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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 >> Hall & Anor v The First Secretary of State & Anor [2007] EWCA Civ 612 (28 June 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2007/612.html Cite as: [2007] EWCA Civ 612 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM QBD, ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
HH JUDGE MOLE QC
CO/8182/2005 & CO/7668/2005
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE CHADWICK
and
LORD JUSTICE CARNWATH
____________________
HALL & ANR |
Appellants |
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- and - |
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THE FIRST SECRETARY OF STATE |
1st Respondent |
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- and - |
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THE LONDON BOROUGH OF HILLINGDON |
2nd Respondent |
____________________
WordWave International Ltd
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Mr Rupert Warren (instructed by Treasury Solicitor) for the 1st Respondent
Miss Alice Robinson (instructed by London Borough of Hillingdon) for the 2nd Respondent
Hearing date : Wednesday 6th June, 2007
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Carnwath LJ :
Background
"… required for a purpose which it is necessary to achieve in the interests of the proper planning of the area in which the land is situated".
"Plot 3… lies on the southern side of Moor Lane to the west of the Duke of Northumberland's River. It has an area of about a third of hectare and is between… Scotchlake Farm to the east and Cambridge Lodge to the west…. Plot 3 is used as a scrapyard, the use of which has become established, and is therefore completely lawful in planning law terms. The yard is fenced. The Inspector described the yard as "densely packed with scrap metals of various kinds", including vehicles ranging in height from 1 metre to two and-a-half metres high."
The adjoining Scotchlake Farm was described by the Inspector (para 2.7) as consisting of "a dwelling and a small group of former buildings, now converted to workshops".
Proposals for Plot 3
"If (BA) acquires freehold ownership of the Rose Cottages Site it will not use or permit the continued use of this land for open storage or as a scrap yard or for commercial or industrial purposes and the Company will improve the appearance of the New Park Land after completion of the Landscaping Works PROVIDED THAT the Company may carry out development on the Rose Cottages Site pursuant to a planning permission granted after the date of this Agreement notwithstanding that the implementation of the development will affect the appearance of the Rose Cottages Site."
"Public access is not intended for plot 3. It has not been decided how this plot would be used. If acquired, its future would be considered with that of the adjoining Cambridge Lodge, which is now owned by BA. There is a possibility that the Lodge might be used as a permanent visitors' centre." (para 3.11)
"Plot 3 is one of the few reminders of the degraded nature of this urban fringe land prior to the implementation of the parkland. Its removal and the reclamation of the site would ensure the remediation of damage land in the Green Belt. The Order Lands are typical urban fringe land where there is always a high risk of poor management or unauthorised activity. Their acquisition would remove the threat of harmful uses in the future and secure proper management in perpetuity." (para 3.37)
The reasons for the decision
"The proposed parkland with public access on plots 1 and 2 and the removal of the scrapyard on plot 3 would be fully compliant with the purposes and uses of the Green Belt set out in PPG 2 and with the UDP policies for the Green Belt and for the promotion of access to the countryside. The purposes for which the Order Lands are sought accord with policy 0L25 (comprehensive rehabilitation area); the speedy removal of waste and visual dereliction on plot 2 and the scrapyard on plot 3 would achieve the objectives of UDP policies concerning damaged, derelict and degraded land…
"The benefits of the parkland and public access would be secured in perpetuity. The implementation of the parkland and the removal of the scrapyard would complete the transformation of the land between Harmondsworth and the M4/M25 that BA has undertaken over the past 10 years, avoid activities detracting from the existing parkland and the possibility of other harm in the future. In my view, the Order Lands are required to achieve the proper planning of the area so as to remove existing or potential harmful activities, to provide parkland for the benefit of the public and to enhance the public benefit of the parkland that has already been provided."
