconsistent. The condition doesn't require the development to be in accord with some of the plans, or parts of the plans, but with the approved plans, and I think it reasonable to imply the word "all" there, again on the basis that is what an ordinary reading of the condition implies.
9. Starting from this point, it could be argued that the P.04 is merely illustrative, the building either side could change shape or size or even be demolished, but that seems to me to be rather missing the point. Firstly, P.04 is clearly not illustrative, it is not a simple sketch purporting to show a view, but is an allegedly scale drawing with the heights of the neighbour at No 159 drawn on to specifically compare to the proposal. Secondly, whether the neighbours can change is irrelevant. The drawing shows the proposed building in a relationship to the neighbours at the time the application was made regardless of any theoretical future changes. That relationship should have been replicable on site on the date the permission was granted and it was not.
10. If we delve further into the extrinsic evidence to see if there is anything else to suggest that reliance on P.04 would be excessive or in some way unreasonable then it becomes clear, for the reasons given in the Council's opinion, that the street scene drawing was important in the determination of the application, which was only allowed by the committee by a narrow margin. Furthermore it is only by detailed analysis of various spot heights across several of the drawing that the errors were revealed. The Council should be able to rely on accurately scaled drawing, especially when the drawing in question is important to determining the acceptability of the proposal.
11. One of the appellant's opinions refers to Burhill Estates, but that is a 1992 case where a barn that was associated with a planning permission for a new dwelling was destroyed in a storm. Could the dwelling still be erected? The Court found it could as the plans showing the adjacent barn were illustrative and did not qualify the permission. In the current appeal the plan in question is not merely illustrative and is included within the permission thanks to condition 1.
12. There is some discussion as to other remedies that may be open to the Council, but that is not relevant to the narrower question before me of whether the planning permission can be implemented in accordance with all the approved drawing. For the reasons given above I do not consider it can."
The law
"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 operation 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."
"When the court is concerned with the interpretation of words in a condition in a public document such as a section 36 consent, it asks itself what a reasonable reader would understand the words to mean when reading the condition in context of the other conditions and of the consent as a whole. This is an objective exercise in which the court will have regard to the natural and ordinary mean of the relevant words, the overall purpose of the consent, any other conditions which cast light on the purpose of the relevant words, and common sense. Whether the court may also look at the other documents that are connected with the application for the consent or are referred to in the consent will depend on the circumstances of the case, in particular the wording of the document that is interpreting. Other documents may be relevant (as in condition 7 set out in para 38 below) or there is an ambiguity in the consent, which can be resolved, for example, by considering the application for consent."
"In Fawcett Properties Ltd v Buckingham County Council [1961] AC 636, a case concerning a condition in a planning permission, Lord Denning stated, at p 678:
"a planning condition is only void for uncertainty if it can be given no meaning or no sensible or ascertainable meaning, and not merely because it is ambiguous or lead of absurd results. It is the daily task of the courts to resolve ambiguities of language and to choose between them; and to construe words so as to avoid absurdities or to put up with them. And this applies to conditions in planning permissions as well as to other documents."
"The development hereby approved shall be carried out and completed in all respects strictly in accordance with the submitted and approved plans."
Three years after the grant of outline planning permission the claimant applied for approval of the reserved matters, and at the same time applied for listed building consent in relation to a listed barn within the application site. The application was granted and a similar condition imposed tying the consent to the submitted and approved plans. Again, the development was not commenced and a further application was made for renewal of the detailed approval which was granted, it being described as "renewal of reserved matters application 86282 subsequent to our outline approval 83/40 for erection of detached dwelling on land adjacent to listed barns".
"A planning permission was a public document. It must (and this was trite) law make reasonably clear to all interested persons, including, of course, people who were not concerned in the obtaining of the planning permission, neighbours and possible intending purchasers, what was the development that was permitted, and what were the restrictions or conditions on carrying out of that permitted development. In his view, simply looking at drawings 12386 and 25382 would not suffice to inform, for example, a possible purchasers that the construction of the house was linked with the retention of the barn so that iw was only permitted to be constructed so long as the barn remained in existence. But if the original planning permission has not made that clear, as in his view had not, if something in the detailed approval sought to impose such a restriction, then as a matter of law that would be an invalid restriction because it would detract from the outline permission by imposing a restriction on its exercise which was not contained in the original permission. In his judgment a grant of detailed approval might not in law detract from the permission which required such approval."
Grounds and Submissions
Conclusions
"Certificate of lawfulness to confirm that planning permission Ref:80/1845/FUL granted 4th July 2018, can be implemented in accordance with all the approved drawings."