BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Bridgend County Borough Council v Boland & Anor [2017] EWCA Civ 1004 (14 July 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2017/1004.html Cite as: [2017] EWCA Civ 1004 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
ON APPEAL FROM THE UPPER TRIBUNAL (LANDS CHAMBER)
HIS HONOUR JUDGE JARMAN QC AND A J TROTT FRICS
[2016] UKUT 174 (LC)
2 Park Street, Cardiff, CF10 1ET |
||
B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE HAMBLEN
and
LORD JUSTICE HICKINBOTTOM
____________________
BRIDGEND COUNTY BOROUGH COUNCIL |
Appellant |
|
- and - |
||
MICHAEL BOLAND MAGALIE MURIEL BOLAND |
Respondent |
____________________
Bridgend County Borough Council) for the Appellant
George Newsom (instructed by Thomas Simon Solicitors) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 27 June 2017
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Hickinbottom:
Introduction
The Law
"(1) Where an interest in land is proposed to be acquired by an authority possessing compulsory purchase powers, either of the parties directly concerned may… apply to the local planning authority for a certificate under this section.
…
(4) Where an application is made to the local planning authority for a certificate under this section in respect of an interest in land, the local planning authority shall... issue to the applicant a certificate stating either of the following to be the opinion of the local planning authority regarding the grant of planning permission in respect of the land in question, if it were not proposed to be acquired by any authority possessing compulsory purchase powers, that is to say –
(a) that planning permission would have been granted for development of one or more classes specified in the certificate (whether specified in the application or not) and for any development for which the land is to be acquired, but would not have been granted for any other development;
(b) that planning permission would have been granted for any development for which the land is to be acquired, but would not have been granted for any other development; …".
Section 17(4) lies at the heart of this appeal.
"In determining, for the purposes of the issue of a certificate under this section, whether planning permission for any particular class of development would have been granted in respect of any land, the local planning authority shall not treat development of that class as development for which planning permission would have been refused by reason only that it would have involved development of the land in question (or of that land together with other land) otherwise than in accordance with the provisions of the development plan relating thereto."
Consequently, a certificate must not be refused solely on the ground that the relevant hypothetical development would be contrary to the relevant development plan. As the learned authors of the Encyclopaedia of Compulsory Purchase and Compensation properly say (at paragraph D-1313-13), this provision is to avoid the whole purpose of the certificate system being defeated where the grant of planning permission is pursuant to a specific policy in the development plan, e.g. a policy allocating the relevant land for the use for which it is being acquired.
"Where a certificate is issued under the provisions of Part III of this Act, it shall be assumed that any planning permission which, according to the certificate, would have been granted in respect of the relevant land or part thereof if it were not proposed to be acquired by any authority possessing compulsory purchase powers would be so granted…".
i) The relevant date for the determination of an application for CAAD is the date of the notice that the interest in land is proposed to be acquired by an authority possessing powers of compulsory acquisition as defined in section 22(2), i.e. in this case 30 September 2005, the date the notice of the relevant compulsory purchase order was published.ii) "Relevant land" for these purposes is the land for which compensation for compulsory acquisition is to be assessed (see, e.g., J S Bloor (Wilmslow) Limited v Homes and Communities Agency [2017] UKSC 12 at [17] per Lord Carnwath of Notting Hill JSC).
"It is one thing to examine these factors, on the assumption that the proposal has been cancelled on the relevant date, in the light of existing circumstances. It is quite another to look back into the past and to try to reconstruct the planning history of the area on the assumption that the proposal had never come into existence at all. The further back in time one goes, the more likely it is that one assumption as to what would have happened must follow on another and the more difficult it is likely to be to reach a conclusion in which anybody can have confidence."
"The question which the local planning authority, and in his turn the Secretary of State for the Environment, had to answer in this case was therefore a relatively simple one. It was capable of being determined, on the assumption that the proposal had been cancelled on the relevant date, in the light of the circumstances existing at that date and by the application of ordinary planning principles. The question was whether reasons existed for the refusal of planning permission which were quite independent of any scheme for the acquisition of the land for use for the purposes of the proposed bypass…".
The Factual Background
"The objectors consider that any changes to the settlement boundary in this locality should simply facilitate future expansion of the primary school, and should not permit additional housing development. The Council explains that the settlement boundary to the south of the objection site [i.e. the North Field] has been delineated so as to permit future expansion of the Pen-y-fai Church in Wales School. The neighbouring field to the north has been included in the settlement as it could be developed for 'rounding off' purposes, utilising the existing access. This would effectively prevent any further development opportunity as, to the north, the boundary excludes the extensions to gardens at the rear of Heol Eglwys.
The objectors claim that the [North Field] would be large enough to accommodate five new dwellings which would damage the character and appearance of the area. However, I consider that the character of the access and the sensitive location of the site (between the school, Court Colman Landscape Conservation Area and established dwellings) limit the capacity of this modest site. I conclude that the settlement boundary is appropriately defined in this locality on the west side of Pen-y-fai."
The inspector thus confirmed that settlement boundary. He did not consider that any additional policies were required for any land which fell within the settlement as a result of that new boundary. So far as material to this appeal, the inspector recommended approval of the plan.
"Part of the site lies outside the designated settlement boundary and forms part of the Court Coleman Landscape Conservation Area as defined in the adopted… Local Plan. However, the site is allocated as land reserved for educational facilities in the deposit UDP with the settlement boundary and landscape area amended accordingly. There are no objections specific to this allocation and as such due weight may be afforded to it. There are therefore no objections in policy terms."
Planning permission was granted on 11 May 2004. As at that date, the UDP had still not been adopted.
"8. … Until the UDP is adopted, the whole of the appeal site remains subject to the countryside restraint policies, and that is the current situation in terms of the provisions of the development plan, to which I have to have regard in the determination of this appeal… The provisions of the emerging UDP are a material consideration, but half of the appeal site would still be subject to those restraint policies even if the UDP were to be adopted at some time in the future. Similarly, the [Landscape Conservation Area] designation remains in force over the whole site at this point in time, and it would not be 'discarded', as [the developers] term it, by the UDP proposals, which involve only a local modification of the boundary.
9. The reason for the proposed modification to the settlement boundary in the UDP is to permit the provision of improved educational facilities in accordance with Policy SC5(15) of the UDP. The development of the appeal site in the way proposed would prevent the provision of those improved educational facilities…".
"The settlement boundary was moved to include this area of land in the UDP for the purposes of the school only, if a resolution to approve an application for a school at this location were not made by the Local Planning Authority the settlement boundary would not have been amended in the UDP and the site would have remained outside of the settlement boundary and national and local countryside policies would have been applied to any application for residential development at this time."
Ms Gandy recommended that a negative certificate be issued. On 3 June 2015, the Council followed that recommendation, and issued such a certificate.
The Ground of Appeal
i) As a result of the order granting permission being sent to the wrong address, the appeal was made out of time. I would grant an appropriate extension of time.ii) There were two issues before the tribunal. One concerned highways. That is no longer is issue – the Council now accept the tribunal's decision in relation to that ground – and I need say nothing further about it.
iii) It is common ground before this court that, before the Upper Tribunal, to succeed, Mr & Mrs Boland had to establish – on the balance of probabilities, applying the principles set out in Fletcher Estates, and on the basis that the proposed new school was cancelled in respect of the Reference Land – that planning permission would have been granted for housing. That was the basis upon which the Upper Tribunal addressed the matter (see paragraph 24 of its decision).
i) The officer's report to the Planning Committee on the application for planning permission for the new school, which said that "the site is allocated as land reserved for educational facilities in the deposit UDP with the settlement boundary and landscape area amended accordingly" (see paragraph 28 above).ii) The inspector's decision on the application for planning permission for a nursing home, which said: "The reason for the proposed modification to the settlement boundary in the UDP is to permit the provision of improved educational facilities in accordance with Policy SC5(15) of the UDP" (see paragraph 29 above).
iii) Ms Gandy's report to the Planning Committee on the application by Mr & Mrs Boland for a CAAD, in which she said: "The settlement boundary was moved to include this area of land in the UDP for the purposes of the school only" (see paragraph 32 above).
iv) Ms Gandy's evidence before the Upper Tribunal, and notably the following:
"On 12 May 2005 the UDP amended the settlement boundary of Pen-y-fai to include the site for the specific purpose of accommodating the requirements of an educational facility as outlined in Policy SC5(15) of the UDP and for no other purpose" (paragraph 6 of her statement of 16 October 2015)."Had the land not been allocated for educational purposes then the boundary would not have been changed" (paragraph 3 of her statement of 20 November 2015).v) Paragraph 36 of the Upper Tribunal's own decision:
"It is clear that it was the replacement school building proposal that prompted the re-drawing of the settlement boundary so as to include the land in the emerging UDP, and the field to the north by way of rounding off."
Therefore, Mr Beglan submitted, if Policy SC5(15) stood as cancelled, then the relevant change in the boundary must stand as cancelled. They are equally part of the underlying proposal.
i) Whether a policy falls within the "underlying proposal" of a scheme is essentially a question of fact for the relevant decision-maker (in this case, the Upper Tribunal) to determine. It is a question of fact and planning judgment. The observations of Lord Nicholls of Birkenhead in Waters v Welsh Development Authority [2004] UKHL 19; [2004] 1 WLR 1304 at [55] and following (especially at [61]), on how the underlying scheme should be identified for the purposes of the assessment of compensation under Part II, with which the rest of the House agreed, are equally apposite here. In respect of matters involving planning judgment, the Lands Chamber of the Upper Tribunal has particular expertise and experience.ii) However, the construction of the policy itself is, of course, a matter of law. That applies to a development plan, as much as to national policy.
iii) In the Bridgend UDP, the settlement boundary has broad policy significance, in the sense that different policies apply to land inside that boundary from the policies that apply to land outside. Generally (and subject to the Policy EV1 caveat in respect of land outside the settlement boundary allocated to a particular use by other specific policies), Policy EV12 proscribes development outside settlement boundaries. Inside the boundary, development is acceptable in principle, the circumstances in which development will be allowed being assessed by reference to criteria-based policies, including Policy H4.
