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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 >> Tallington Lakes Ltd v South Kesteven District Council (Rev1) [2024] EWCA Civ 811 (17 July 2024) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2024/811.html Cite as: [2024] EWCA Civ 811, [2024] WLR(D) 346 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE UPPER TRIBUNAL (LANDS CHAMBER)
UPPER TRIBUNAL JUDGE COOKE
[2022] UKUT 334 (LC)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
(Vice-President of the Court of Appeal (Civil Division))
LORD JUSTICE BEAN
and
LORD JUSTICE LEWIS
____________________
TALLINGTON LAKES LIMITED |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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SOUTH KESTEVEN DISTRICT COUNCIL |
Respondent |
____________________
Jenny Wigley KC (instructed by South Kesteven District Council) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 27 June 2024
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
LORD JUSTICE LEWIS:
INTRODUCTION
"Ground 1 – no properly convened on notice hearing with the requisite evidence and documentation has ever taken place (in either the FTT or in the [Upper Tribunal] when deciding the site's [relevant protected site] status.
"Ground 2 – [the appellant] is not the occupier of Tallington Lakes Leisure Park.
Ground 3 – Tallington Lakes Leisure Park is not a relevant protected site ("RPS")."
THE LEGAL FRAMEWORK
"1.— Prohibition of use of land as caravan site without site licence.
(1) Subject to the provisions of this Part of this Act, no occupier of land shall after the commencement of this Act cause or permit any part of the land to be used as a caravan site unless he is the holder of a site licence (that is to say, a licence under this Part of this Act authorising the use of land as a caravan site) for the time being in force as respects the land so used.
(2) If the occupier of any land contravenes subsection (1) of this section he shall be guilty of an offence
…..
(3) In this Part of this Act the expression "occupier" means, in relation to any land, the person who, by virtue of an estate or interest therein held by him, is entitled to possession thereof or would be so entitled but for the rights of any other person under any licence granted in respect of the land:
Provided that where land amounting to not more than four hundred square yards in area is let under a tenancy entered into with a view to the use of the land as a caravan site, the expression "occupier" means in relation to that land the person who would be entitled to possession of the land but for the rights of any person under that tenancy.
(4) In this Part of this Act the expression "caravan site" means land on which a caravan is stationed for the purposes of human habitation and land which is used in conjunction with land on which a caravan is so stationed.
"5A Relevant protected sites: annual fee
(1) A local authority in England who have issued a site licence in respect of a relevant protected site in their area may require the licence holder to pay an annual fee fixed by the local authority.
…..
(4) Where a licence holder fails to comply with an order under subsection (3) within the period of three months beginning with the date specified in the order for the purposes of that subsection, the local authority may apply to the tribunal for an order revoking the site licence.
(5) In this Part, "relevant protected site" means land in respect of which a site licence is required under this Part, other than land in respect of which the relevant planning permission under Part 3 of the Town and Country Planning Act 1990 or the site licence is, subject to subsection (6)—
(a) expressed to be granted for holiday use only, or
(b) otherwise so expressed or subject to such conditions that there are times of the year when no caravan may be stationed on the land for human habitation.
THE FACTUAL BACKGROUND
The 2013 Site Licence
"1) The total number of static holiday caravans sited shall not exceed 385.
2) This licence is issued subject to compliance with the standard South Kesteven District Council site licence conditions for static holiday caravans.
3) Static holiday caravans shall be sited in accordance with Annex A which forms part of this licence.
The Management and Trading Licence
"shall be entitled to occupy and control the Property and exclusively use the Trading Assets and cash of the Business for purpose of managing, operating and trading the Business as Licensee."
"In consideration of these Management Services [the appellant and the holding company] shall pay to [Lakes Leisure Ltd.] the Management & Trading Licence Fee to be determined by the directors of [the appellant and the holding company] on demand any time after 1 January 2008.
The 2016 Revision
The Proceedings in the FTT
"(a) was the site licence dated 18 May 2016 correctly issued to [Tallington Lakes Ltd.]?
(b) if yes, is [Tallington Lakes Ltd.] to be granted leave to appeal the licence conditions out of time?
"The bundle of documents and the responses supplied by each party in accordance with paragraphs 4 and 5 above shall be regarded as its entire case and must include all copies of all documents on which it seeks to rely including (but not limited to) such of the following are in its possession:
Site licence(s) granted prior to 18 May 2016 in relation to the Park;
All planning permissions granted in respect of the Park;
…..".
"1. The site licence dated 18 May 2016 was correctly issued to Tallington Lakes Limited.
2. [Tallington Lakes Limited] has not applied for and is not granted an extension of time to appeal the conditions attached to that licence.
3 . [Tallington Lakes Limited] is the correct respondent to the application number MAN/23/UG/PHP/2019/0001."
The Appeal to the Upper Tribunal
The Decision of the Upper Tribunal
"3. The issues in the appeal are:
a. Was the site licence correctly issued to the appellant rather than to the company that manages the site?
b. Should the FTT have made its decision without a hearing in December 2021, when the appellant had requested a hearing?
c. Is the site a "relevant protected site" as defined in section 5A(5) of the Caravan Sites and Control of Development Act 1960 ?"
"28. The wording of section 1(3) of the 1960 Act is clear and unambiguous; the occupier has to occupy the land "by virtue of an estate or interest therein", meaning a legal or equitable estate or interest; the wording is not broad enough to encompass a licensee or the manager under a management contract.
29. Accordingly the appeal fails on ground 1; the occupier and the correct licence holder is the appellant as the freeholder of the site."
"32. The appellant in its letter to the Regional Judge did express a very clear objection. Ms Wigley KC [counsel for the respondent] has confirmed that the respondent makes no submissions on this ground of appeal.
33. I find that the appellant did object, within time. The second ground of appeal succeeds; the FTT should not have decided the respondent's application on the papers in December 2021 and its decision is set aside."
"54. Ground 2 succeeded and resulted in the setting aside of the FTT's decision. The Tribunal can only substitute its own decision on ground 3 if it has the material to decide it. Despite Mr Morgan's wish for the matter to be remitted to the FTT, he did not suggest until the afternoon of the hearing that the 7 Permissions were not the correct permissions on the basis of which the site licence was granted.
55. Mr Morgan never filed any evidence to that effect in the FTT; that was because he chose not to comply with the FTT's directions to file evidence for the final determination, because he disagreed with the direction that the determination be made without a hearing. Had he been legally represented that would be the end of the matter, but as he is unrepresented I overlook that omission.
56. There is no suggestion in Mr Morgan's grounds of appeal that the 7 Permissions are not the right ones.
57. In June 2022 following the grant of permission to appeal Mr Morgan tried to file new and expanded grounds of appeal on the three grounds on which he had been given permission. His revised grounds were rejected because the Tribunal had directed, in giving permission, that he simply edit his grounds to remove the ones for which permission had not been given. He now says that the Tribunal prevented him from introducing fresh evidence at that point; and it is true that he was not allowed to file fresh evidence (the appeal being a review of the FTT's decision) but there is no hint in the revised grounds that he tried to file or any suggestion that the 7 Permissions were not the right ones and indeed those grounds refer to the permissions in the plural. And as I have already said there was no such suggestion either in Mr Morgan's skeleton arguments or at the hearing before lunch.
58. The respondent does not deny that there have been a number of other permissions for the land in respect of which the licence was issued. It issued the licence 84/2 in 2003 on the basis that the 7 Permissions were the relevant ones, because others had expired or had never been implemented, and that was not challenged in 2003. Nor was it challenged in 2016, understandably because the list was the same.
59. My very strong impression at the hearing, particularly from Mr Morgan's words "on checking today", was that the new argument in the afternoon was a new idea. It had never been part of Mr Morgan's case that there was a single planning permission for the entire site covered by the licence, that was expressed to be for holiday use only, and it had never been something he had planned to argue at a hearing before the FTT. I believe that he seized at the last minute upon a planning permission which appeared to fit the bill. It would be unfair to the respondent to have the matter remitted to the FTT for a further hearing on the basis of a last minute surmise on Mr Morgan's part. It would be particularly unfair to do so when Mr Morgan has not availed himself of the opportunity (which need not have been given to him, since it was his own appointment that meant the hearing had to finish early) to produce further argument and indeed a copy of the relevant planning permission. I conclude from the fact that he did not do so that that there is in fact no planning permission that will assist his case.
60. Accordingly I determine the matter on the basis of the parties' arguments made before the lunch break on the day of the hearing and in their written material before that."
"67. I agree with Ms Wigley's construction of section 5A(5) : in order for the land the subject of the licence to fall outside the definition of a relevant protected site either the licence or the planning permission – which means the permission or permissions that cover the site and by virtue of which the licence is granted – must be expressed to be for holiday use only, across the whole site, or must be on terms that "that there are times of the year when no caravan may be stationed on the land for human habitation" across the whole site. Where the licence and planning permissions allow mixed use that includes residential, the site is a relevant protected site.
68. The site is a relevant protected site as defined in section 5A(5) of the 1960 Act and the appeal fails on ground 3."
THE APPEAL
GROUND 1 – THE FAIRNESS OF THE HEARINGS BELOW
Submissions
Discussion and Conclusion
GROUND 2 – THE OCCUPIER OF THE SITE
Submissions
Discussion
GROUND 3 – RELEVANT PROTECTED SITE
Submissions
Discussion and Conclusion
ANCILLARY OBSERVATIONS
CONCLUSION
LORD JUSTICE BEAN
LORD JUSTICE UNDERHILL