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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 >> Jones & Anor v Secretary of State for Housing Communities and Local Government & Anor [2022] EWHC 520 (Admin) (11 March 2022) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2022/520.html Cite as: [2022] EWHC 520 (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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KENNETH VICTOR PRICHARD JONES DAGMAR PRICHARD JONES |
Appellants |
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- and - |
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(1) SECRETARY OF STATE FOR HOUSING COMMUNITIES AND LOCAL GOVERNMENT (2) HORSHAM DISTRICT COUNCIL |
Respondents |
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Matthew Henderson (instructed by Government Legal Department) for the 1st Respondent
No appearance for the 2nd Respondent
Hearing date: 20 October 2021
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr C M G Ockelton :
"Without planning permission, the construction on the land of a vehicular means of access by removal of the boundary planting and the deposit of material to form a hard surface access track and concrete apron as a crossover onto the highway."
"The land is located to the north of the Lawson Hunt Industrial Park in a truncated road that now forms a cul de sac off the Old Guildford Road which runs along the northern side of Broadbridge Heath. The road in question comprises part of the grass verge and vegetated boundary of the adjacent Field Place Estate. The road is an unnumbered "C" classified road.
Prior to the access being formed, the area was densely planted with mature shrubs forming part of the natural boundary treatment situated between the highway and the adjoining countryside/farmland.
The landowner has removed approx. 10m of vegetation and created a crossover onto the highway comprising a 10m x 8m bellmouth surfaced with concrete and compacted material. A pair of chain-link gates have been erected in the gap formed by the removal of the vegetation."
"2. For an appeal to succeed on ground (c) the onus is on the appellants to demonstrate, on the balance of probabilities, that there has not been a breach of planning control. This could be because the matters alleged do not constitute development, planning permission has already been granted for the matters alleged in the enforcement notice or they are permitted development.
3. The enforcement notice alleges a breach of planning control in respect of the construction of a vehicular means of access by the removal of boundary planting and the deposit of material to form a hard surface access track and concrete apron as a crossover onto the highway (the engineering operations).
4. The appellants contend that there was an existing gateway in this location, which may have been historic, but that it has been in place since before 1983, when the appellants acquired the property/became the farming tenants. However, even if I were to accept the totality of the evidence concerning that very overgrown gateway, the Council have not enforced against that gateway, but rather, the more recent engineering operations described above.
5. I am satisfied on the balance of probabilities from my own site visit that the works undertaken, which I could see related to the removal of vegetation to facilitate a large concrete hard surface from the edge of the highway, leading to a set of two metal gates, as well as further hardstanding, is of such an extent that it amounts to an operation normally undertaken by a person carrying on business as a builder. It therefore follows that the engineering operations are development for the purposes of Section 55 of the Town and Country Planning Act 1990, as amended, and based on the evidence before me are materially different from the said historic gateway, given the extent of works undertaken. It is therefore not a matter of repair and maintenance.
6. The appellants provide very little evidence to demonstrate on the balance of probabilities that the engineering operations are permitted development. The Council, including the highways department, have provided evidence which demonstrates on the balance of probabilities that the highway is a 'C' classified road. It therefore follows that the engineering operations cannot be permitted development as it would contravene Schedule 2, Part 2, Class B of the Town and Country (General Permitted Development) (England) Order 2015, because the engineering operations irrespective of any agricultural contentions amount to the formation, laying out and construction of a means of access to a highway which is classified road.
7. There is very little evidence before me to demonstrate on the balance of probabilities why the engineering operations now enforced against would not require planning permission. There has also been no planning permission brought to my attention for the engineering operations and a prior approval for a new agricultural access track starting in this location has been previously refused by the Council.
8. As a matter of fact and degree the appellants have therefore not discharged the necessary burden of proof to demonstrate on the balance of probabilities that there has not been a breach of planning control.
9. The appeal on ground (c) accordingly must fail."
"1. The Inspector erred in law in failing to deal with a specific issue raised in the appeals. Namely whether the development was permitted by the General Permitted Development Order 2015.
2. The Inspector failed to deal with a material consideration, namely a previous DL with the same legal point and facts. The Inspector failed to explain why he disagreed with it, if that is what he was doing, or he failed to take it into account and thereby made a decision that was diametrically opposed to a previous DL that considered the same legal point.
