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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Tapp & Anor, R (on the application of) v Thanet District Council [2001] EWCA Civ 559 (21 March 2001) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2001/559.html Cite as: [2001] EWCA Civ 559, [2001] JPL 1436 (Note), [2002] 1 P & CR 7, [2002] PLCR 6, [2001] 13 EGCS 151, [2001] 3 PLR 52 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM CROWN OFFICE AND DIVISIONAL COURT
(SULLIVAN J)
Strand London WC2 Wednesday, 21st March 2001 |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE MANTELL
-and-
LORD JUSTICE BUXTON
____________________
THE QUEEN | ||
- v - | ||
THANET DISTRICT COUNCIL | ||
Ex parte | ||
(1) RICHARD TAPP | ||
(2) DAVID BRITTON |
____________________
Smith Bernal Reporting Limited
180 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2HD
Telephone No: 0171-421 4040/0171-404 1400
Fax No: 0171-831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
MR R HUMPHREYS (instructed by Legal Department, Thanet District Council, Margate CT9 1XZ) appeared on behalf of the First Respondent.
MR A ALESBURY (instructed by David Bruce, Wiggins Group Plc, London NW8 7JL) appeared on behalf of the affected third party.
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Wednesday, 21st March 2001
"(1) If any person wishes to ascertain whether-
(a) any proposed use of buildings or other land; or
(b) any operations proposed to be carried out in, on, over or under land, would be lawful, he may make an application for the purpose to the local planning authority specifying the land and describing the use or operations in question.
(2) If, on an application under this section, the local planning authority are provided with information satisfying them that the use or operations described in the application would be lawful if instituted or begun at the time of the application, they shall issue a certificate to that effect; and in any other case they shall refuse the application.
(3) A certificate under this section shall-
(a) specify the land to which it relates;
(b) describe the use or operations in question (in the case of any use falling within one of the classes specified in an order under section 55(2)(f), identifying it by reference to that class);
(c) give the reasons for determining the use or operations to be lawful; and
(d) specify the date of the application for the certificate.
(4) The lawfulness of any use or operations for which a certificate is in force under this section shall be conclusively presumed unless there is a material change, before the use is instituted or the operations are begun, in any of the matters relevant to determining such lawfulness."
"If, on an application under this section, the local planning authority are provided with information satisfying them of the lawfulness at the time of the application of the use, operations or other matter described in the application, or that description as modified by the local planning authority or a description substituted by them, they shall issue a certificate to that effect; and in any other case they shall refuse the application."
3. The two certificates relate to RAF Manston, an airfield located to the west of Ramsgate in Kent. Prior to, during and after World War Two, RAF Manston was used for military purposes as a fighter and bomber base. Civilian use of the airfield began in the late 1950s or early 1960s. Traffic built up to quite substantial volumes and in 1965 planning permission was granted for a passenger terminal with a design capacity of around one million passengers a year. By the 1980s Kent International Airport PLC ('KIA') operated passenger and cargo flights out of a part of the airfield containing the passenger terminal known as the "civilian enclave". Between 1993 and 1997 the number of military flights declined from nearly 20,000 to around 7,600 a year, whilst the number of civilian flights fluctuated within the range of 35,000 to 46,000 a year.
4. In 1997 the Ministry of Defence announced its intention to dispose of RAF Manston. Following a bidding process, heads of terms were agreed in July 1998 for a sale to The Wiggins Group Plc, ('Wiggins'), which had acquired KIA through a subsidiary. The Ministry of Defence wished to establish that civilian use of the airfield (outside the civilian enclave) would be lawful. Accordingly, in May 1998 the Ministry applied for three LDCs under section 192 of the Town and Country Planning Act 1990: 98/398 for continuation of the use of the airfield for civilian purposes, 98/399 for retention of a large number of buildings on the site and 98/400 for continued use of those buildings in association with the civilian use of the airfield.
5. In June and July 1998 the applications for the first two certificates were granted. Certificate 98/398 is in the following terms:
'The Thanet District Council hereby confirm that on 14th May 1998 the use described in the First Schedule hereto in respect of the land specified in the Second Schedule hereto and edged red on the plan attached to this certificate would have been lawful within the meaning of section 192 of the Town and Country Planning Act 1990 as amended.'
6. The First Schedule describes the proposal in these terms:
'Certificate of lawfulness for the proposed use of the airfield for civilian purposes.'
7. The Second Schedule describes the location:
'Location: RAF Manston, Kent (restricted to the area edged red on plan attached to this certificate).'
8. The area edged red on the plan included the main runway and taxiways running off it, but excluded the civilian enclave and a number of buildings used for airfield services (hangers, control tower, fuel installations and the like) lying to the northwest of one of the main taxiways.
9. Certificate 98/399 was in the same form save that the First Schedule described the proposal in these terms:
'Certificate of lawful development in respect of the retention of the following existing airfield buildings.'
