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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Godfrey, R (on the application of) v Southwark [2012] EWCA Civ 500 (24 April 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2012/500.html Cite as: [2012] BLGR 683, [2012] EWCA Civ 500 |
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ON APPEAL FROM QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
THE ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
MR JUSTICE LINDBLOM
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE MOORE-BICK
and
LORD JUSTICE PATTEN
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The Queen (on the application of Godfrey) |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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The London Borough Of Southwark |
Respondent |
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BDW Trading Ltd |
Interested Party |
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Mr D Kolinsky (instructed by London Borough of Southwark) for the Respondent
Mr N King, QC and Mr R Walton (instructed by Richard Max & Co) for the Interested Party
Hearing date : 15 March 2012
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Pill :
The background, including reports to Committee
"To re-provide a community hall for all local residents that addresses local needs in consultation with the community."
The report did refer to the still existing hall as "surplus to requirements" but I do not regard that as an indication that there were not community demands and needs for an appropriate facility. The hall was plainly in very poor condition and was demolished in September 2003.
"The creation of a new health centre, significantly larger than its predecessor will provide a greatly improved service for the residents of Rotherhithe. The existing doctor's surgeries and dentist will be able to expand and the PCT will be able to provide additional crucial health services from the new premises. Approval of this recommendation will play a major role in securing access to state of the art primary health care services for residents of Rotherhithe for decades to come.
Community meeting room facilities will also be provided within the new health centre."
"D Use classes including a Community Centre and a health centre C3 Use Class."
The residential capacity was put at 251 units. D2 Use Class was rightly said to include "assembly and leisure uses".
"248. A new community centre has been part of all three planning applications for the development of this site, and consistent with the proposed use designated for this site in the UDP. However, following the provision of facilities at Redriff School, the previously proposed Crèche on this site was no longer needed. As this was to fund the running of a new community hall, an alternative solution was needed to meet the need for a community facility on this site. Provision of space with the new health centre building would achieve this need.
249. In response to the previous comments raised at the planning committee meeting in November 2008, the proposed community centre has been increased in size to 124m2 (from 101m2) and will include a larger community space which can be utilised for a range of activities and functions by both the GP Practices and local community groups. It will operate as a shared facility, available for use by both local organisations and the PCT and doctors practices, during the official opening hours of the Health Centre ensuring that it is fully utilised at different times of the day.
250. The proposed community centre incorporates a multi-functional hall which extends to 92m2. This is larger than previously and will be capable of being used for a whole range of activities and uses. It will be capable of being used to hold a meeting or presentation of up to 132 people which should cater for the needs of the majority of local groups surrounding the site. A range of options for the internal layout and arrangements have been provided as illustrations with this application.
251. The new community centre will benefit from its own secure access point and entrance lobby which will allow the remainder of the health centre to be secured outside core opening hours and enable the community centre to operate independently. It will also have full access to own kitchen, toilet and store facilities.
252. A report on the Proposed Community Centre appended to the Planning Statement, demonstrated that enlarging the community centre further would have a significant impact on the viability of the health centre. For example, the provision of a further 76m2 of floorspace for the community centre area would be equivalent to the loss of 5 consulting/examination rooms (measuring 15m2 each). This would have a significant impact on the level and type of health care the new centre is able to offer the local community.
253. Whilst it is right that the size of the community centre has been significantly reduced from the position in respect of the first and second planning applications, officers consider that the size of the community centre proposed in the present application is sufficient to constitute a beneficial community resource. It should be noted that the UDP proposed 7P contains no specific size requirement for the community centre. Neither is it necessary for the community centre to be a separate freestanding building. Officers consider that the size of the facility and the commitments in respect of its availability for community use to be secured by s.106 agreement (as indicated in paragraph 16 of this report) make it fit for purpose as a valuable community resource and comply with the UDP proposal."
"308. Reference has also been made to the size of the community hall being much smaller than previously proposed community centre and that this is considered to be an 'unacceptable loss of a pre-existing community benefit'. Although the applications submitted in 2004 and 2007 both included a community centre of 945m2, neither of these applications have planning permission and therefore it cannot be said that there has been a loss of an existing community centre.
309. There was previously a community facility on part of the site it was declared surplus to requirements by the Council in 2003 and demolished for safety reasons. The size of the previous community building from an OS Site Plan as 413m2.
310. The proposed community centre will provide a modern flexible space which will be available for use by members of the local community for a wide range of uses and activities.
311. As has already been indicated, proposal 7P of the UDP does not contain any size requirement for the community centre. Officers consider that the proposed community centre will be a beneficial community resource and that the proposal accords with the UDP in this respect."
"Changes in the community space provision are set out in paragraphs 306 – 311 on the report. Whilst, the new Community facility may be smaller in total area than the previous building before it became derelict and demolished, the main issue is whether the new facility meets current needs. The new facility will be 124m2 and capable of a variety of different uses and layouts. From all the information available the new premises should be able to meet current local demand and provide a useful facility for the future. As stated in the main report, officers consider that the community facility complies with proposal 7P of the UDP."
Submissions
"In the procedural case we find a promise or practice of notice or consultation in the event of a contemplated change. In the substantive case we have a promise or practice of present and future substantive policy. This difference is at the core of the distinction between procedural and substantive legitimate expectation."
"In this context, then, the notion of a promise or practice of present and future substantive policy risks proving too much. The doctrine of substantive legitimate expectation plainly cannot apply to every case where a public authority operates a policy over an appreciable period. That would expand the doctrine far beyond its proper limits. The establishment of any policy, new or substitute, by a public body is in principle subject to Wednesbury review. But a claim that a substitute policy has been established in breach of a substantive legitimate expectation engages a much more rigorous standard. It will be adjudged, as I have foreshadowed, by the court's own view of what fairness requires. This is a principal outcome of this court's decision in Ex p Coughlan (see in particular paragraphs 74, 78, 81 and 82). It demonstrates the importance of finding the reach of substantive legitimate expectation."
The question to be posed was stated by Laws LJ at paragraph 36:
". . . what are the conditions under which a prior representation, promise or practice by a public decision-maker will give rise to an enforceable expectation of a substantive benefit?"
"Public authorities typically, and central government par excellence, enjoy wide discretions which it is their duty to exercise in the public interest."
"But the court will (subject to the overriding public interest) insist on such a requirement, and enforce such an obligation, where the decision-maker's proposed action would otherwise be so unfair as to amount to an abuse of power, by reason of the way in which it has earlier conducted itself."
Laws LJ added, at paragraph 43:
". . . it must constitute a specific undertaking, directed at a particular individual or group, by which the relevant policy's continuance is assured. Lord Templeman in Preston referred (866 – 867) to 'conduct [in that case, of the Commissioners of Inland Revenue] equivalent to a breach of contract or breach of representations'."
". . . the broader the class claiming the expectation's benefit, the more likely it is that a supervening public interest will be held to justify the change of position complained of. In Ex p Begbie I said this (1130G – 1131B) [R v Secretary of State for Education and Employment ex p Begbie [2000] 1 WLR 115]
'In some cases a change of tack by a public authority, though unfair from the applicant's stance, may involve questions of general policy affecting the public at large or a significant section of it (including interests not represented before the court); here the judges may well be in no position to adjudicate save at most on a bare Wednesbury basis, without themselves donning the garb of policy-maker, which they cannot wear… In other cases the act or omission complained of may take place on a much smaller stage, with far fewer players… The case's facts may be discrete and limited, having no implications for an innominate class of persons. There may be no wide-ranging issues of general policy, or none with multi-layered effects, upon whose merits the court is asked to embark. The court may be able to envisage clearly and with sufficient certainty what the full consequences will be of any order it makes.'"
"The local planning authority . . . were under a duty to consider it in the circumstances existing at the time of the decision. The relevant considerations were set out in the Planning Officer's report. The statutory duty would not be discharged lawfully if one consideration, the length of time for which the condition had persisted, could in law be held to prevail over the duty to have regard to the considerations set out in those sections. The local residents had an expectation that consideration would be given, in any decision taken, to local amenity. Failure to have regard to that material consideration would render a decision liable to be quashed. The expectation did not, however, extend to give legal primacy to that expectation over the duty of the Council to take all material considerations into account."
Judgment of Lindblom J
"In simple terms, what the council's planning committee had to do, and what it did, was to satisfy itself that the proposal before it contained a community centre that was good enough for the purposes for which it was to be provided."
"This site, the Downtown site, is the subject of a specific proposal, namely proposal 7P, which envisages a mixed-use development comprising some 250 residential units as well as the Class D uses. It was to this proposal that the council's local planning [committee] had to direct its mind. In my judgment it did so, and it did so without falling into legal error."
The new ground
"34. In order to ensure transparency of procedures and equal treatment of tenderers, amendments to the provisions of a public contract during the currency of the contract constitute a new award of a contract within the meaning of Directive 92/50 when they are materially different in character from the original contract and, therefore, such as to demonstrate the intention of the parties to renegotiate the essential terms of that contract (see, to that effect, Case C-337/98 Commission v France [2000] ECR I-8377, paragraphs 44 and 46).
35. An amendment to a public contract during its currency may be regarded as being material when it introduces conditions which, had they been part of the initial award procedure, would have allowed for the admission of tenderers other than those initially admitted or would have allowed for the acceptance of a tender other than the one initially accepted."
Conclusions
"In reality, as the 1,535 m2 new health centre includes the new 124 m2 community facility, it will be exactly 553 m2 bigger than the existing health centre, which is a true increase of 64.4 %."
Result
Lord Justice Moore-Bick :
Lord Justice Patten :