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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 >> William Davis Ltd & Ors v Charnwood Borough Council [2017] EWHC 3006 (Admin) (23 November 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2017/3006.html Cite as: [2017] EWHC 3006 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Priory Courts 33 Bull Street Birmingham B4 6DS |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
WILLIAM DAVIS LTD BLOOR HOMES LTD JELSON HOMES LTD DAVIDSONS HOMES LTD BARWOOD HOMES LTD |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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CHARNWOOD BOROUGH COUNCIL |
Defendant |
____________________
Paul Stinchombe QC (instructed by Kathryn Harrison, Legal Services, Charnwood Borough Council ) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 25th October 2017
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
GILBART J :
Statutes and Regulations
TCPA 1990 Town and Country Planning Act 1990
PCPA 2004 Planning and Compulsory Purchase Act 2004
LP Regs 2012 Town and Country Planning (Local Planning)
(England) Regulations 2012
Types of statutory document (defined in PCPA 2004 and LP Regs 2012)
LDD Local Development Document
DPD Development Plan Document
SPD Supplementary Planning Document
Secretary of State's Guidance and Policy
NPPF National Planning Policy Framework (2012)
NPPG National Planning Practice Guidance (policy advice of the SSCLG, published on the internet and revised from time to time
Charnwood Borough Council Documents
CLPCS Charnwood Local Plan 2011-2028 Core Strategy HSPD Housing Supplementary Planning Document
Other
CBC Charnwood Borough Council
LPA Local Planning Authority
SSCLG Secretary of State for Communities and Local Government
i) the terms of the CLPCS and HSPD;
ii) the developmnt plan in the context of the Planning Code;
iii) identifying the development plan;
iv) procedures for adoption/approval;
v) cases for the Claimants and Defendant;
vi) discussion and conclusions.
(i ) The terms of the CLPCS and HSPD
"We expect new housing development to take account of local housing needs and the current mix of homes available in the local area. We will work with our partners to identify the mix of homes required from new developments. This will be done through masterplanning on strategic sites, Neighbourhood Plans for our existing communities and by using evidence from the Strategic Housing Market Assessment, local housing needs surveys and household projections when considering planning applications."
"Strategic Housing Needs
We will manage the delivery of at least 13,940 new homes between 2011 and 2028 to balance our housing stock and meet our community's housing needs
We will do this by:
- Seeking the following targets for affordable homes within housing developments, having regard to market conditions, economic viability and other infrastructure requirements:
- 30% affordable housing within the sustainable urban extensions north east of Leicester and west of Loughborough and the direction of growth north of Birstall;
- On sites of 10 dwellings or more in the following urban areas and service centres
Location | Target |
Thurmaston Shepshed |
25% |
Birstall Loughborough Anstey Barrow upon Soar Mountsorrel Silsby Syston |
30% |
Quorn Rothley |
30% |
- On sites of 5 dwellings or more in the following rural locations
East Goscote Thurcaston |
30% |
(list of 26 settlements) | 40% |
- Seeking an appropriate mix of types, tenures and sizes of homes, having regard to identified housing needs and the character of the area;
- ……..
- Securing the delivery of affordable homes on-site and integrated with market housing unless there are exceptional circumstances which contribute to the creation of mixed communities
- ………..
- Monitoring the delivery of affordable homes through our Annual Monitoring Report."
"in accordance with Core Strategy Policy CS3 the following broad proportions will be used in order to deliver an appropriate mix of sizes of homes:
Size |
Affordable |
Market |
1 bed |
60-70% |
0-10% |
2 bed |
30-35% |
|
3 bed |
25-30% |
45-55% |
4+ bed |
5-10% |
10-20% |
Where development proposes (sic) a significantly different mix to that identified in the table it must be justified through evidence of identified housing needs and character of the area in accordance with Policy CS3 taking into account;
- evidence of housing need including reference to the housing register;
- existing mix and turnover of properties;
- nature of the development site;
- character of the wider area the site is located within;
- detailed design considerations; and
- economic viability."
