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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Wickford Development Company Ltd & Ors, R (On the Application Of) v Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs [2024] EWHC 2034 (Admin) (02 August 2024) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2024/2034.html Cite as: [2024] PTSR 1837, [2024] EWHC 2034 (Admin), [2024] WLR(D) 375 |
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AC-2023-LON-0003839 AC-2024-LON-001238 |
KING'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
PLANNING COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
THE KING (on the application of) (1) WICKFORD DEVELOPMENT COMPANY LIMITED |
Claimant One |
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- and - |
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THE KING (on the application of) (2) WITHAM NELSON INVESTMENTS LTD |
Claimant Two |
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- and - |
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THE KING (on the application of) (3) SMAR HOLDINGS LIMITED |
Claimant Three |
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- and - |
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SECRETARY OF STATE FOR ENVIRONMENT, FOOD AND RURAL AFFAIRS |
Defendant |
____________________
Ms Heather Sargent and Mr Charles Bishop (instructed by Government Legal Department) for the Defendant (Wickford Development matter)
Mr Richard Banwell (instructed by Taylor Haldane Barlex Solicitors LLP) for Claimant Two
Mr Hugh Richards and Ms Jessica Allen (instructed by Jury O'Shea LLP) for Claimant Three
Mr Zack Simons and Mr Edward Arash Abedian (instructed by Government Legal Department) for the Defendant (Witham Nelson and Smar Holdings matters)
Hearing dates: 25-27 June 2024
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mrs Justice Lieven DBE :
a. In Wickford Developments the decision of 6 November 2023 to uphold the RSN;
b. In Witham Nelson the decision of 12 October 2023 to uphold the RSN;
c. In Smar Holdings the decision of 6 November 2023 to uphold the RSN.
a. Outline of Grounds;
b. The statutory scheme and Court of Appeal decision in R (Arnold White Ltd) v Forestry Commission [2023] PTSR 242 ("Arnold White");
c. The facts of the three individual cases;
d. The submission on each individual case;
e. Conclusions.
The Grounds
a. Ground One –
i. failure to address the Claimant's first Ground of objection that the RSN was an abuse of power by the FC by reason of assurances that had been given to Parliament in 2006, during the consideration of the introduction of s.17A of the 1967 Act;
ii. A failure to give reasons if the Minister did consider the objection.
b. Ground Two – misdirection in law by the Minister, relying on the reasoning of the RC, in respect of the meaning of "garden" as set out by the Divisional Court in Rockall v DEFRA [2008] EWHC 2408;
c. Ground Three – failure to properly address the Claimant's objection on the grounds of disproportionate impact of the requirement to plant 242 trees;
d. If any of the above Grounds are made out, whether the decision would have been "highly likely" to be the same, pursuant to s.31(2A) Senior Courts Act 1981.
a. Ground One – whether the decision was ultra vires/irrational in the light of the RC's finding that it was inevitable that the trees would be removed after the shortened maintenance period;
b. Ground Two – whether the RC and the Minister unlawfully remitted the question of an alternative area of land to the FC;
c. Ground Three - whether the RC erred in refusing to determine or consider legal issues.
a. Ground One – the RC erred in law by stating that the "planning regime" would be undermined if the appeal was allowed;
b. Ground Two – the Minister erred in law by not considering the public interest in allowing the appeal;
c. Ground Three – the approach to the use of an alternative site was irrational;
d. Ground Four – the process adopted was unfair.
Statutory framework
(a) "the development of afforestation, the management of forests and the production and supply of timber" (s.1(3A)(a)) and
(b) "the conservation and enhancement of natural beauty and the conservation of flora, fauna and geological or physiographical features of special interest" (s.1(3A)(b)).
"9 Requirement of licence for felling.
(1) A felling licence granted by the appropriate forestry authority shall be required for the felling of growing trees, except in a case where by or under the following provisions of this Part of this Act this subsection is expressed not to apply.
(2) Subsection (1) above does not apply—
(a) to the felling of trees with a diameter not exceeding 68 centimetres or, in the case of coppice or underwood, with a diameter not exceeding 15 centimetres; or
(b) to the felling of fruit trees or trees standing or growing on land comprised in an orchard, garden, churchyard or public open space; or
(c) to the topping or lopping of trees or the trimming or laying of hedges.
….
(4) Subsection (1) above does not apply to any felling which—
(a) is for the prevention of danger or the prevention or abatement of a nuisance;
(b) is in compliance with any obligation imposed by or under an Act of Parliament, including this Act;
(c) is carried out by, or at the request of, an electricity operator, because the tree is or will be in such close proximity to an electric line or electrical plant which is kept installed or is being or is to be installed by the operator as to have the effect mentioned in paragraph 9(1)(a) or (b) of Schedule 4 to the Electricity Act 1989;
(d) is immediately required for the purpose of carrying out development authorised by planning permission granted or deemed to be …granted under the Town and Country Planning Act 1990 or the enactments replaced by that Act." [emphasis added]
"(1) There is no "all-embracing test" for whether land is a garden for the purposes of the 1967 Act [1] and [16].
(2) There is a "factual flexibility" inherent in the 1967 Act [1].
(3) In order to identify whether land comprises of garden, it is necessary not only to look at its appearance and its characteristics, but also to its use. It is necessary to look at how the particular occupier in question used the land [15-17].
(4) S.9 of the 1967 Act suggests that felling which does not need a licence should be in some way ancillary to the use of the land in question as an orchard, garden, churchyard or public open space ([17], citing McInerney v Portland Port Limited [2001] 1 PLR 104).