iv) The settlement boundary is tested through the rigorous statutory process that development plans involve, which includes consultation and independent examination. The incorporation of settlement boundaries into the development plan has substantial significance, given that applications for planning permission or for the renewal of planning permission are to be determined in accordance with the approved or adopted development plan for the area, unless material considerations indicate otherwise (see Section 54A of the Town and Country Planning Act 1990 and Section 38(6) of the Planning and Compulsory Purchase Act 2004, and paragraph 3.1.3 of Planning Policy Wales).
v) In this case, as Ms Gandy accepted in evidence before the Upper Tribunal (see paragraph 37 of the tribunal's decision), there was nothing in the development plan to suggest that the significance of the settlement boundary to the west of Pen-y-fai, once re-drawn, was any different from the broad policy significance to which I have referred. As Mr Beglan frankly accepted, other than Policy SC5(15), there are no specific policies in the plan that restrict the use of the Boland Land and the North Field, now enclosed by the boundary.
vi) It is noteworthy that, when objection was taken to the re-drawing of the boundary to include the North Field, the broad issue of whether changes to the boundary should simply facilitate future school expansion was raised, and the inspector recommended that no modification to the plan be made (see paragraph 26 above). On that basis, Mr Beglan did not suggest that the re-drawing of the boundary as a result of the cancellation of the new school scheme would be to exclude the North Field. He accepted – as I think he was bound to do – that, if, even prior to the new school scheme being permitted and implemented, planning permission had been sought for small scale residential development of the North Field, given Policy H4 and the absence of any policies that contraindicate residential development on that site, planning permission would have been granted.
vii) Although there was no evidence before either the Upper Tribunal or this court in support of the proposition, for (and only for) the purposes of this appeal, I am prepared to accept Mr Beglan's submission that it is common practice for a settlement boundary in a development plan to be drawn or re-drawn to include land that is the subject of specific allocation, that would or might be otherwise be outside the settlement. I also accept, for the same limited purposes, that, when land is given a particular planning allocation as part of a development scheme then, if that scheme is cancelled, there might be a compelling argument that, in any application for a CAAD, not only the fact of acquisition and policy allocating the site, but the policy by which the settlement boundary is fixed might be properly disregarded – because it might properly be said that that policy, so far as the inclusion of the allocated land within the settlement is concerned, has no function beyond the scheme.
viii) However, in this case, the re-drawing of the settlement boundary to the west of Pen-y-fai was such as to include the North Field within the settlement, which re-drawing, as Mr Beglan accepts, was not part of the underlying scheme, in the sense that the North Field could have been developed with (e.g.) housing under the within-settlement Policy H4 even if the new school scheme did not go ahead.
ix) Mr Beglan thus submitted – indeed, I think, driven to submit – that the only part of the policy that re-drew the settlement boundary that must be disregarded is that which applied, literally, around the Reference Land; but, in my view, that is a legalistic and uncompelling point. I appreciate that we are here concerned with a hypothetical and artificial world; but, if the school scheme had been cancelled, it would have been a curious result if the rounding-off North Field could have been developed with housing (and the Northern Boland Land developed with at least educational facilities), but permission for residential development of the Reference Land denied by virtue of the settlement boundary being re-drawn to exclude it and only it.
x) In my view, there is nothing in the development plan which compels such a conclusion as a matter of law. As I have described, it is uncontroversial that the plan fixes the boundary to include the Reference Land within the settlement and without applying any special development criteria to it over and above the Policy SC5(15) allocation. Whether the boundary drawn around the Reference Land was such as to comprise part of the underlying scheme was a matter of fact for the Upper Tribunal, using their planning judgment, as I have described.
xi) I do not consider that the tribunal erred in law in their approach to that issue. In paragraph 36 of their decision, they properly acknowledged that the redrawing of the settlement boundary to include the Boland Land and the North Field was prompted by the proposal for a new school. That that re-draw was not necessary for the proposal to comply with the policies of the (then emerging) UDP was also, in my view, a material consideration. There is nothing in the decision to suggest that the tribunal considered that that was, in itself, determinative – otherwise the decision would no doubt have been somewhat shorter – and I reject the contention, insofar as it was made, that the weight the tribunal gave to that matter was excessive as a matter of law.
xii) Importantly, in my view, the tribunal focused upon the development plan itself; and noted that it did not contain any policies that restricted development in any part of the land "taken into" the settlement (i.e. the Reference land, the Northern Boland Land and the North Field). If the development plan had intended the restriction for which it now contends, it could easily have made clear provision for it. In the event, it made no provision. In the circumstances, the Upper Tribunal was entitled to conclude that, as a matter of fact, the policy that re-drew the settlement boundary was not a part of the underlying scheme, as Mr Beglan contends.
Lord Justice Hamblen:
Lord Justice Lloyd Jones: