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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Court of Appeal in Northern Ireland Decisions >> UK Waste Management, In re [1999] NICA 2; [1999] NI 183 (30th April, 1999) URL: https://www.bailii.org/nie/cases/NICA/1999/2.html Cite as: [1999] NICA 2, [1999] NI 183 |
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1. In
this appeal the Department of the Environment for Northern Ireland (the
Department), the planning authority for Northern Ireland, challenges a decision
of Coghlin J given on 22 January 1999, whereby the judge made an order of
mandamus ordering the Department to grant planning permission to the respondent
UK Waste Management Limited (the Company) in the terms of a notice issued by
the Department on 10 October 1997 in accordance with the provisions of Article
31(3) of the Planning (Northern Ireland) Order 1991 (the 1991 Order). By the
decision challenged in these proceedings the Department purported to defer
granting planning permission to the Company for the development of a landfill
site at Cottonmount, Mallusk, Co Antrim for the disposal of waste. The Company
claimed that the Department did not have power to defer the grant of permission
and that under the terms of Article 31 it was bound to proceed without delay to
the issue of planning permission on the terms of its notice.
2. Control
of the development of land is regulated by the 1991 Order, which by Article
3(1) imposes upon the Department the duty of formulating and co-ordinating
policy for securing the orderly development of land and the planning of that
development. Planning applications have to be made in the manner specified by
a development order, which order was provided for in the Planning (General
Development) Order (Northern Ireland) 1993. Article 25(1) provides:
4. This
procedure is not reflected in the English planning legislation, and appears to
be unique to Northern Ireland.
5. Under
Article 32 an applicant may appeal against the Department's refusal of planning
permission to the Planning Appeals Commission, which may allow or dismiss the
appeal or reverse or vary the planning decision. It is provided by paragraph
(2), however, that this procedure is not to apply to any application in
relation to which the Department has served a notice under Article 31(1).
Article 33 provides for what is known as a "deemed refusal". A decision must
be given on a planning application within a period of two months (specified by
Article 11 of the Planning (General Development) Order (Northern Ireland)
1993). Unless this period is extended by agreement Article 32 is to apply as
if the application had been refused at the end of the period. Again, this does
not apply to applications which have been made subject to the special procedure
under Article 31. It is apparent accordingly that applications to which the
Article 31 procedure has been applied stand alone and that the procedure is
intended to replace the ordinary arrangements for appeal against a refusal.
6. The
Company has operated a landfill waste disposal site at Cottonmount Quarry since
1994, in pursuance of planning permission granted in 1989 following a public
inquiry. On 3 February 1995 it lodged with the Department an application for
planning permission to extend the landfill operation on that site. There
followed a sequence of events which consumed a period of some three and a half
years and then culminated in a decision by the Department to defer yet further
the determination of the application, "pending development of the Department's
Waste Management Strategy for Northern Ireland". We are not called on to
decide in this appeal whether this extraordinarily long delay can be justified,
and we shall confine our conclusions to the issues before us. We feel bound to
say, however, that it reflects no credit on the operation of the system of
planning control in the Province, and express the hope that it is an isolated
instance.
7. On
21 March 1995 the Department served a notice applying the special procedure
contained in Article 31 of the 1991 Order. It then commenced a process of
advertising and consultation, interspersed with meetings and requests for
information on a number of matters, which was still going on after the lapse of
a good two years. The Company's concern, not to say frustration, over the
delay, appears clearly from the terms of a detailed letter written on 10 March
1997 by its managing director Mr Ian Wakelin to the Minister in charge of
matters relating to the environment, then Mr Malcolm Moss MP. In concluding
this letter Mr Wakelin stated:
8. The
Minister's Private Secretary eventually replied on 29 April 1997, setting out
various reasons why the delay had been so great, declining on behalf of the
Minister a request for a meeting, and stating that the Department would be
seeking to have an Order containing new waste management legislation laid as
soon as possible after the General Election, due to be held on 1 May. He then
stated:
9. The
promised notice of opinion was not in fact issued in May, and did not
materialise until 10 October 1997. That notice, issued under the terms of
Article 31(3) of the 1991 Order, stated that planning permission for the
development should in the opinion of the Department be granted, subject to a
large number of detailed conditions. The document concluded with several
notes, numbers 1, 2 and 4 of which read:
10. The
covering letter accompanying the notice drew attention to the notes and
reminded the Company that if a hearing was not requested it should inform the
Department as soon as possible, "so that a final decision may be issued without
delay."
11. The
Company was reluctant to accept some of the conditions and sought clarification
of others, and there followed a series of meetings and discussions and an
exchange of letters. By the summer of 1998 the Company's concern about the
continuing delay in obtaining a final decision was mounting, and in a letter
dated 10 June Mr David Wilson its Regional Manager was seeking an early
resolution of the matter. In that letter he stated that the Company would be
prepared, notwithstanding its concern over the content of some of the
conditions, to accept the conditions if it facilitated the issue of a consent
for the proposal. By letters of 24 June and 17 July 1998 the Company continued
to press for a decision. In the former it confirmed that it accepted the
conditions in the proposed decision. On 12 August 1998 the Minister's Private
Secretary replied to say:
12. The
Department then sent a letter dated 21 August 1998, by which it notified the
Company of a proposal to defer determination of the planning application. The
letter was in the following terms:
13. The
reasons underlying this decision were set out in paragraph 6 of an affidavit
sworn by Mr PJ McBride on 23 October 1998 on behalf of the Department:
14. The
process of consultation and consideration of options for waste management had
begun in March 1997 and the draft Waste Management Strategy was issued in June
1998.
15. The
Company did not make any further representations, but instead made an
application on 11 September 1998 for leave to apply for judicial review, leave
being granted on 14 September. The grounds set out in its statement were as
follows:
16. The
application for judicial review came on for hearing before Coghlin J on 7
December 1998, and by a written judgment delivered on 22 January 1999 the
learned judge gave a decision in favour of the Company. He made an order of
mandamus commanding the Department forthwith to issue the planning permission
sought by the applicant as notified in the Department's notice dated 10 October
1997. His conclusion appears at page 12 of his judgment:
17. In
my view, on the true construction of article 31(3) of the 1991 Order, in the
absence of any request on the part of an applicant for a hearing before the PAC
the respondent is subject to a duty to issue a final decision in accordance
with the Notice of Opinion without delay."
18. In
reaching this conclusion the judge accepted at page 10 of his judgment,
contrary to the Company's submission, that the Department had a general power
to defer determination of a planning application. He held, however, that once
a notice had been issued under Article 31(3) it was bound to proceed to confirm
it once any conditions had been accepted by the applicant.
19. At
the hearing before us Mr Weatherup QC put forward the following arguments on
behalf of the Department:
20. Mr
Hicks QC for the Company sought to uphold the judge's conclusion that the
Department had to issue a planning permission on the terms of the Article 31(3)
notice once the conditions had been accepted. He submitted, however, that if
the Department was not so bound the judge was wrong in holding that it had
power to defer a planning decision, and that its only powers were to grant or
refuse permission.
21. Since
there is no equivalent of Article 31 in legislation applying elsewhere in the
United Kingdom, we have not been able to derive assistance from decisions of
other jurisdictions, and we have found nothing in Hansard which would throw any
light on the intention of Parliament in enacting the provisions of this
Article. The structure of the Article 31 procedure is such that one might
regard the issue of the notice under paragraph (3) as equivalent to the grant
of permission on an ordinary planning application and the appearance before the
Planning Appeals Commission to an appeal under Article 32. On this approach it
could perhaps be said that the issue of the notice is a final act, subject to
the applicant's right to be heard by the Planning Appeals Commission, and the
Department cannot go back on it. When one construes the words of the Article,
however, it seems to us inescapable that the notice is not to be equated with a
grant of permission. The words "before determining the application" in our
view are inconsistent with such a conclusion and leave no doubt that the notice
is not to be regarded as the final determination of the planning application.