(5) There is nothing in the statutory provisions which dictates that a garden which has fallen into disuse cannot become a garden again until it is established [23].
(6) A mere assertion of intention may well be insufficient to establish and satisfy the burden upon a defendant to show that he did not need a licence. The position will depend upon all the facts and circumstances of the case [19]."
"17 Penalty for felling without licence.
(1) Anyone who fells a tree without the authority of a felling licence, the case being one in which section 9(1) of this Act applies so as to require such a licence, shall be guilty of an offence and
(a) in relation to an offence committed in Wales, liable on summary conviction to a fine, or
(b) in relation to an offence committed in England, liable on summary conviction to a fine.
(2) Proceedings for an offence under this section may be instituted within six months from the first discovery of the offence by the person taking the proceedings, provided that no proceedings shall be instituted more than two years after the date of the offence."
"17A Power of Commissioners to require restocking notice after unauthorised felling.
(1) The appropriate forestry authority may serve a notice under this section (a "restocking notice") on a person where—
(a) it appears to the appropriate forestry authority that he has committed an offence in England or Wales under section 17 of this Act,
(b). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
and ... he has such an estate or interest in the land in question as is mentioned in section 10(1) of this Act.
(1A) A restocking notice is a notice requiring the person on whom it is served—
(a) to restock or stock with trees the land or such other land as may be agreed between the appropriate forestry authority and him; and
(b) to maintain those trees in accordance with the rules and practice of good forestry for a period, not exceeding ten years, specified in the notice.
(1B) A restocking notice served by the Commissioners is a local land charge; and for the purposes of the Local Land Charges Act 1975 the Commissioners are the originating authority as respects the charge.
(2). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
(3) Subject to the provisions of this Act, in considering whether to issue a restocking notice the Commissioners shall—
(a) have regard to the interests of good forestry and agriculture and of the amenities of the district;
(b) have regard to their duty of promoting the establishment and maintenance of adequate reserves of growing trees; and
(c) take into account any advice tendered by the regional advisory committee for the conservancy comprising the land to which the restocking notice would relate."
"17B Appeal against restocking notice.
(1) A person on whom a restocking notice has been served who objects to the notice or to any condition contained therein may by notice served within the prescribed time and in the prescribed manner request the Minister where the restocking notice relates to land in England or Wales to refer the matter to a committee appointed in accordance with section 27 of this Act; and—
(a) the Minister shall, unless he is of the opinion that the grounds of the request are frivolous, refer the matter accordingly; and
(b) the committee, after compliance with subsection (3) of that section, shall thereupon make a report to the Minister.
(2) The Minister may, after considering the committee's report, direct the appropriate forestry authority to withdraw the notice or to notify the objector that it shall have effect subject to such modification as the Minister shall direct."
"25 Appeal against notice under s. 24.
(1) If a person to whom a notice under section 24 is given claims—
(a) that the works in question have been carried out in accordance with the conditions of the felling licence or, in the case of felling directions, that they have been complied with; or
(b) that the steps required by the notice to be taken are not required by the conditions or directions, he may by a notice served on the Minister where the notice is given in respect of land or trees in England or Wales, in the prescribed manner and within the prescribed period after the receipt of the notice under section 24, request the Minister to refer the matter to a committee appointed in accordance with section 27 below."
"(3) On any reference being made to them under this Part of this Act a committee appointed in accordance with this section shall–
(a) afford to the person concerned with the subject-matter of the reference an opportunity of appearing before them and of making representations to them on the matter in question;
(b) if they think fit, or are so required by the said person, inspect the trees or land to which the reference relates; and
(c) take into consideration any information furnished to them by the appropriate forestry authority as to the performance within the conservancy in which the trees are growing of their duty of promoting the establishment and maintenance of adequate reserves of growing trees."
The factual background
Wickford Developments
"… between 21/11/2017 and 22/11/2017, at land to the south of Newton Hall, near Great Dunmow, Essex, was responsible for the felling of trees at the aforementioned land, without the authority of a licence issued by the Forestry Commission under section 9(1) of the Forestry Act 1967, contrary to section 17(1) of the Forestry Act 1967, as amended."
"I am writing to inform you that I have today sent a notice to the Justices' Chief Executive, under section 23 of the Prosecution of Offences Act 1985, discontinuing the following charges against your client:
Fell a growing tree without a section 9(1) felling licence 21/11/2017 - 22/11/2017. The effect of this notice is that your client no longer need to attend court in respect of these charges and that any bail conditions imposed in relation to them cease to apply.
The decision to discontinue these charges has been taken because there is not enough evidence to provide a realistic prospect of conviction.
This decision has been taken on the evidence and information provided to the Crown Prosecution Service as at the date of this letter. If more significant evidence and/or information is discovered at a later date the decision to discontinue may be reconsidered. …"
"It has been established that you felled trees on land lying to the south of Newton Hall, Dunmow (CMG 2AS), without a felling licence in contravention of the provisions of the Forestry Act 1967. The Forestry Commissioners, in pursuance of their powers under Section 17A of that Act, hereby give notice requiring you to carry out the restocking specified in the schedule below".