(ii) The Development Plan in the context of the Planning Code
"Planning control is the creature of statute. It is an imposition in the public interest of restrictions upon private rights of ownership of land. The public character of the law relating to planning control has been recognised by the House in Newbury District Council v. Secretary of State for the Environment [1981] AC 578. It is a field of law in which the courts should not introduce principles or rules derived from private law unless it be expressly authorised by Parliament or necessary in order to give effect to the purpose of the legislation. The planning law, though a comprehensive code imposed in the public interest, is, of course, based on the land law. Where the code is silent or ambiguous, resort to the principles of the private law (especially property and contract law) may be necessary so that the courts may resolve difficulties by application of common law or equitable principles. But such cases will be exceptional. And, if the statute law covers the situation, it will be an impermissible exercise of the judicial function to go beyond the statutory provision by applying such principles merely because they may appear to achieve a fairer solution to the problem being considered. As ever in the field of statute law it is the duty of the courts to give effect to the intention of Parliament as evinced by the statute, or statutory code, considered as a whole."
"If regard is to be had to the development plan for the purpose of any determination to be made under the planning Acts the determination must be made in accordance with the plan unless material considerations indicate otherwise."
i) have regard to the statutory development plan (see s 70(2) TCPA 1990);
ii) have regard to material considerations (s 70(2) TCPA 1990);
iii) determine the proposal in accordance with the development plan unless material considerations indicate otherwise (s 38(6) PCPA 2004);
iv) apply national policy unless he gives reasons for not doing so- see Nolan LJ in Horsham District Council v Secretary of State for the Environment and Margram Plc [1993] 1 PLR 81 following Woolf J in E. C. Gransden & Co. Ltd. v. Secretary of State for the Environment [1987] 54 P & CR 86 and see Lindblom J in Cala Homes (South) Ltd v Secretary of State for Communities & Local Government [2011] EWHC 97 (Admin), [2011] JPL 887 at [50];
v) consider the nature and extent of any conflict with the development plan: Tesco Stores Ltd v Dundee City Council [2012] UKSC 13 at [22] per Lord Reed;
vi) consider whether the development accords with the development plan, looking at it as a whole- see R(Milne) v Rochdale MBC (No 2) [2000] EWHC 650 (Admin), [2001] JPL 470, [2001] Env LR 22, (2001) 81 P & CR 27 per Sullivan J at [46]- [48]. There may be some points in the plan which support the proposal but there may be some considerations pointing in the opposite direction. It must assess all of these and then decide whether in the light of the whole plan the proposal does or does not accord with it; per Lord Clyde in City of Edinburgh Council v. the Secretary of State for Scotland [1997] UKHL 38, [1997] 1 WLR 1447, 1998 SC (HL) 33 cited by Sullivan J in R(Milne) v Rochdale MBC (No 2) at [48].
i) LPAs should positively seek opportunities to meet the development needs of their area;
ii) Local Plans should meet objectively assessed needs, with sufficient flexibility to adapt to rapid change, unless
a) any adverse impacts would significantly and demonstrably outweigh the benefits, when assessed against the policies in NPPF as a whole, or
b) specific NPPF policies indicate that development should be restricted.
"use their evidence base to ensure that their Local Plan meets the full objectively assessed needs for market and affordable housing in the housing market areas, as far as is consistent with the policies set out in (NPPF)……"
i) plan for a mix of housing based on current and future demographic trends, market trends and the needs of different groups in the community,
ii) identify the size type, tenure and range of housing that is required in particular locations, reflecting local demand, and
iii) where they have identified that affordable housing is needed, "set policies for meeting this need on site…………. Such polices should be sufficiently flexible to take account of changing market conditions over time."
(iii) Identifying the Development Plan
i) The regional strategy (if any), and
ii) The development plan documents (taken as a whole) which have been adopted or approved.
"a local development document which is specified as a development plan document in the local development scheme."
" Local development documents
5. (1) For the purposes of section 17(7)(za)(1) of the Act the documents which are to be prepared as local development documents are—
(a) any document prepared by a local planning authority individually or in cooperation with one or more other local planning authorities, which contains statements regarding one or more of the following—
(i) the development and use of land which the local planning authority wish to encourage during any specified period;
(ii) the allocation of sites for a particular type of development or use;
(iii) any environmental, social, design and economic objectives which are relevant to the attainment of the development and use of land mentioned in paragraph (i); and
(iv) development management and site allocation policies, which are intended to guide the determination of applications for planning permission;
(b) ………………………………………………………………
(2) For the purposes of section 17(7)(za) of the Act the documents which, if prepared, are to be prepared as local development documents are—
(a) any document which—
(i) relates only to part of the area of the local planning authority;
(ii) identifies that area as an area of significant change or special conservation; and
(iii) contains the local planning authority's policies in relation to the area; and
(b) any other document which includes a site allocation policy.
Local plans
6. Any document of the description referred to in regulation 5(1)(a)(i), (ii) or (iv) or 5(2)(a) or (b) is a local plan."
(iv) Procedures for adoption/approval
By contrast, the adoption of a "local plan" requires steps to carry out the obligations in s 20 PCPA 2004.They include notification of the proposed preparation of a local plan. That is addressed in Regulation 18, whereby
"18. (1) A local planning authority must—
a) notify each of the bodies or persons specified in paragraph (2) of the subject of a local plan which the local planning authority propose to prepare, and
b) invite each of them to make representations to the local planning authority about what a local plan with that subject ought to contain.
(2) The bodies or persons referred to in paragraph (1) are—
a) such of the specific consultation bodies as the local planning authority consider may have an interest in the subject of the proposed local plan;[1]
b) such of the general consultation bodies as the local planning authority consider appropriate;[2] and
c) such residents or other persons carrying on business in the local planning authority's area from which the local planning authority consider it appropriate to invite representations.
(3) In preparing the local plan, the local planning authority must take into account any representation made to them in response to invitations under paragraph (1).
(v) Cases for the Claimants and Defendant
i) The viability of a particular scheme;
ii) The effects on all schemes of such a policy.
i) if a policy in a document simply repeats what is in the adopted local plan or in another Local Development Document, it does not then fall within Reg 5(1) at all ([68]-]69]);
ii) the reference to "development management" in sub-paragraph (iv) cannot extend to all matters of development management or development control, since that would mean that there could never be SPDs ([74]);
iii) sub-paragraph (iv) differs from (i) – (iii) because it deals with regulating the use of development generally, while the latter deal with particular developments or uses of land which the LPA is promoting (75]);
iv) the policy in question was seeking to encourage the granting of permission to wind turbines, so that sub-paragraph (iv) did not apply.
(vi) Discussion and conclusions
"18 Regulation 2 of the 2012 Regulations defines "local plan" as "any document of the description referred to in regulation 5(1)(a)(i), (ii) or (iv) or 5(2)(a) or (b), and for the purposes of section 17(7)(a) of the Act these documents are prescribed as DPDs" (see also regulation 6). Further, "supplementary plan document" ("SPD") means "any document of a description referred to in regulation 5 (except an adopted policies map or a statement of community involvement) which is not a local plan".
19 By regulation 5:
"Local Development Documents
(1) For the purposes of section 17(7)(a) of the Act the documents which are to be prepared as [LDDs] are –
(a) any document prepared by a local planning authority individually or in co-operation with one or more local planning authorities which contains statements regarding one or more of the following -
(i) the development and use of land which the local planning authority wish to encourage during any specified period;
(ii) the allocation of sites for a particular development or use;
(iii) any environmental, social design and economic objectives which are relevant to the attainment of the development and use of land mentioned in paragraph (i); and
(iv) development management and site allocation policies, which are intended to guide the determination of applications for planning permission.
…
(2) For the purposes of section 17(7)(za) of the Act the documents which, if prepared, are to be prepared as local development documents are –
(a) any document which -
…
(iii) contains the local planning authority's policies in relation to the area; …"
20 Thus, the effect of regulations 2 and 6 is that the local plan (and, therefore, the development plan) comprises documents of the description referred to in regulation 5(1)(a)(i), (ii) or (iv), or 5(2)(a) or (b). Documents which fall within the description referred to in regulation 5(1)(a)(iii) or (1)(b) cannot be DPDs.
21 SPDs are subject to regulations 12 and 13 of the 2012 Regulations, and specific public consultation requirements. DPDs are subject to the different consultation requirements of regulation 18.
22 SPDs, which are not a creature of the PCPA 2004, are defined negatively (see regulation 2(1)) as regulation 5 documents which do not form part of the local plan, i.e. are not DPDs. By the decision of this court in R (RWE Npower Renewables Ltd) v Milton Keynes Borough Council [2013] EWHC 751 (Admin) (Mr John Howell QC sitting as a DHCJ), not all documents which are not DPDs are SPDs. As I have said, SPDs are only those documents which fall within regulation 5(1)(a)(iii) or (1)(b) of the 2012 Regulations. Documents which are neither DPDs nor fall within any of the provisions of regulation 5(1) are capable of being LDDs but – in order to differentiate them from DPDs and SPDs - are "residual LDDs". At paragraphs 57-59 of this judgment in RWE, Mr Howell QC made clear that it is not the location of a document within the prescribed categories which is critical; what matters is that the document fulfils the separate criteria of section 17(3) and (8) of the 2004 Act.
23 Thus, there are three discrete categories, namely:
(1) DPDs: these are LDDs which fall within regulation 5(1)(a)(i), (ii) or (iv). They must be prepared and adopted as a DPD (as per the requirements of Part 6 of the 2012 Regulations). They must be subject to public consultation (regulation 18) and independent examination by the Secretary of State (section 20 of the PCPA 2004). As I have said (see paragraph 16 above), an issue potentially arises as to whether a document which does not fall within these regulatory provisions may nonetheless be a DPD because a local planning authority chooses to adopt it as such.
(2) SPDs: these are LDDs which are not DPDs and which fall within either regulation 5(1)(a)(iii) or (1)(b). They must be prepared and adopted as SPDs (as per the requirements of Part 5 of the 2012 Regulations). SPDs do not require independent examination but they do require public consultation (regulations 12 and 13).
(3) Residual LDDs: these are LDDs which are neither DPDs or SPDs. They must satisfy the criteria of section 17(3) and (8) of the PCPA 2004, and must be adopted as LDDs (as per (2) above). There are no public consultation and independent examination requirements: see paragraphs 44-46 of the decision of this Court on R (Miller Homes) v Leeds City Council [2014] EWHC 82 (Admin). At paragraph 17 above, I said that LDDs are material considerations in planning applications although they do not have the status of DPDs. I consider that the same logic should hold that LDDs which are SPDs carry greater weight in such applications than do residual LDDs."
"75 First, if the document at issue contains statements which fall within any of (i), (ii) or (iv) of regulation 5(1)(a), it is a DPD. This is so even if it contains statements which, taken individually, would constitute it an SPD or a residual LDD. This conclusion flows from the wording "one or more of the following", notwithstanding the conjunction "and" between (iii) and (iv).
76 Secondly, I agree with Stewart J" (in Miller) "that "regarding" imports a material nexus between the statements and the matters listed in (i)-(iv). Stewart J referred to "document" rather than to "statements", but this makes no difference. There is no material distinction between "regarding" and other similar adjectival terms such as "relating to", "in respect of" etc.
77 Thirdly, I agree with Mr Howell QC" (in RWE Npower) "that there may be a degree of overlap between one or more of the (i)-(iv) categories, although (as I have already said) a document which must be a DPD (because it falls within any of (i), (ii) and/or (iv)) cannot simultaneously be an SPD. This last conclusion may well flow as a matter of language from the true construction of regulation 5(1)(a)(iii), but it certainly flows from the straightforward application of regulations 2(1) and 6.
78 Fourthly, it would have been preferable had regulation 5(1)(a)(iii) followed (iv) rather than preceded it. However, the sequence does not alter the sense of the provision as a whole. Nor do I think that much turns on the relative order of (i) and (iv).
79 Fifthly, I note the view of Mr Howell QC that regulation 5(1)(a) pertains to statements which contain policies. This reflects section 17(3) of the 2004 Act – LDDs must set out the local planning authority's policies relating to the development and use of land in its area. I would add that section 17(5) makes clear, as must be obvious, that an LDD may also contain statements and information, although any conflict between these and policies must be resolved in favour of the latter. Regulation 5(1)(a) fixes on "statements" and not on policies. However, in my judgment, the noun "statements" can include "policies" as a matter of ordinary language, and any LDD properly so called must contain policies. It follows that any document falling within (i)-(iv) must contain statements which constitute policies and may contain other statements, of a subordinate or explanatory nature, which are not policies.
80 Sixthly, the difference in wording between regulation 5(1)(a)(i) and (iv) featured in the argument in Miller but not on my understanding in the argument in RWE. For the purposes of (i), the statements regarding the development and use of land etc. are the policies, or at the very least include the policies. On a strict reading of (iv), the statements at issue are "regarding … development management and site management policies". In other words, the statements are not the policies: they pertain to policies which exist in some other place. I will need to examine whether this strict reading is correct.
81 Seventhly, given that we are in the realm of policy, "however expressed", it seems to me that by definition we are dealing with statements of a general nature. A statement which can only apply to a single case cannot be a policy. To my mind, the difference between a policy which applies to particular types of development and one which applies to all developments is one of degree not of kind. The distinction which Mr Howell QC drew in RWE (see paragraph 75 of his judgment, and paragraph 69(6) above) is nowhere to be found in the language of the regulation, save to the limited and specific extent that regulation 5(1)(a)(ii) uses the adjective "particular". Looking at regulation 5(1)(a)(i), I think that this could not be a clearer case of a policy of general application ("development and use of land"), subject only to the qualification of the development being that which the authority wishes to encourage.
