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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Reid v Secretary of State for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities [2022] EWHC 3116 (Admin) (06 December 2022) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2022/3116.html Cite as: [2022] EWHC 3116 (Admin) |
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KING'S BENCH DIVISION
PLANNING COURT
BIRMINGHAM DISTRICT REGISTRY
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
FREDDIE REID |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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SECRETARY OF STATE FOR LEVELLING UP, HOUSING AND COMMUNITIES |
Defendant |
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- and - |
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NEWARK AND SHERWOOD DISTRICT COUNCIL |
Interested Party |
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appeared by video link
Killian Garvey (instructed by the Government Legal Department) for the Defendant appeared by video link
Christian Hawley (instructed by Newark and Sherwood District Council) for the Interested Party appeared by video link
Hearing date: 10 November 2022
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Crown Copyright ©
Mrs Justice Farbey :
Introduction
(1) Did the inspector have the power to consider an appeal against NSDC's refusal of a new section 73 planning permission when the application for the new permission sought changes to conditions in two, separate previous planning permissions?
(2) Did she in any event misdirect herself in law by concluding that the appeal could not succeed in so far as section 73 does not permit the removal of conditions in such a way that the new planning permission would give rise to a fundamental change to the use of the land?
Factual background
The site
The 2015 planning permission
"34 self-catering holiday units, a 25-bed inn building, watersports building, storehouse and outfitters along with a commercial and educational unit, nature trails, cycle trails, pathways and family facilities. Re-routing a public right of way at Kilvington."
For succinctness, I shall refer to the description as holiday accommodation.
"19 Notwithstanding the provisions of Part C, Class C3 'Dwelling Houses' of the Schedule of the Town and Country Planning (Use Classes) Order 2005, (or any order revoking or re-enacting that Order), the premises shall be used for the purpose of holiday accommodation only and for no other purpose, including any other purpose within Class C3 of the Order.
20 The site operator shall maintain a register of occupiers for each calendar year, which shall be made available for inspection by the local planning authority, at any time, and a copy of the register shall be supplied to the local planning authority at the end of each calendar year.
21 The properties hereby permitted for use as holiday accommodation shall not be occupied by the same person or persons for a total period exceeding 6 weeks in any calendar year."
The 2020 planning permission
The claimant's application
The inspector's appeal decision
"The main issues in the appeal are:
(1) Whether it is possible in law to alter the use of the 34 self catering holiday units by 'removing' the disputed conditions attached to the planning permissions, in the way proposed; and
(2) If it is possible to do so:
i. Whether it is reasonable and necessary to restrict the use to holiday accommodation bearing in mind the site's location in the open countryside;
ii. The effect of the proposal on highway safety;
iii. Whether or not the proposal makes an adequate contribution to affordable housing; and
iv. Whether or not the proposal would adequately mitigate any impact on health care and public transport."
"6. The application that is the subject of the appeal was submitted under section 73 of the Town and Country Planning Act 1990. This enables the development of land without complying with conditions subject to which a previous planning permission was granted. The Finney judgement established that an application under s73 may not be used to obtain a permission that would require a variation to the terms of the 'operative' part of the planning permission, that is the description of development for which the original permission was granted.
7. In this case the description of development on the original application refers to the development comprising 34 self catering holiday units. The appeal proposal does not seek to change the description. However, the Council have argued that by seeking to 'remove' the disputed conditions imposed on the previous applications it would enable the units to be used as permanent residential dwellings, which would be contrary to the description of the development.
8. The circumstances of this case are different to those in the Finney judgement. In the Finney case the effect of the s73 application was that it imposed a new ('varied') condition that enabled a wind turbine of up to 125m which was clearly contrary to the description of development which sought permission for a turbine of 100m. Whereas, in this appeal, the effect would be to remove the conditions restricting how the units were used. As such, there would be no condition imposed that was inconsistent with development."
"9. Nonetheless, if the conditions were to be removed it would enable the 34 units to be used in an unrestricted way. This would cause conflict with the original description of development which specifies that the use of these units is as self-catering holiday units and so clearly sought a restricted use. The fact that they were holiday units and not unrestricted residential uses was fundamental to them being allowed in a location where the development of unrestricted residential uses is strictly controlled by both local and national policies."
"10. The appeal proposal does not seek to remove condition 21 on the original permission and so if the appeal was allowed this permission would retain a condition that would prevent any occupier of the units using it for more than 6 weeks in any one year. As such, it could be considered that this permission would not grant unrestricted use of the units."
