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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Ross Park Homes Ltd v Secretary of State for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities & Anor [2024] EWHC 1334 (Admin) (09 May 2024) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2024/1334.html Cite as: [2024] EWHC 1334 (Admin) |
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KING'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
PLANNING COURT
B e f o r e :
____________________
ROSS PARK HOMES LIMITED | Claimant | |
- and - | ||
(1) SECRETARY OF STATE FOR LEVELLING UP, | ||
HOUSING AND COMMUNITIES | ||
(2) TEIGNBRIDGE DISTRICT COUNCIL | Defendants |
____________________
MR B DU FEU (instructed by Government Legal Department) appeared on behalf of the First Defendant.
The Second Defendant did not appear and was not represented
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
MRS JUSTICE LANG:
"7. Ross Park is an established caravan park for which planning permission was granted in 1991 ('the 1991 Permission') The appeal site is the central area of the caravan park and is part of the same overall planning unit. It is common ground that the Appeal Site has planning permission for use by touring caravans; that there is no longer any condition governing the number of caravans permitted; and that as a consequence of the LDC granted in 2022, there is no longer any restriction on touring caravans remaining on the appeal site outside the period from April to September. The dispute between the parties relates to the manner in which such caravans may be occupied.
"8. The main issue for this appeal, then, is whether or not the proposed use of touring caravans for any type of occupation, including as a person's sole or main place of residence, falls within the existing lawful use of the appeal site. If it does, the LDC should be granted."
"19. In my judgement, then, the existing lawful use of the appeal site is a site for touring caravans where transient visitors occupy their caravans (or camping tents) for leisure purposes. The development proposed by the current LDC application would be a change from that use and that it would encompass the year-round residential occupation of caravans as places of sole or main residence...
"20. ... What is at issue is whether there would be a change in the character of the existing use.
"21. The proposed use has to be compared with the present use ... There is no evidence that any touring caravans on the appeal site are occupied as sole or main places of residence ... There would be a materially different level and pattern of traffic movements if the touring caravans were to be occupied for permanent residential use. It is likely there would also be changes to character and appearance of the appeal site.
"22. ... There is therefore a strong possibility that occupation of the touring caravans as sole or main places of residence ... would result in a material change of use ... That being the case, I cannot be satisfied on the balance of probabilities that the proposed use would fall within existing lawful use of the appeal site. The LDC cannot therefore be issued."
Grounds 1 and 2
"34. 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 the 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 meaning 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."
"19. In summary, whatever the legal character of the document in question, the starting-point - and usually the end-point - is to find 'the natural and ordinary meaning' of the words there used, viewed in their particular context (statutory or otherwise) and in the light of common sense."
"14. In support of this contention, the appellant has drawn my attention to the High Court's judgment in Cotswold Grange where it was held that generally the only things which are effectively prohibited by grant of planning permission are those things that are the subject of a condition. That proposition is, of course sound but a more recent relevant judgment was handed down by the Appeal Court in Barton Park Estates Limited. Lindblom LJ held that the absence of the condition specifically restricting (in that case) the number of residential caravans on the site:
'... does not have the effect of altering the description of development in the grant itself. It does not change what the planning permission is actually for. The permission is for the development described in the brief particulars restricted by the conditions….. It is not for some other proposal, formulated in different terms from the grant."
"15. The Barton Park Estates Limited judgment also refers to the Appeal Court's earlier judgment in Winchester where'Sullivan LJ said:
'It is possible that the use of the word "limitation" in the judgment has contributed to the misunderstanding of the effect of the I'm Your Man line of authorities. The simple proposition which should not be lost sight of is that the use for which a planning permission is granted must be ascertained by interpreting the words in the planning permission itself. Whether other uses would or would not be materially different from the permitted use is irrelevant for the purpose of ascertaining what use is permitted by the planning permission.'"
Ground 3
"16. In this case by operation of 2022 LDC conditions which restricted the amount of time for (and periods during) which touring grounds to remain on the site no longer apply, but it does not necessarily follow that there is no planning control over how they may be occupied. The terms of the 1991 Permission cannot simply be disregarded.
"17. The Inspector's decision on the 2022 LDC refers to a Statutory Declaration given in evidence for the Appellant. It explained that every winter, some of the caravans of customers who rented seasonal pitches were left on their pitches for the duration of the winter. There was no point in moving them into caravan storage areas at the caravan park as there was insufficient demand during the winter months for the caravan pitches.
"18. In considering the interpretation of the relevant conditions, the Inspector held that 'remain' cannot be interpreted to mean 'occupied'. I agree with that finding. An unoccupied touring caravan left on a seasonal pitch that would otherwise be unused over winter is not at all the same thing as a caravan that has been lived in year round as a sole or main residence. In my view, the fact that some unoccupied touring caravans were left on their pitches (instead of being moved to the site's dedicated caravan storage area) out of season would not in and of itself necessarily mean that the appeal site could no longer be characterised as "a site for touring caravans". Be that as it may, the important point here is that the 2022 LDC does not certify the lawfulness of year-round occupation of touring caravans on the appeal site."
Ground 4
Ground 5