"… if this CPO is confirmed the Secretary of State will be guilty of land grabbing, for the sake of a private corporation's greed as the site has industrial use, is NOT in the Park and will be redeveloped, which is in direct violation of our Human Rights…"
"Subject, therefore, to the effects of the proposal for a third runway at Heathrow, the Secretary of State agrees with the Inspector's view (in IR 8.49 and 8.50) of the benefits to be secured by confirmation of the CPO, and his view that this would be in the interests of the proper planning of the area. He also places weight on the consideration that the creation of the park accords with the purposes of the section 106 agreement accepted by British Airways (BA) in connection with the planning permission granted to them in 1992 for a corporate headquarters and business centre, landscaping and public parkland. The second (1995) agreement (the one now in force) requires BA to use reasonable endeavours to acquire those parts of the site which were not then in their ownership to form the new park. The decision letter issued by the Secretary of State in 1992 relies on the Inspector's finding that the creation of the parkland for public use is one of the very special circumstances that would justify investment in Green Belt in the particular case." (para 23)
"24. The Inspector recognises (IR 8.35) the compulsory acquisition in the case of plot 3 is sought so as to remove the present use rather than establish a new one, though he sees the result (IR 8.37) as being that the site would be made compatible with the appearance of the park, with contamination removed, and considers that this would be a significant benefit in the public interest. He says (IR 8.35) that in his view, the scrapyard significantly detracts from the appearance of its immediate surroundings, though not the village conservation area, and can not envisage the use continuing without its being readily noticeable by the public. In IR 8.39 the Inspector also indicates a range of benefits that would arise from the compulsory acquisition of plot 3, including the completion of the package of environmental improvements on the western side of the Duke of Northumberland's River. In IR 8.45, the Inspector indicates that a third runway at Heathrow would not render the existing adjacent parkland west of the Duke of Northumberland's River and south of Moor Lane unattractive or unusable, and that the removal of the scrapyard would be a benefit to that parkland in perpetuity. That said, in IR 8.38 he also recognises as a disbenefit the possibility that confirmation of the CPO could result in the cessation of the scrapyard business on plot 3 because it may not be possible to relocate it. In IR 8.53 he considers that there is a compelling need in the public interest to acquire all of the Order Lands, and that this need outweighs the desire of Mr Hall to continue his business. He recommends in IR 9.1-9.3 that the Order should be confirmed for plot 3, whatever decision is made on the third runway."
"26. The Secretary of State agrees with the Inspector that the removal of the scrapyard would render the site compatible with the adjacent parkland (IR 8.37), is in accordance with relevant Unitary Development Plan policies (IR 8.39) and would bring other desirable environmental benefits, including the removal of any contamination and the potential for contamination (IR 8.36 and 8.37). He agrees with the Inspector's view (in IR 8.50) that the implementation of the parkland and the removal of the scrapyard would complete the transformation of the land and avoid activities detracting from the existing parkland. He notes that (IR 8.20) there is no proposal that plot 3 should itself become parkland, and that BA has no specific plans for the site other than compliance with its obligations.
27. The Inspector indicates (IR 8.39) that the benefits arising from the removal of the use would occur only by confirmation of the CPO. The Secretary of State agrees with that conclusion. Discontinuance action under section 102 of the Town and Country Planning Act 1990 could bring about a cessation of the use of the land as a scrapyard, without depriving the owner of his land. However, the Secretary of State considers that this would leave uncertainties over the future use and management of the land which could greatly reduce the benefits to the public from the adjacent parkland. The representations made on his 'minded to' letter do not alter the balance of factors that lead him to this view. The Secretary of State therefore considers that acquisition of the land is necessary for the proper planning of the area. Notwithstanding the potential adverse effect of confirmation on the scrapyard business, he considers that there is a compelling case in the public interest for confirmation of the Order in relation to plot 3."
The legal issue
"A compulsory purchase order should only be made where there is a compelling case in the public interest. An acquiring authority should be sure that the purposes for which it is making a compulsory purchase order sufficiently justify interfering with the human rights of those with an interest in the land affected, having regard in particular to the provisions of Article 1 of the First Protocol to the European Convention on Human Rights…" (para 14)
The courts have accepted that this principle fairly reflects the necessary balance required by the Convention (see R(Clays Lane Housing) v Housing Corporation [2005] 1WLR 2229, 2236). Where the balance depends on judgments of planning policy, the Secretary of State's decision will not be open to challenge save on conventional judicial review grounds.
Conclusion
Lord Justice Chadwick :
Lord Justice Ward :