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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Wokingham Borough Council v Scott & Ors [2017] EWHC 294 (QB) (20 February 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2017/294.html Cite as: [2017] EWHC 294 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
IN THE MATTER OF AN APPLICATION UNDER
SECTION 187B OF THE TOWN AND COUNTRY PLANNING ACT 1990
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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WOKINGHAM BOROUGH COUNCIL |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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KEITH ROBERT SCOTT YVONNE THERESA SCOTT THE OWNERS AND OCCUPIERS OF THE RETAIL USE TRADING AS PET STOP THE OWNERS AND OCCUPIERS OF THE RETAIL USE TRADING AS FISH GLORIOUS FISH THE OWNERS AND OCCUPIERS OF THE RETAIL USE TRADING AS QUALITY GARDEN BUILDINGS THE OWNERS AND OCCUPIERS OF THE RETAIL USE TRADING AS GRANITE TRANSFORMATIONS THE OWNERS AND OCCUPIERS OF THE RETAIL USE TRADING AS BELL ANTIQUES THE OWNERS AND OCCUPIERS OF THE RETAIL USE TRADING AS DEEP END POOLS THE OWNERS AND OCCUPIERS OF THE RETAIL USE TRADING AS GARDEN TRENDS PERSONS UNKNOWN |
Defendants |
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Scott Stemp instructed by Hawksley's Solicitors on behalf of the First and Second Defendants
Hearing dates: 23-26 January 2017
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Crown Copyright ©
HH Judge Karen Walden-Smith :
Introduction
The Hearing
The Background
"The Government attaches great importance to Green Belts. The fundamental aim of Green Belt policy is to prevent urban sprawl by keeping land permanently open; the essential characteristics of Green Belts are their openness and their permanence." [para 79]
and that
"As with previous Green Belt policy, inappropriate development is, by definition, harmful to the Green Belt and should not be approved except in very special circumstances." [para 87]
and
"When considering any planning application, local planning authorities should ensure that substantial weight is given to any harm to the Green Belt by reason of inappropriateness, and any other harm, is clearly outweighed by other considerations." [para 88]
"Without planning permission, 1) the material change of use of the land from horticulture to a mixed use comprising horticulture, A1 retail, A3 restaurant/café, D2 children's play facilities and the stationing of a residential mobile home 2) the construction of hard surfaced areas for car parking and outdoor retail use, 3) the erection of structures for purposes ancillary to the mixed use."
"s. 191
(1) If any person wishes to ascertain whether—
(a) any existing use of buildings or other land is lawful;
(b) any operations which have been carried out in, on, over or under land are lawful; or
(c) any other matter constituting a failure to comply with any condition or limitation subject to which planning permission has been granted is lawful he may make an application for the purpose to the local planning authority specifying the land and describing the use, operations or other matter.
(2) For the purposes of this Act uses and operations are lawful at any time if—
(a) no enforcement action may then be taken in respect of them (whether because they did not involve development or require planning permission or because the time for enforcement action has expired or for any other reason); and
(b) they do not constitute a contravention of any of the requirements of any enforcement notice then in force.
(3) . . .
(4) If, on an application under this section, the local planning authority are provided with information satisfying them of the lawfulness at the time of the application of the use, operations or other matter described in the application, or that description as modified by the local planning authority or a description substituted by them, they shall issue a certificate to that effect; and in any other case they shall refuse the application."
"It is certainly possible to envisage rare cases in which this law [that any challenge to an enforcement notice is by way of appeal pursuant to section 174 to a planning inspector] may work some injustice. They will be confined to those in which both (a) there is a defect in the enforcement notice which can irrefutably be established, and (b) the landowner had an understandable reason for omitting to pursue a section 174 appeal. The coincidence of these facts will, I think, be rare. But it is not entirely unknown for administrative errors to lead to the issue of an enforcement notice when there is an existing planning permission, or Certificate of Lawful Use, and the chance of such error is no doubt increased if there are two different authorities concerned in the case. It is no doubt possible that a landowner might be absent abroad, ill, illiterate or simply may wrongly think that his CLU provides an answer and he need take no advice and do nothing. There is, we are told, no power even in an exceptional case to extend time for bringing a section 174 appeal. So in such a case, rare as it may be, the landowner could perhaps find himself with a cast iron defence to a prosecution under an Enforcement Notice, which he is prevented by section 285 from advancing."
"I agree that the plain purpose of the statutory scheme, and of section 285 in particular, is to prevent any challenge to the enforcement notice on grounds which can be raised before the Inspector under section 174, in any place other than before him, with appeal from him to the High Court and beyond on a point of law. If the Certificate of Lawful Use did provide an answer to the Enforcement Notice, that was a ground of challenge which could and should have been the subject of an appeal under section 174, invoking grounds (c) and/or (d). That is enough to conclude this appeal. In short, section 285 prevails over section 191(6). The latter establishes conclusively the lawfulness of the certificated use at the time of the CLU, but the issue must be raised in the manner prescribed by the statute, namely before the Inspector."