3. A classified road under the DOT guidance falling within A (or B) is a road linking two places. The road adjacent to the gated access onto the appellant's land, the Old Guildford Road West (OGRW), is a dead-end serving only a local industrial estate, the Lawson-Hunt Industrial Park, and also used as a local informal car parking area. As such:
a. The OGRW is not continuous and thereby cannot fulfil any function of a classified road described in the said guidance contrary to paragraphs 1.2, 1.3, 1.9, 1.13, 3.5 and Appendix A. The OGRW is no longer factually a primary route network or part of it. Instead the county council, as highway authority, redesignated this part of the former A281 to the OGRW and gave it a C classification in accordance with the said guidance, paragraphs 1.19 and 3.5.
b. The proper inference to draw (as a matter of law based on the facts) is that the old part of the A281 now comprising the OGRW ceased to be classified by the Minister because it cannot serve a primary route network purpose and/or because it has been redesignated by the country highway authority (formally or de facto by its remaining and actual use).
c. Further and in any event the access in issue is to the appellant's field and the replacement/alteration of it is irrelevant for the purposes of the General Permitted Development Order 2015 (GPDO). The restriction to what access is permitted by the GPDO connected with some other development permitted by the Schedule is not exclusive or exhaustive. The use of the field is lawful and the access serves it not the gate. It is wrong in law therefore, if it be the suggestion, that the GPDO does not permit the access to be created to serve the lawful use of the field.
4. Further, and in any event, having acknowledged that there was on balance a pre-existing gate, the Inspector failed to take account of this fact, or failed to explain why he could ignore it, when upholding the enforcement notice to the extent that it would require the filling-in of that lawful opening.
5. Further, and in any event, the Inspector failed to vary the enforcement notice so that the steps for compliance left the pre-existing and lawful opening capable of being used. Reducing the impact of the EN was an obvious alternative to its requirements as issued."
The General Permitted Development Order
"A. The erection, construction, maintenance, improvement or alteration of a gate, fence, wall or other means of enclosure.
[Paragraph A.1. provides that development under Class A is not permitted in certain circumstances, particularly relating to the height of the structure in question.]
B. The formation, laying out and construction of a means of access to a highway which is not a trunk road or a classified road, where that access is required in connection with development permitted by any Class in this Schedule (other than by Class A of this part)."
""classified road"' means a highway or proposed highway which -
(a) is a classified road or a principal road by virtue of section 12(1) of the Highways Act 1980 (General Provision as to Principal and Classified Roads); or
(b) is classified by the Secretary of State for the purposes of any enactment by virtue of Section 12(3) of that act."
"(1) Subject to subsection (3) below, all such highways or proposed highways as immediately before the commencement of this Act –
(a) were principal roads for the purposes of any enactment or instrument which refers to roads or highways classified by the Minister as principal roads, either by virtue of having been so classified under section 27(2) of the Local Government Act 1966 (which is replaced by subsection (3) below), or by virtue of being treated as such in accordance with section 40(1) of the Local Government Act 1974,
(b) were (whether or not they also fall within paragraph (a) above) classified roads for the purposes of any enactment or instrument which refers to roads classified by the Minister (but does not specifically refer to their classification as principal roads), either by virtue of having been so classified under section 27(2) of the said Act of 1966, or by virtue of being treated as such in accordance with section 40(1) of the said Act of 1974, or
(c) were classified roads for the purposes of any enactment or instrument by virtue of being treated as such in accordance with section 27(4) of the said Act of 1966,
continue to be, and to be known as, principal roads or, as the case may be, classified roads (or both principal roads and classified roads of a category other than principal roads, in the case of highways falling within both paragraph (a) and paragraph (b) above) for the purposes specified in subsection (2) below.
(2) So far as a highway that continues to be a principal or classified road in accordance with subsection (1) above was, immediately before the commencement of this Act, a classified road for the purposes of any enactment repealed and replaced by this Act; it is a classified road for the purposes of the corresponding provision of this Act; and so far as any such highway was immediately before the commencement of this Act a principal or classified road for the purposes of any other enactment, or any instrument, it so continues for the purposes of that enactment or instrument.
(3) The Minister may for the purposes of –
(a) any provision of this Act which refers to classified roads, or
(b) any other enactment or any instrument (whether passed or made before or after the passing of this Act) which refers to highways classified by the Minister,
classify highways or proposed highways, being highways or proposed highways for which local highway authorities are the highway authorities, in such manner as he may from time to time determine after consultation with the highway authorities concerned [….]"
The Road
"Article 1 of the GPDO defines "classified road" by reference to sections 12(1) and 12(3) of the Highways Act 1980. Further information on the definition is given on page 39016 [sic] of the Encyclopaedia of Planning Law and Practice. For practical purposes, the category includes all Class A and B roads which are not trunk roads. Wellhead Road is therefore not a classified road for the purposes of this part of the GPDO."
The gate