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England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> I'm Your Man Ltd, R (on the application of) v International Helicopter Museum [2004] EWHC 342 (Admin) (26 February 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2004/342.html Cite as: [2004] EWHC 342 (Admin) |
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Case No: CO/5872/2003 |
QUEENS BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
THE QUEEN (on the application of I'M YOUR MAN LIMITED) |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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NORTH SOMERSET COUNCIL |
Defendant |
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- and- |
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THE INTERNATIONAL HELICOPTER MUSEUM |
Interested Party |
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John Steel QC and Jonathan Auburn (instructed by Miss S. Andrews, Senior Legal Adviser, Litigation Corporate Services, North Somerset Council) for the Defendant
Hearing date: 24th November 2003
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Forbes:
"5. The premises shall be used as a museum only and for no other purpose including any other purpose in Class D1 of the Town and Country Planning (Use Classes) Order 1987 or any provision equivalent to that class in any statutory instrument revoking and re-enacting that Order."
"11. CONCLUSION
- there has been some flying of helicopters on the site over the last ten years.
- the intensity of flying increased less than ten years ago to an extent that could be regarded as a change of use.
- some of these helicopter flights have been ancillary to the use of the museum.
- the applicant has been unable to provide clear and specific evidence of the scale of use that is not ancillary to use of the museum that has been carried on over a period of ten years.
In conclusion it is recommended that the Certificate of Lawfulness for use of land at the helicopter museum for unlimited use as an aerodrome by powered helicopters for general aviation should be refused on the grounds that on the balance of probabilities the applicant has failed to provide clear and specific evidence of such use over a continuous period of ten years or of the scale of use that is not ancillary to the use of the museum.
(It is to be noted that the Council will have to make a decision as to what it regards as ancillary use, and thus permitted use, in any enforcement action it may decide to take)."
"This report sets out the Council's current opinion as to what flights and activities the museum may undertake within the scope of its permitted use as a "museum". It concludes that whilst further investigation is warranted due to the complexity of the issue, the power to take enforcement action against unauthorised flying should be delegated to the Director to pursue.
Issue 1 What flights may lawfully take place either to or from the Helicopter museum?
It is considered that helicopters may land at, and take off, from the museum premises providing that the principal purpose of the flight is to visit the museum for the purpose of viewing the exhibits on display as fee paying bona fide visitors. Helicopters flying to and from the museum for any other purpose than to view the exhibits being displayed is not considered to be an ancillary use although this is disputed by the Museum.
Helicopters that are to be displayed by the museum as exhibits, or are being exhibited at specifically organised museum events at the museum may land and take off from the premises.
Issue 2 What flights or activities may not take place from the helicopter museum?
The following flights, on the facts currently available, are not considered to be ancillary to the use of the museum.
- Pleasure flights or sight seeing flights that are operated by an independent company, where payment is made by passengers directly to that company and the purpose of the visit to the museum is to take part in a flight.
- The landing of helicopters at the museum in order to refuel or buy fuel. Only fuel required in order to undertake the ground running demonstration of exhibitors should be available on site.
- Flights by third parties for private purposes not connected to the use of the site as a museum.
- The storage or keeping of helicopters which are not exhibits [or not] used for spare parts to assist the restoration of exhibits.
Assessment
As set out in the previous report to the Committee on 18 September the fact that breaches of planning control may be identified does not mean that enforcement action must automatically be taken. The Local Planning Authority must consider, having regard to the development plan, whether it is expedient to take enforcement action.
In this case the noise of helicopters taking off and landing is a source of disturbance to local residents and its continuation in an uncontrolled manner could prejudice long term development proposals in the area. It is therefore recommended that the Museum be advised that this use should cease.
The Museum however has asked for further meetings to seek to clarify further the definition of what may be carried on as an ancillary activity to the use as a museum. Given the fact that there are no clear definitions of what is an "ancillary use " in this situation, further investigations will need to take place on the issues the Museum has raised.
A further report will be brought back to Committee if necessary. "
"From the information received, it has become apparent that obtaining a close comparison case to that of the Helicopter Museum, and how it operates, has not been possible. The museums listed in the annex are all related to aviation and exhibit collections of aircraft and associated memorabilia but none have the same pattern of use as the Helicopter Museum.
The majority of the museums identified, are located adjacent to or adjoining an operational airfield. As such, visitors to the museums can experience flights by observing them land and take off, as part of the daily routine of the airfields. In some situations, the operational airfields are home to companies that provide "pleasure flight" services for the members of the public.
Therefore, having considered the information provided and having evaluated the evidence available, the following issues can be addressed.
Issue 1 What flights may lawfully take place either to or from the Helicopter museum?
The key point in addressing this issue is the purpose of the flight. For example, it is considered that helicopters may land at, and take off from, the museum premises providing that the principal purpose of the flight is to visit the museum for the purpose of viewing the exhibits on display as fee paying bona fide visitors. This would be akin to a museum visitor arriving by car. Helicopters that are to be displayed by the museum as exhibits, or are being exhibited or demonstrated at specifically organised museum events at the museum may also land and take off from the premises. On the other hand, helicopters flying to and from the museum for any other purpose are much less likely to be an ancillary use and require closer examination.
