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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Greenfields (IOW) Ltd, R (On the Application Of) v Isle of Wight Council [2024] EWHC 2107 (Admin) (23 August 2024) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2024/2107.html Cite as: [2024] EWHC 2107 (Admin) |
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KING'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
PLANNING COURT
London Rd, Southampton, SO15 2XQ |
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B e f o r e :
Sitting as a judge of the High Court
Between :
THE KING
(on the application of GREENFIELDS (IOW) LIMITED)
- and -
ISLE OF WIGHT COUNCIL
-and-
WESTRIDGE VILLAGE LIMITED
____________________
THE KING (on the application of GREENFIELDS (IOW) LIMITED) |
Claimant |
|
- and - |
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ISLE OF WIGHT COUNCIL |
Defendant |
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-and- |
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WESTRIDGE VILLAGE LIMITED |
Interested Party |
____________________
Dr Ashley Bowes (instructed by Isle of Wight Council Legal Services) for the defendant
Mr Andrew Byass (instructed by Lester Alridge LLP) for the interested party
Hearing dates: 1-2 July 2024
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
HHJ JARMAN KC:
Introduction
The July 2021 meeting
"Councillors are elected to implement, amongst other things, planning policies. They can properly take part in the debates which lead to planning applications made by the Council itself. It is common ground that in the case of some applications they are likely to have, and are entitled to have, a disposition in favour of granting permission. It is possible to infer a closed mind, or the real risk a mind was closed, from the circumstances and evidence. Given the role of Councillors, clear pointers are, in my view, required if that state of mind is to be held to have become a closed, or apparently closed, mind at the time of decision."
"…The court, with its expertise, must take on the responsibility of deciding whether there is a real risk that minds were closed."
Central to such a consideration, however, must be a recognition that Councillors are not in a judicial or quasi-judicial position but are elected to provide and pursue policies. Members of a Planning Committee would be entitled, and indeed expected, to have and to have expressed views on planning issues…
"More importantly, planning committees comprise democratically elected politicians, seeking to respond to their local communities and ultimately answerable to them. The job is not easy, especially when passions on an issue are high and rational argument is squeezed. Large numbers of the public may attend committee meetings to voice their concerns. … To my mind the taking of statements when councillors are asked to explain their voting, is especially to be deplored. Prudence is the sensible judicial approach in this context."
"Because this is against officer recommendation, you will need to come up with a reason for why this should be refused. I think in the past there has been a bit of an approach that we'll let the Officers sort that out, but I think we've all had recent training. Do you have any proposal, any reasons for why you wish to refuse it…?"
"…I'm entirely comfortable with whatever you propose, provided it is sustainable. You can't just be against it… you can't sit there and just expect the Officers to make up something that they're going to have to defend if they don't think it's defendable."
"Thank you, Chair. Yeah, the first time round, I've abstained on the application. It's a difficult one, you know, my heart is telling me to do one thing and I was waiting for an argument to overrule my head, but to be honest I haven't found it. We cannot just ignore Officer recommendations, I'm sorry, we – there is a presumption to support the application and I was – I really was hoping that there would be a good enough point to refuse the application, but due to the material facts not being strong enough, I'm proposing that the application be accepted, Chair."
Events after the July 2021 meeting
The meeting of April 2023
Delay
"In my opinion, for the reasons given by Lord Steyn, where there is a challenge to the grant itself, time runs from the date of the grant and not from the date of the resolution. It seems to me clear that because someone fails to challenge in time a resolution conditionally authorising the grant of planning permission, that failure does not prevent a challenge to the grant itself if brought in time, ie from the date when the planning permission is granted. I realise that this may cause some difficulties in practice, both for local authorities and for developers, but for the grant not to be capable of challenge, because the resolution has not been challenged in time, seems to me wrongly to restrict the right of the citizen to protect his interests. The relevant legislative provisions do not compel such a result nor do principles of administrative law prevent a challenge to the grant even if the grounds relied on are broadly the same as those which if brought in time would have been relied on to challenge the resolution."
"As a matter of language it is possible to say in respect of a challenge to an alleged unlawful aspect of the grant of planning permission that "grounds for the application first arose" when the decision was made. The ground for challenging the resolution is that it is a decision to do an unlawful act in the future; the ground for challenging the actual grant is that an unlawful act has taken place. And the fact that the element of unlawfulness was already foreseeable at earlier stages in the planning process does not detract from this natural and obvious meaning. The context supports this interpretation. Until the actual grant of planning permission the resolution has no legal effect. It is unlawful for the developer to commence any works in reliance on the resolution. And a developer expends money on the project before planning permission is granted at his own risk. The resolution may come to nothing because of a change of circumstances. It may fall to the ground because of conditions which are not fulfilled. It may lapse because negotiations for the conclusion of a section 106 agreement break down. After the resolution is adopted the local authority may come under a duty to reconsider its decision if flaws are brought to its attention: R v West Oxfordshire District Council, Ex p C H Pearce Homes Ltd (1986) 26 RVR 156 . Moreover, it is not in doubt that a local authority may in its discretion revoke an outline resolution. In the search for the best contextual interpretation these factors tend to suggest that the date of the resolution does not trigger the three-month time limit in respect of a challenge to the actual grant of planning permission."
"For my part the substantive position is straightforward. The court has jurisdiction to entertain an application by a citizen for judicial review in respect of a resolution before or after its adoption. But it is a jump in legal logic to say that he must apply for such relief in respect of the resolution on pain of losing his right to judicial review of the actual grant of planning permission which does affect his rights. Such a view would also be in tension with the established principle that judicial review is a remedy of last resort."
"For all these reasons I am satisfied that the words "from the date when the grounds for the application first arose" refer to the date when the planning permission was granted. In the case before the House time did not run therefore from the resolution of 15 September 1999 but only from the grant of planning permission on 12 May 2000."
"The references to the Burkett and Risk Management cases were clearly helpful in identifying the principles but they cannot be dispositive in themselves. … [M]uch may turn on the individual facts of the particular case. To what extent is it right on the evidence before me to regard the decisions as final?"
"I believe the true position to be as follows. If the earlier decision is no more than a preliminary, or provisional, foreshadowing of the later decision, Burkett does indeed apply so that the later, -final, decision falls to be treated as a new decision, the grounds for challenging which -first arise only when it is made. But if the earlier and later decisions are distinct, each addressing what are substantially different stages in a process, then it is necessary to decide which decision is in truth being challenged; if it is the earlier, then the making of the second decision does not set time running afresh. I accept that the distinction may in particular cases be subtle, but it is in my view nonetheless real and important.
This distinction is not explicitly made by either Lord Steyn or Lord Slynn in Burkett. But it did not need to be. The focus of their reasoning is on the particular situation with which the House was dealing, namely one where planning permission has been preceded by a resolution approving the award subject to certain conditions: the essential point made is that since the resolution was indeed only conditional it decided nothing. The House was not considering the case of staged decision-making. Likewise in Risk Management the essential point was that no actual decision had been taken before the beginning of March 2007."
"The act of a public authority is taken to be valid and effective unless it is challenged and quashed by legal action taken in proper time. However, where a public law measure is taken at the end of and on the basis of a series of steps and its lawfulness is contingent on the lawfulness of each of the steps leading up to it, a question may arise whether the lawfulness of the final measure …can be impugned by a claim brought within time assessed by reference to that measure by showing that an earlier step was affected by unlawfulness, even though the claimant would by then be out of time to challenge the lawfulness of the earlier step if taken by itself".
"The Trust relies upon the principle in R (Burkett) v Hammersmith and Fulham London Borough Council [2002] 1WLR 1593 and submits that time ran from the date of the planning permission and not some earlier date. The defendants and interested parties argue that time should run from various earlier dates related to any breach of s.100D as a freestanding basis for seeking judicial review. If the effect of a breach of s.100D is to vitiate the related committee resolution (or in this case planning permission) because of, for example, procedural unfairness, I do not see how Burkett can be distinguished. In the present case the planning permission is not vitiated, but the court did not receive sufficiently full argument to justify taking the step of distinguishing Burkett. I am not prepared to refuse leave in relation to ground 2 on the basis of delay."
The authority's constitution
"Any member of the council may attend any meeting of a committee, including those parts of the meeting from which the public and press are excluded. They do not have a right to vote or move a motion or amendment, but may speak with the consent of the chairman (such consent to be sought before the meeting and should not normally be withheld)."
"Any local member who is not a member of the Planning Committee is entitled to attend and speak in relation to any item on the agenda with direct impact on their electoral division, so long as they have given prior notice before the start of the meeting to Democratic Services of their wish to do so. […] A local member can speak for five minutes at the end of public speaking unless the chairman agrees otherwise. Members of the Planning Committee who are determining applications that are within their electoral division should, by local convention, declare the fact and nature of the impact on their electoral division as a personal interest and may speak but will not vote on the issue […]"
Ground 1-procedural irregularity
Ground 2- bias
Ground 3- failure to publish the section 106 agreement
"In those circumstances I am satisfied that the claimant has suffered no prejudice at all in the breach of statutory duty and the legitimate expectation created by the Circular, and has suffered no substantive unfairness. Insofar as it becomes a matter of discretion because of the breach of duty rather than an assessment of substantive fairness, I decline in the exercise of my residual discretion to quash the permission. Midcounties has not shown that it would have anything to say on the detail of the agreement for consideration by the Council. Quashing the permission for nothing to be reconsidered would be pointless."
"..when it comes to material prejudice, a person who was aware of a reference in a committee report to a background paper but who has never shown or had any interest in inspecting the document is unlikely to get very far in a claim for judicial review."
"First, the substance of the s 106 agreements, as contained in the heads of terms, were placed on the Register via the ORs, which were published there. I think there was thus compliance in substance, if not in form, with the requirement to publish the s 106 Agreements."
Ground 5- highway impact mitigation
Ground 4- deferral of consideration of CIL Regulation 122
"(1) This regulation applies where a relevant determination is made which results in planning permission being granted for development.
(2) A planning obligation may only constitute a reason for granting planning permission for the development if the obligation is—
(a) necessary to make the development acceptable in planning terms;
(b) directly related to the development; and
(c) fairly and reasonably related in scale and kind to the development.
(3) In this regulation—
"planning obligation" means a planning obligation under section 106 of TCPA 1990 and includes a proposed planning obligation…"
Relief
"(2A)The High Court—"
(a) must refuse to grant relief on an application for judicial review, and
(b)may not make an award under subsection (4) on such an application,
if it appears to the court to be highly likely that the outcome for the applicant would not have been substantially different if the conduct complained of had not occurred.
(2B) The court may disregard the requirements in subsection (2A)(a) and (b) if it considers that it is appropriate to do so for reasons of exceptional public interest."