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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Jersey Unreported Judgments >> JK Limited -v- Minister for Planning [2012] JRC 193 (22 October 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/je/cases/UR/2012/2012_193.html Cite as: [2012] JRC 193 |
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Before : |
J. A. Clyde-Smith, Commissioner, sitting alone. |
Between |
J K Limited |
Appellant |
And |
Minister for Planning and Environment |
Respondent |
Advocate D. G. Le Sueur for the Appellant.
The Solicitor General for the Respondent.
judgment
the commissioner:
1. On 8th May, 2012, the Court allowed the appeal of the appellant against the decision of the respondent ("the Minister") to refuse permission to the appellant to construct 25 dwellings at De la Mare Nurseries, La Rue a Don, Grouville - see the judgement of the Court at [2012] JRC 090.
2. On 13th June, 2012, I heard applications for costs by both the appellant and the Minister. The appeal proceeded by way of the modified procedure and both applicants faced the hurdle presented by Practice Direction RC 06/03, which provides:-
3. The appellant had appealed unsuccessfully against the Master's decision that the appeal be heard by way of the modified procedure - see the judgement of the Court on that appeal at [2011] JRC 161. Mr Le Sueur, for the appellant, had argued that this was a complex appeal which could only be dealt with by oral evidence and cross-examination of the Minister personally over an allegation that he had been improperly motivated for political purposes. In refusing the appeal, I said this at paragraph 19:-
4. There was no subsequent application by the appellant for the procedure to be reviewed which could have been undertaken at any stage pursuant to the provisions of Rule 15/3A(3) which is in the following terms: -
5. The appellant then applied unsuccessfully for an extensive order for disclosure against the Minister in support of its assertion of impropriety on the part of the Minister. In refusing the application (see the judgement of the Court at [2011] JRC 169) I said this at paragraph 19: -
6. In the Court's substantive judgment on the appeal, it found that the central issue on the appeal was the proper interpretation to be given to policy C20 of the Island Planning 2002, which concerns redundant glasshouses, and that there was no evidence before it to support any allegation of impropriety on the part of the Minister or the planning officers.
7. Mr Le Sueur submits that there are exceptional circumstances justifying an award of costs in the appellant's favour for the following reasons:-
(i) The length and complexity of the hearing.
(ii) Inequality of arms between the Minister and the appellant.
(iii) Mistakes made by the Planning Department in the interpretation of Policy C20.
I take each in turn.
8. Mr Le Sueur pointed out that the hearing took the best part of a day as opposed to the 1½ hours the Practice Directions states should normally be taken. I accept that this was the case, but this was due in part to the appellant maintaining its contention of impropriety on the part of the Minister and in part the Court not imposing stricter time limits. Stripped of those contentions of impropriety, the case was not complex. It was concerned with the interpretation of Policy C20.
9. The expectation, according to paragraph 4 of RC06/03, is that in appeals under the modified procedure, parties will not normally be represented. In this case, it would be unreasonable, Mr Le Sueur argued, to expect either the beneficial owner of the appellant or Mr Jonathan Stratford, who filed an affidavit on his behalf, to analyse Policy C20 and make submissions of the kind made by Mr Le Sueur. Accordingly, as the appellant had no choice but to employ a lawyer contrary to the expectations of the modified procedure, the case should be regarded as exceptional for the purposes of awarding costs.
10. I do not accept that submission. In my view, a layman is perfectly capable of interpreting policies and indeed, Mr Stratford did so with considerable skill in his affidavit of 1st April, 2011. Irrespective of this, the Practice Direction makes it clear the employment of a legal representative is not an exceptional circumstance:-
11. A search by Mr Le Sueur of the unreported judgments and Jersey Law Reports showed that of the 40 or so appeals under the modified procedure heard since 2006 on not one occasion had the Minister either represented himself or been represented by a member of the Planning Department, contrary, Mr Le Sueur said, to the expectation of the Practice Direction that ordinarily the parties would not be legally represented. The risk to the public, he said, is that the Minister and his advisers would be likely to press unreasonably for the modified procedure since this would positively deter appellants from instructing their own lawyers for fear of their not being able to recover their costs. The system, he said, actively encourages would-be appellants to dispense with obtaining legal advice and represent themselves but leaves the Minister completely free to engage specialist planning lawyers or as in this case, the Solicitor General, to argue the case for him. This is clearly unjust, Mr Le Sueur submitted and unfairly weighted in favour of the Minister and where the Minister's decision is found to be wrong, results in legally represented appellants being substantially out of pocket through no fault of their own. Furthermore he said, the modified procedure also provides absolutely no incentive or reason for the Minister to negotiate a settlement, safe in the knowledge that even if he or she is unsuccessful in the appeal, it is unlikely that adverse costs orders will be made. All of the "costs pressure" will be with the appellant.
12. In my view these are general criticisms of the procedure (upon which I express no view), that might more properly be addressed to the Rules Committee who advise the Superior Number in relation to its power to make rules of Court under Article 13 of the Royal Court (Jersey) Law 1948. The Court, in the meantime, must work within the procedure as currently laid down, which expressly preserves the entitlement of parties to be legally represented, an entitlement that the Minister exercised as indeed did the appellant. There can be no question of inequality of arms in this case.
13. The modified procedure facilitates the conduct of appeals by disappointed applicants without fear of adverse costs orders, a valuable protection that in my view should not be eroded by the Court too readily finding exceptional circumstances. In any event I do not see how the fact that an appellant has chosen to be legally represented could amount to exceptional circumstances bearing in mind that, as stated above, the Practice Direction makes it clear that it is not.
14. Much of Mr Le Sueur's submissions constitute a rerun of his arguments as to why the appeal should have been heard under the ordinary procedure, but it was not heard under the ordinary procedure and there was no application made at the appeal for it to be heard under the ordinary procedure. In terms of mistakes, he refers to the inability of the planning officers to interpret Policy C20 and to the legal advice apparently received by the Planning Department in this respect being wrong.
15. Mr Le Sueur relied upon the costs decision made by Bailhache, Deputy Bailiff, in the case of Manning-v-Minister for Planning and Environment [2012] JRC 086A, an appeal brought under the modified procedure. In that case, the Minister was ordered to pay 50% of the costs of the appellant and the interested person, even though the appeal was unsuccessful. The Court had found that the Planning Department had imposed mutually inconsistent conditions upon an existing permit and it is clear from the unreported judgment of the Deputy Bailiff dealing with costs that it was this mistake that in large part gave rise to the proceedings and the parties incurring costs:-