Assessment
It is clear from the investigations that have been carried out that there is a wide range of transport related museums which include rides and moving exhibits as part of the museum's activities. The key factor in determining whether such activities form a lawful part of the use is the degree to which it is connected to the primary use of the site as a museum. Therefore, as stated above, the use of the museum for completely unrelated flying activities would not be a lawful use.
In this case, however, since the issue of unauthorised flying has been debated, it has become apparent that the Helicopter Museum is intending to revise its flying operations to make them more explicitly linked to its learning and discovery function. For the forthcoming season, the Museum has indicated an intention to stop "Pleasure Flights" and instead offer "Helicopter Experience Flights" where visitors to the museum can learn at first hand how a helicopter flies. It is said that during these flights, pilots will demonstrate how the controls work and demonstrate various manoeuvres from take off to landing. Publicity material indicates that "Helicopter Experience Flights" will be bought as part of a combined ticket to include admission to the museum. This is an important change and, if carried out as described may mean that these flights could arguably be ancillary to the museum use.
The use as unrestricted "pleasure flights" would cause harm to amenity and is considered unacceptable. In terms of other activities, the use of the site for the sale of fuel to passing helicopters or trips by helicopters not visiting the site for purposes directly connected to the use as a museum, are not ancillary uses
Similarly, the keeping and flying of a private helicopter for purposes unconnected to the museum is not an ancillary use
RECOMMENDATION
(a) That the Museum be advised that the following are not ancillary to the use of the museum:
- Take off and landings related to:-
Pleasure flights or sight seeing flights where the primary purpose of the visit by the passenger to the museum is to take part in a sight seeing flight;
Visits of helicopters at the museum in order to refuel or buy fuel;
Flights by third parties for private purposes not connected to the use of the site as a museum; and
- The storage or keeping of helicopters which are not exhibits or used for spare parts to assist the restoration of exhibits
And the Director of Development and Environment in consultation with the Solicitor to the Council be authorised to take ENFORCEMENT ACTIONS including any court action if applicable, to secure the cessation of these non-ancillary activities should they continue;
(b) That the Director of Development and Environment be authorised to instruct a noise consultant to advise on the limits that could be applied to the definition of ancillary flying activities and that the principle of "air experience flights" as an ancillary use be the subject of further consideration. "
"RESOLVED
(1) that the museum be advised that the following are not ancillary to the use of the museum:-
- take off and landings related to:-
pleasure flights or sight seeing flights where the primary purpose of the visit by the passenger to the museum is to take part in a sight seeing flight;
- visits of helicopters at the museum in order to refuel or buy fuel;
- flights by third parties for private purposes not connected to the use of the site as a museum; and
- the storage or keeping of helicopters which are not exhibits or used for spare parts to assist the restoration of exhibits
and the Director of Development and Environment, in consultation with the Solicitor to the Council, be authorised to take ENFORCEMENT ACTIONS including any Court action if applicable, to secure the cessation of these non-ancillary activities should they continue;
(2) without prejudice to any decision that the Council might make on the acceptability of flying activities, the Helicopter Museum be invited to submit a planning application for the use of the site for non-ancillary activities listed below:
- the landing of helicopters at the museum in order to refuel of buy fuel;
- take off and landings by third parties for private purposes not connected to the use of the site as a museum;
- the storage or keeping of helicopters which are not exhibits or used for spare parts to assist the restoration of exhibits."
"1. SUMMARY
This report updates members on a High Court Judicial Review application which has been made in respect of the resolution of the Committee at its meeting on 5 February 2003.
The question has been raised as to whether the Council made a decision as to whether certain helicopter flights were ancillary to the use of the land as a museum.
It is recommended that a decision is now made upon such matters."
"12. CONCLUSION
Air experience flights and flights by visitors coming to view exhibits in the museum are at present levels, as a matter of law, ancillary to the use of the museum. No enforcement action can therefore be taken.
Should the nature of the flying activities change, or prove to be different, then a further report would be made to this Committee and the issue of enforcement action would be raised at that stage."
"RECOMMENDATIONS
The Committee is recommended to decide
A. That at present levels the following activities are ancillary to the primary use of the museum, namely the use of the land of the museum for:
i the static and working display of helicopters, on the ground and in the air, with or without passengers who are visitors to the museum;
ii helicopter "air experience" flights with passengers who are visitors to the museum;
iii helicopter flights to and from the museum and in order to visit the museum, with or without passengers who are visitors to the museum.
B. That having regard to the decision in (A), that no enforcement action is taken at present and that the situation be monitored in the future to ensure that the activities remain ancillary to the primary use of the museum."