(1) it was an abuse of the power in s.17A of the 1967 Act to serve a restocking notice in circumstances where
(a) a prosecution had been brought and discontinued and
(b) no further prosecution could be brought in respect of the alleged offence in the notice;
(2) no such offence could have been committed because the land in question was garden land for the purposes of section 9(2)(b) of the 1967 Act and therefore no felling licence was required;
(3) the offence with which Wickford had been charged – unauthorised felling between 21 and 22 November 2017 – could not have been committed because no felling took place on the dates alleged;
(4) condition (1) of the schedule to the notice states that the felled area must be restocked with broadleaf species to achieve no less than 1,100 equally spaced stems per hectare, which equates to 242 trees at the site. This number of trees greatly exceeds the number of trees that were on the site in 2017 and in requiring this number of trees to be planted the notice was grossly disproportionate.
"… the Minister has decided to modify the notice based on the conclusions of the Reference Committee. Therefore, pursuant to section 17B(2) of the Forestry Act 1967, the Forestry Commissioners have been directed by the Secretary of State to notify you that the Restocking Notice 12/20-21 dated 25 June 2020 shall have effect, including the Schedule and Map attached to the Notice with modification to retain current natural regeneration on the site and extend the date of compliance to allow a further planting season for the completion of the remaining restocking. Forest Services will issue the official (signed) versions of these in due course."
"… Thank you for your e-mail. I am sorry for having taken time to understand what I can share in this regard, but I am unable to share with you my direct communications with the Minsters Office. Even if your request was made under the provisions in the Environmental Information Regulations 2004 (which are broadly similar to the Freedom of Information Act) the exceptions to disclose under Regulation 12(4)(e) internal communications and Regulation 5(d) the confidentiality of proceedings would be applied.
However, I can advise you that the Minister was provided with the original Restocking Notice, the Objection and the Meeting Notes with the Committee's conclusions. I was advised by the Ministers Private Secretary (as is part normal processes for communicating Minister's decisions) that the Committee's conclusions had been accepted in full. I then communicated this to both the Objector and Officials in the Forestry Commission.
As you will know from the requirements of the Forestry Act the decision is made by the Minister after considering the Committee Report, the decision is not made by the Committee or by the Forestry Commission. My role is limited to facilitating and supporting the referral to the Reference Committee and the subsequent submission of its Report and communicating back the outcome (Minister decision). If you are seeking to challenge the Minister's decision, then I suggest that you direct your enquires to the Department (Defra) not to me in my role as Committee support. …"
Wickford Reference Committee's Report
"1. The Reference Committee agreed that the legal issue raised by the Objector, namely that the serving of the Restocking Notice followed a discontinued prosecution, was beyond the remit of the Committee to conclude upon. The Reference Committee noted further that the Objector accepted this, and that the Objector's intention in raising it was for the sake of exhausting available processes for the sake of justifying Judicial Review as a remedy of last resort.
2. The Reference Committee therefore agreed that the focus of their report would be whether the land could have been considered a garden and therefore exempt from the requirement for a felling licence, and if this requirement did apply, whether the Restocking Notice was a proportionate response.
3. The Reference Committee considered the Objector's claim that in the distant past the landscaped vista may have been considered a garden. The Reference Committee understood that it was on this basis, given the precedent in case law in Rockall, that the Objector argued that the land was being restored to garden land in the plans submitted by Wickford Development Company.
…
5. The Reference Committee agreed that changing the land from historically landscaped vista to multiple gardens for new dwellings was not a restoration of a garden.
6. The Reference Committee noted that the age of some of the trees on the site suggested that natural regeneration had taken place on the site for at least 20 to 60 years prior to the felling. The Reference Committee also accepted the evidence from Forest Services that typical features of a garden were absent from the site, and noted that these were evidently absent during their own site inspection.
7. The Reference Committee considered the letter provided by the Objector wherein Mr Hammond refers to the land as 'remaining a garden'. The Reference Committee agreed that this was not sufficient to establish conclusively whether the land was a garden or not.
8. The Reference Committee further considered the language of the Woodland Management Plan (WMP) provided in the Objector's bundle. The Reference Committee agreed that a WMP would be more likely to be commissioned for a woodland than a garden, and noted that the WMP used multiple terms to refer to the site including 'woodland' and 'wooded area'. The Reference Committee noted that the report prepared prior to the felling predominantly referred to the area as woodland and not a garden.
9. The Reference Committee considered that claims of restoring the land to a garden appeared only to have arisen after the allegation of illegal felling took place and was not evidenced to be a factor at the time of the felling.
…
13. The Reference Committee agreed that the standard restocking practice of 1100 stems per hectare was not unreasonable, and did not find the Objector's argument against the conditions in the notice to be justified on silvicultural grounds. The Reference Committee agreed that restoration of canopy cover to the site was likely to be achieved by following the conditions set out in the Restocking Notice, but noted that the removal of natural regeneration on the site for the sake of restocking would be ill advised.
Conclusions
14. The Reference Committee concluded, based on observations on site, aerial photographs from the Objector and the Forestry Commission, the Objector's WMP, and the designations in Forest Services' submission, that the land was not a garden at the time of the felling, nor had it likely been one in at least the 60 years prior to the felling.
15. The Reference Committee concluded that the future use of the site at the time of the felling was to develop the land as gardens for multiple adjacent dwellings, not the restoration of an historical garden to a manor house.
16. The Reference Committee concluded that the felling required a felling licence, and that in the absence of one that a Restocking Notice is a reasonable and proportionate response to the offence of unlicenced felling.
17. The Reference Committee concluded that any Restocking Notice now served should take into consideration the natural regeneration already on the site as part of its conditions, given the amount of time elapsed since the initial felling and the appeal against the subsequent Restocking Notice reaching the Reference Committee.
18. The Reference Committee concluded that the current Restocking Notice should stand subject to two minor modifications namely 1) a new compliance date to allow a planting season to complete the required works, and 2) to allow successful natural regeneration to count towards meeting the restocking requirements with new planting making up for any shortfall." [emphasis added]
Witham Nelson
"None of the trees identified for retention on Drawing No 3 within the submitted Revised Arboricultural Assessment undertaken by Eco-Planning UK, dated 22nd January 2020 shall be removed from the site and no works shall be undertaken to such trees, without the prior formal consent of the Planning Authority" and, "all works on site shall be undertaken in accordance with the provisions of the submitted Revised Arboricultural Assessment undertaken by Eco-Planning UK, dated 22nd January 2020."
"From the details provided, I can confirm that it appears to the Forestry Commission that an offence has been committed by your company under section 17 of the Forestry Act 1967 (as amended).
This is because no exemption to the need for a felling licence under the Forestry Act applies to the trees or land in question, and the volume of timber felled is such that a licence to fell the trees should have been obtained from the Forestry Commission before the felling took place. Moreover, the investigation shows that your company has liability for the felling undertaken on the site.
The Forestry Act 1967 provides the Forestry Commissioners with a number of powers with which to address a breach of the regulations. These include referring cases for prosecution and / or securing the restocking of a felled site through a Restocking Notice.
Having considered this case, I have decided that issuing a Restocking Notice is the most appropriate action. The Forestry Act 1967 was amended by the Regulatory Reform Order (Forestry) 2006 to provide the Forestry Commissioners with the option of serving such a Notice on an owner without first securing prosecution, where it appears to the Commissioners that an offence has been committed. . .
The Restocking Notice will require you to restock the site with trees.
So that you have the opportunity to agree and understand the work required by the Notice, please contact your local Woodland Officer, Lindsay Allen . . . to discuss the restocking prescriptions. . .
If you are seeking planning permission for the felled area, you should be aware that the granting of planning permission will not override the conditions of the Restocking Notice. Nor is this the case is [sic] planning permission granted in the interim between the felling occurring and the Notice being served. . ."
"Please find the Reference Committee report attached. Two things to highlight:
1. The Reference Committee proposed that Forest Services consider whether restocking an alternative area would be acceptable (for a 10 year period), given the inevitable development on site. When approached with this option, Forest Services did not accept, hence the committee's other option of a reduced maintenance period. I have attached a copy of the refusal from FS for your reference.
2. The letter does not make it clear that the modified Restocking Notice will not include the land erroneously mapped in the original notice. My apologies for this! It is a result of poorly applied stock text. Please be assured that the revised Restocking Notice will not include the unowned strip of land and the number of trees required will be appropriately reduced (based on a stocking density of 1100 stems per hectare). This is agreed by the Reference Committee at par[sic] 19 and so must be complied with. Forest Services have been instructed to produce the revised notice which removes this unowned strip of land." [emphasis added]
"The Reference Committee for the above case have concluded that the Restocking Notice is an appropriate and proportionate response to an act of unlicensed felling, have recommended that Forest Services and the Objector consider whether restocking an alternative area would be preferable (with a maintenance period of 10 years).
They have further concluded that if restocking an alternative area cannot be agreed, then the Restocking Notice maintenance period should be reduced by 3 years and 6 Months [from the date of planting the trees].
For the purposes of my reporting to the Minister to proactively provide the best recommendations to her, please confirm whether Forest Services will consider negotiating an alternative area with the Objector."
"The Forest Services has had no new information to substantiate a silvicultural reason to agree an alternative restocking area. Given that, there's no rational basis for us to change our original decision to restock the felled area."
Witham Nelson Reference Committee Report
"11. . . . the Reference Committee further considered the position of the Objector in this case having already implemented full planning permission through beginning the development of drainage at the entrance to the site. This means that the planning permission will remain in effect beyond the maintenance period of the Restocking Notice. The Reference Committee therefore accepted that should the Restocking Notice be complied with, then any restocked trees will inevitably be removed once the legal obligation for maintenance expires. The Reference Committee considered that this may nullify any advantages of the restocking beyond this period (restoration of canopy cover, biodiversity gain, species corridor maintenance, etc.)
12. The Reference Committee accepted that withdrawing the Restocking Notice on this basis could set an unacceptable precedent whereby felling controls through both planning and felling licence regimes could be circumvented. For example, given the prospect of development, a nefarious actor may, in the hope of both avoiding the felling licence process and removing trees from the consideration for planning permission, fell trees without a licence, subsequently obtain full planning permission, and avoid any Restocking Notice by way of appeal or by referring to a precedent whereby full planning permission nullified a Restocking Notice.
13. On the other hand, the Reference Committee also accepted that this case necessarily leads to the loss of the restocked trees, and that in the context of long term objectives (such as biodiversity net gain or indeed the preservation of growing timber reserves) the practical consequences of upholding the Restocking Notice may appear to some more as the temporary frustration of development prospects than it does the restoration of canopy cover.
Ground 3: That the Forestry Commission's service of the Restocking Notice was not lawful because full planning permission was granted before the notice was serviced
14. The Reference Committee considered the Objector's claims that the granting of full planning permission in advance of the service of the Restocking Notice means that the Restocking Notice was not lawful.
