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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 >> Devine v Secretary of State for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities [2023] EWCA Civ 601 (25 May 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2023/601.html Cite as: [2023] EWCA Civ 601, [2023] PTSR 1548 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
KING'S BENCH DIVISION
PLANNING COURT
MR JUSTICE FORDHAM
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
(Senior President of Tribunals)
LORD JUSTICE SINGH
and
LADY JUSTICE ELISABETH LAING
____________________
BARRY DEVINE |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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SECRETARY OF STATE FOR LEVELLING UP, HOUSING AND COMMUNITIES |
Respondent |
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- and - |
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CHESHIRE WEST AND CHESTER COUNCIL |
Interested Party |
____________________
Freddie Humphreys (instructed by the Treasury Solicitor) for the Respondent
The Interested Party did not appear and was not represented
Hearing date: 29 March 2023
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Sir Keith Lindblom, Senior President of Tribunals:
Introduction
The main issue in the appeal
Background
Section 55 of the 1990 Act
Sections 171B(1) and 174(2)
"(1) Where there has been a breach of planning control consisting in the carrying out without planning permission of building … operations … on … land, no enforcement action may be taken after the end of the period of four years beginning with the date on which the operations were substantially completed."
"(2) An appeal may be brought on any of the following grounds –
(a) that, in respect of any breach of planning control which may be constituted by the matters stated in the notice, planning permission ought to be granted …;
(b) that those matters have not occurred;
…
(d) that, at the date when the notice was issued, no enforcement action could be taken in respect of any breach of planning control which may be constituted by those matters;
…".
"13. The inspector started by considering Mr Sage's contention that it was an agricultural structure and therefore he had never needed any planning permission to erect it. He considered how it was constructed and concluded that it was constructed with domestic not agricultural features, as a dwelling not as a building to be used for agricultural purposes. … He applied the test of physical layout and appearance … .
14. The inspector rightly did not investigate the intentions of Mr Sage at various stages in the history nor the uses he had made of the structure from time to time. The character and purpose of a structure falls to be assessed by examining its physical and design features. The relevance of the assessment is to determine whether or not the building operation is one requiring planning permission. The actual use made of the building does not alter the answer to be given. Keeping a pig in the sitting-room or hens in the kitchen does not turn a dwelling house into an agricultural building even if the humans move out. Permission for a change of use may have to be applied for but that would be a separate question. The starting point for considering the permitted use of a new structure is the character of the building for which permission has been given or does not require to be given (section 75(3)): "… the permission shall be construed as including permission to use the building for the purposes for which it is designed."".
The inspector had concluded that, "[as] a matter of fact and degree, … having regard to its layout and appearance, [this building] is not an agricultural building and was not designed as such", but "is best described as a dwelling house that is in course of construction" (paragraph 15).
"19. It would be a question of fact whether the external work still to be done would have had a material effect on the building's appearance. But that question would only become significant if the work was carried out "for the maintenance, improvement or other alteration" of the building. Work carried out by way of completing an incomplete structure would not come within exception (a) [in section 55(2)]. So, once it has to be accepted, in accordance with the inspector's finding, that the structure was a dwelling house in the course of construction, it follows that the work would be properly described as work carried out in the course of completing the construction of the building. Exception (a) clearly contemplates and involves a completed building which is to be maintained, improved or altered. …".
"7. … [If] it is shown that he has stopped short of what he contemplated and intended when he began the development, the building as it stands can properly be treated as an uncompleted building against which the four-year period has not yet begun to run.
8. It must be emphasised that it is not for the inspector to substitute his own view as to what a building is intended to be for that which was intended by the developer. But that was not what the inspector did in this case. It was not just that the building looked to him like a dwelling house that was in the course of construction. His conclusion was supported, in his view, by an application which Mr Sage had made in 1994 to use the building for tourist accommodation and by his finding that that remained Mr Sage's stated intention. These matters were relevant to the question which he had to decide, and in my opinion he was entitled on the facts which he found to reach the conclusion he did."
The inspector's decision letter
"24. The courts have held that, in principle, the retention of fabric from an original building does not preclude it being found, as a matter of fact and degree, that a new building has been formed and that the original building has ceased to exist [Here a footnote refers to the Court of Appeal's decision in Oates v Secretary of State for Communities and Local Government and Canterbury City Council [2018] EWCA Civ 2229; [2019] JPL 251.]. Whether that has occurred is a matter to be determined according to the facts of each case.
25. It is not known what works the appellant contemplated and intended to carry out when he bought the building, although he began using it for his building and joinery business after making the roof watertight. Nevertheless, the 5 applications he made in 2018, after he had retired, confirm it was then his intention that the building should become a dwelling.