"RESOLVED:
(1) that at present levels the following activities are ancillary to the primary use of the museum, namely the use of the land of the museum for:-
(i) the static and working display of helicopters, on the ground and in the air, with or without passengers who are visitors to the museum;
(ii) helicopter "air experience" flights with passengers who are visitors to the museum;
(iii) helicopter flights to and from the museum and in order to visit the museum, with or without passengers who are visitors to the museum.
(2) that having regard to the decision in (1), that no enforcement action is taken at present and that the situation be monitored in the future to ensure that the activities remain ancillary to the primary use of the museum."
"The aim of the new Order is twofold:-
(i) to reduce the number of classes while retaining effective control over changes of use which, because of environmental consequences or relationship with other uses, need to be subject to specific planning applications; and
(ii) to ensure that the scope of each class is wide enough to take in changes which generally do not need to be subject to specific control.
It serves no-one's interest to require planning permission for types of development that generally do not damage amenity. Equally, the Secretaries of State are in no doubt that effective control must be retained over changes of use that have a material impact, in land-use planning terms, on the local amenity or environment."
"20. In my judgment, the proper approach to these cases by the local planning authority is to start by considering whether what is involved amounts to a material change of use. That is the statutory test. The case law reveals the application of that test to a variety of different situations. In the course of doing that different phrases have been used. I gave some examples in my judgment in Millington, which Sullivan J. cited in the present case. But it would be wrong to substitute some phrase from one or other judgment for the statutory formula. Those phrases are merely an aid to judicial exegesis.
21. In the present case what the Secretary of State in effect did was to ask himself whether, ignoring the Use Classes Order, the introduction of a facility for operating helicopters from the roof of the store amounted to a material change of use of the store, a change from retail use to retail use plus helicopter use. He answered that question in the affirmative. In my judgement he was, as a matter of law, entitled to come to that conclusion.
22. It is important to emphasise that when a shop owner wants to introduce an activity which is reasonably incidental to the running of his shop but which is not reasonably incidental to the running of most shops, he is not necessarily introducing an activity which will produce a material change of use. That is a matter of fact and degree which can be evaluated without reference to the Use Classes Order. If the Secretary of State approached matters in a legally permissible way so far as the first question is concerned, namely, is this on the face of it a material change of use, does the Use Classes Order make any difference so as to vitiate his answer? In my judgment the Secretary of State was entitled to conclude that it does not. The judge was right to reject Mr Roots' approach. It is not appropriate to concentrate on what is incidental to this particular shop, given the way it is run, and given its needs. The right approach is to see what shops in general have as reasonably incidental activities. And the reason that is the right approach is, in my judgment, the reason given by Mr Sales. Planning is concerned with balancing the interests of the community with the interests of the landowner and one of the things one seeks to avoid is having too much regulation but on the other hand another thing one seeks to avoid is giving the opportunity to by pass a careful scrutiny of activities which do impact severely (or can do) on neighbours.
23. A person who moves next door to a shop can expect normal shopping activities to go on there without there being a requirement for planning permission. A person who moves next door to Harrods can expect things that are normal there and in other emporia of that sort of size. But if what an appellant wants to introduce is not generally associated with what goes on in shops then it seems probable that Parliament intended that neighbours should have the chance to object to the grant of planning permission and thus force the owner to go through the appropriate procedures to get his planning permission. And it is probably a fair comment (although it is legally irrelevant) that the fact that this appeal is being pursued through one court after another is an indication that Harrods are not particularly hopeful of actually getting a planning permission. In any event they have not chosen to apply. They may turn out to have been unduly pessimistic. That is not for this court to judge."
(i) In none of their reports did the officers begin by posing the correct question, namely whether there has been (or would be) a material change of use. Instead, the report of 5th February 2003 commences with the assertion that "the key point is the purpose of the flight" and the report of 8th October 2003 indicates that the central question depends on "the character of the use and the functional relationship between the primary use and the other (potentially ancillary) use." Mr Brown submitted that an approach to the central question that relied on the "functional relationship" between the primary use and potentially ancillary use was wholly inconsistent with the correct approach as stated in the Harrods case.
(ii) It was Mr Brown's submission that the planning permission that was granted was completely non-specific as to the type of museum. He therefore submitted that the officers should have considered what incidental activities can reasonably be expected of museums in general, rather than considering the position in relation to a transport/aviation museum. Mr Brown contended that the officers (and thus the Council) had therefore wrongly concentrated on the nature of the particular premises an approach that the Court of Appeal in the Harrods case had specifically indicated was wrong.
(iii) Mr Brown submitted that, in considering whether the relevant types of helicopter flight are ancillary to the museum use, the Council (and its officers) had not asked the crucial question whether, having regard to the nature of the activity, Parliament intended that neighbours should have the opportunity to object to the grant of planning permission and thus force the owner to go through the appropriate procedures to get that planning permission. Mr Brown suggested that, far from considering this crucial question, the officers' reports conspicuously failed to address the impact of the flights on neighbouring properties in any way.