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England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Boot, R (On the Application Of) v Elmbridge Borough Council [2017] EWHC 12 (Admin) (16 January 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2017/12.html Cite as: [2017] EWHC 12 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
PLANNING COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
THE QUEEN on the application of AMANDA BOOT |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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ELMBRIDGE BOROUGH COUNCIL |
Defendant |
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Neil Cameron QC and Zack Simons (instructed by Elmbridge BC) for the Defendant
Hearing date: 6 December 2016
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Supperstone :
Introduction
Factual Background
"Development comprising new football and athletics stadium with spectator seating and detached two-storey building incorporating changing facilities, storage, function and club rooms; floodlighting, additional football and sports pitches, new car park and access road, hard and soft landscaping, dog walking area, playground and new electric sub-station following demolition of existing football club and facilities."
"The Sports Hub will provide a Football Association standard main pitch (which will be 3G), a further 3G synthetic turf pitch, four grass training pitches, an 8 lane athletics track to UK Athletics standards with facilities for field sports located with in-field area, a shared pavilion with spectator seating, changing facilities, storage/function/club rooms, flood lighting, new access road, parking for 265 vehicles and associated landscaping."
Grounds of Challenge
The Legal and Policy Framework
"It has been repeatedly emphasised that officers' reports such as this should not be construed as though they were enactments. They should be read as a whole and in a common sense manner, bearing in mind the fact they are addressed to an informed readership, in this case the respondent's planning sub-committee."
"An application for judicial review based on criticisms of the planning officer's report will not normally begin to merit consideration unless the overall effect of the report significantly misleads the committee about material matters which thereafter are left uncorrected at the meeting of the planning committee before the relevant decision is taken."
"The court should focus on the substance of a report of officers given in the present sort of context to see whether it has sufficiently drawn councillors' attention to the proper approach required by the law and material considerations…"
"79. The Government attaches great importance to Green Belts. The fundamental aim of Green Belt policy is to prevent urban sprawl by keeping land permanently open; the essential characteristics of Green Belts are their openness and their permanence.
80. Green Belt serves five purposes:
- to check the unrestricted sprawl of large built-up areas;
- To prevent neighbouring towns merging into one another;
- To assist in safeguarding the countryside from encroachment;
- To preserve the setting and special character of historic towns; and
- To assist in urban regeneration, by encouraging the recycling of derelict and other urban land.
81. Once Green Belts have been defined, local planning authorities should plan positively to enhance the beneficial use of the Green Belt, such as … to provide opportunities for outdoor sport and recreation; … or to improve damaged and derelict land.
…
87. As with previous Green Belt policy, inappropriate development is, by definition, harmful to the Green Belt and should not be approved except in very special circumstances.
88. When considering any planning application, local planning authorities should ensure that substantial weight is given to any harm to the Green Belt. 'Very special circumstances' will not exist unless the potential harm to the Green Belt by reason of inappropriateness, and any other harm, is clearly outweighed by other considerations.
89. A local planning authority should regard the construction of new buildings as inappropriate in Green Belt. Exceptions to this are:
…
- provision of appropriate facilities for outdoor sport, outdoor recreation and for cemeteries, as long as it preserves the openness of the Green Belt and does not conflict with the purposes of including land within it;
… "
"214. For 12 months from the day of publication, decision-takers may continue to give full weight to policies adopted since 2004 even if there is a limited degree of conflict with this Framework.
215. In other cases and following this 12-month period, due weight shall be given to relevant policies in existing plans according to their degree of consistency with this Framework (the closer the policies in the plan to the policies in the Framework, the greater the weight that may be given)."
"b. Built development for outdoor sport, recreation and cemeteries will need to demonstrate that the building's function is ancillary and appropriate to the use and that it would not be practical to re-use or adapt any existing buildings on the site. Proposals shall be sited and designed to minimise the impact on the openness of the Green Belt and should include a high quality landscape scheme."
"To state that like cases should be decided alike presupposes that the earlier case is alike and is not distinguishable in some relevant respect. If it is distinguishable then it will usually lack materiality by reference to consistency although it may be material in some other way. Where it is indistinguishable then ordinarily it would be a material consideration. A practical test for the inspector is to ask himself whether, if I decide this case in a particular way am I necessarily agreeing or disagreeing with some critical aspect of the decision in the previous case?"
The Parties Submissions and Discussion
Ground 1: Error in Interpretation of Para 89 of the NPPF
"88. Para 89 of the NPPF deals with buildings rather than uses and establishes that buildings (defined by s.336 of the 1990 Act as including any structure or erection i.e. including floodlights, fencing etc.) which provide appropriate facilities for outdoor sport, outdoor recreation are appropriate development provided they preserve the openness of the Green Belt and do not conflict with the purposes of including land within it.
89. Therefore, the use proposed, and the buildings and structures required to support it, including the pavilion, floodlights, fencing and car park, are appropriate development within the Green Belt provided that they preserve the openness of the Green Belt and do not conflict with the purposes of including land within it.
90. The physical size of the proposed pavilion compared to the existing buildings means that it would have a greater impact on the openness of the Green Belt compared to the existing buildings. While it may be appropriate development an assessment must be made in terms of whether the proposal preserves the openness of the Belt. The proposed landscaping in the amended scheme involves the creation of a series of land forms around the perimeter of the site to enhance the character of the informal open space and will assist in screening activity within the site from certain viewpoints. Whilst there would be a larger area of formal enclosed sports facilities it is not considered that the impact on the openness of the Green Belt would be significant."
"Taking Green Belt policy as a whole the proposals comprised development which is appropriate within the Green Belt. There will be limited adverse impact on landscape and visual amenity and 'openness' of the Green Belt, however there will also be significant benefits in terms of facilitating the beneficial use of land within the Green Belt by providing significant opportunities for public access and outdoor sport and recreation and by improving damaged land."
"It is concluded that the proposal represents appropriate development within the Green Belt. The proposal is not considered to have a significant adverse impact on the openness of the Green Belt or the amenity of nearby properties. On the basis of the above, and in light of any other material considerations, the proposal is considered to be in accordance with the development plan. Accordingly, the recommendation is to grant permission subject to receipt of satisfactory legal agreement and referral to the Secretary of State."
"There will be a limited adverse impact on landscape and visual amenity and 'openness' of the Green Belt, however there will also be significant benefits in terms of facilitating the beneficial use of land within the Green Belt by providing significant opportunities for public access and outdoor sport and recreation by improving damaged land which is supported by para 81 of the NPPF."
i) First, if paragraph 89 of the NPPF permitted less than significant harm to the openness of the Green Belt, it would say so. It does not. To be appropriate, new sports facilities must "preserve the openness of the Green Belt". The ordinary meaning of the word 'preserve' is defined in the OED as meaning, 'to keep safe from injury, harm or destruction' In South Lakeland DC v Secretary of State for the Environment [1992] 2 AC 141, at 150 Lord Bridge approved the passage from the judgment of Mann LJ in the Court of Appeal that concluded:
"The statutorily desirable object of preserving the character or appearance of an area is achieved either by a positive contribution to preservation or by development which leaves character or appearance unharmed, that is to say, preserved."
ii) Second, the Defendant's approach is contrary to the decision in West Lancashire Borough Council v SSCLG [2009] EWHC 3631 (Admin), which, he submits, is directly on point.
iii) Third, the judgment in that case is supported by other case law (see Doncaster MBC v Secretary of State for the Environment, Transport and the Regions [2002] EWHC 808 (Admin) at para 68, and R (Heath and Hampstead) v LB Camden [2007] EWHC 977 (Admin)).
iv) Fourth, the Defendant's interpretation would significantly weaken policy protection for the Green Belt. The effect of the Defendant's interpretation is that a number of individual planning applications, each causing harm to the Green Belt (albeit less than substantial), could be permitted without the need to demonstrate very special circumstances. The cumulative effect of this approach, it is said, would result in a "death by a thousand cuts" to the Green Belt (see by analogy the comments made by Sullivan J in Heath and Hampstead at para 37).
"Implicit in the policy in paragraph 89 of the NPPF is a recognition that agriculture and forestry can only be carried on, and buildings for those activities will have to be constructed, in the countryside, including countryside in the Green Belt. Of course, as a matter of fact, the construction of such buildings in the Green Belt will reduce the amount of Green Belt land without built development upon it. But under NPPF policy, the physical presence of such buildings in the Green Belt is not, in itself, regarded as harmful to the openness of the Green Belt or to the purposes of including land in the Green Belt. This is not a matter of planning judgment. It is simply a matter of policy."
"24. The true position surely is this. Development that is not, in principle, 'inappropriate' in the Green Belt is, as Dove J said in paragraph 62 of his judgment, development 'appropriate to the Green Belt'. On a sensible contextual reading of the policies in paragraphs 79-92 of the NPPF, development appropriate in – and to – the Green Belt is regarded by the government as not inimical to the 'fundamental aim' of Green Belt policy 'to prevent urban sprawl by keeping land permanently open', or to 'the essential characteristics of Green Belts', namely 'their openness and their permanence' (paragraph 79 of the NPPF), or the 'five purposes' served by the Green Belt (paragraph 80). This is the real significance of a development being appropriate in the Green Belt, and the reason why it does not have to be justified by 'very special circumstances'.
25. That was the basic analysis underlying the judge's conclusion, with which I agree, 'that appropriate development is deemed not harmful to the Green Belt and its [principal] characteristic of openness in particular…' Dove J saw support for this conclusion in the judgment of Ouseley J at first instance in Europa Oil and Gas v Secretary of State for Communities and Local Government [2013] EWHC 2643 (Admin) (at paragraphs 64-78). I think he was right to do so. Ouseley J captured the point well when he said (in paragraphs 66 of his judgment) that under the policies in paragraphs 89 and 90 of the NPPF 'considerations of appropriateness, preservation of openness and conflict with Green Belt purposes are not exclusively dependent on the size of building or structures but include their purpose', and that '… two materially similar buildings [,] one a house and one a sports pavilion, are treated differently in terms of actual or potential appropriateness.' Thus, as Ouseley J said:
'The Green Belt may not be harmed by one but is harmed necessarily by another. The one it is harmed by because of its effect on openness, and the other it is not harmed by because of its effect on openness. These concepts are to be applied… in the light of a particular type of development.'
That reasoning was adopted and applied by HHJ Pelling QC, sitting as a Deputy judge of the High Court, in Fordent Holdings Ltd v Secretary of State for Communities and Local Government [2013] EWHC 2844 (Admin) (at paragraphs 33-35 of his judgment). An appeal against Ouseley J's decision was later dismissed by this court ([2014] EWCA Civ 825). In that appeal Richards LJ (at paragraphs 35-41 of his judgment, with which Moore-Bick and Kitchin LJJ agreed) expressly endorsed the 'general thrust' of Ouseley J's reasoning in the passage of his judgment referred to by Dove J, including the observations I have quoted from paragraph 66 (see, in particular, paragraph 37 of Richards LJ's judgment)."
"In my view, and agreeing with Ms Reid who appeared on behalf of the Claimant, the policy in PPG2 simply does not accord any latitude to the Inspector to decide that a material change of use of land does affect the openness of the Green Belt but that the extent of such effect does not, in the Inspector's opinion, matter sufficiently to raise significant planning concerns."
Ground 2: Failure to Have Regard to the 2013 Appeal Decision
Conclusion