26. The elevations and floor plans from those applications are marked 'existing + proposed', indicating that any structural or elevational changes the appellant deemed necessary for residential use had already been carried out. Except for a porch, since removed, and the insertion of doors and windows, the drawings show the building as it is now. It would require a substantial leap of imagination to view this repurposing of the building as an unplanned consequence of nothing more than repairs and improvements.
27. However, it is necessary to determine whether, and if so to what extent, the original building has survived or whether what the appellant describes as repair and improvement has resulted in a new building. It is the building that existed when the notice was issued, taking account of the cumulative effect of the works since 2000, that must be considered.
28. The entire eastern wing is a new building. The appellant's annotated plan indicates it is a significant proportion, possibly a third of the total fabric. The walls of the northern and western wings have been greatly altered, particularly in the western wing, where the southern gable is rebuilt, with an inner skin added, and an entire section of wall has been replaced in the west elevation. The collective evidence indicates, as a matter of fact and degree, that the entire roof structure of these wings, including the slates, is new.
29. Everything that can be seen from inside the northern and western wings, including the walls, the floor, and the roof structure, is new fabric. The appellant contends that most of the original outer brickwork of these wings remains in place and he estimates that approximately a quarter of the brickwork in these wings is new or re-used. While that estimate was made in good faith, it is not supported by other evidence and its credibility is undermined by ambiguities exposed in cross-examination.
30. As a matter of fact and degree, only an indeterminate, but nevertheless small, proportion of the building's original fabric may have survived in the walls of the northern and western wings. This, and the corresponding far greater proportion of new fabric, mean that the original building no longer exists as a recognisable structure.
31. There is no doubt that the original base of the northern and western wings supports the building above it. Neither can it be doubted that the remaining original fabric in the outer skin of the external walls of the northern and western wings contributes in some way to the structural integrity of the building. However, the proportion of original brickwork is not quantified and, consequently, the degree of support it may provide to the building is uncertain. It has therefore not been demonstrated that the remaining original fabric provides anything more than modest support to the building now existing.
32. Although the building works undertaken between 2000 and 2018 have been presented as apparently unconnected repairs and improvements, the outcome is a unified building. While the northern and western wings broadly follow the form and mass of the original building, they are significantly different in terms of their fabric. When the elevational changes to those wings and the construction of the entire eastern wing are also considered, there can be no doubt that a different, and therefore new, building now exists. What fabric remains from the original building is fully incorporated in this new building."
"38. The building lacks heating and sanitation, electric work is incomplete, and doors and windows have yet to be inserted. The appellant has documented building operations that were undertaken after the Relevant Date, the most significant being the entire roof over the northern and western wings. Other works undertaken after the Relevant Date include the final restoration of bricked up windows, alterations to the south gables of the eastern and western wings, and the replacement, re-pointing, and cleaning of brickwork throughout. While the appellant states these works did not continue beyond 2017, another statement indicates that building works were still being undertaken in 2019. The author of that statement was not called as a witness, so it was not possible to test this ambiguity, and greater weight must be afforded to the evidence that was affirmed.
39. Nevertheless, significant building operations that were part of the erection of the new building were undertaken after the Relevant Date. Evidence of the appellant's intentions for the building at that time was not presented. However, he affirmed that his retirement in 2015, the year of the Relevant Date, had given him more time to devote to 'the project'. A precise retirement date was not given, and the nature of 'the project' was not explained. However, in the context of the appellant ending his business use of the building, it is reasonable to assume the project was concerned with its future use.
40. The possibility that the changes to the structure deemed necessary for residential occupation, which were part of the erection of the new building, had been achieved without forethought is too slight to be given significant weight. In contrast, the building operations carried out from 2015 to 2017 would be consistent with an objective of creating a building suitable for residential use. That intention was repeatedly stated in the 5 applications made in 2018, after those works had been completed.
41. The construction of the eastern wing in its original form was substantially completed before the Relevant Date. While there is little or no evidence of that original form to compare with what existed when the notice was issued, the appellant's Hearing Plan … indicates that significant elevational changes were undertaken. Nevertheless, by 2018, and like the rest of the building, any structural and elevational changes to the eastern wing that the appellant deemed necessary for future residential use had been carried out. This must be assumed to include the replacement of roof tiles with slates.
42. The building works that resulted in the northern and western wings becoming a new building were not substantially completed on or before the Relevant Date. As a matter of fact and degree, and considering the changes made to it from 2015 onward, the eastern wing is not an extension to a building that no longer exists as a recognisable structure. Rather, it is part of the new building.
43. For these reasons it has not been demonstrated that the new building was substantially completed on or before the Relevant Date."
Fordham J.'s judgment
Was the inspector's approach to the ground (d) appeal unlawful?
Conclusion
Lord Justice Singh:
Lady Justice Elisabeth Laing: