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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 >> Shropshire Council, R (On the Application Of) v The Secretary of State for Communities and Local Government [2019] EWHC 16 (Admin) (16 January 2019) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2019/16.html Cite as: [2019] PTSR 828, [2019] EWHC 16 (Admin), [2019] WLR(D) 41 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
PLANNING COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
(SITTING AS A JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT)
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The Queen on the Application of Shropshire Council |
Claimant |
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and |
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The Secretary of State for Communities and Local Government |
Defendant |
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and |
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Lee Jones |
Interested Party |
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The Defendant did not appear and was not represented
Ms Saira Kabir Sheikh QC (instructed by CLP Solicitors) for the Interested Party
Hearing dates: 13 September 2019
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr C.M.G. Ockelton:
THE REGULATIONS
"54B.
(1) A person who wishes to benefit from the exemption for self-build housing must submit a claim to the collecting authority in accordance with this regulation.
(2) The claim must—
(a) be made by a person who—
(i) intends to build, or commission the building of, a new dwelling, and intends to occupy the dwelling as their sole or main residence for the duration of the clawback period, and
(ii) has assumed liability to pay CIL in respect of the new dwelling, whether or not they have also assumed liability to pay CIL in respect of other development;
(b) be received by the collecting authority before commencement of the chargeable development;
(c) be submitted to the collecting authority in writing on a form published by the Secretary of State (or a form substantially to the same effect);
(d) include the particulars specified or referred to in the form; and
(e) where more than one person has assumed liability to pay CIL in respect of the chargeable development, clearly identify the part of the development that the claim relates to.
(3) A claim under this regulation will lapse where the chargeable development to which it relates is commenced before the collecting authority has notified the claimant of its decision on the claim.
(4) As soon as practicable after receiving a valid claim, and subject to regulation 54A(10), the collecting authority must grant the exemption and notify the claimant in writing of the exemption granted (or the amount of relief granted, as the case may be).
(5) A claim for an exemption for self-build housing is valid if it complies with the requirements of paragraph (2).
(6) A person who is granted an exemption for self-build housing ceases to be eligible for that exemption if a commencement notice is not submitted to the collecting authority before the day the chargeable development is commenced."
"Commencement notice" means a notice submitted under regulation 67."
Regulation 2(5)(b) provides that
"References to notices, representations, forms or other documents, or to copies of such documents, include references to such documents or copies of them in electronic form."
Regulation 67 is as follows:
"Commencement notice
67 (1) Where planning permission is granted for a chargeable development, a commencement notice must be submitted to the collecting authority no later than the day before the day on which the chargeable development is to be commenced.
(2) A commencement notice must—
(a) be submitted in writing on a form published by the Secretary of State (or a form to substantially the same effect);
(b) identify the liability notice issued in respect of the chargeable development;
(c) state the intended commencement date of the chargeable development; and
(d) include the other particulars specified or referred to in the form.
(3) A person submitting a commencement notice must serve a copy of it on each person known to that person as an owner of the relevant land.
(4) On receiving a valid commencement notice the collecting authority must send an acknowledgment of its receipt to the person who submitted it.
(5) Where charitable or social housing relief has been granted in respect of the chargeable development, the acknowledgement must state the date on which the clawback period ends (on the assumption that the chargeable development is commenced on the intended commencement date).
(6) Where a collecting authority receives a valid commencement notice any earlier commencement notice received by it in respect of the same chargeable development ceases to have effect.
(7) A person who has submitted a commencement notice may withdraw it at any time before the commencement of the chargeable development to which it relates by giving notice in writing to the collecting authority.
(8) A commencement notice is valid if it complies with the requirements of paragraph (2)."
THE FACTS
"Dear Gay,
Further to your mail of 17 June, please be advised that site clearance works will begin on site tomorrow 11 July for site 14/05016/FUL.
I understand that the £9000 fee will be payable 2 years from this date or 3 months after project completion, whichever occurs first under the terms of the 106 agreement.
regds
Lee Jones."
"Dear Mr Jones,
Thank you for your email informing me that work was to commence on the 11th July 2015. Your comments have been noted and our records updated. … "
[The rest of the email details the crystallisation of the s 106 liability and methods of payment.]
THE INSPECTOR'S DECISION
THE PRESENT PROCEEDINGS
"16. I suggest that the right approach is to regard the question of whether a requirement is directory or mandatory as only at most a first step. In the majority of cases there are other questions which have to be asked which are more likely to be of greater assistance than the application of the mandatory/directory test: The questions which are likely to arise are as follows.
(a) Is the statutory requirement fulfilled if there has been substantial compliance with the requirement and, if so, has there been substantial compliance in the case in issue even though there has not been strict compliance? (The substantial compliance question.)
(b) Is the non-compliance capable of being waived, and if so, has it, or can it and should it be waived in this particular case? (The discretionary question.) I treat the grant of an extension of time for compliance as a waiver.
(c) If it is not capable of being waived or is not waived then what is the consequence of the non-compliance? (The consequences question.)
17. Which questions arise will depend upon the facts of the case and the nature of the particular requirement. The advantage of focusing on these questions is that they should avoid the unjust and unintended consequences which can flow from an approach solely dependent on dividing requirements into mandatory ones, which oust jurisdiction, or directory, which do not. If the result of non-compliance goes to jurisdiction it will be said jurisdiction cannot be conferred where it does not otherwise exist by consent or waiver."
DISCUSSION AND CONCLUSIONS
"In my view, with respect, this approach was too narrow. For the reasons I have given, this is not a context in which either statute needs to be read as requiring more than substantial compliance to achieve validity."