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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 >> Barrett v Welsh Ministers (Rev1) [2023] EWHC 2503 (Admin) (13 October 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2023/2503.html Cite as: [2023] EWHC 2503 (Admin) |
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KING'S BENCH DIVISION
PLANNING COURT
2 Park Street, Cardiff CF10 1ET |
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B e f o r e :
Sitting as a judge of the High Court
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MALCOM JEFFREY BARRETT |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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THE WELSH MINISTERS |
Defendant |
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-and- |
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POWYS COUNTY COUNCIL |
Interested Party |
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Mr Owain Rhys James (instructed by Government Legal Department) for the defendant
The interested party did not appear and was not represented.
Hearing dates: 25 September 2023
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Crown Copyright ©
HHJ Jarman KC:
Introduction
i) the inspector was wrong in law to find that condition 2 attached to the outline planning permission was prohibitive in substance.
ii) the inspector was wrong in law to find that as a matter of fact and degree condition 2 goes to the heart of the permission, without carrying out any fact-sensitive enquiry or assessment into the terms of the condition in the context of the permission and the permission in its planning context.
The planning background
"2). The sixteen new dwelling houses are hereby approved under the provisions of Article 5(2) of the Town and Country Planning General Development Order 1977, on an outline application and the further approval of the District Planning Authority shall be required with respect to the following matters hereby reserved before any development is commenced:
a) The siting, design and external appearance of the proposed buildings or other structures to be erected on the site's, including fences, walls and other means of enclosure;
b) details of the access arrangements including car parking and vehicle turning areas;
c) details of the landscaping of the site, including the size and species of all proposed planting and any existing species to be retained. The scheme shall include tree and hedge planting along the South and east boundaries of Site A and the North and South boundaries of Site C referred to on plan 14760/A attached to this consent, as well as the new site entrance off the A490 road.
In the case of the reserved matters specified above, application for approval, accompanied by all detailed drawings and particulars, must be made to the district planning authority not later than the expiration of three years beginning with the date of this permission.
The development to which this condition relates must be begun not later than the expiration of five years from the date of this permission or within the expiration of two years from the final approval of all reserved matters whichever is later."
"The construction of the new dwellings shall be phased in order B, C and A as indicated on plan 14760/A attached. No work, other than the provision of items of common infrastructure, shall be commenced on a new phase until the previous phase has been substantially completed."
"Excluding conversion works to the Hall itself, before any of the remainder of the development hereby approved is commenced the existing access off Raven square shall be permanently closed to vehicular traffic with a scheme which has received the prior approval of the local planning authority."
"…RESERVED MATTERS ARE APPROVED for the following development,
namely:
Erection of four dwellings Llanerchydol Hall Park, Welshpool
In accordance with the application and plans submitted to the Council on 14 August 1990 in compliance with conditions 2a, 2b, 5 and 6 of the Notice of Decision dated the 4th day of July 1988 Ref: M14760 subject to the outstanding conditions of the above mentioned decision and to the following conditions…"
"There are still outstanding matters to be agreed before this permission can be implemented –
A. Landscaping scheme for this area;
B. Access onto A490 in accordance with Condition No.10."
The inspector's decision letter
"However, I am not persuaded that such factors assist the appellant in respect of 'Site A', not least because those sites were subject to separate reserved matters permissions. Indeed, any irregularities in respect of those permissions/ developments are stand-alone matters for the LPA. Similarly, whilst I acknowledge the appellant's frustration regarding the ability for the developer to fully discharge the landscaping details for 'Site A' under Ref: M20115, as Condition 2(c) also related to the wider development of 'Site B' and 'Site C', this falls well short of rendering the permission in respect of 'Site A' extant."
"Therefore, on the basis of the foregoing, I concur with the Council's position that the appellant has failed to demonstrate that, on the balance of probability, the requirements of Condition 2(c) of planning permission Ref: M14760 were properly discharged. Much has been made of whether a not Condition No.2 represents a condition precedent. Nevertheless, it is clear that, amongst other things, Condition No.2 required details of the landscaping of the site, including the size and species of all proposed planting, to be approved by the LPA before any development commenced. The condition was therefore prohibitive in substance and effect and, as a reserved matter, there is little doubt in my mind that, as a matter of fact and degree, the condition goes to the heart of the permission. In coming to this conclusion, I have been mindful of the wide range of legal authorities in respect of such matters, including those referred within the appellant's evidence, and I am satisfied that my findings are consistent with the principles established therein."
Legal principles
i) The interpretation of a condition attached to a planning permission is a matter for the courts.
ii) The starting point is to consider what it meant by the words of the condition.
iii) If a condition is intended to prohibit something, this should be spelled out in clear terms.
iv) There is no difference between a condition which provides that no development should commence until a scheme is submitted and approved and one which provides that a scheme should be submitted and approved before development commences.
v) Whether a breach of such a condition means simply that enforcement action may be taken to remedy the breach or whether it renders any commencement of development unlawful depends on whether the condition goes to the heart of the planning permission.
vi) Whether a condition goes to the heart of the planning permission can be answered only by a fact-sensitive enquiry into the terms of the condition in the context of the permission, and the permission in its planning context.
vii) Such a question is a matter of planning judgment and is not a matter for the court.
"As I understand the effect of the authorities to which I am about to refer, it is only necessary to ask the single question: are the operations (in other situations the question would refer to the development) permitted by the planning permission read together with its conditions? The permission is controlled by and subject to the conditions. If the operations contravene the conditions they cannot be properly described as commencing the development authorised by the permission. If they do not comply with the permission they constitute a breach of planning control and for planning purposes will be unauthorised and thus unlawful. This is the principle which has now been clearly established by the authorities."
"It is the daily task of the courts to resolve ambiguities of language and to choose between them; and to construe words so as to avoid absurdities or to put up with them. And this applies to conditions in planning permissions as well as to other documents."
"58. If a local planning authority wishes to impose any obligation upon an applicant by way of a requirement or prohibition, it should do so in express terms. The need for a local planning authority to spell out any requirement or prohibition in clear terms applies with particular force where the condition is said to prevent not merely some detail of the development, but the commencement of any development pursuant to the planning permission…….the principle argued for by the defendant applies only where a condition expressly prohibits any development before a particular requirement, such as the approval of plans, has been met…
59…If Durham County Council had wished to prohibit any extraction before a restoration scheme for the worked out areas was agreed, it could have said so by imposing a condition expressly to that effect, similar in form to condition 2 in Whitley, "No extraction shall take place except in accordance with a restoration scheme to be agreed ..."; or it could have imposed the standard form of conditions that are imposed on grants of outline planning permission: "details of [a restoration scheme] shall be submitted to and approved by the Local Planning Authority before any development takes place.
…
61. Condition 10 is a "condition precedent" in the sense that it requires something to be done before extraction is commenced, but it is not a "condition precedent" in the sense that it goes to the heart of the planning permission, so that failure to comply with it will mean that the entire development, even if completed and in existence for many years, or in the case of a minerals extraction having continued for 30 years, must be regarded as unlawful."
"….cases where there is only a permission in principle because no details whatsoever have been submitted and those cases where the failure has been limited to a failure to obtain approval for one particular aspect of the development…. In the former case, common sense suggests that the planning permission has not been implemented at all. In the latter case, common sense suggests that the planning permission has been implemented, but there has been a breach of condition which can be enforced against."
"The fact that a condition is not complied with does not necessarily render the entire development unlawful. One has to ascertain first what the nature and extent of the relevant clause is…
The conditions stipulate that the schemes must be applied for and agreed before commencement. If they are not approved before commencement there is a breach of the condition, but there is not the further consequence that the building cannot commence."
"The passage in Hart Aggregates to which the judge referred was at [59], quoted above, where Sullivan J gave two examples of express language that could have been used by the local planning authority if it had wished to prohibit extraction before a restoration scheme for the worked out areas was agreed: it could have imposed a condition in the form "No extraction shall take place …"; or it could have imposed the standard form of condition used in the grant of outline planning permission, namely "… before any development takes place". Sullivan J plainly, and in my view rightly, regarded the two forms of words as equivalent."
"It seems to me that any tension is more apparent than real. It is clear that condition 10 was rejected as a condition precedent engaging the Whitley principle not because it used the second form of words rather than the first, but for the deeper reasons explained at length in the judgment. There is nothing in the judgment to detract seriously from the force of the examples given by Sullivan J at [59]"
"Fourthly, the local planning authority was in my view reasonably entitled to treat the ground floor levels of the building as a matter of sufficient importance to justify the inclusion of a condition prohibiting the commencement of any work on the site, including access work, before the levels were agreed. By condition 4 it chose wording plainly intended to achieve that result. I can see no good reason for declining to respect its judgment on the point."
"16. The starting-point is that development in breach of conditions is unlawful, and it follows that, if there is a condition that has to be fulfilled before development commences, and development commences without the condition being fulfilled, the development has been commenced unlawfully. This is 'the Whitley principle'. In those circumstances, if a question arises about whether the development commenced within the three-year period after the grant of permission, the work done in breach of the condition will not count, and the result may be that the permission expired before the commencement of any work authorised by the permission
17. But that starting-point has to be applied in the context of the statutory regime as a whole, which draws a clear distinction in s171A(1) of the 1990 Act between (a) carrying out development without planning permission and (b) failing to comply with a condition subject to which planning permission was granted. It follows that not every breach of condition can have the result that the development has been carried out without planning permission.
18. Nevertheless, when an authority has clearly made a condition requiring some further act before the commencement of work, there must be scope for saying that the intended function of the condition was to prevent the commencement of work (or render it unlawful) before the condition had been fulfilled. That will be the case if the condition 'goes to the heart of the planning permission': if it does, it is a condition going beyond the detail of a matter that is agreed in principle: it is, instead, something without which the authority would not be content to permit the development at all.
19. The question whether a condition "goes to the heart of the planning permission" is not merely a matter of construing the grant of permission. The grant may give reasons why the condition is imposed; but those reasons cannot resolve the question by themselves. Rather, the question can be answered only by a fact-sensitive enquiry into the terms of the condition in the context of the permission, and the permission in its planning context. In other words, this question is a matter of planning judgment. It is not for the Court; it is for the Inspector; and unless the Inspector's decision on the issue is at fault in a Wednesbury sense, the Court will not intervene "
The principles applied