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Scottish Court of Session Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Site Projects Ltd v Decision of Douglas G Hope [2008] ScotCS CSOH_57 (02 April 2008)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/2008/CSOH_57.html
Cite as: [2008] CSOH 57, [2008] ScotCS CSOH_57

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OUTER HOUSE, COURT OF SESSION

 

[2008] CSOH 57

 

 

XA174/06

 

OPINION OF LORD BRODIE

 

in the Appeal of

 

SITE PROJECTS LIMITED

 

Appellants

 

against

 

A decision of DOUGLAS G HOPE, a Reporter appointed by the SCOTTISH MINISTERS dated 6 September 2006

ญญญญญญญญญญญญญญญญญ________________

 

 

 

Appellant: Steven L Stuart; HBJ Gateley Wareing (Scotland) LLP,

Respondents: Springham; M Sinclair, Office of the Solicitor to the Scottish Executive

 

2 April 2008

Introduction

[1] This is an appeal under section 239 of the Town and Country Planning (Scotland) Act 1997 against a decision of a Reporter (Mr Douglas G Hope) appointed by the Scottish Ministers to determine an appeal, in terms of regulation 25 of the Town and Country Planning (Control of Advertisements) (Scotland) Regulations 1984 ("the Regulations"), against an enforcement notice served by Glasgow City Council on, inter alia, the Appellants and dated 7 April 2006. The Appellants are Site Projects Limited, a company incorporated under the Companies Acts and having a place of business at Abercorn Street, Newton, Broxburn EH52 6PZ. They are the owners of subjects on which are erected a number of advertising hoardings, opposite Duke Street on Shettleston Road, Glasgow ("the site"). The Respondents are the Scottish Ministers. At the hearing before me the Appellants were represented by Mr Steven Stuart, Advocate. The Respondents were represented by Ms Kay Springham, Advocate.

 

Control of the display of advertisements

[2] The display of advertisements in Scotland is subject to control by regulations made in terms of powers currently conferred by sections 182 and 183 of the 1997 Act and formerly conferred by section 61 of the Town and Country Planning (Scotland) Act 1972. In terms of regulation 5 of the Town and Country Planning (Control of Advertisements) (Scotland) Regulations 1984 no advertisement may be displayed without consent granted either by the planning authority or by the Scottish Ministers on an application in that behalf (referred to in the Regulations as "express consent") or deemed to be granted in accordance with Part IV of the Regulations (referred to in the Regulations as "deemed consent"). However, if the display of the advertisement is in accordance with the Regulations, planning permission for such development as is involved in the display shall be deemed to be granted and no further application shall be necessary under Part III of the 1997 Act (1997 Act, section 184). The definition of "advertisement" in regulation 2(1) of the Regulations is very extensive. It includes

"any hoarding or similar structure ...used, or designed or adapted principally for use, for the display of advertisements and references to the display of advertisements shall be construed accordingly".

[3] The Regulations confer a number of powers on local planning authorities with a view to the exercise of control on the display of advertisements additional to the power, conferred by regulation 17, to grant express consent. If it appears to an authority that it is expedient that any express consent should be revoked or modified, the authority may by order revoke or modify the consent in terms of regulation 22. If the authority considers it expedient to do so to remedy a substantial injury to the amenity of the locality or a danger to members of the public, it may serve a notice requiring the discontinuance of a display for which there is deemed consent in terms of regulation 14 of the Regulations. In the event that it appears to a planning authority that any advertisement has been displayed without a consent required by the Regulations or that a condition or limitation subject to which such consent was granted or was deemed to be granted has not been complied with, then the planning authority may serve an enforcement notice in terms of regulation 24. Decisions of the planning authority are subject to appeal to the Scottish Ministers: refusals of express consent and service of a discontinuance notice in terms of regulation 21, service of an enforcement notice, in terms of regulation 25.

 

Relevant site history

[4] The site had been subject of an instance of the exercise of control over the display of advertisements prior to the enforcement notice of 7 April 2006. On 20 December 1989 the City of Glasgow District Council served a discontinuance notice in respect of the site in terms of regulation 21 of the Regulations. As at that date the site comprised six 48 panel hoardings. They were not illuminated. The discontinuance notice was subject to an appeal to the Secretary of State for Scotland. In terms of regulation 21(8) the Secretary of State is given power on determining an appeal against a discontinuance notice to give such direction as may be necessary for giving effect to his determination including, where appropriate, directions for quashing the discontinuance notice or for varying the terms of the discontinuance notice in favour of the appellant. The reporter appointed to determine this appeal exercised these regulation 21(8) powers, as appears from his decision letter of 2 August 1990 (ref P/ADD/SL/50). Paragraph 17 of the decision letter of 2 August 1990 included this:

"I hereby sustain the appeal and grant consent for the continued display of the hoardings for a further period of 2 years from the date of this letter but subject to the condition that the forecourt to the display is landscaped to the satisfaction of the planning authority."

