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High Court of Ireland Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> High Court of Ireland Decisions >> O'Connor v. Nenagh U.D.C. [1996] IEHC 4 (16th July, 1996) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ie/cases/IEHC/1996/4.html Cite as: [1996] IEHC 4 |
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1. This
Application in its original form sought by way of Judicial Review a number of
reliefs against Nenagh Urban District Council. But ultimately, the Applicant
has confined his reliefs to an Order of Certiorari quashing a certificate given
by the Town Clerk of Nenagh Urban District Council on the 27th September, 1994
certifying the correctness of certain information given to the Notice Party at
the time of an intended purchase by the Notice Party of supermarket premises in
the town of Nenagh or, alternatively, a declaration that certain statements
contained in the information certified to be true was not true. For reasons
which will become apparent, I do not intend to review in detail all the
surrounding circumstances of this case. It is sufficient for the purposes of
this judgment to state that the predecessor in title of the Notice Party, a Mr.
Mulqueen, obtained a planning permission from the Urban Council for the
erection of a supermarket premises in 1974. Before he had carried out
development pursuant to that permission, Mr. Mulqueen in 1981 sought permission
for a somewhat altered development. That permission was refused by the Urban
Council and on appeal by Bord Pleanala. The primary allegation being made by
the Applicant is that Mr. Mulqueen then proceeded to develop in purported
pursuance of his original 1974 permission and not only did the development not
comply with that permission but was, in the view of the Applicant, similar to
the development in respect of which permission had been refused. The siting
and orientation of the buildings were different than those envisaged in the
1974 permission. The Applicant then goes on to complain that when the Notice
Party purchased the premises from Mr. Mulqueen in 1974, the Urban District
Council issued to the Notice Party the certificate sought to be quashed which
in the view of the Applicant was a wrongful certificate of comfort given to the
Notice Party. That certificate signed by Mr. McCormack, the Town Clerk, was in
the form “I hereby certify that the above information is correct”.
The “above information” was in a question and answer format in a
standard type of form used regularly by the Urban Council for the benefit of
buyers and indeed used by the County Council also. The form was headed
“Nenagh Urban District Council Local Government (Planning and
Development) Acts, 1963 to 1993 Planning Search”. It then contained a
reference to the property at “Limerick Road, Nenagh Shopping
Centre” and to the owner “Thomas Mulqueen”. The
controversial questions and answers were as follows:-
4. The
Applicant claims that the Planning Authority could not have regarded the
development as in fact complying with the 1974 permission and that therefore
could not reasonably have answered the first question, as it did, in the
negative. For the same reasons the Applicant objects to the negative answers
to the remaining two questions.
5. The
Application is being resisted by both the Respondent and the Notice Party on a
number of grounds which include the following:
6. That
is not a comprehensive list of the grounds of objection but it represents the
main grounds which were argued.
7. In
addition to the alterations in the siting and orientation of the buildings, it
is also suggested that flooding and sewage problems have arisen as a
consequence of further breaches of the 1974 permission. I accept that it was
as a consequence of flooding problems that the Applicant originally examined
the planning file and discovered the situation of which he now complains.
Having regard to the fact that he is a member of the Urban Council and in that
capacity in particular would be entitled to be concerned that the public
functions of the Council were being carried out lawfully, I am inclined to
think that he does have locus standi but I have great doubts about this. As to
whether he has a locus standi or not is not dependent in my view on his
motives. It is his legitimate interest in the matter in an objective sense and
not his motives which determine whether he has locus standi or not. He makes
no secret of the fact that he is unhappy about having Dunnes as a competitor
but he complains that he is being treated unequally by the Council in that the
planning laws have been enforced with the utmost strictness against him
whereas, as he sees it, that has not been the position in the case of the
Notice Party, Dunnes. I am not satisfied on the evidence that I have heard
that any case of inequality of treatment can be made out but having regard to
the Applicant's role as a public representative, I am prepared to accept with
considerable misgivings that he may have locus standi.
8. I
am also inclined to the view that the document sought to be quashed or in
respect of which in the alternative declaratory relief is sought, is of a
sufficiently public nature to permit of being judicial reviewed. First of all,
it is a document that came into being pursuant to a system adopted by each of
the Local Authorities in Tipperary. Secondly, because of its official
appearance and nature and the certification by the Town Clerk, it is likely to
be given the status of a planning permission in practice. There was some
evidence before me that that did in fact happen in a licensing application and
I think it highly likely that a District Judge in a licensing application would
rely on it. I do not agree that it is analogous to a reply to an ordinary
letter or an oral answer to an oral query. Therefore, in an appropriate case, I
think that it could be made the subject of judicial review. I have no doubt
for instance that if Mr. Mulqueen made analogous queries before he developed
and, had been told that if he developed in accordance with the plans they would
be treated as compliance with the 1974 permission that certificate would be
reviewable. The case is less strong when the person to whom the document is
addressed is a buyer but nevertheless having regard to the general appearance
of the document and the fact that it was issued as part of the system adopted
by the Planning Authority, I think that it can be the subject of judicial
review.
9. But
even if the Applicant does have locus standi and the document can, in theory,
be the subject of judicial review I am absolutely satisfied that the Applicant
ought not to be granted such relief in this case. There are good public policy
reasons why the Oireachtas has imposed time limits on both the Section 27 and
the enforcement notice procedures. Unless there was some proven element of
fraud or public corruption, it would be wrong in my view for the Courts to
circumvent those time limits by giving reliefs which would take the form of
denying or at least querying the compliance with planning permission by the
route of judicial review. This would, apart from anything else be most unfair
towards the Notice Party of whom Counsel for the Applicant concedes that the
Applicant has no legitimate criticism. The Applicant's annoyance is directed
solely against the Council. While an Order of Certiorari or a Declaration of
the kind sought would not have the effect of compelling the Notice Party to
demolish and rebuild, it would unfairly throw in doubt the compliance with the
Planning Acts and could conceivably have adverse effects on the Notice Party in
certain situations such as, for instance, a compulsory purchase order and a
consequent compensation claim. Not only is there no evidence of wrongful
collusion or corruption as between the Council and the Notice Party but there
is in fact no evidence of mala fides on the part of the Council. Mr. McCormack
issued the certificate on foot of a report from a draughtsman technician. In
reliance on that report and in reliance also on what he knew had been the view
at a much earlier stage of the engineer then in charge of planning, Mr. Haugh,
he accepted that there was no material deviation from the 1974 permission.
There possibly was some ambiguity about his evidence in this regard but I
interpreted him as accepting that there was no material deviation or at the
very least no material deviation of sufficient seriousness that the Council
would consider taking any action.
10. I
am satisfied that Mr. Haugh and Mr. McCormack acted bona fides at all stages.
That being so, I think that it would be wrong for me to enter into any
consideration of whether the view taken by them was a justifiable one or not.
I would only do this if I considered that if the view was unjustifiable, the
relief sought should be granted but as I have already indicated, I do not take
that view.
11. Even
if I were to extend the time under Order 84 of the Rules of the Superior Courts
therefore, I could not grant the relief sought. But if I am wrong about that,
I would still see no reason to extend the time. While courts frequently extend
the time for judicial review under Order 84, I think that in this case there
would be no good reasons for doing so. I cannot accept that the time should
run from the commencement of the flooding. I also think that I should have
regard to the public policy embodied in statute imposing strict time limits in
relation to almost every aspect of planning enforcement and therefore, I would
not be prepared to extend the time. But as I was against the Applicant for
other reasons also I thought it best to state those reasons.