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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Supreme Court of Ireland Decisions >> Waterford County Council v. John A Wood Ltd. [1998] IESC 32; [1999] 1 IR 556; [1999] 1 ILRM 217 (29th October, 1998)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/ie/cases/IESC/1998/32.html
Cite as: [1999] 1 IR 556, [1998] IESC 32, [1999] 1 ILRM 217

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Waterford County Council v. John A Wood Ltd. [1998] IESC 32; [1999] 1 IR 556; [1999] 1 ILRM 217 (29th October, 1998)

THE SUPREME COURT
347/97

BETWEEN:
WATERFORD COUNTY COUNCIL
APPLICANT/APPELLANT

AND

JOHN A WOOD LIMITED
RESPONDENT


Judgment of Mr Justice Francis D Murphy delivered The 29th day of October 1998 [Nem Diss.]

1. The Case Stated herein by Mrs Justice McGuinness on the 30th day of October 1997 for the opinion of this Court raises an important and novel question as to the extent to which development - and more particularly “works” - commenced before the 1st day of October 1964 (“the appointed day”) is excluded from the scope of the Local Government (Planning and Development) Act 1963 by virtue of the provisions of s.24 of that Act.


2. The circumstances in which the particular question arises are set out in detail in the case stated but may be summarised as follows. By an agreement in writing dated the 16th September 1952 Richard Looby granted a licence to Agricultural Limestone Limited to dig. Process, remove and carry away limestone” from that part of the lands of Kilgrainey in the County of Waterford containing approximately eight acres and delineated on the map annexed thereto. It appears that Agricultural Limestone Limited commenced quarrying shortly after the date of that agreement but was taken over by the Respondents herein, John A

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3. Wood Limited, in or about 1969. The eight acres comprised in the 1952 Agreement may be conveniently described as “the original Looby lands “. By an indenture of lease dated the 5th day of September 1972 made between the said Richard Looby of the one part and the Respondents of the other part the said Richard Looby demised to the Respondents a further part of the lands of Kilgrainey comprising some thirty-six acres for a term of forty years from the 1st day of January 1970 subject to the various royalty charges thereby reserved. The lands comprised in the 1972 lease may be described as “the additional Looby lands” . In 1986 the Respondents purchased from a Mr Doyle further lands in the town land of Kilgrainey. The conveyance by Mr Doyle is not annexed to the case stated and does not appear to have been exhibited in the High Court proceedings. However, Counsel on behalf of the Respondent explained that the lands included in the 1986 conveyance comprised some ninety-six acres of which only approximately forty acres contained limestone suitable for quarrying. It may be relevant to note that it was further explained that the additional fifty acres approximately were acquired from Mr Doyle because he was unwilling to dispose of the limestone-bearing land separate from the remainder of his take.


4. It is common case that on the appointed day the Respondents were quarrying the original Looby lands and extracting limestone therefrom. Again, it was common case that after the acquisition of the additional Looby lands the Respondents extracted limestone therefrom without any apparent objection from the planning authority. It was only when the Respondents commenced quarrying operations on the Doyle lands in 1995 that proceedings were threatened and ultimately brought by the Waterford County Council as the planning authority for the county of Waterford. The proceedings were brought under s.27 of the Local Government (Planning and Development) Act 1976 and on the 16th November 1995 the learned Judge of the Circuit Court refused to grant an injunction restraining the Respondents


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from carrying out quarrying works on the Doyle lands. It was from that decision that an appeal was taken to the High Court and on that appeal the case was stated herein by the learned High Court Judge. The question posed by the learned Judge was:

“Whether the quarrying operations being carried out by the Respondents in the Doyle lands is development requiring planning permission”.

5. The physical features and more particularly the boundaries of the Looby lands and the Doyle lands are material partly because disputes in relation thereto may have brought the matter to the attention of the planning authority and partly because these boundaries may be of relevance in answering the question posed by the learned trial Judge.


6. It appears that the entire of the Looby lands and that part of the Doyle lands containing recoverable deposits of limestone are all situate within the town land of Kilgrainey, County Waterford and that the combined land holding is bounded on the north by the White Church Road and on the south by the Canty Road. The Looby lands and the Doyle lands are separated by a boithrín which connects the White Church Road to the Canty Road. Local residents contended that there was a public right of way over this boithrín. Whether such a right existed was never finally determined because a sensible agreement appears to have been reached with the local residents involved under which the route was to be maintained subject to the right of the Respondents to close it off from time to time in the interests of safety. That there was and is a modest route, fairly described as a boithrín, separating the Looby lands from the Doyle lands is an objective fact. Finally in relation to material facts, it is important to note that the seam of limestone which had been identified in the original Looby lands in fact extended for a distance of some six miles.