No other express consent has been granted by any relevant authority in respect of the site.

[5] Regard must be had, however, to regulation 19 of the Regulations. This is in the following terms:

"19(1) Except where the planning authority when granting consent impose a condition to the contrary or where renewal of consent is applied for and refused, advertisements displayed with express consent may on the expiry of their term continue to be displayed subject to service by the planning authority of a discontinuance notice but without prejudice to the exercise of any other power in these regulations to require the removal of such advertisements.

(2) Where under paragraph (1) of this regulation advertisements continue to be displayed after the expiry of express consent, consent shall be deemed to be granted in respect of the continuance of such display, subject to the like conditions as those to which the express consent immediately preceding it was subject and, unless previously brought to an end, shall expire when the site ceases to be used for the display of such advertisements."

[6] Subsequent to the decision letter of 2 August 1990 two adjacent 48 panel hoardings were amalgamated into one 96 panel hoarding. A further externally illuminated 48 panel hoarding was added to the site in 1991. At the same time external illumination was added to the other five hoardings (that is the one 96 panel hoarding and the four 48 panel hoardings).

 

The appeal to the Scottish Ministers against the enforcement notice

[7] This appeal is concerned with the enforcement notice dated 7 April 2006, served by Glasgow City Council on the Appellants in terms of regulation 24, which was then the subject of an appeal to a Reporter appointed by the Scottish Ministers in terms of regulation 25. In addition to the Appellants, the enforcement notice was also served on J C Decaux Limited, described in the notice as occupiers of the site, and SMG Primesight Advertising Limited ("Primesight"), described in the notice as lessees of the site. The enforcement notice stated that a breach of advertisement control had taken place on the site, consisting of the "unauthorised display of five x 48 sheet and one x 96 sheet externally illuminated advertising hoardings". The steps required to be taken for the purpose of remedying the breach of advertisement control were specified as "cease the display, remove the structures and submit a scheme of landscaping to the Planning Authority for consideration and implementation". No alternative steps were specified.

[8] I do not understand that any action was immediately taken in response to the enforcement notice by the Appellants. However, an appeal was lodged against the notice by Mr James Barron of the Barron Planning Consultancy, acting on behalf of Primesight, in terms of letter dated 16 May 2006 ("the Barron submission"). A copy of the Barron submission is number 7/3 of process.

[9] The grounds upon which an enforcement notice may be appealed to the Scottish Ministers are set out in regulation 25 (1). The Barron submission was construed by Glasgow City Council and by the Reporter as founding on the grounds provided by paragraph (a) and paragraph (d) of regulation 25(1). These paragraphs are in the following terms:

"(a) that the matters alleged in the notice do not constitute a display of an advertisement without a consent required by these regulations or a failure to comply with any condition or limitation subject to which any such consent was granted or deemed to be granted;

...

(d) that the steps required by the notice to be taken exceed what is necessary for the purpose identified under regulation 24(3)."

[10] Regulation 24(3) is in these terms:

"An enforcement notice shall specify the advertisement which is alleged to have been displayed without consent or the matters in respect of which it is alleged that any condition or limitation has not been complied with, and may specify steps that shall be taken within a given period to restore the land to its condition before the display was begun or to secure compliance with the condition or limitation; but may in addition specify, as an alternative, steps required to be taken to bring the display to a condition acceptable to the planning authority having regard to the provisions of these regulations; and in particular any such notice may for this purpose require the demolition or alteration of any buildings or works, the discontinuance of any use of land or the carrying out on land of any building or other operation."

[11] Accordingly, the "purpose identified under regulation 24(3)" which is referred to in the ground of appeal provided by regulation 25(1)(d) is

"to restore the land to its condition before the display was begun or to secure compliance with the condition or limitation [which has not been complied with]"

or, where alternative steps are specified (which was not done in this case),

"to bring the display to a condition acceptable to the planning authority having regard to the provisions of [the Regulations]".