15. The Reference Committee agreed that as a point of law any challenge to the Restocking Notice on this basis would be better considered under Judicial Review. They did however agree that the granting of planning permission subsequent to an act of illegal felling is not the retrospective exemption of that felling from the requirement for a felling licence.
Ground 4: That the Forestry Commission failed to exercise proper discretion in issuing a Restocking Notice, essentially that a Restocking Notice is not a reasonable or proportionate response
16. The Reference Committee agreed that any points of law with respect to the fettering of discretion by the Forestry Commission is a matter beyond the remit of the Reference Committee and best examined under judicial review.
…
18. The Reference Committee accepted that while every effort can be and should be made to ensure Restocking Notices are generally resilient to future circumstances, these cannot be the determining factors in whether a Restocking Notice is appropriate or not. What is material are the circumstances at the time of felling and the silvicultural status of the site. The Reference Committee therefore agreed that a Restocking Notice is an appropriate response to the felling on this site, given the silvicultural characteristics of the site at the time of felling." [emphasis added]
"23. The Reference Committee considered the prospect of any restocked trees being immediately felled once the maintenance period of the Restocking Notice expires. Fully accepting the regulatory justifications for continuing in this vein, the Reference Committee considered whether restocking an alternative area may be specifically appropriate in this case. The Reference Committee acknowledged that the standard practice with respect to planting alternative areas is to do so only for sound silvicultural reasons, where the land is for example flooded or renders tree planting otherwise impossible. The Reference Committee considered that this case is unusual because of the time elapsing between its various stages allowing for the enactment of planning permission to take place. In this case, this means that the site's development is all but inevitable. Given that the trees are therefore almost certainly to be removed after the expiry of the Restocking Notice, the Reference Committee suggested that an alternative planting area may be preferable for the sake of any longer-term establishment of restocked trees and the associated benefits of this in terms of biodiversity net gain and protecting timber reserves."
"Conclusions
24. The Reference Committee concluded that no exemption applied at the time of the felling and that therefore a felling licence was required (Ground 1).
25. The Reference Committee concluded that any points of law related to the infringement of property rights is a point of law beyond their remit. The Reference Committee nonetheless concluded that it would be unwise to recommend withdrawing the Restocking Notice on the basis that future development is inevitable, as this risks setting an unacceptable precedent whereby both planning and felling licence regimes could be circumvented and are therefore undermined (Ground 2).
26. The Reference Committee concluded that the subsequent granting of full planning permission did not satisfy the requirement for an exemption to apply at the time of the felling and that this does not therefore provide a satisfactory justification to conclude that the Restocking Notice should be withdrawn (Ground 3).
27. The Reference Committee concluded that a Restocking Notice is an appropriate and proportionate response to an act of unlicensed felling (Grounds 4 & 5).
28. The Reference Committee concluded that the mitigating circumstances in this case may warrant reducing the 10 year maintenance period of the Restocking Notice so that it ends 10 years from the date of the original notice rather than 10 years from the issue of a modified notice.
29. The Reference Committee concluded that the Minister may wish to consider whether presenting Forest Services and the Objector the opportunity to restock an alternative area may be a preferable outcome given the near inevitability of any restocked trees being removed for the sake of the extant and enacted planning permission on the site." [emphasis added]
Smar Holdings
Reference Committee Report
a. Issue 3. Should the requirements of the RSN be varied so as to allow the redevelopment of Area B for housing within the next 10 years if so required in the public interest?
b. Issue 4. In all the circumstances of this case, should any re-stocking take place on alternative land?
a. Issue 3:
(1) It accepted that the draft allocation meant that the Land may be removed from the Green Belt and allocated for development.
(2) Allowing the RSN to be modified to allow development to take place within 10 years if the allocation is confirmed would "undermine both the felling licence regime and planning regime with respect to lawful tree felling".
(3) Replacing felled trees and housing development were both in the public interest but it was not for the Committee "to establish which of these public interests should take precedence".
b. Issue 4:
(1) It accepted that the restocked trees could lawfully be removed after 10 years in the event that the land was allocated for development.
(2) It accepted the Land could become available for development before that.
(3) But that did not amount to a "silvicultural justification that the [Land] is ill suited to Restocking".
(4) The alternative area had not been shown to be suitable and similar to the Land.
"Conclusions
18. The Reference Committee concluded that the area mapped out by Forest Services in the Restocking Map is correct and should be treated as a single area for a single act of illegal felling.
19. The Reference Committee concluded that the Restocking Notice is a proportionate and reasonable response to an act of illegal felling, and that it's conditions being 1100 stems per hectare across the whole site with 20% allowance for open ground is appropriate.
20. The Reference Committee concluded that while competing claims about public interest were made, these bore no material impact on the appropriateness of the 10 year maintenance period stipulated by the Restocking Notice conditions. The Reference Committee considered this period appropriate, and modifying the notice to allow felling for the sake of potential development would undermine the forestry and planning regulations around tree felling.
21. The Reference Committee concluded that an alternative restocking area was not justified, and that no appropriate silvicultural reason was immediately evident preventing the current site from being restocked.
22. The Reference Committee therefore concluded that the Restocking Notice could stand unmodified but for a new compliance date to allow an additional planting season for the Objector to complete the works."
a. "11. It would be most unusual for Ministers to reject the conclusions and recommendations of the Committee. I am not aware of any reason why the Committee's recommendations should not be accepted in full in this case."
b. "17. Enforcement processes are an essential element of the protection of our trees and woodlands, and there has been a strong commitment to this, this could be undermined if the recommendations of the Committee are not followed."