"…an enforcement notice will be interpreted so as not to interfere with permitted development rights under the General Development Permitted Order or with rights under to use land for a purpose ancillary to a principal use which is itself not being enforced against. The authorities go no further than that and certainly do not establish any general right to assert existing use rights at a time when the enforcement notice has come into effect after an unsuccessful appeal or in the absence of an appeal. Such rights must be asserted at the time of appeal against the enforcement notice. If the landowner sleeps on those rights, he will lose them." (per Keene LJ in Challinor).
The Statutory Basis for an Injunction
"187B – Injunctions restraining breaches of planning control.
(1) Where a local planning authority consider it necessary or expedient for any actual or apprehended breach of planning control to be restrained by injunction, they may apply to the court for an injunction, whether or not they have exercised or are proposing to exercise any of their other powers under this Part.
(2) On an application under subsection (1) the court may grant such an injunction as the court thinks appropriate for the purpose of restraining the breach.
(3) Rules of court may provide for such an injunction to be issued against a person whose identity is unknown.
(4) In this section "the court" means the High Court or the County Court."
"The discretion of the court under section 187B, like every other judicial discretion, must be exercised judicially. That means, in this context, that the power must be exercised with due regard to the purpose for which the power was conferred: to restrain actual and threatened breaches of planning control. The power exists above all to permit abuses to be curbed and urgent solutions provided where these are called for. Since the facts of different cases are infinitely various, no single test can be prescribed to distinguish cases in which the court's discretion should be exercised in favour of granting an injunction from those in which it should not. Where it appears that a breach or apprehended breach will continue or occur unless and until effectively restrained by the law and that nothing short of an injunction will provide effective restraint (City of London Corporation v Bovis Construction Ltd [1992] 3 All ER 697, 714), that will point strongly towards the grant of an injunction. So will a history of unsuccessful enforcement and persistent non-compliance, as will evidence that the defendant has played the system by wilfully exploiting every opportunity for prevarication and delay, although section 187B(1) makes plain that a local planning authority, in applying for an injunction, need not have exercised nor propose to exercise any of its other enforcement powers under Part VII of the Act. In cases such as these the task of the court may be relatively straightforward. But in all cases the court must decide whether in all the circumstances it is just to grant the relief sought against the particular defendant."
"…the 1990 Act, like its predecessors, allocates the control of development of land to democratically-accountable bodies, local planning authorities and the Secretary of State. Issues of planning policy and judgment are within their exclusive purview. As Lord Scarman pointed out in Pioneer Aggregates (UK) Ltd v Secretary of State for the Environment [1985] AC 132,141, "Parliament has provided a comprehensive code of planning control". In R (Alconbury Developments Ltd) v Secretary of State for the Environment, Transport and the Regions [2001] 2 WLR 1389, [2001] UKHL 23, paragraphs 48, 60, 75, 129, 132, 139-140, 159 the limited role of the court in the planning field is made very clear. An application by a local planning authority under section 187B is not an invitation to the court to exercise functions allocated elsewhere. Thus it could never be appropriate for the court to hold that planning permission should not have been refused or that an appeal against an enforcement notice should have succeeded or (as in Hambleton [1995] 3 PLR 8) that a local authority should have had different spending priorities. But the court is not precluded from entertaining issues not related to planning policy or judgment, such as the visibility of a development from a given position or the width of a road. Nor need the court refuse to consider (pace Hambleton) the possibility that a pending or prospective application for planning permission may succeed, since there may be material to suggest that a party previously unsuccessful may yet succeed, as the cases of Mr Berry and Mrs Porter show. But all will depend on the particular facts, and the court must always, of course, act on evidence." [para 29]
"… It seems to me perfectly clear that the judge on a s.187B application is not required, nor even entitled, to reach his own independent view of the planning merits of the case. These he is required to take as decided within the planning process, the actual or anticipated breach of planning control being a given when he comes to exercise his discretion. But it seems to me no less plain that the judge should not grant injunctive relief unless he would be prepared if necessary to contemplate committing the defendant to prison for breach of the order, and that he would not be of this mind unless he had considered for himself all questions of hardship for the defendant and his family if required to move, necessarily including, therefore, the availability of suitable alternative sites. I cannot accept that the consideration of those matters is, as Burton J suggested was the case in the pre-1998 Act era, "entirely foreclosed" at the injunction stage. Questions of the family's health and education will inevitably be of relevance. But so too, of course, will countervailing considerations such as the need to enforce planning control in the general interest and, importantly therefore, the planning history of the site. The degree and flagrancy of the postulated breach of planning control may well prove critical. If conventional enforcement measures have failed over a prolonged period of time to remedy the breach, then the court would obviously be the readier to use its own, more coercive powers. Conversely, however, the court might well be reluctant to use its powers in a case where enforcement action had never been taken. On the other hand, there might be some urgency in the situation sufficient to justify the pre-emptive avoidance of an anticipated breach of planning control. Considerations of health and safety might arise. Preventing a gipsy moving onto the site might, indeed, involve him in less hardship than moving him out after a long period of occupation. Previous planning decisions will always be relevant; how relevant, however, will inevitably depend on a variety of matters, including not least how recent they are, the extent to which considerations of hardship and availability of alternative sites were taken into account, the strength of the conclusions reached on land use and environmental issues, and whether the defendant had and properly took the opportunity to make his case for at least a temporary personal planning permission. [para 38]