[12] As appears from his decision letter dated 6 September 2006, the Reporter found that both ground (a) and ground (d) failed. It is the decision by the Reporter to dismiss the appeal at the instance of Primesight, as presented in the Barron submission, and uphold the enforcement notice of 7 April 2006 that is the subject of appeal to this court under reference to the familiar considerations summarised in Wordie Property Co Ltd v Secretary of State for Scotland 1984 SLT 345 at 347.

 

Submissions of parties

The submissions for the Appellant

[13] Mr Stuart submitted that the Reporter had erred in law. An enforcement notice can only be effective in respect of something that has neither express nor deemed consent: Mansi v Elstree Rural District Council (1965) 16 P & CR 153. What the Reporter should have done was to consider to what extent what was on site in 2006 when the enforcement notice was served enjoyed the benefit of deemed consent by virtue of the expired express consent granted on 2 August 1990 and continued display after that, as provided by regulation 19. Determining this was a matter of fact and degree. To the extent that it did enjoy deemed consent, there was no basis for enforcement (whatever might be the case in relation to discontinuance). The Reporter should have had regard to how the 96 panel hoarding came into being. Because he had not done this and because he had failed to consider to what extent what was on site in 2006 had the benefit of deemed consent, he was not in a position to consider what steps were necessary to restore the land to its condition before the display was begun. All that an enforcement notice could require was the restoration of a site to its state prior to an "un-consented to" display of an advertisement. The Reporter had not addressed regulation 19(2) in a proper way. Curiously, he did not refer to regulation 19 in the context of his consideration of the regulation 25(1)(a) ground of appeal but in any event he had misapplied the provision. He had looked at changes in the way in which the site had been used, rather than considering whether advertisements which had been subject to express consent had been continued to be displayed. Reference was made to R (on the application of Clear Channel UK Ltd) v Southwark London Borough Council [2007] JPL 927 and R (on the application of Maiden Outdoor Advertising Ltd) v Lambeth London Borough Council [2004] JPL 820. The Reporter referred to considerations of amenity in paragraph 17 of his decision letter and to public safety in paragraph 18 of the letter. These references and what appeared in paragraph 14 of the decision letter where the Reporter appears to have dealt with the regulation 25(1)(a) ground simply under reference to Schedule 4 to the Regulations and before looking at regulation 19, suggested a misunderstanding on the part of the Reporter of what it was Primesight had been arguing for.

[14] Mr Stuart separately submitted that the Reporter erred in upholding the requirement in the enforcement notice that a scheme of landscaping be submitted. That was not necessary for a purpose identified by regulation 24(3). There was no evidence to suggest that this was a step required to restore the land to its condition prior to the advertising hoardings were displayed. Mr Stuart further submitted that, in any event the Reporter had taken into account an irrelevant consideration in having regard to road safety considerations. Reference was made to regulation 4. There was, in any event, no evidence before the Reporter justifying a requirement based on road safety considerations.

[15] Mr Stuart moved me to allow the appeal, quash the decision in terms of section 239(5) of the 1997 Act and remit to the Reporter for re-consideration.

 

The submissions for the Respondents

[16] Miss Springham began by emphasising that in the written grounds of appeal to this court whereas it was said that the Reporter had erred in law in refusing the appeal against the enforcement notice under regulation 25(1)(d), there was no equivalent reference to regulation 25(1)(a). Thus, there was no challenge to the Reporter's finding that the display of advertisements had not been consented to. Mr Stuart's submission that the Reporter should have considered to what extent what was displayed in 2006 had the benefit of consent with a view to determining what was required to restore the land to its condition before the display was to conflate two separate steps identified in regulation 25(1)(a) and (d). The Reporter in any event had assessed what was on the site in 2006 and compared it to what was consented to in 1990. There was no need for him to do more because he had determined that there had been an unauthorised display since 1991 and accordingly this was not a case where the matters alleged in the enforcement notice did not constitute a display of an advertisement without consent. The approach now argued for by Mr Stuart: that each hoarding had to be considered separately had not been put forward to the Reporter in the Barron submission. The Reporter's consideration of amenity and public safety was to be understood in the light of terms of regulation 24(3) which provided that the local authority might specify alternative steps (that is, alternative to restoration of the land to its condition before the display was begun) to bring the display to a condition acceptable to the planning authority having regard to the provisions of the Regulations. The Reporter was entitled to consider whether there were other steps which might be taken to remedy a breach of advertisement control. Although regulation 25(1)(d) referred to "the purpose" identified under regulation 24(3), when one looked at regulation 24(3) there were in fact three purposes: restoration of the land to its condition before the display was begun (which, Miss Springham submitted, meant before there had been any display whatsoever), securing compliance with a condition, and making the display acceptable to the planning authority. Amenity and public safety were clearly relevant to the third of these purposes. What one finds the Reporter doing in paragraphs 15 to 18 of the decision letter is considering the whole range of options available to the planning authority. If this is regarded as being a superfluous exercise it does not follow that it leads to the Reporter's determination being wrong. There was little or nothing that could be taken from the English decisions which had been referred to by Mr Stuart given the differences as to the facts and the relevant legislation.

[17] As far as the requirement in the enforcement notice that a scheme of landscaping be submitted, Miss Springham emphasised what it was the Council had required: that the parties on whom the notice had been served submit a scheme. It was for them to determine what that might comprise. Nothing had been submitted. As matters stood it simply could not be determined whether a degree of landscaping might be necessary to restore the land to its condition before the display was begun. As far as road safety considerations were concerned, Miss Springham drew attention to the enumerated reasons for service which the Council had included in the enforcement notice. The Reporter was demonstrating by the terms of the decision letter that he had taken them into account. It would be curious if when having to decide whether an application for express consent for an advertisement had been properly refused the Reporter could take public safety into account but he could not do so when the issue was whether an advertisement could be removed.

 

Motion to amend the appeal

[18] An appeal such as the present must be made in terms of Form 41.19. It must state, in brief numbered propositions, the grounds of appeal. On the second day of the hearing at the end of what Miss Springham had had to say, Mr Stuart moved to amend his grounds of appeal by referring expressly to the Reporter having erred in law in refusing the appeal to him under regulation 25(1)(a) as well as regulation 25(1)(d). Miss Springham opposed the motion on the grounds that it was incompetent and, in any event, that it came too late. An appeal had to be lodged within 6 weeks of the decision appealed against. It would be to elide that requirement if an additional ground could be added by way of amendment outwith that period. In any event the motion came too late in the hearing. Miss Springham had articulated the Respondents' position on the first day of the hearing. It was only after she had concluded her submissions on the second day that Mr Stuart had made his motion. There would be prejudice to the Respondents in that the submissions on their behalf had been completed.

[19] In my opinion the motion was competent but, in the circumstances, I considered it appropriate to refuse it. I agreed with Miss Springham that it came too late in the hearing.

 

Discussion

[20] The issue before me is whether in refusing the appeal the Reporter acted unlawfully, in one or other of the ways identified by the Lord President in Wordie Property Co Ltd v Secretary of State for Scotland supra. That has to be determined by consideration of the Reporter's decision letter in the light of the relevant legislation. A decision letter is addressed to the parties to the appeal. As Lord Brown of Eaton-under-Heywood observed in a passage in his opinion in South Bucks District Council v Porter (No. 2) [2004] 1 WLR 1953, which was cited with approval by the Lord Justice-Clerk in Moray Council v Scottish Ministers 2006 SC 691 at 699:

"Decision letters must be read in a straightforward manner, recognising that they are addressed to parties well aware of the issues involved and the arguments advanced."

However, difficulty may arise when the decision letter addresses itself to a party whose grasp of the relevant issues, as judged by its submissions, is less than secure. By responding to a party on its own terms the decision maker may be drawn towards irrelevant considerations and away from relevant ones. This may be what happened in this case.

[21] Looking to what is said in paragraph 14 of the decision letter; Mr Stuart suggested that the Reporter had misunderstood what it was that Primesight had been arguing for. Mr Stuart pointed to the curiosity that the decision letter only refers to regulation 19, which provides for deemed consent in certain circumstances, at paragraph 16, a point in the decision letter after the regulation 25(1)(a) ground of appeal (not constituting a display without consent) had been determined against Primesight. Looking to what is said by the Reporter about amenity in paragraph 17 and about road safety in paragraph 18 of the decision letter, Mr Stuart said that the Reporter has had regard to irrelevant considerations.

[22] I share Mr Stuart's difficulty over the point at which regulation 19 is introduced into the decision letter but, leaving aside for the moment what is to be made of paragraphs 14, 16, 17 and 18, in fairness to the Reporter, it seems to me that in these paragraphs the Reporter was attempting to address the Barron submission. The Barron submission is not entirely easy to follow. It has the look of having taken points from the opinion of Collins J in R (on the application of Maiden Outdoor Advertising Ltd) v Lambeth London Borough Council supra without having focused them in what was a different factual and legislative context. However, the Barron submission appeared to argue that, because there had never been a condition attached to a consent to the effect that there could or could not be illumination, then consent for display of an advertisement was to be treated as consent for display of an illuminated advertisement. This argument seems to have been based upon Maiden Outdoor without appreciating that that decision turned on the definition of "advertisement" in the (English) Town and Country Planning Act 1990 which included the words "illuminated or not". These words do not appear in the definition of "advertisement" in the Regulations. The matter is underlined by the Regulations containing a separate definition of "illuminated advertisement". I take it that that is what the Reporter was responding to at paragraph 14 of the decision letter. He refers to Class VI of Schedule 4 to the Regulations (which require to be read with regulation 10) because it is only there where there is provision for deemed consent for illumination of advertisements.

[23] Turning to Mr Stuart's criticisms about what appears in paragraphs 17 and 18 of the decision letter, power to serve an enforcement notice is conferred by regulation 24(1). Power is conferred "where it appears to a planning authority that any advertisement has been displayed without consent". What the planning authority can require by way of enforcement notice is set out in regulation 24(3) and that is to "specify steps required to be taken to restore the land to its condition before the display was begun." Hence the grounds of appeal set out in regulation 25(1)(a) and regulation 25(1)(d). Regulation 4(1) provides that the powers conferred the Regulations with respect to the grant and refusal of consent, revocation or modification of consent and discontinuance of display of advertisements with deemed consent, shall be exercisable only in the interests of amenity and public safety. However, nothing is said in regulation 4(1) about the powers conferred with respect to enforcement notices. Amenity as such and public safety are not relevant to the making of or the appealing against an enforcement notice. I agree with Mr Stuart about that (although, following R (on the application of Maiden Outdoor Advertising Ltd) v Lambeth London Borough Council supra, I can see that amenity and public safety may be relevant if what is in issue is the materiality of what is said to be a failure to comply with an express consent). The point was made by the Council in its Appeal Observations (number 7/2 of process). However, that was not the position taken in the Barron submission. The Barron submission began by stating that:

"Much of the evidence in relation to this site have (sic) already been addressed in the previous appeal against the refusal of the Council to grant Express Consent for a reduced display at the site (SEIRU P/ADA/260/501)".

Amenity and public safety would have been relevant to such an appeal and it appears that the author of the Barron submission thought that the same was so in relation to an appeal against an enforcement notice. The Barron submission included a section headed "Amenity & Policy Issues" and a section headed "Highway Issues". It concluded with a paragraph in these terms:

"It is our contention that the display is lawful and benefits from deemed consent. In the circumstances it is not within the council's remit to seek removal by way of Enforcement Notice. The Council have failed to show that the proposal is unlawful or in any way affects amenity or highway safety and in view of the lack of substantive argument to the contrary we would request that our submissions be accepted and this appeal allowed."

[24] It appears to me that the Reporter was drawn into amenity and public safety issues by what was addressed to him on behalf of Primesight. Miss Springham, however, suggested that there was an alternative explanation for what I took her to accept would otherwise have been an irrelevant excursion. She referred to regulation 24(3). She pointed to the discretionary power of the planning authority to specify, in addition to "steps that shall be taken ... to restore the land to its condition before the display was begun", "steps required to be taken to bring the display to a condition acceptable to the planning authority having regard to the provisions of these regulations". The alternative would have to be formulated having regard to considerations of amenity and public safety. In the light of the planning authority's power to put forward an alternative to restoration of the land to its condition before the display, the Reporter had been entitled to apply his mind to amenity and public safety, as part of his consideration of the regulation 25(1)(d) ground (whether the steps required by the notice exceeded what was necessary). I consider Miss Springham's suggestion as to what the Reporter was doing to be ingenious. I do not think it to be correct. The Council had not specified an alternative. Had it done so then the Reporter might have been able to express a view as to whether what was proposed was within the range of what a reasonable local authority might regard as acceptable but when Glasgow City Council had not expressed any view as to what steps might bring the display to a condition acceptable to it, I simply do not understand what the Reporter could say on the subject. He no doubt has planning expertise but that does not allow him to express a sensible view on what might or might not be acceptable to a particular planning authority. Importantly, the Reporter does not explain in his decision letter that it is only with an eye to the non-existent alternative that he is expressing views on the desirability of removal of the hoardings from the perspectives of amenity and road safety. Rather, for all that appears to the contrary in paragraphs 17 and 18, it would seem that the Reporter considered that the necessity of the steps specified in the enforcement notice had to be determined by reference to considerations of amenity and public safety. That would be a misdirection. It is true that at paragraph 15 of the decision letter the Reporter narrates an argument (the source of which I have not found in the Barron submission) to the effect that it is not necessary to remove the hoardings in order to remedy the breach of control constituted by the illumination. All that was required was removal of the illumination. I do not see the Reporter to have dealt with that argument but, more important for what I am presently considering, I do not take from what appears in paragraph 15 that the Reporter had correctly directed himself to what was the test to be applied in considering the regulation 25(1)(d) ground of appeal.

[25] I am accordingly satisfied that the Reporter made an error of law in relation to the ground 25(1)(d) appeal. However, before quashing the decision I have also to be satisfied that the error was material. At one level the error was clearly material. What the Reporter was required to do by the Regulations was to determine whether the steps required by the notice to be taken exceeded what was necessary to restore the land to its condition before the display was begun. What he did was something quite different and that was to determine that removal of the advertisements would improve the visual amenities of the area and reduce potential road safety hazards. However, I consider that I must consider the argument advanced by Miss Springham to the effect that once it was accepted that the display did not have the benefit of consent then it followed that the planning authority was entitled to order the display to cease and remove every structure associated with the display of advertisements. That, submitted Miss Springham, is the natural meaning of "restore the land to its condition before the display was begun". Miss Springham did not concede that the Reporter had made an error of law and her argument was not made in the context of materiality, but it would appear to me that if she is correct in her construction of regulation 24(3) then the Reporter's observations about amenity and road safety could simply be disregarded as superfluous because once it was accepted that the display did not have consent the Reporter had no alternative but to refuse the regulation 25(1)(d) ground of appeal.

[26] I do not consider that Miss Springham's construction is correct. There is no question but the enforcement notice can require the recipient of the notice to "restore the land" to its condition before an earlier point in time. The issue is: at what point in time? I understood Miss Springham to argue for that point of time which was before any advertisement whatsoever being displayed on the land. That would mean that where an advertisement had been displayed which had the benefit of either express or deemed consent and was then altered in some material way, let us say by the addition of illumination to a hoarding, then an enforcement notice could require the removal of everything, or at least everything by way of advertisement, necessary for restoration of the land to its condition before any display of advertisements, even display with consent. Disagreeing with Miss Springham, I do not see that as the natural meaning of "condition before the display was begun" (emphasis added). I see "the display" as a referring to what had "been displayed without consent". It is restoration to that condition which can lawfully be required by an enforcement notice. That would be consistent with the position where a condition or limitation has not been complied with. There it is clear that where a condition or limitation has not been complied with the power is limited to securing compliance. It does not go beyond that. I would see requiring restoration to the condition before display without consent to be the equivalent of securing compliance with a condition or limitation.

[27] If I am correct in my construction, even where it is accepted that there has been display of an advertisement without consent and that therefore an enforcement notice can lawfully be served in respect of that advertisement, a question arises as to what that enforcement notice can require. In the first alternative provided by regulation 24(3) that does not fall to be determined by reference to amenity or public safety but, rather, by reference to what is required to restore the land to its condition before the display without consent was begun.

[28] I do not propose to address the arguments relating to the requirement of the enforcement notice to submit a scheme of landscaping in any detail beyond indicating that I was sympathetic to Miss Springham's point that it cannot be said that landscaping might not be required to restore the condition of the land to its condition prior to the display of an advertisement without consent.

[29] I shall accordingly allow the appeal, quash the decision in terms of section 239(5) of the 1997 Act and remit to the Reporter for re-consideration. I shall reserve all questions of expenses. For the avoidance of doubt, I have allowed this appeal upon the basis that I consider that the Reporter erred in law in his consideration of the regulation 25(1)(d) ground of appeal. However, I intend the effect of my decision to be to quash the Reporter's decision simpliciter. The appeal will therefore require to be reconsidered by the Reporter under reference to all grounds that are put before him.

 

 


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