Submissions
Wickford
"42. The Commissioners consider that the no reasonable right or freedom would be lost as a result of the proposed power for them to impose re-stocking requirements. They also believe that, by permitting that a person can be required to restock felled trees without existing condition of his first having been convicted of the relevant offence being satisfied, that the person's freedom would actually thereby be enhanced, as he would not necessarily be prosecuted in circumstances where he might currently be. This reasoning seems questionable; but in these circumstances the relevant consideration under the Standing Order and statutory test is that no person should be compelled to carry out restocking unless that person has indeed committed the offence of unlawfully felling trees under the 1967 Act (or he has to carry out the remedial work as the freeholder of the land, in a situation where the person responsible for felling the trees no longer retains such an interest in the land as would enable him to comply with a remedial notice). However, we consider that no reasonable right or freedom would be lost, given the proposal maintains a right of appeal against a restocking notice where the service of that notice or its terms might be in some way unfair.
…
52. It is proposed that a person could have a legal duty to carry out remedial works imposed on them as a result of a decision of the Forestry Commissioners, in circumstances where at present that person could be required to perform those works only after being found guilty of the necessary offence in the courts. The Commissioners have stated that there is no intention that the standard of proof required before a re-stocking notice is issued will in practice be lessened, so as to make it possible for re-stocking to be required in cases where a conviction would presently be unlikely or impossible. They further argued that the process of determining whether a re-stocking notice should be served on someone is concerned with questions of fact, and that this is a judgement "which the Commissioners would be qualified to make". Essentially, they seem to consider that the existing requirement to obtain a prosecution is without a practical justification or beneficial purpose, given their belief that they will always be in a position to reach a justified conclusion on whether a person has committed the relevant offence. The relevant question therefore appeared to us to amount to whether there is any necessary protection for the public in the need for the Commissioners to obtain a conviction before they may require restocking works to be carried out. If there are no questions of fact which the Commissioners could not determine as readily, effectively and impartially as a court, there would not be any necessary protection in the current requirement to secure prosecution.
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54. The Commissioners argued in support of their proposal that the current need to obtain a conviction as pre-condition for requiring re-stocking has given rise to a situation in which the "existing provisions have not been effective". This view is derived from their argument that there are many cases where the relevant offence has certainly been committed but no prosecution is ever attempted as it would not in their view be in the public interest to do so (and thus enable the service of a restocking notice) for reasons such as the offence having been committed in ignorance. On this basis, the Commissioners believe the existing enforcement machinery gives rise to active problems, in addition to their view that there is no practical benefit in requiring prosecutions as pre-condition for enforcement when they believe that they are already in a position to establish for themselves whether the relevant act has in fact been committed.
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57. Various statistics relating to the operation of the current enforcement mechanisms are given in the Regulatory Impact Assessment at pages 50 and 51 of the explanatory statement. These indicate that, in England and Wales in 2003/4, 215 cases of alleged illegal felling were reported and 76 were fully investigated, of which 15 finally went to court. 14 of these 15 court actions resulted in a successful prosecution. It is noted on page 51 of the explanatory statement that "The [Forestry Commissioners] would have liked to pursue a larger proportion of those investigated…but did not on the advice of Defra Legal". This appeared to us to indicate that there are more instances of alleged illegal felling in which the Commissioners would like to enforce re-stocking than cases in which the Commissioners believe a successful prosecution could be achieved. The implication seemed to be that, should the Commissioners be given the powers which they propose, they would use that power to enforce restocking in instances where at present the need to prove the relevant offence in court or demonstrate a public interest in prosecuting would make this impossible. It is not clear to what extent any increase in the use of the power could arise from a lower standard of proof or simply a lower cost of taking action under the administrative procedure compared with that currently through the courts.
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59. We have considered this issue very carefully. We take the view that the method of determination which the Commissioners propose is sufficiently thorough to protect against the use of the proposed administrative power in relation to frivolous or unsubstantiated allegations of unlawful felling." [emphasis added]
"… Here the issue turns not on the meaning of a statutory expression but on the scope of a statutory power. In this context a minister might describe the circumstances in which the government contemplated use of a power, and might be pressed about exercise of the power in other situations which might arise. No doubt the minister would seek to give helpful answers. But it is most unlikely that he would seek to define the legal effect of the draftman's language, or to predict all the circumstances in which the power might be used, or to bind any successor administration. Only if a minister were, improbably, to give a categorical assurance to Parliament that a power would not be used in a given situation, such that Parliament could be taken to have legislated on that basis, does it seem to me that a parliamentary statement on the scope of a power would be properly admissible."
"51. Public authorities are under no general common law duty to give reasons for their decisions; but it is well-established that fairness may in some circumstances require it, even in a statutory context in which no express duty is imposed (see R v Secretary of State for the Home Department, Ex p Doody [1994] 1 AC 531 ; R v Higher Education Funding Council, Ex p Institute of Dental Surgery [1994] 1 WLR 242 , 263A-D; De Smith's Judicial Review 7th ed, para 7-099). Doody concerned the power of the Home Secretary (under the Criminal Justice Act 1967 section 61(1) ), in relation to a prisoner under a mandatory life sentence for murder, to fix the minimum period before consideration by the Parole Board for licence, taking account of the "penal" element as recommended by the trial judge. It was held that such a decision was subject to judicial review, and that the prisoner was entitled to be informed of the judge's recommendation and of the reasons for the Home Secretary's decision:
"To mount an effective attack on the decision, given no more material than the facts of the offence and the length of the penal element, the prisoner has virtually no means of ascertaining whether this is an instance where the decision-making process has gone astray. I think it important that there should be an effective means of detecting the kind of error which would entitle the court to intervene, and in practice I regard it as necessary for this purpose that the reasoning of the Home Secretary should be disclosed. If there is any difference between the penal element recommended by the judges and actually imposed by the Home Secretary, this reasoning is bound to include, either explicitly or implicitly, a reason why the Home Secretary has taken a different view …" (p 565G-H per Lord Mustill).