10. The buildings are then listed and numbered and the numbered buildings are shown on a plan.
11. Application 98/400 was held in abeyance whilst legal advice was sought as to whether the use of the buildings in connection with civilian use of the airfield would constitute a material change of use. Counsel was instructed and advised that a single change of user from military to civilian would not amount to a material change of use. In accordance with counsel's opinion the use of each building was then considered to see whether there would be 'an equivalent citizen use' to the previous military or military/civilian use of the building, that is to say to see whether the actual use of the building, setting aside the identity of the occupier, would not be materially changed as a result of civilian use. The Council concluded that there was 'an equivalent civilian use' in the case of each building and so Certificate 98/400 was issued. It is in the same form as the first two certificates. The First Schedule is in the forming terms:
'Certificate of lawful development for the proposed use of the existing airfield buildings listed on the attached schedule in associated with the use of the airfield for civilian purpose.'
12. The Schedule then listed rather fewer buildings than had been included in 98/399, but nothing turns on that. Counsel's opinion had also dealt with the extent of the planning unit which could properly be said to comprise the airfield. In the light of counsel's opinion and of the Ministry's wish to include all of the land proposed to be disposed of to Wiggins, a further application was made, 99/377, for a certificate of use of RAF Manston for 'commercial say civilian user'.
13. Having considered a report of the Director of Planning Services which dealt with both the deferred application, 98/400, and 99/377 together, the Council approved both applications and issued the relevant certificates on the 8th July, 1999. The First Schedule to 99/377 describes the proposal as:
'Certificate of lawful development in respect of the use of crown owned airfield land and buildings for commercial civilian use.'
14. The reason given was:
'In the opinion of the Local Planning Authority the change of ownership of the land in question from Crown owned airport to civilian owned and operated airport does not in itself [constitute] a material change of use of the land edged red. As the land in question has been used for airport purposes for a period in excess of 10 years, no specific planning permission is required, unless there occurs some other material change in circumstances.'
15. The land edged red on the plan referred to in Schedule 2 is substantially the same as the land which is the subject of Certificate 98/398, with the addition of two area: first, there is an area to the north of the main airfield, described in the documents as the Northern Grass area, which contains a grass strip; second, the area to the north-west of the taxiway, containing a number of buildings used for airport services to which I have earlier referred. Certificate 99/377 also included a few individual buildings which are situated within an area that was previously the station domestic area and which had been omitted from 98/398.
16. In these proceedings the first and second applicants, who live or work at the western and eastern ends of the runway respectively, challenge only the two latest certificates, 98/400 and 99/377. There is no challenge to Certificates 98/398 and 98/399. Nor is there any challenge to the advice received by the Council from counsel that a change of user from military to civilian would not amount to a material change of use. The applicants' concern is that the change of military to civilian use of the airport may lead to an increase in activity at the airport, both in the air and on the grounds. Wiggins have made no secret of the fact that, as the Director of Planning reported to his members:
'They intend to pursue a programme of expansion of the commercial use of the former military airfield."
"'In the opinion of the Local Planning Authority the change of ownership of the land in question from Crown owned airport to civilian owned and operated airport does not in itself [this then the word is clearly intended to be constitute] a material change of use of the land edged red.
As the land in question has been used for airport purposes for a period in excess of 10 years, no specific planning permission is required, unless there occurs some other material change of circumstances'."
"The judge below erred in finding that the local planning authority were not under a duty to consider seeking the imposition of a limitation within the description of proposed use as set out on the certificates of lawful proposed use."
"The judge below held that:
i) a realistic limitation to prevent intensification could not have been imposed upon the certificates in question; andii) such a limitation would have no practicaleffect in light of the earlier unchallenged certificates.
There was no evidence before the court below upon which such conclusions could properly be drawn. The judge below thereby erred in law in reaching the above conclusions which were adverse to the Applicants and relying upon these conclusions in dismissing the application for Judicial Review."
"There may be a material change in use where an existing use has become intensified... mere intensification of a use does not in itself constitute a material change... It must be intensification of such a degree as to amount to a material change in the character of a use."
"It is easy to state the principle that intensification may be of such a degree or on such a scale as to make a material change in the character of a use, it is far more difficult to apply it in practice. There are very few cases of 'mere intensification'. Usually the increase in activity will have led to some other change: from hobby to business, from part to full-time employment, or an increase in one use at the expanse of other uses in a previously mixed use."
"'The change of use and retention of buildings (including the runway) was in fact not in issue anyway (except in relation to the Northern Grass). The applicant's attack on the second certificates would, even if successful, serve no practical purpose because the airport could in substance continue to operate as before in reliance on the first certificates."
"No evidence has been adduced on behalf of the applicants to refute that contention. There is no sensible reason to believe that intensification on the Northern Grass strip would be of any significance given the unlimited intensification which would be lawful over the remainder of the airfield including the civil enclave."
"They stated that therefore their preferred option was to build a new terminal for five million passengers together with substantial hanger development, plane craft maintenance on the area known as the northern grass."
"..change of ownership of the land in question from Crown owned airport to Civilian owned and operated airport, which does not in itself [constitute] a material change of use of the land edged red. As the land in question has been used for aircraft purposes for a period in excess of 10 years, no specific planning permission is required, unless there occurs some other material change in circumstances."
"Evidence has been provided that the buildings referred to in the attached schedule have been used for purposes that have an equivalent civilian airport use and therefore provided the use continues as at present, that will continue to be the lawful use."
"Certificate of lawful development for the proposed use of the existing airfield buildings listed on the attached schedule in association with the use of the airfield for civilian purposes."