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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 >> Secretary of State for Communities and Local Government v Hopkins Developments Ltd [2014] EWCA Civ 470 (15 April 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2014/470.html Cite as: [2014] EWCA Civ 470, [2014] WLR(D) 170, [2014] PTSR 1145 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Buy ICLR report: [2014] PTSR 1145] [View ICLR summary: [2014] WLR(D) 170] [Help]
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE, QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT IN BRISTOL
His Honour Judge Denyer QC
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE BEATSON
and
LORD JUSTICE CHRISTOPHER CLARKE
____________________
Secretary of State for Communities and Local Government |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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Hopkins Developments Ltd |
Respondent |
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WordWave International Limited
A Merrill Communications Company
165 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2DY
Tel No: 020 7404 1400, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Jeremy Cahill QC and Satnam Choongh (instructed by Ashfords LLP) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 13 March 2014
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Jackson:
Part 1. Introduction | (paragraphs 2 to 17) |
Part 2. The facts | (paragraphs 18 to 35) |
Part 3. The application to the High Court | (paragraphs 36 to 41) |
Part 4. The appeal to the Court of Appeal | (paragraphs 42 to 44) |
Part 5. The law | (paragraphs 45 to 62) |
Part 6. The application of the legal principles to the present appeal | (paragraphs 63 to 75) |
Part 7. Executive summary and conclusion | (paragraphs 76 to 78) |
"(1) An Inspector may, within 10 weeks of the starting date, send to the appellant, the local planning authority and any statutory party a written statement of the matters about which he particularly wishes to be informed for the purposes of his consideration of the appeal."
"(1) The local planning authority and the appellant shall–
(a) together prepare an agreed statement of common ground; and
(b) ensure that the Secretary of State and any statutory party receives a copy of it, within 5 weeks of the starting date.
(2) The local planning authority shall afford to any person, who so requests, a reasonable opportunity to inspect and, where practicable, take copies of the statement of common ground sent to the Secretary of State."
"(1) Except as otherwise provided in these Rules, the inspector shall determine the procedure at an inquiry.
(2) At the start of the inquiry the Inspector shall identify what are, in his opinion, the main issues to be considered at the inquiry and any matters on which he requires further explanation from the persons entitled or permitted to appear.
(3) Nothing in paragraph (2) shall preclude any person entitled or permitted to appear from referring to issues which they consider relevant to the consideration of the appeal but which were not issues identified by the inspector pursuant to that paragraph.
…
(12) The inspector may take into account any written representation or evidence or any other document received by him from any person before an inquiry opens or during the inquiry provided that he discloses it at the inquiry."
"(3) If, after the close of an inquiry, an inspector proposes to take into consideration any new evidence or any new matter of fact (not being a matter of government policy) which was not raised at the inquiry and which he considers to be material to his decision, he shall not come to a decision without first–
(a) notifying in writing the persons entitled to appear at the inquiry or who appeared at it of the matter in question; and
(b) affording them an opportunity of making written representations to him or of asking for the re-opening of the inquiry,
and they shall ensure that such written representations or request to re-open the inquiry are received by the Secretary of State within 3 weeks of the date of the notification."
"6.6.1 A statement of common ground is essential to ensure that the evidence at an inquiry focuses on the material differences between the main parties. Effective use of such statements is expected to lead to more efficient inquiries. The statement should identify the areas of agreement and disagreement. Identification of these two matters will greatly assist the Inspector in preparing for the case, by clarifying the matters remaining in dispute. It will also provide a commonly understood basis for the parties to inform the evidence. This should lead to an improvement in the quality of the evidence and a reduction in the quantity of material which needs to be considered.
…
6.8.2 Proofs of evidence should not include matters which are not in dispute. They should focus on the issues of dispute remaining following the statement of common ground."
i) The proposed development was not needed in order to meet the Council's target for five year housing supply.ii) The proposal made insufficient provision for public open space.
iii) The proposed dwellings were so close to the hospital and the Cable Road houses that they would result in "an overbearing impact, loss of outlook and loss of privacy to the detriment of the amenities of existing residents and users of the hospital".
iv) There was a danger of noise and odours from the proposed pumping station affecting residential amenity.
v) The proposed access route passing through the hospital grounds "would result in conflicting traffic movements to the detriment of highway safety and residential amenity".
vi) There was inadequate information as to how the proposed development would impact on local educational and other facilities.