82 Eighthly, regulation 5(1)(a) must be viewed against the overall backdrop of the 2004 Act introducing a "plan-led" system. Local planning authorities owe statutory duties to keep their local development schemes and their LDDs under review: see, for example, section 17(6) of the 2004 Act.
83 Does the NAHC 2016 fall within regulation 5(1)(a)(i)? Mr Bedford draws a distinction between affordable housing and residential development. On his approach, affordable housing is a concept which is adjunctive to that which is "development" within these regulations or the 2004 Act; and, moreover, the NAHC 2016 predicates a pre-existing wish or intention to carry out residential development. I would agree that if the focus were just on the epithet "affordable", there might be some force in the point that it is possible to decouple the NAHC 2016 from the scope of regulation 5(1)(a)(i), which is concerned only with "development".
84 I was initially quite attracted by Mr Bedford's submissions, and the attraction did not lie simply in their deft and effective manner of presentation. On reflection, I am completely satisfied that they are incorrect, for the following cumulative reasons.
85 First, the Defendant wishes to promote affordable housing throughout its area in the light of market conditions. It no longer has an affordable housing policy in its adopted local plan, but there is such a policy (differently worded) in its emerging local plan. In the meantime, the Defendant wishes to promote affordable housing in conformity with the overarching policy direction of paragraphs 17 and 50 of the NPPF and the 2014 Ministerial Statement. Indeed, the language of the NPPF is reflected in the NAHC 2016 itself. Affordable housing policies are ordinarily located in local plans because they relate to the development and use of land.
86 Secondly, affordable housing forms a sub-set of residential development. The latter may be envisaged as the genus, the former as the species. It is artificial to attempt to separate out "affordable housing" from "residential development". This entails an excessive and unrealistic focus on narrow aspects of tenure. As Mr Jones convincingly pointed out, the NAHC 2016 ranges well beyond tenure (which is simply another way of expressing what affordable housing is) into matters such as size of dwelling, distribution of types of housing across developments etc.
87 Thirdly, the correct analysis is that the NAHC 2016 promotes residential development which includes affordable housing. The latter is expressed as a percentage of the former. The setting of that percentage will inevitably have an impact on the economics of all residential development projects, because it impinges directly on developers' margins. Setting the percentage too high would kill the goose laying these eggs. Setting the percentage too low would lead to insufficient quantities of the affordable housing the Defendant wishes to encourage. The common sense of this is largely self-evident, and is reflected both in the language of paragraph 50 of the NPPF and paragraph 2 of the NAHC 2016 itself – "[s]uch policies should be sufficiently flexible to take account of changing market conditions over time".
88 Fourthly, it is incorrect to proceed on the basis that (in accordance with Mr Bedford's primary submission) residential development should be taken as a given, with the affordable housing elements envisaged as a series of restrictions and constraints. Arguably, some support for this approach may be drawn from paragraph 26 of Miller, although that case turned on its own facts. This approach ignores the commercial realities as well as what the NAHC 2016 specifically says about the need for pre-application discussions, with insufficient attention to affordable housing requirements likely leading to the refusal of an application. In my judgment, all elements of a housing package which includes affordable housing are inextricably bound.
89 Fifthly, the language of regulation 5(1)(a)(i) mirrors section 17(3) of the 2004 Act, "development and use of land". These terms are not defined in the 2004 Act. "Development" is defined in section 55 of the Town and Country Planning Act 1990 and includes "material change of use". "Use" is not defined, although such uses which cannot amount to a material change are. Mr Bedford submitted that regulation 5(1)(a)(i) is tethered to section 55; Mr Jones submitted that the concept is broader. In my judgment, even on the assumption that section 17(3) of the 2004 Act should be read in conjunction with section 55 of the 1990 Act, nothing is to be gained for Mr Bedford's purposes by examining the latter. "Use" is not defined for present purposes, still less is it defined restrictively. I would construe section 17(3) as meaning "development and/or use of land". If residential development includes affordable housing, which in my view it does, there is nothing in section 55 of the 1990 Act which impels me to a different conclusion.