"11. However, without condition 20 requiring a register of occupiers to be kept, I consider that [condition 21] would not be enforceable and so would fail the tests for conditions set out in paragraph 56 of the National Planning Policy Framework. Given this it would not be appropriate to impose that condition. Thus, the effect of allowing the appeal with respect to the original application would also enable the units to be used in an unrestricted way."
"12. Consequently, I consider that the effect of the proposal would not be consistent with the description of the development and so the appeal cannot succeed. Therefore, as a matter of law and on the facts of the appeal, I conclude it is not possible to alter the use of the buildings by 'removing' the disputed conditions attached to either the original or the revised planning permissions in the way proposed."
The present review
The claimant's grounds for review
i) Ground 1: The inspector erred in law in holding that a section 73 planning application could not be made for the grant of planning permission for development of a description within a Use Class without a condition which removes the benefits of the Use Classes Order.
ii) Ground 2: The Inspector erred in law in considering that condition 21 of the 2015 planning permission would remain in force unless omitted by a section 73 permission.
The Secretary of State's "preliminary point"
Legal framework
The nature of planning permission
"the grant identifies what can be done what is permitted so far as use of land is concerned; whereas conditions identify what cannot be done what is forbidden."
"It is clear that what Sullivan J [in Pye] meant by the 'operative' part of the planning permission was the description of the development, rather than the conditions."
The nature of development
"If there was planning permission for use A and the land was actually being used for use A, then no planning permission was needed for use B, if use B was not a material change of use from use A. This was not because planning permission for use A included use B but because there was no material change of use from the one being used, that question being of course one of fact and degree."
Hodgson J's analysis was approved in Winchester City Council v Secretary of State for Communities and Local Government [2015] EWCA Civ 563, paras 15 and 18.
Section 73
"(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.
(5) Planning permission must not be granted under this section for the development of land in England to the extent that it has effect to change a condition subject to which a previous planning permission was granted by extending the time within which
(a) a development must be started;
(b) an application for approval of reserved matters (within the meaning of section 92) must be made."
"13. In Pye v Secretary of State for the Environment, Transport and the Regions [1998] 3 PLR 72 Sullivan J explained the origin and purpose of section 73 . It first entered the planning system as section 31A of the Town and Country Planning Act 1971. Before its introduction, a developer dissatisfied with a condition imposed on the grant of planning permission had no choice but to appeal. That exposed him to the risk of losing the planning permission altogether. Guidance about the policy underlying section 73 was given in Circular 19/86 from which the following points emerge: (i) Its purpose was to enable an applicant to apply 'for relief from any or all of [the] conditions'. (ii) The planning authority 'may not go back on their original decision to grant permission'. (iii) If the planning authority decide that 'some variation of the conditions' is acceptable, a new alternative permission will be created. The applicant may then choose between the two permissions.
14. Sullivan J's description of the origins and purpose of section 73 was approved by this court in R v Leicester City Council, Ex p Powergen UK Ltd (2000) 81 P & CR 5; and by the Supreme Court in Lambeth London Borough Council v Secretary of State for Housing, Communities and Local Government [2019] PTSR 1388. In the latter case Lord Carnwath JSC said at para 11:
'A permission under section 73 can only take effect as an independent permission to carry out the same development as previously permitted, but subject to the new or amended conditions. This was explained in the contemporary Circular 19/86, para 13, to which Sullivan J referred. It described the new section as enabling an applicant, in respect of 'an extant planning permission granted subject to conditions', to apply 'for relief from all or any of those conditions'. It added: 'If the authority do decide that some variation of conditions is acceptable, a new alternative permission will be created. It is then open to the applicant to choose whether to implement the new permission or the one originally granted.' (Emphasis added.)
15. Some further points are, I think, uncontroversial: (i) In deciding on its response to an application under section 73 , the planning authority must have regard to the development plan and any other material consideration. The material considerations will include the practical consequences of discharging or amending conditions: Pye [1998] 3 PLR 72, 85B. (ii) When granting permission under section 73 a planning authority may, in principle, accede to the discharge of one or more conditions in an existing planning permission; or may replace existing conditions with new conditions. But any new condition must be one which the planning authority could lawfully have imposed on the original grant of planning permission. (iii) A condition on a planning permission will not be valid if it alters the extent or the nature of the development permitted: Cadogan v Secretary of State for the Environment (1992) 65 P & CR 410."
Ground 1
The parties' submissions
Analysis and conclusions
Ground 2
The parties' submissions
Analysis and conclusions
The "preliminary point"
The parties' submissions
Analysis and conclusions