I shall refer to these six reasons as the "refusal reasons".
"6. MATTERS TO BE ADDRESSED AT THE INQUIRY
Without inhibiting the case of either main party, on the basis of material seen to date, I consider that the Inquiry should focus principally on the following matters:
1. Whether there is a need for housing in the area;
2. The effect of the proposal on highway safety;
3. The effect of the proposal on the safety and convenience of users of the hospital and future residents;
4. The effect of the proposal on protected trees; and
5. The effect of the proposal on the provision for affordable housing, education provision and sports, art and leisure facilities."
This paragraph clearly constituted a rule 7 statement, and I shall so refer to it.
"Two matters are still at contention:
1. Whether the release of the appeal site for development would be justified. This requires the consideration of three matters:
a. whether the Council can demonstrate a 5 year supply for housing such that Development Plan housing policies can be considered out of date;
b. if so, is there an overriding need to develop and set aside the Local Plan policy of restraint in the countryside;
c. if not are the proposals in accordance with the NPPF.
2. The effect of the proposal on the safe running of the hospital."
This constituted a rule 16 statement.
"6. Having regard to the remaining reasons for refusal, the evidence submitted and the representations made at the inquiry, I now consider the main issues in this appeal are:
i) housing supply;
ii) the effect of the proposal on the character and appearance of the area;
iii) whether the site is in a sustainable location;
iv) the effect on highway safety and the safe running of the hospital."
I shall refer to the second of these four issues as "character/appearance" and to the third as "sustainability".
i) The District Council cannot demonstrate a five year supply of deliverable housing sites. The shortfall is substantial. Therefore the Council's first refusal reason is unsound.
ii) The construction of a housing estate on the site would unacceptably detract from the tranquil and rural character of the area.
iii) The site is not in a particularly sustainable location. This is because many residents would need to travel by car to the town centre (a) so as to commute to other centres for their work and (b) so as to access shops and services.
iv) The proposed access arrangements would cause undue risk to motorists and pedestrians. Therefore the District Council's fourth refusal reason was valid.
I shall refer to these four conclusions as "conclusion 1", "conclusion 2", "conclusion 3" and "conclusion 4".
"72. I have weighed the factors in opposition to the proposal against the contribution the proposal would make towards meeting the substantial shortfall in the five-year housing land supply and other benefits. I find that the adverse impacts of the proposal would significantly and demonstrably outweigh the benefits when assessed against the policies in the Framework taken as a whole and that the appeal proposal would not represent sustainable development."
i) The sustainability issue was the subject of extensive evidence and argument during the hearing. Hopkins had the opportunity to deal with the matter, even though the Inspector did not specifically identify it as a main issue.
ii) The issue of character/appearance was the subject of evidence by third parties. Therefore Hopkins had the opportunity to deal with this issue, even though the Inspector did not identify it as a main issue. Furthermore, the issue of character/appearance was a matter of aesthetics rather than a technical matter. Therefore there was little that Hopkins could achieve by adducing evidence or making submissions about that matter.
iii) Having found two breaches of natural justice, the judge erred in proceeding straight to a decision to quash. The judge ought to have exercised his discretion and considered whether those breaches warranted a quashing order.
"Whilst an Inspector can reasonably expect parties at an Inquiry to explore and clarify the position of their opponents, if an Inspector is to take a line which has not been explored, perhaps because a party has been under a misapprehension as to the true position of its opponents, as in my view happened here, fairness means that an Inspector give the party an opportunity to deal with it. He need not do so where the party ought reasonably to have been aware on the material and arguments presented at the Inquiry that a particular point could not be ignored or that a particular aspect needed to be addressed. Here, whilst I am satisfied that the Inspector was unaware that he might be being unfair because he may not have appreciated the misapprehension under which the Claimant was labouring, I am satisfied on balance that the Claimant ought, in fairness, to have been given the opportunity to address the implications of the Inspector concluding in the way he did as to the appropriateness of the site for a LAP. I do not consider that the circumstances were such that the Claimant ought reasonably to have been alerted to the need to address that issue, from what was raised by the Council or the Inspector."
Ouseley J held that, if the developer had been invited to deal with the requirement for an LAP on site, the developer would have done so and this might have led to a different outcome of the planning appeal.
"I can well understand that the claimant is greatly disappointed by the Inspector's conclusions, but from the outset of the inquiry it should have been foreseeable that the Inspector might be persuaded by the views expressed by local residents on this, and indeed on the other issues they raised. Equally, it would have been appreciated that the Inspector would conduct a site visit and that whatever impression he gained would be gained at a site inspection in December. In all the circumstances, I do not accept that there was any unfairness on the Inspector's part. This was a matter which was fairly and squarely at issue during the inquiry. The fact that in the event the Inspector accepted Mr Fowler's evidence rather than Miss Dixon's evidence on this point does not mean that there has been any unfairness."
"The majority of the trees covered by the Tree Preservation Orders can be maintained and protected. The loss of any protected tree can be mitigated against through the planting of replacement trees that can be secured by conditions."
The Council subsequently called evidence which contradicted that paragraph. The Inspector refused the developer's application for an adjournment. The Inspector ultimately dismissed the developer's appeal because of the unacceptable effect of the proposed development on one of the protected trees. Sullivan J quashed the Inspector's decision because there had been procedural unfairness.
"However, it is most important when deciding whether the parties at an inquiry have had a fair opportunity to comment on an issue raised by an Inspector of his or her own motion, and whether they could reasonably have anticipated that an issue had to be addressed because it might be raised by an Inspector, to bear in mind the highly focused nature of the modern public inquiry where the whole emphasis of the Rules and procedural guidance contained in Circulars is to encourage the parties to focus their evidence and submissions on those matters that are in dispute."
Sullivan J added that in deciding whether there had been unfairness the court should take into account the importance of the issue in respect of which the Inspector was differing from the position agreed in the statement of common ground.
i) Any party to a planning inquiry is entitled (a) to know the case which he has to meet and (b) to have a reasonable opportunity to adduce evidence and make submissions in relation to that opposing case.
ii) If there is procedural unfairness which materially prejudices a party to a planning inquiry that may be a good ground for quashing the Inspector's decision.
iii) The 2000 Rules are designed to assist in achieving objective (i), avoiding pitfall (ii) and promoting efficiency. Nevertheless the Rules are not a complete code for achieving procedural fairness.
iv) A rule 7 statement or a rule 16 statement identifies what the Inspector regards as the main issues at the time of his statement. Such a statement is likely to assist the parties, but it does not bind the Inspector to disregard evidence on other issues. Nor does it oblige him to give the parties regular updates about his thinking as the Inquiry proceeds.
v) The Inspector will consider any significant issues raised by third parties, even if those issues are not in dispute between the main parties. The main parties should therefore deal with any such issues, unless and until the Inspector expressly states that they need not do so.
vi) If a main party resiles from a matter agreed in the statement of common ground prepared pursuant to rule 15, the Inspector must give the other party a reasonable opportunity to deal with the new issue which has emerged.
Lord Justice Beatson:
"it is clear from decisions in the last 60 years that what is required is an opportunity to be heard, an opportunity to participate in the procedure by which the decision is made."
I gave as examples the classic statement by Denning LJ in Abbott v Sullivan [1952] 1 KB 189 at 198 and the recent statement by Lord Reed in Osborne v Parole Board [2013] UKSC 61 at [68]. The decisions to which my Lord has referred and which I discuss briefly at [89] – [92] show that this is also the broad position in the context of planning inquiries.
Lord Justice Christopher Clarke:
Note 1 The NPPF refers (at 254) to the definition of sustainable development in UN General Assembly Resolution 42/187: “meeting the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs.” It includes (NPPF at 262) land uses that minimise the need to travel (and journey lengths for employment, shopping and other activities) and maximise the use of sustainable transport modes. [Back]