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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> First-tier Tribunal (General Regulatory Chamber) >> Newton v Derbyshire Dales District Council & Anor (Re Community Right to Bid) [2024] UKFTT 435 (GRC) (30 May 2024) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKFTT/GRC/2024/435.html Cite as: [2024] UKFTT 435 (GRC) |
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(General Regulatory Chamber)
Community Right to Bid
Heard on: 10 January 2023 and subsequent written submissions |
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B e f o r e :
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MR BRIAN NEWTON | Appellant |
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- and - |
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(1) DERBYSHIRE DALES DISTRICT COUNCIL (2) STARKHOLMES ALLOTMENT ASSOCIATION |
Respondents |
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For the Appellant: Simon Bird KC, counsel instructed by Geldards
For the Respondent: Anthony Gill, counsel instructed by Anthony Collins Solicitors
For the Second Respondent: Andrew Gore, counsel instructed directly
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Crown Copyright ©
Decision: The appeal is dismissed.
The appeal
Legal Framework & Principles
Criteria for listing an ACV
(1) For the purposes of this Chapter but subject to regulations under subsection (3), a building or other land in a local authority's area is land of community value if in the opinion of the authority—
(a) an actual current use of the building or other land that is not an ancillary use furthers the social wellbeing or social interests of the local community, and
(b) it is realistic to think that there can continue to be non-ancillary use of the building or other land which will further (whether or not in the same way) the social wellbeing or social interests of the local community.
(2) For the purposes of this Chapter but subject to regulations under subsection (3), a building or other land in a local authority's area that is not land of community value as a result of subsection (1) is land of community value if in the opinion of the local authority—
(a) there is a time in the recent past when an actual use of the building or other land that was not an ancillary use furthered the social wellbeing or interests of the local community, and
(b) it is realistic to think that there is a time in the next five years when there could be non-ancillary use of the building or other land that would further (whether or not in the same way as before) the social wellbeing or social interests of the local community.
30. In Gullivers Bowls Club Ltd v Rother District Council and Anor (CR/2013/0009), Judge Warren heard an appeal by Gullivers Bowls Club Ltd, the owner of land used as a bowls club, which appealed against the inclusion of its land in the statutory list, following nomination by a Community Association. Judge Warren held:
"11. Turning to the future condition in Section 88(1)(b) Mr Cameron [representing the Bowls Club] submits that the existing bowls club has no realistic prospect of continuing. He points to the poor state of the buildings and the finances and relies on a report prepared by GVA. This finds that Gullivers is not commercially viable. Mr Cameron submitted that since listing lasts for five years, my starting point in considering whether the future condition was satisfied, should be whether the bowls club could continue in existence for that length of time.
12. I do not accept that the statute requires me to foresee such long-term viability. Indeed, it seems in the very nature of the legislation that it should encompass institutions with an uncertain future. Nor, in my judgment, is commercial viability the test. Community use need not be and often is not commercially profitable.
13. On this issue, I accept the submissions made by Mr Flanagan. Gullivers may be limping along financially but it still keeps going and membership is relatively stable. Of course it is possible that something could go drastically wrong with the buildings and Gullivers would not have the capital to repair them; but that has not happened yet and, in an institution that has lasted for 50 years, it would be wrong to rule out community spirit and philanthropy as resources which might then be drawn on. In any event, should the site cease to be land of community value, Rother would have power to remove it from the list."
31. In Worthy Developments Ltd v Forest of Dean District Council and Anor (CR/2014/0005), Judge Warren dismissed the appeal of a developer, which had bought a former pub known as the "Rising Sun" outside Chepstow, and wished to build two four-bedroomed houses on the site. A planning application to that effect had been refused but was likely to be appealed. The respondent accepted nomination by the "Save our Sun Committee" of the land and building comprising the pub. On the issue of section 88(1)(b), Judge Warren held:
"17. In respect of the future condition, Worthy Developments Ltd asked me to have regard to their intention to develop the plot to provide two houses. I take that into account although I balance it with the fact that they have not yet obtained the necessary planning permission. I also take into account the remoteness of the public house which must compound the general malaise affecting public houses nationally.
18. The written submissions ask me to consider which was the more likely to happen, that planning permission should be obtained and houses be built, or that the building be revived as a pub? In my judgment, however, to approach the issue in this way is to apply the wrong test.
19. I agree with the council. The future is uncertain. Worthy Developments Ltd may or may not obtain their planning permission. They may or may not sell the land. The Save our Sun Committee may or may not see their plans reach fruition. It remains still a realistic outcome that The Rising Sun might return to use either as a traditional pub or as a pub/shop/community centre as envisaged by the committee.
20. My conclusion in this respect is reinforced by the pledges of support and petitions gathered by our (sic) Save our Sun Committee. It is true that they have not yet made an offer with a firm completion date but their proposals are not fanciful. It is enough that return to use as a pub or some other venture furthering the social wellbeing or interests of the local community be realistic."
Review
Appeal
(1) An owner of listed land may appeal to the First-Tier Tribunal against the local authority's decision on a listing review in respect of the land.
"7. Regulation 11 of those regulations provides that an owner of listed land may appeal to the First-tier Tribunal against the local authority's decision on a listing review in respect of the land. No grounds of appeal or restrictions on the right of appeal are specified and the parties did not dissent from my suggestion that on such an appeal the First-tier Tribunal stands in the shoes of the local authority and makes its own findings of fact and decision afresh, although it must of course consider all the relevant evidence and representations. …"
"47. The first is the decision of the Court of Appeal in John Dee Ltd v Comrs of Customs and Excise [1995] STC 941. The case concerned the jurisdiction of the VAT Tribunal on an appeal from a decision of the Commissioners that a taxpayer should provide security for the payment of tax. The Commissioners had a discretion to require security, in terms of the relevant legislation, "[w]here it appears to the Commissioners requisite to do so for the protection of the revenue". No statutory guidance was given as to the scope of an appeal against the exercise of the power or as to the powers of the tribunal on such an appeal. The tribunal was, however, given powers to hear evidence and make orders relating to discovery.
48. Neill LJ, with whom the other members of the court agreed, held that the question for the tribunal was not whether it appeared to it that the provision of security was requisite for the protection of the revenue: the statutory condition was whether it appeared to the Commissioners to be requisite. In examining whether that condition was satisfied, the tribunal would, to adopt the language of Lord Lane in Customs and Excise Comrs v J H Corbitt (Numismatists) Ltd [1981] AC 22, 60, "consider whether the Commissioners had acted in a way in which no reasonable panel of Commissioners could have acted or whether they had taken into account some irrelevant matter or had disregarded something to which they should have given weight" (p 952). The tribunal might also have to consider whether the Commissioners had erred on a point of law. The tribunal could not, however, exercise the statutory discretion itself. The legislature had conferred on the Commissioners alone, and not on the tribunal or the court, the assessment of whether security was requisite. Although that case arose in the circumstances of taxation, the reasoning was not confined to that context, but turned on the nature of the discretion and the fact that it had been confided to the primary decision-maker.
49. The case of Customs and Excise Comrs v J H Corbitt (Numismatists) Ltd, which Neill LJ followed, concerned an appeal to the VAT Tribunal against the Commissioners' exercise of their discretion to recognise a taxpayer's records as sufficient for the purposes of a statutory scheme. It was in that context that Lord Lane, with whom Lord Diplock, Lord Simon of Glaisdale and Lord Scarman agreed, said at p 60 that the tribunal could only properly review the Commissioners' decision "if it were shown that the Commissioners had acted in a way in which no reasonable panel of Commissioners could have acted; if they had taken into account some irrelevant matter or had disregarded something to which they should have given weight"."
"66. …The opening words ("The Secretary of State may …") indicate that decisions under section 40(2) are made by the Secretary of State in the exercise of his discretion. The discretion is one which Parliament has confided to the Secretary of State. In the absence of any provision to the contrary, it must therefore be exercised by the Secretary of State and by no one else. There is no indication in either the 1981 Act or the 1997 Act, in its present form, that Parliament intended the discretion to be exercised by or at the direction of SIAC. SIAC can, however, review the Secretary of State's exercise of his discretion and set it aside in cases where an appeal is allowed, as explained below.
67. The statutory condition which must be satisfied before the discretion can be exercised is that "the Secretary of State is satisfied that deprivation is conducive to the public good". The condition is not that "SIAC is satisfied that deprivation is conducive to the public good". The existence of a right of appeal against the Secretary of State's decision enables his conclusion that he was satisfied to be challenged. It does not, however, convert the statutory requirement that the Secretary of State must be satisfied into a requirement that SIAC must be satisfied. That is a further reason why SIAC cannot exercise the discretion conferred upon the Secretary of State.
68. As explained at paras 46-50, 54 and 66-67 above, appellate courts and tribunals cannot generally decide how a statutory discretion conferred upon the primary decision-maker ought to have been exercised, or exercise the discretion themselves, in the absence of any statutory provision authorising them to do so (such as existed, in relation to appeals under section 2 of the 1997 Act, under section 4(1) of the 1997 Act as originally enacted, and under sections 84-86 of the 2002 Act prior to their amendment in 2014: see paras 34 and 36 above). They are in general restricted to considering whether the decision-maker has acted in a way in which no reasonable decision-maker could have acted, or whether he has taken into account some irrelevant matter or has disregarded something to which he should have given weight, or has erred on a point of law: an issue which encompasses the consideration of factual questions, as appears, in the context of statutory appeals, from Edwards (Inspector of Taxes) v Bairstow [1956] AC 14. They must also determine for themselves the compatibility of the decision with the obligations of the decision-maker under the Human Rights Act, where such a question arises."
"99. …Under the tribunal system established by the Tribunals Courts and Enforcement Act 2007 I consider that, when hearing an appeal, the FTT is a true appellate tribunal. It is not exercising an administrative function.
100. At the heart of any appeal against a decision must, in my judgment, be a contention that the decision under appeal was wrong in some sense. As Judge Cooke explained in Marshall v Waltham Forest LBC [2020] UKUT 35 (LC), [2020] 1 WLR 3187 at [61]:
"The answer to the conundrum is that the idea "unless it is wrong" is being used in two different senses. Both in Joffe and in Sagnata the court rejected the idea that the lower court was exercising a narrow jurisdiction and could assess only whether the original decision was one that could have been reached on the evidence. The idea that the original decision stands "unless it was wrong", that is, wrong in law, is expressly rejected. In both cases the court stressed that this was a rehearing and not (to use a modern term) a review. But in both cases—in Joffe in the words I quoted at para 57 and in Sagnata by reference to those quoted words—the court stressed that the original decision carries a lot of weight; and it is in this sense that it is true that the courts will not vary it unless it is wrong. Here "wrong" means a decision with which the court disagrees; the court can vary that decision where it disagrees with it, despite having given it that special weight.""
63. …That points inexorably to the conclusion that the task of the FTT is to determine whether the decision under appeal was wrong at the time when it was taken.
64. "Wrong", as Upper Tribunal Judge Cooke explained in Marshall v Waltham Forest LBC [2020] UKUT 35 (LC), [2020] 1 WLR 3187 at [61]–[62], means in this context that the appellate tribunal disagrees with the original decision despite having accorded it the deference (or "special weight") appropriate to a decision involving the exercise of judgment by the body tasked by Parliament with the primary responsibility for making licensing decisions. It does not mean "wrong in law". Put simply, the question that the FTT must address is, does the Tribunal consider that the authority should have decided the application differently?
"20. The relevant legal principles this court must follow in deciding an application of this kind are essentially as follows. The court must disturb the decision of the IOT only if satisfied that the decision is "wrong". This does not mean that the court is confined to acting only if a public law error is identified, such as would be the position on judicial review. The way in which the principle operates so as to prevent an unconstrained "merits" review is by requiring this court to give weight to the views of the specialist Tribunal."
Nothing in the legal framework considered in Cook specified the relevant right of appeal as a "rehearing".
a. First, the nomination is made. The strict requirements applying to the identity of the nominator and the contents of the nomination guard against overly casual or abusive nominations.
b. Second, the local authority must form an opinion on whether the statutory condition is met and, if it is, list the ACV. It is required to notify the owner of the land and the local Town Council that it is considering listing, but there is no explicit duty to invite, wait upon or consider representations. Instead there is an absolute requirement that the process must be completed within 8 weeks of receiving the nomination.
c. Third, upon listing the landowner is notified and has the right to seek a review. Where a landowner does object then the procedure at Schedule 2 to the regulations applies. It provides the landowner with 8 weeks to request a review, and can be seen to aim at a fair process of the challenging the decision by requiring a different officer "of appropriate seniority" to take the review decision, and entitling the landowner to disclosure of documents relied upon when listing, legal representation, and to request an oral hearing at which they may make representations. It must be completed within 8 weeks of the review request.
d. Fourth, there is a final safeguard by way of an appeal to the Tribunal. While the appeal does not apply a strict approach akin to judicial review, nor does it sweep away all the work done in the review.
Consideration
"a building or other land in a local authority's area is land of community value if in the opinion of the authority—
(a) an actual current use of the building or other land that is not an ancillary use furthers the social wellbeing or social interests of the local community, and
(b) it is realistic to think that there can continue to be non-ancillary use of the building or other land which will further (whether or not in the same way) the social wellbeing or social interests of the local community."
"…does need to be a use which is more than trivial or temporary. It is necessary to consider whether the use can continue for a period of time which is reasonable having regard to the nature of the use and the purpose of the listing."
"(a) The Starkholmes Allotment Association ("the SAA") have been served with a notice to quit which requires them to deliver up possession of the land to the Appellant no later than 29th September 2022;
(b) The Appellant is a private land owner who has decided that the allotment use should now cease. There is no prospect of that decision changing or of the notice to quit being withdrawn; and
(c) The Appellant intends to pursue the residential development potential of the land but, in the event that this is not realisable, will maintain the land as scrub land."
"11. … an owner need only say "I have set my face like flint against any use of community value" and listing will be avoided. This almost makes the scheme voluntary. I think it more reasonable to take into account Mr Patel's intentions 'as part of the whole set of circumstances'."
Conclusion
Signed
Judge Neville
Date: 29 May 2024