It is to be noted that a principal justification for imposing the duty was seen as the need to reveal any such error as would entitle the court to intervene, and so make effective the right to challenge the decision by judicial review.
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57. Thus in Oakley the Court of Appeal were entitled in my view to hold that, in the special circumstances of that case, openness and fairness to objectors required the members' reasons to be stated. Such circumstances were found in the widespread public controversy surrounding the proposal, and the departure from development plan and Green Belt policies; combined with the members' disagreement with the officers' recommendation, which made it impossible to infer the reasons from their report or other material available to the public. The same combination is found in the present case, and, in my view, would if necessary have justified the imposition of a common law duty to provide reasons for the decision."
"The facts of the present case are similar to those in Rockall. The site was part of the enclosed, landscaped grounds of Newton Hall, a large country house, as shown by historical maps. The land was expressly acquired by the first defendant to be used as garden land in connection with its scheme of development. By letter dated 13 April 2017, months before felling took place, Wickford wrote to the then owner to say that the land would only be used as 'garden space'. It was for this purpose that the trees were felled. There can be no question as to the genuineness of the first defendant's intentions."
"The Reference Committee agreed that the standard restocking practice of 1100 stems per hectare was not unreasonable, and did not find the Objector's argument against the conditions in the notice to be justified on silvicultural grounds. The Reference Committee agreed that restoration of canopy cover to the site was likely to be achieved by following the conditions set out in the Restocking Notice, but noted that the removal of natural regeneration on the site for the sake of restocking would be ill advised."
Witham Nelson
"68. I would reject that proposition, for three reasons. The first I have already mentioned. In a carefully constructed and self-contained statutory scheme for the felling of trees, Parliament has explicitly dealt with the relationship between that statutory scheme and the separate statutory scheme for planning. It has provided expressly for the synchronicity between these two regulatory regimes where they are both engaged by proposals for development, reconciling the requirement to apply for a felling licence with the process for granting planning permission. One may assume, I think, that it has sought to legislate as fully as it considered necessary for the different scenarios which might arise.
69. Secondly, Parliament did not provide, either in the 1967 Act or in the planning legislation, that the statutory provisions for felling licences would be disapplied, or the conditions imposed on a felling licence and the corresponding requirements of a section 24 notice annulled, automatically and retrospectively, by a later grant of planning permission which would have engaged the exemption in section 9(4)(d) had it been in place before the felling licence was applied for, granted and acted upon. There is no provision either in section 9(4) or elsewhere in the 1967 Act whose effect is that the granting of planning permission for a development nullifies the requirements of conditions on an extant felling licence where compliance with those requirements would prevent the development from being carried out or completed, or which gives a future grant of planning permission or reserved matters approval the effect of superseding such requirements. And I do not accept that this can somehow be read into the statutory scheme. So significant a change to the statutory arrangements for felling, which would negate action lawfully taken by the Forestry Commission in issuing a felling licence with restocking conditions, and prevent enforcement action under section 24(2), (3) and (4) , would surely have required explicit provision to be made in the statute itself or by an amendment to it. As Mr Simons submitted, it would have been possible for Parliament to enact such a provision had it intended to do so, but this it has never done.
70. And thirdly, the fact that in this case the council, when it granted outline planning permission in June 2016, took into account the proposed removal of trees in the light of the "Illustrative Masterplan" submitted with the application, and imposed several conditions requiring the submission and approval of details before felling could proceed, does not affect the operation of the statutory provisions themselves or alter the consequences of the restocking conditions incorporated into the felling licence. Nor does the fact that it was always the overt intention of Arnold White Estates to undertake or facilitate development on the site. It was free to apply when it did for the felling licence, before the reserved matters approvals required under the outline planning permission had been granted. And this was what it chose to do, for commercial reasons. It would equally have been open to it, instead, to seek the required reserved matters approvals or a full planning permission for the same development, and it would then, potentially, have been able to take advantage of the exemption in section 9(4)(d) .
71. There is no inherent illogicality in the statutory provisions for felling licences as the Forestry Commission understands them. The land use planning system and the legislation for forestry comprise separate but co-ordinated statutory schemes. They are among several regulatory regimes which can bear on the progress of development on a site. They do not belong to a legislative hierarchy in which the planning system ranks above, and takes precedence over, the legislation for forestry. Parliament has addressed the interaction between them where it has seen the need to do so, in particular in sections 9(4)(d) and 15 of the 1967 Act . Far from subordinating the statutory regime for felling licences to that for planning permission, the enactment of that regime, which explicitly acknowledges the planning legislation, demonstrates the synergy between them. The duties of the Forestry Commission, set out in section 1 of the 1967 Act , require it to take a national view of forestry, to consider national supplies of timber, and to maintain adequate national reserves of growing trees. They go beyond the role of local planning authorities in discharging their development control functions. They involve considerations which would not necessarily be taken into account by those authorities when determining applications for planning permission. The two statutory schemes are designed to operate together where proposals for development engage them both. And the respective roles of the Forestry Commission and local planning authorities undoubtedly have much in common. But the remit and responsibilities of the latter cannot be said wholly to subsume those of the former.
72. In this case it was clearly the view of the Forestry Commission when it issued the section 24 notice that it would not be consistent with good forestry and thus in the public interest for Arnold White Estates, having had the benefit of the felling authorised in the felling licence granted on 19 October 2018, to be able to avoid the burden of the restocking conditions which had been imposed on that licence as indispensable requirements if the proposed felling was to proceed. Otherwise, in the exercise of its statutory power to do so, the Forestry Commission would not have decided to issue a formal notice to enforce compliance with those conditions. Nor can it be said that the Forestry Commission was doing anything other than lawfully exercising its power to issue that notice, in accordance with its statutory purpose under section 1 of the 1967 Act ."
"79. That argument was powerfully presented by Mr Elvin. But I am not persuaded by it. If we had to resolve the point in this case, I would hold that the Forestry Commission's refusal to withdraw the section 24 notice was legally sound. I would not accept that, under the 1967 Act , there is an implied general power to withdraw such a notice such as was suggested by Mr Elvin. Nor would I accept that, if the Forestry Commission did have such a power, its failure or refusal to withdraw the section 24 notice it had issued in this case was irrational or otherwise unlawful.
80. I would not want to rule out a residual discretion for the Forestry Commission to amend or withdraw a section 24 notice in limited circumstances. Without trying to define the scope of such a discretion, I think it might exist, for example, in a case where it became clear that the notice had been mistakenly issued because of some factual error or misunderstanding, or where some inaccuracy or ambiguity had occurred in its wording. The exercise of the power to amend or withdraw in such a case would of course need to be considered in the particular circumstances as they arose."
"A public law claim is where, for example, it is claimed that the Forestry Commissioners (through Forest Services) has acted unlawfully, irrationally, or unfairly. These claims should be tested through Judicial Review, and not considered in detail by a Reference Committee. For the purposes of an appeal the power to serve and existence of the Restocking Notice should normally be regarded as a given."
"Q12. Does planning permission trump a restocking notice?
A11. The case of Arnold White Estates Ltd v Forestry Commission (2022) highlights the interaction between the planning regime and the Forestry Act 1967, where a development requires the felling of trees. The Court of Appeal held that a subsequent grant of planning permission does not automatically remove the need to comply with the conditions of a felling licence, even if compliance with these conditions would make the development impossible. Therefore, developers should wait for the grant of a qualifying planning permission before felling any trees, rather than obtaining and felling pursuant to a felling licence. Only full planning permission that is granted prior to the felling would count as an exemption to the requirement for a felling licence.
Q13. Is allowing the restocking of an alternative area a fair compromise where a restocking notice is being appealed for disrupting planning ambitions?
A13. In the initial submission of an appeal against a Restocking Notice, the Form 6A asks whether an appellant wishes to object against the notice, the conditions of the notice, or both. Objectors commonly object to both, with the claim that should the objection against the notice itself fail, that the Reference Committee consider allowing for the restocking area to be modified and an alternative area considered in its place. It has become normal practice for Forest Services, when first issuing the Restocking Notice, to consider allowing the restocking of an alternative area. This is, however, only ever considered acceptable if the original restocking area is not suited to restocking for silvicultural reasons.
Allowing alternative area restocking without good silvicultural reasons (for the unsuitability of the felled area) could result in a particularly unhealthy precedent."
"Hi Mark
Thanks for the below.
Forest Services has had no new information to substantiate a silvicultural reason to agree an alternative restocking area. Given that, there's no rational basis for us to change our original decision to restock the felled area.
James
Dear James
The Reference Committee for the above case have concluded that the Restocking Notice is an appropriate and proportionate response to an act of unlicensed felling, have recommended that Forest Services and the Objector consider whether restocking an alternative area would be preferable (with a maintenance period of 10 years).
They have further concluded that if restocking an alternative area cannot be agreed, then the Restocking Notice maintenance period should be reduced by 3 years and 6 months.
For the purposes of my reporting to the Minister to proactively provide the best recommendations to her, please confirm whether Forest Services will consider negotiating an alternative area with the Objector.
Many thanks
Mark"
"10. Given the inevitability of development on the site, the Reference Committee were concluded [sic} that the Minister may wish to consider presenting Forest Services the opportunity to accept restocking an alternative area, as this may be a preferable outcome given the near inevitability of any restocked trees being removed after the maintenance period expires. I have proactively presented Forest Services with this option in advance of the Minister's decision for the sake of practicality and Forest Services have declined to consider an alternative area.
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13. It would be most unusual for Ministers to reject the conclusions and recommendations of the Committee. I am not aware of any reason why the Committee's recommendations should not be accepted in full in this case."
Smar Developments
"Unless immediately required for the purpose of carrying out development authorised by planning permission granted or deemed to be granted under the Town and Country Planning Act 1990 or enactments replaced by that Act".
"Typically the FC would only ever agree to restocking an alternative location in exceptional cases where naturally occurring events rendered the felled area unviable for restocking. For example, if the felled area had been flooded. The FC would expect any man-made barriers to restocking to be rectified to allow compliance with the Notice".
Conclusions
Wickford
Witham Nelson
Smar Developments