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THE ARGUMENTS

7. The Respondents submitted - no doubt correctly - that the issue in the present case did not involve any question as to what constituted “exempted developments” within the meaning or for the purposes of section 4 of the 1963 Act. The issue in this case concerned the proper interpretation of s.24 of that Act which, so far as material, provides as follows:


“24(1) Subject to the provisions of this Act, permission shall be required under this
Part of this Act:

(a) In respect of any development of land, being neither exempted development nor development commenced before the appointed day and

(b) ...............

(2) A person shall not carry out any development in respect of which permission is required by subsection (1) of this section save under and in accordance with a permission granted under this Part of this Act

The word “development” is defined in section 3 in the following terms:

8. ““Development” in this Act means, save where the context otherwise requires, the carrying out of any works on, in, or under land or the making of any material change in the use of any structures or other land.”


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9. In turn the word “works" is defined as including:


“.........any act, or operation of construction, excavation, demolition, extension, alteration, repair or renewal.”

10. Counsel on behalf of the Respondents contended, first, that quarrying of the seam of limestone having commenced before and continuing at the appointed day there was no obligation to obtain planning permission for the continuation of those works even if they were to continue for many years and over a very substantial area. Alternatively, the Respondents contended, they are entitled to continue works which were “a natural and logical extension of the development which existed before the appointed day” . This was an expression taken from views expressed by the late Eamonn Walsh when a senior counsel and author of an authoritative book on planning law but before his appointment to the Bench. In the views expressed by him and adopted by counsel on behalf of the Respondents he went on to explain that what he meant by the expression aforesaid was “that it could also have been reasonably anticipated that the development would progress to this point”. He pointed out that one would have to disregard the apparent change of use in the sense that land which had formerly been used for agricultural purpose was being swallowed up by the advance of the extraction programme.


11. However, Mr Justice Walsh in the views expressed by him did state that some limitation must be imposed on the extent to which works that had started might be continued. He suggested that the deposit being worked must be the same deposit; that there could be no leapfrogging over major roads, rivers or other developments so as to reach what was essentially a new seam. He thought that one could cross a minor road but that a major baffler would present a


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development terminus. Again, his view was that there could be no substantial intensification of user without permission being obtained.

12. Mr Gallagher SC on behalf of the Applicant/Appellant likewise contended for either an extreme interpretation of s.24 or a more moderate one. He submitted that quarrying operations in existence on the appointed day could not be continued at all thereafter without the developer obtaining planning permission. That argument was based on the fact that every quarrying operation - certainly every lateral extension of a quarry - would appear to involve a material change of use of the surface area from - in the present case - farming to excavation works.


13. Indeed, Mr Gallagher’s argument found support in the typically colourful phrase of Lord Denning in Thomas David . v. Penybont RDC [1972] 3 All ER 1092 when he said of quarrying that:


“In my view every shovel full is a mining operation.”

14. It seems to me that the extreme views contended for by either party must be rejected. Not for the nature of the views in themselves but for the fact that they do not represent a proper interpretation of s.24 of the 1963 Act as construed within the general framework of that legislation. Section 24 of the 1963 Act having expressly excluded works from the need to obtain permission - which term expressly includes “any act or operation of ...... excavation......” - necessarily permits the continuation of such works even where they involve a material change in the user of adjoining ground. If s.24 had not contained a provision so as to exclude existing uses and works from the new planning code serious and perhaps unconstitutional


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injustice might have been imposed upon those who had invested time, money and resources in such developments. It seemed to me to be clear that the purpose of s.24 was to permit (among other things) a developer to continue works which he had commenced before the appointed day without the necessity of seeking a planning permission which might not be forthcoming and the application for which would at the very least involve significant delay.

15. On the other hand it is, in my view, equally clear that the right to continue works commenced before the appointed day does not give to the developer an unrestricted right to engage in activities of the nature commenced before the relevant date. The exclusion from the operation of s.24 could not be invoked so as to confer on the particular developer a licence to carry on generally the trade or occupation in which he was engaged. The section merely permits the continuation to completion of the particular works commenced before the appointed day at an identified location. In my view the answer to the question posed by the learned Judge of the High Court requires the examination of all of the established facts to ascertain what was or might reasonably have been anticipated at the relevant date as having been involved in the works then taking place. It is clear that in some cases particular factors may be of decisive importance whereas in others those factors may be of little or no consequence. It has been argued, for example, that the fact that the property rights of the Respondents were confined to the original Looby lands at the appointed date is not a decisive factor. Whilst that may be so, I doubt that the converse would be correct. If the Respondents had acquired the ownership of the eighty acres for the purpose of extracting limestone before the relevant date and had commenced work on part of those lands I would have thought that the acquisition of the lands would have been of decisive importance in determining what might have been reasonably anticipated as the consequences of continuing the works commenced before the operative date. In the context of building works, presumably, plans