Relevant too will be the local authority's decision under s.187B(1) to seek injunctive relief. They, after all, are the democratically elected and accountable body principally responsible for planning control in their area. Again, however, the relevance and weight of their decision will depend above all on the extent to which they can be shown to have had regard to all the material considerations and to have properly posed and approached the article 8(2) questions as to necessity and proportionality. [para 39]
Whilst it is not for the court to question the correctness of the existing planning status of the land, the court in deciding whether or not to grant an injunction (and, if so, whether and for how long to suspend it) is bound to come to some broad view as to the degree of environmental damage resulting from the breach and the urgency or otherwise of bringing it to an end. In this regard the court need not shut its mind to the possibility of the planning authority itself coming to reach a different planning judgment in the case. [para 40]
True it is, as Mr McCracken points out, that, once the planning decision is taken as final, the legitimate aim of preserving the environment is only achievable by removing the gipsies from site. That is not to say, however, that the achievement of that aim must always be accepted by the court to outweigh whatever countervailing rights the gipsies may have, still less that the court is bound to grant injunctive (least of all immediate injunctive) relief. Rather I prefer the approach suggested by the 1991 Circular: the court's discretion is absolute and injunctive relief is unlikely unless properly thought to be "commensurate" in today's language, proportionate. The Hambleton approach seems to me difficult to reconcile with that Circular. However, whatever view one takes of the correctness of the Hambleton approach in the period prior to the coming into force of the Human Rights Act 1998, to my mind it cannot be thought consistent with the court's duty under s.6(1) to act compatibly with convention rights. Proportionality requires not only that the injunction be appropriate and necessary for the attainment of the public interest objective sought here the safeguarding of the environment but also that it does not impose an excessive burden on the individual whose private interests here the gipsy's private life and home and the retention of his ethnic identity are at stake. [para 41]
I do not pretend that it will always be easy in any particular case to strike the necessary balance between these competing interests, interests of so different a character that weighing one against the other must inevitably be problematic. This, however, is the task to be undertaken by the court and, provided it is undertaken in a structured and articulated way, the appropriate conclusion should emerge." [para 42]
Discussion
"Those cases are, in my judgment, authority for two propositions which are determinative of the outcome here: first, that a defect, error or misdescription in an enforcement notice which is capable of correction by the Secretary of State under section 176 is not such a defect, error or misdescription as is capable of making the notice a nullity in accordance with the doctrine in Miller-Mead; second, that if the defect, error or misdescription is the statement that the notice is given under section 171A(1)(a), when in fact it should have said 171A(1)(b) – or vice versa – that is an error capable of correction by the Secretary of State under section 176 …the notice told the appellant what he had done wrong and told him what he must do to remedy it. [para 68]
All this assumes that the validity of the notice was a pre-requisite to the proper grant of the injunction of which the appellant now complains. But it was not. My Lord has referred to section 187B. A local authority is not confined in seeking injunctive relief to cases where it has issued an enforcement notice. It can seek such relief whenever it "consider[s] it necessary or expedient for any actual or apprehended breach of planning control to be restrained by injunction". I agree with everything my Lord has said on this aspect of the appeal. I add only that the appellant's attempt to argue that the formal authorisation for the commencement of proceedings pursuant to section 187B given by the council's head of legal services in a document dated 22 December 2009 was inapt to cover any application other than one founded on the enforcement notice – a technical point if ever there was one – is quite hopeless. The authorisation is expressed in quite general terms and refers to what is said to be a breach of both "planning control" and "the requirements of the enforcement notice." [para 69]
"… I accept, of course, that one cannot look outside the statutory scheme for some principle or rule whose application might be thought to produce a fairer solution. Our duty, as Lord Scarman said, is "to give effect to the intention of Parliament as evinced by the statute, or statutory code, considered as a whole." That we have done. Our duty is to apply the statutory code according to its language, sensibly construed and as Parliament intended. It is not our duty to seek for technical or pedantic reasons why, as a pettifogger might argue, someone as obviously in breach of planning control as the appellant should be enabled to buy further time and to postpone the inevitable day of reckoning, all the time making money out of his unauthorised use of the land. The statutory code is not some game of 'snakes and ladders'. It is a feature of an immature system of law that form is everything: the slightest error of procedure invalidates the proceedings, the merest verbal slip is fatal. A mature system of law, however, is concerned with substance rather than form, justice rather than technicality." [para 71]
The Application for an Injunction
Persons Unknown
Timing
The Precise Wording of the Injunction
Costs