22. The
judge recognised this in the passage which we have quoted from page 12 of his
judgment when he held that the Department was "subject to a duty to
issue
a final decision
in accordance with the Notice of Opinion without delay" (our emphasis). He
reached the conclusion, however, that the Department could only frame that
final decision in accordance with the terms of the notice, so leaving it no
discretion to change its mind, whether because of supervening events or other
sufficient reason. We are unable to agree with this conclusion. An applicant
for planning permission who has received a notice under Article 31(3)
indicating the Department's proposed decision is no doubt entitled to expect
that this will be implemented in the absence of some good reason to the
contrary. We consider, however, that it must still be open to the Department
to change its mind for sufficient reasons and give a different final decision
on the application. There must always be room, within certain limits, for a
public authority to change tack in its administration of matters with which it
has to deal: cf the observation of Lord Russell of Killowen in
Secretary
of State for Education and Science v Tameside Metropolitan Borough Council
[1977] AC 1014 at 1073. If the Department were debarred from changing its view and
giving a different final decision, there would be no room for amendment of its
proposal if supervening events – such as, for example, the issue of a
European directive – were to make it desirable in the public interest
that the original proposal should not be adopted. It may well be that
reconsideration of the wisdom of the proposed decision would be sufficient to
allow amendment of the proposal, but we do not find it necessary to decide
that. In the present case the draft Waste Management Strategy for Northern
Ireland was published in June 1998, and it was quite appropriate that
permission for a major landfill development should be considered in the light
of the strategy when it was finalised. It may be thought strange that this
point had not been taken at the time of the issue of the notice in October
1997, for matters were by then proceeding towards the formation of a definitive
strategy and the need for the decision to harmonise with a Province-wide
strategy for waste management must have been clearly visible. We accept
nevertheless that once it was established that a definitive strategy would be
adopted within a reasonable time, the Department could properly adopt the view
that a final decision should not be given on the present planning application
until it was clear that it harmonised with the strategy.
23. The
issue then arises whether the Department was entitled to defer a decision on
the application, as it purported to do by its letter of 21 August 1998. The
judge accepted the submission advanced on behalf of the Department that a
planning authority has a general power to defer a decision on a planning
application, but this was challenged on behalf of the Company on appeal before
us. The Company did not raise this issue by a respondent's notice, but since
it appears to us desirable to determine the issue rather than merely reverse
the judge's decision and leave the matter unresolved, we propose to come to a
conclusion on it.
24. Mr
Weatherup argued that the planning authority has an implied power to defer
consideration of a planning application and that the options specified in
Article 25(1) of the 1991 Order, to grant or refuse planning permission, are
not exhaustive of those open to it. He submitted that this could be regarded
as an example of ellipsis in drafting, discussed in Bennion,
Statutory
Interpretation
,
3
rd
ed, pages 382-3. We are of opinion, however, that the implication of such a
power in cases to which Article 31 has not been applied would be inconsistent
with the provisions of Article 33, whereby an application is deemed to be
refused after the expiry of two months unless an extended period is agreed upon
in writing. If the Department had power to defer consideration of an
application, it would stultify the operation of this provision.
25. The
decision of the English Court of Appeal in
Wyre
Forest District Council v Secretary of State for the Environment
(1989) 58 P & CR 291 was drawn to our attention, but we do not consider
that it assists the Department. In that case the court was considering the
validity of the conclusion of an inspector conducting a planning appeal, the
issue being whether he could properly conclude in favour of the applicant when
another inspector was about to conduct a local plan inquiry and might reach a
different conclusion on the use of the land. At pages 298-9 Slade LJ stated
that there were several courses open to an inspector in such a situation, one
being to defer his decision until after the local plan inquiry. It is to be
observed, however, that this statement was made in the context of a planning
appeal, not an application to the planning authority for permission to develop.
It does not in our view affect the issue of the planning authority's powers on
receipt of a planning application, which are governed by the provisions of the
1991 Order.
26. For
the reasons which we have given we consider that the Department does not have
power to defer an application which is not made subject to the Article 31
procedure. It is true that the deemed refusal under Article 33 does not apply
when the Article 31 procedure is invoked – there is very good reason for
this omission, since investigations in major planning applications of this type
may consume much more time. We do not consider that this is sufficient to give
rise to an implied power to defer consideration of an application when under
the statutory scheme for other planning applications the Department does not
have such a power. It may take such time as it reasonably needs to complete
its investigation, consultation, discussions etc, but once it has completed
this process, as it clearly had done in the present case, it must in our view
make a decision one way or the other. We accordingly are of the opinion that
the Department did not have power to defer reaching a decision on the present
application. It could, if it thought it an appropriate case, have refused
permission, on a "without prejudice" basis, on the ground of prematurity, a
well-recognised possible course of action (see the discussion in Dowling,
Northern
Ireland Planning Law
,
page 116 and the authorities there cited).
27. For
the reasons which we have given we do not consider that the order of mandamus
made by the judge was correct and we shall
pro
tanto
reverse his decision. The Department did not, however, have power to defer
consideration of the planning application, and it should forthwith determine
the application, by either granting permission or refusing it. We propose
therefore to make an order of certiorari quashing the decision to defer
determination of the planning application, which was notified to the Company in
the Department's letter of 21 August 1998, and an order of mandamus directing
it to determine the Company's planning application. We shall hear counsel on
the length of time within which that step is to be carried out.