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prepared or contracts entered into by the developer would give very considerable guidance as to the nature and extent of the building works which might be anticipated. In relation to mining, the extent of the ore body would necessarily place a limitation on what could be achieved. If work had commenced on the extraction of ore from a small ore body the fullest extent of the rights preserved by s.24 would be the extraction of that ore body. It could not be argued successfully that work on a different ore body had been commenced before the operative date. In the present case some importance should be attached to the roadways running along the northern and southern boundaries of the combined properties. I would also attach some but by no means decisive importance to the boithrín n separating the Looby lands from the Doyle lands. The fact that the limestone deposit is substantial and continues from the Looby lands into the Doyle lands is of very great significance but perhaps the very extent of the deposit makes it a less valuable guide than might otherwise have been the case. I doubt that anybody viewing the works in progress in October 1964 would have contemplated or anticipated that they could or might at any stage involve or extend to quarrying operations at a distance of five or six miles from the operations then being carried on. In the present case I would in fact attach the greatest significance to the extent of the property under the control of the Respondents. The only lands in the areas over which they had any rights - so far as the findings reveal - were limited to the eight acres comprised in the original Looby lands. Of course the Respondents could seek - as they subsequently did - to acquire further lands or rights in the neighbourhood but they had not done so on the appointed date. The works that were being carried out involved quarrying for limestone on the original Looby lands. No evidence was produced to show that the Respondents were aware of the extent of the limestone deposits of which their quarry formed part. It may be reasonable to speculate that as their quarry became exhausted the Respondents would examine the possibility of discovering limestone in the adjoining lands and explore the possibility of acquiring rights

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over such lands. It is not, however, in my view proper to assume that limestone of appropriate quality would be discovered in lands which could and would be acquired on terms acceptable to the Respondents. Indeed, the fact that the Respondents were compelled to acquire fifty acres of land from Mr Doyle in excess of their requirements is indicative of the problems which one might have expected to arise if and when the Respondents decided to expand their operations. It seems to me that the proper inference is that the quarrying works on the Doyle lands were a distinct operation or at the very least a different phase from the works which were being carried on when the 1963 Act came into operation. Those works are not, in my opinion, the continuation of the original quarrying operations and therefore do not fall within the exclusion or exempting provisions contained in s.24 of the 1963 Act. Accordingly, those works require planning permission. I would therefore answer the question posed by the learned Judge of the High Court in the affirmative.

16. No question was posed by the learned trial Judge in relation to quarrying works which were or have been carried on on the additional Looby lands and it may be that those works have been completed so that no question of an injunction arises but I feel that it would be appropriate to say that the logic of my reasoning would have had equal application to those lands so that if the question had arisen I would have felt bound to say that planning permission would likewise have been required for planning operations on these lands.


17. Again, I note that the learned trial Judge has rightly reserved to herself the question whether or not an injunction should be granted in relation to the works started on the Doyle lands in 1995 and I accordingly express no view on that matter.


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18. Finally, I should add that it is clear - perhaps with the benefit of hindsight - that the proceedings herein should not have been instituted under s.27 of the 1976 Act. As Mr Justice Gannon pointed out in Dublin County Council .v. Kirby [1985] IRLM 325, that section was:


“........intended as a fire brigade section to deal with an urgent situation requiring immediate action to stop clear breaches of the Act.”

19. The views so expressed by Gannon J were confirmed by Mr Justice Keane in Dublin Corporation . v. McGowan [1993] 1 IR 405 and applied by this Court in Mahon . v. Butler [1998] 1 ILRM 284. This observation is not intended as any criticism of the Applicant/Appellant or its legal advisors. Indeed they did explore the possibility of invoking other remedies. I merely draw attention to the fact that it is now clear that the matters in issue between the parties involved novel questions of law and complex questions of fact which could not be dealt with readily in summary proceedings. Indeed Mrs Justice McGuinness recognised that special difficulties arose in the case and sought to overcome them by facilitating the parties in furnishing additional evidence before her. These difficulties should be borne in mind where similar applications are contemplated.


© 1998 Irish Supreme Court


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URL: http://www.bailii.org/ie/cases/IESC/1998/32.html