90 I mentioned in argument that there may be force in the point that the NAHC 2016 sets out social and economic objectives relating to residential development, and that this might lend support to the contention that the more natural habitat for an affordable housing policy is regulation 5(1)(a)(iii) rather than (i). On reflection, however, there is no force in this point. There is nothing to prevent a local planning authority including all its affordable housing policies in one DPD. Elements of these policies may relate to social and economic objectives. However, these elements do not notionally remove the policy from (i) and locate it within (iii). The purpose of regulation 5(1)(a)(iii) is to make clear that a local planning authority may introduce policies which are supplementary to a DPD subject only to these policies fulfilling the regulatory criteria. The Defendant has made clear that it may introduce an SPD, supplementary to its new local plan, which sets out additional guidance in relation to affordable housing.
91 In any event, on the particular facts of this case it is clear that the NAHC 2016 could not be an SPD even if I am wrong about it being a DPD. This is because there is nothing in the saved policies of the 1999 Local Plan to which the NAHC is supplementary, despite Mr Jones' attempts to persuade me otherwise. This is hardly surprising, because the whole point of the NAHC 2016 is to fill a gap; it cannot logically supplement a black hole. That it fills a gap is, of course, one of the reasons I have already identified in support of the analysis that the NAHC 2016 is a DPD.
92 In my judgment, the correct analysis is that the NAHC 2016 contains statements in the nature of policies which pertain to the development and use of land which the Defendant wishes to encourage, pending its adoption of a new local plan which will include an affordable housing policy. The development and use of land is either "residential development including affordable housing" or "affordable housing". It is an interim policy in the nature of a DPD. It should have been consulted on; an SEA should have been carried out; it should have been submitted to the Secretary of State for independent examination.
93 Strictly speaking, it is unnecessary for me to address regulation 5(1)(a)(iv). However, in deference to the full argument I heard on this provision, I should set out my conclusions as follows:
(1) despite the textual difficulties which arise (see paragraph 78 above), and notwithstanding the analysis in Miller (which addressed the claimant's formulation of its case), I cannot accept that it is necessary to identify a development management policy which is separate from the statements at issue. As I have already pointed out, the whole purpose of regulation 5 is to define LDDs qua policies, by reference to statements which amount to or include policies. A sensible, purposive construction of regulation 5(1)(a)(iv) leads to the clear conclusion that the NAHC 2016 could fall within (iv) if it contains development management policies (subject to the below).
(2) I would construe the "and" in regulation 5(1)(a)(iv) disjunctively. This is in line with regulation 5(1)(a)(iii) (see the first "and", before "economic") and the overall purpose of the provision. As Mr Howell QC has rightly observed, a conjunctive construction would lead to absurdity. It would have been better had the draftsperson broken down (iv) into two paragraphs ("development management policies which …"; "site allocation policies which …") but the upshot is the same.
(3) I agree with Mr Howell QC, for the reasons he has given, that it is possible to have LDDs which are outside regulation 5 but that it is impossible to have DPDs which are outside the regulation. This is another reason for supporting a disjunctive construction.
(4) I disagree with Mr Howell QC that regulation 5(1)(a)(i) and (iii) applies to particular developments or uses of land, whereas (iv) is general (see paragraph 79 above).
(5) The real question which therefore arises is whether the NAHC 2016 contains development management policies which guide or regulate applications for planning permission. It may be seen that the issue here is not the same as it was in relation to regulation 5(1)(a)(i) because there is no need to find any encouragement; this provision is neutral.
(6) I would hold that the NAHC 2016 clearly contains statements, in the form of development management policies, which regulate applications for planning permission. I therefore agree with Stewart J's obiter observations at paragraph 37 of Miller.
94 There is force in Mr Bedford's objection that a disjunctive reading of regulation 5(1)(a)(iv) leaves little or no space for (ii) and site allocation policies, given the definition of the latter in regulation 2(1). However, this is an anomaly which, with respect, is the fault of the draftsperson; it cannot affect the correct approach to regulation 5(1)(a)(iv). There is more limited force in paragraph 74 of the judgment of Mr Howell QC in RWE, but I would make the same point. Regulation 5(1)(a)(i) and (iv) do not precisely overlap (see paragraph 93(5) above); (iii) is in any event separate because it only applies in relation to statements of policy objectives which are supplemental to a specific DPD. Further, anomalies pop up, like the heads of Hydra, however these regulations are construed. These, amongst others, are good reasons why the 2012 Regulations should be revised."
Note 1 “Specific consultation bodies” are those defined as such in Reg (2), being the usual range of statutory consultees, whereas
[Back] Note 2 “general consultation bodies,” includes voluntary bodies and community groups, but also bodies representing the interests of those carrying on business in the area (ibidem).
[Back]