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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 >> Maximus Networks Ltd v SSCLG [2018] EWHC 1933 (Admin) (25 July 2018) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2018/1933.html Cite as: [2019] PTSR 312, [2018] WLR(D) 491, [2018] EWHC 1933 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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Maximus Networks LTD |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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SSCLG |
Defendant |
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- and - |
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Southwark London Borough Council and (2) London Borough of Hammersmith and Fulham |
Interested Parties |
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Richard Kimblin QC and Mark Westmoreland Smith (instructed by GLD) for the Defendant
Hearing date: 9th May 2018
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Dove :
The facts
"PART 16
Communications
Class A – electronic communications code operators
Permitted development
A. Development by or on behalf of an electronic communications code operator for the purpose of the operator's electronic communications network in, on, over or under land controlled by that operator or in accordance with the electronic communications code, consisting of—
(a) the installation, alteration or replacement of any electronic communications apparatus,
(b) the use of land in an emergency for a period not exceeding 6 months to station and operate moveable electronic communications apparatus required for the replacement of unserviceable electronic communications apparatus, including the provision of moveable structures on the land for the purposes of that use, or
(c) development ancillary to radio equipment housing."
"A.3—(1) The developer must give notice of the proposed development to any person (other than the developer) who is an owner of the land to which the development relates, or a tenant, before making the application required by sub-paragraph (3)—
(a) by serving a developer's notice on every such person whose name and address is known to the developer; and
(b) where the developer has taken reasonable steps to ascertain the names and addresses of every such person, but has been unable to do so, by local advertisement…
(3) Before beginning the development, the developer must apply to the local planning authority for a determination as to whether the prior approval of the authority will be required as to the siting and appearance of the development.
(4) The application must be accompanied—
(a) by a written description of the proposed development and a plan indicating its proposed location together with any fee required to be paid;
(b) by the developer's contact address, and the developer's email address if the developer is content to receive communications electronically;
(c) where sub-paragraph (1) applies, by evidence that the requirements of sub-paragraph (1)
have been satisfied; and …
(6) The local planning authority must take into account any representations made to them as a result of consultations or notices given under paragraph A.3, when determining the application made under sub-paragraph (3).
(7) The development must not begin before the occurrence of one of the following—
(a) the receipt by the applicant from the local planning authority of a written notice of their determination that such prior approval is not required;
(b) where the local planning authority gives the applicant written notice that such prior approval is required, the giving of that approval to the applicant, in writing, within a period of 56 days beginning with the date on which they received the applicant's application;
(c) where the local planning authority gives the applicant written notice that such prior approval is required, the expiry of a period of 56 days beginning with the date on which the local planning authority received the application under sub-paragraph (4) without the local planning authority notifying the applicant, in writing, that such approval is given or refused; or
(d) the expiry of a period of 56 days beginning with the date on which the local planning authority received the application without the local planning authority notifying the applicant, in writing, of their determination as to whether such prior approval is required."
"In your letter, you confirm that your client does not have any legal interest in any of the application sites. As such condition A.3 (1) applies. The obligation imposed by this condition is that "any developer must give notice of the proposed development to any person (other than the developer) who is an owner of the land to which the development relations (sic), or a tenant, before making the application" [cont..]. The notion of person in all legislation also includes other legal entities.
Notwithstanding legal issues of whether the highway authority and the local planning authority are the same legal entity, the legislation is explicit that the Developer Notice must be provided before making the application. Therefore, the application cannot be deemed to be notice itself. Had it been intended to have been interpreted any other way the obligation would have been drafted differently.
It is clear from your letter than no Developer Notice has been served, as no lawful application for prior approval has been submitted to the Local Planning Authority for consideration.
For the avoidance of any doubt, even if your client has served a Developer Notice to comply with condition A.3(1), evidence would need to be submitted with the application to achieve compliance with condition A.3(1)(c). In the absence of this evidence, your client' applications remain invalid.
You request that the Local Planning Authority supply you with details of land owners. Given the points above this request is considered erroneous, you will need to rely on your own investigation.
Finally, you state that in the absence of there being third party ownership your client considers that they have deemed consent. Given the clear evidence of failure to comply with the legislative requirements, any work your client chooses to carry out is at their own risk and may result in enforcement action being taken against them. Furthermore, should work start before a lawful application is made, the prior approval application process will no longer be available to your client for that development and a full planning application would be required."
"We have now reviewed these applications following the submission of the appeals (as delivered on 20 September) and alongside the information supplied in your email of 23 August. It appears that you took the same approach in respect of the 'developer's notice for all 390 applications and for all boroughs and we have not seen anything to contradict this.
In view of the above we have concluded that the failure to comply with the requirements of paragraph A.3(1) and A.3(5)(c)) of the GPDO renders each of the applications are [sic] invalid and we therefore have no jurisdiction to determine these appeals. We are unable to take any action on the appeals, unless of course you are able to provide us with evidence that you have met the above mentioned requirements."
"Paragraph A.3(1) of Part 16 of Schedule 2 to the GPDO provides that:
"Before making the application required by sub-paragraph (4), the developer must give notice of the proposed development to—
(a) any person (other than the developer) who is an owner of the land to which the development relates, or
(b) a tenant of an agricultural holding any part of which is comprised in the land to which the application relates."
Paragraph A.3(5)(c) of Part 16 of Schedule 2 to the GPDO provides that relevant applications must be accompanied by "evidence that the requirements of sub-paragraph (1) have been satisfied where applicable".
Section 79 of the Town and Country Planning Act 1990 ("the 1990 Act") provides that on an appeal under section 78 the Secretary of State may allow or dismiss the appeal, or reverse or vary any part of the decision of the local planning authority and may deal with the application as if it had been made to him in the first instance.
Accordingly, it is open for the Secretary of State to consider the validity of the original application. If he were to take the view that the application was not valid then the Secretary of State would not have jurisdiction to entertain the substantive appeal (see R v Secretary of State for the Environment, Transport and the Regions ex parte Bath and North East Somerset District Council [1999] 1 WLR 1759).
Section 327A of the 1990 Act is in clear mandatory terms. It provides:
"(1) This section applies to any application in respect of which this Act or any provision made under it imposes a requirement as to—
(a) the form or manner in which the application must be made;
(b) the form or content of any document or other matter which accompanies the application.
(2) The local planning authority must not entertain such an application if it fails to comply with the requirement."
This section is not addressed in your advice. However, it is quite clear that an application must comply with the statutory requirements. This post dates Main v City of Swansea (1985) 49 P. & C.R. 26.
Therefore, following receipt of the appeals, it was for the Secretary of State to decide whether or not the applications were valid ones. Based on the correspondence referred to above, and in the absence of receipt of evidence to the contrary, the Inspectorate has taken the view that neither paragraphs A.3(1) or A.3(5)(c) of Part 16 of Schedule 2 to the GPDO were complied with in relation to the applications and that, therefore, the applications are invalid. It follows (see ex parte Bath and North East Somerset above) that the Secretary of State does not have jurisdiction to entertain the appeals.
By virtue of section 79 of the 1990 Act, the fact that some local planning authorities may have accepted the applications as valid does not preclude the Secretary of State from making his own decisions as to the validity or otherwise of the applications, which can only be made following receipt of related appeals.
I must also respond to your ill-founded suggestion that our decision on the validity of the applications may have been "driven ….. by resourcing concerns". This is simply not the case; the Inspectorate takes its role in upholding a robust planning appeals system very seriously and does not take decisions on whether to accept appeals based on the resources available to it."
"Your case is that the Secretary of State was wrong to decline to determine the appeals on the basis of your client's failures to give requisite notice and failure to provide evidence that notice was given.
Section 79 of the Town and Country Planning Act 1990 ("the 1990 Act") provides that on an appeal under section 78 the Secretary of State may allow or dismiss the appeal, or reverse or vary any part of the decision of the local planning authority and may deal with the application as if it had been made to him in the first instance.
Accordingly, it is open for the Secretary of State to consider whether or not to entertain the applications/ appeals. The Secretary of State did so in this case. The question, therefore, is whether or not the Secretary of State's consideration of that issue was lawful.
The Secretary of State's decision was simply an exercise of his planning judgment. In the absence of receipt of evidence to the contrary, the Secretary of State through the Planning Inspectorate took the view – and you appear to agree – that neither of paragraphs A.3(1) or A.3(5)(c) of Part 16 of Schedule 2 to the GPDO were complied with in relation to the applications. In short, a required element of the applications was missing in all cases. In light of these failures and having regard to section 327A of the 1990 Act, he concluded that the applications are invalid. That was a conclusion which was open to the Secretary of State.
To be clear, the Secretary of State's position is not reliant on reading down section 327A of the 1990 Act so as to bar him from finding the applications are valid in circumstances where requirements have not been met. The Secretary of State is aware of the Main line of authority. This is not a question of whether an error in the application process vitiates a subsequent grant of planning permission. Rather the Secretary of State was simply exercising his original jurisdiction under section 79 of the 1990 Act as to whether or not the planning application is valid.
In coming to that decision, the Secretary of State noted and has taken into account the suggestion you make that the mischief against which the relevant requirements are directed has not been offended and no party has been prejudiced.
However, (a) precisely because the requirements were not fulfilled the Secretary of State is not in a position properly to judge whether or not there has been any prejudice and (b), in any event, none of the points raised in Maximus's advice overcomes the complete failure to engage with a statutory requirement.
The Secretary of State has an obligation to uphold the planning system. Permitting applicants to pick and choose requirements they believe they need to follow would be damaging to the planning system as a whole."
"14.—(1) Where an application is made to a local planning authority for their determination as to whether the prior approval of the authority will be required in relation to development under Schedule 2 to the General Permitted Development Order (permitted development)(31) a fee shall be paid to that authority of the following amounts— …
(2) Where the local planning authority who receive the fee in accordance with this regulation—
they shall remit the fee to that authority at the same time as they forward the application to them.
(3) Any fee paid pursuant to this regulation shall be refunded if the application is rejected as invalid. "
The Grounds in brief
The relevant legal principles
"79 Determination of appeals.
(1)On an appeal under section 78 the Secretary of State may—
(a)allow or dismiss the appeal, or
(b)reverse or vary any part of the decision of the local planning authority (whether the appeal relates to that part of it or not), and may deal with the application as if it had been made to him in the first instance."
"327A Applications: compliance with requirements
(1)This section applies to any application in respect of which this Act or any provision made under it imposes a requirement as to—
(a)the form or manner in which the application must be made;
(b)the form or content of any document or other matter which accompanies the application.
(2)The local planning authority must not entertain such an application if it fails to comply with the requirement."
"In our judgment, the most significant observation in Lord Hailsham's speech, indeed in the whole of the Clydesdale case, is that the court must consider the consequences in the light of a concrete state of facts and a continuing chain of events. This recognises that the court looks not only at the nature of the failure but also at such matters as the identity of the applicant for relief, the lapse of time, the effect on other parties and on the public and so on."
"39. In my judgment the conduct of Mr Docking and/or his agent on his behalf disclose a cavalier disregard for the mandatory requirements in connection with a statutory certificate. It is one thing to fail to give notice to an unidentified owner of part of the land, as in the case of Main, but it is quite another to certify that prior notice of an application has been given, when it was known that no such notice has been given. More than that, as I am satisfied on the evidence, it is yet worse to certify that notice has been given on a stated date (2nd December) when no notice had been given on that day or at all.
40. I have concluded that for the Court, in these circumstances, to exercise its discretion so as to preserve the benefit of the planning permission granted to Mr Docking would come close to undermining the mandatory scheme of the legislation. Nor can I see that the law as stated in Main anticipates saving voidable grants of planning permission from being quashed where there has been a deliberate failure to comply with the mandatory requirements of the scheme of the legislation to which the local planning authority, acting in good faith, has been party and where, operating under an error of law, it has gone on to press, unnecessarily, for prompt and timeous determination. In the case of Main , the applicant for relief was not the owner affected by want of notice and the allegation of acting with knowledge of the false certificate was rejected.
41. More than that, I reject the suggestion that it is clear no prejudice has occurred. It is not a convincing answer to the Pridmores' complaint, which is that more time was required to consider the amended plan, for the Council to assert that the matter now raised in these proceedings should have been raised earlier and/or that they should have asked for more time at the time they saw the amended plan. The suggestion misses the substance of the complaint. It is because they had too short a period of time to consider the amended plan that the Pridmores now suggest they failed to realise that points on the available turning space could have been made by reference to the amended plan. For that reason, the issue has been raised in these proceedings."
"If the local planning authority refuse what purports to be an application for planning permission and the applicant wishes to appeal, he will need to rely on section 78(1). In such circumstances it will be common ground between the applicant and the local planning authority that what purports to be an application is indeed an application. A question might arise as to whether the Secretary of State has jurisdiction to entertain the appeal if he takes the view that the purported application is not an application. The question is unlikely to arise often in practice, but in my judgment, if the Secretary of State takes that view then he has no jurisdiction to entertain the appeal — until such time, if any, as his decision that the purported application is no application, is quashed by way of judicial review.
If the local planning authority decides not to process the application but declares the application invalid the applicant can challenge that decision by judicial review. The Act has not provided for an appeal against the decision to declare the application invalid. If the applicant tries to appeal under section 78(2), in order to bring himself within the section he will have to assert that he is a person who has made an application for planning permission. If he does so assert, a question will arise as to whether the Secretary of State has jurisdiction to determine whether the applicant is a person who has made an application for planning permission. Again, the question is unlikely to arise often in practice, but in my judgment, if the Secretary of State takes the view that no application for planning permission has been made, then he has no jurisdiction to entertain the appeal — until such time, if any, as his decision that the purported application is no application, is quashed by way of judicial review. If, on the other hand, the Secretary of State takes the view that an application for planning permission has been made then, in my judgment, the Secretary of State is under a duty to entertain the appeal …."
"I have however come to the conclusion that a right of appeal does arise even when the local planning authority have formed the opinion that the application is invalid. The applicant is entitled to have the opinion of the Secretary of State on the question of validity. I reach that conclusion upon a purposive construction of the statutes and a consideration of the scheme as a whole. With the notable and long-standing exception that there is no statutory right of appeal against a grant of planning permission by a local planning authority, it provides, in a variety of situations, an appeal to the Secretary of State. In addition to a right of appeal against planning decisions and failure to take planning decisions, the planning act provides for appeals against enforcement notices, certificates of lawful use or development, tree preservation order consents, advertisement consents, appeals against tree replacement requirements and appeals against information requirements of the planning authority. In addition, the Secretary of State has the power under section 77 of the planning act to call in planning applications. The scheme of the Act gives a status to the Secretary of State such that a construction of statutory provisions dealing with appeals which has the effect of conferring exclusive jurisdiction on the local planning authority does not fit easily with that scheme.
As the judge pointed out, it is not stated in terms in the statutory provisions that the local planning authority is the sole arbiter upon validity. Regulation 3 of the 1988 Regulations does not purport to make the local planning authority the sole judge of what plans, drawings and information are necessary to describe the development. (In this respect, the appellants are on stronger ground on the listed buildings act which does include the expression "such other particulars as may be required by the [local planning] authority".)
The case turns upon the meaning of the word "application" in section 78 of the planning act and section 20 in the listed buildings act. In my judgment, and in the context of the statutes, it includes an application which the local planning authority consider to be invalid under the Regulations. The words "which the local authority consider to be valid" should not be read into section 78 of the planning act and section 20 of the listed buildings act to govern the word "application". A determination of invalidity by the local planning authority does not exclude the right of appeal to the Secretary of State on the question of validity. The applications in this case remained applications for the purpose of triggering the operation of the appeal provisions in the legislation notwithstanding the view of the local planning authority that the applications were invalid.
Though I have reached the conclusion by a somewhat different route, it follows that I agree with the views expressed by Schiemann LJ in Geall and with the conclusion of the judge in the present case. The Company was not restricted to a remedy by way of judicial review."
"1. On 10 August 2006, The Town and Country Planning (General Development Procedure) (Amendment) (England) Order 2006 gave effect to provisions in the Planning and Compulsory Purchase Act 2004. These require design and access statements for most types of applications and implement changes to the application process for outline planning permission including the redefinition of reserved matters and in particular, a greater level of minimum information to allow the impact to be understood and evaluated. The appellant confirmed at the start of the Inquiry that in accordance with these changes, the application was submitted with layout, scale, appearance, landscaping and access reserved for subsequent approval.
2. The appellant submitted further illustrative drawings before the start of the Inquiry which provided information on the internal layout and location of the cabins and internal layouts and 3 design options for the facilities building (plans A2 – A11). Information on the scale parameters of all the proposed buildings was submitted on a table (Document 4) during the Inquiry. It was also confirmed that site layout drawing No. 339/97/10/B remains correct from the previous application. Having regard to all this information together with the supporting statement supplied by the Council by Humberts Leisure on 6 March 2007, I did not consider that there was sufficient information for the inquiry to proceed or that anyone's interests would be prejudiced."
"30 After sitting through five days of evidence and advocates' submissions, in the course of which the proposals were thoroughly scrutinized, the Inspector can hardly be faulted for concluding that he was well equipped to make the decision it was his duty to make. He had before him the information he required to discharge the task of considering the physical and visual characteristics of all the elements of the proposed development, in their context. He was able to follow, in substance, the guidance in sections 2 and 3 of Circular 01/2006 . He had all the information he needed to be able to consider the design principles and concepts applied to the development, which is the defined purpose of a design and access statement under paragraph (2)(a) of article 4C. He could be — and plainly was — satisfied on the question underlying paragraphs (2)(b) and 4 of article 4C, namely how issues relating to access to the development have been dealt with. He had had explained to him through the application documents and materials, amply elucidated by evidence and submissions, the matters required of a design and access statement in paragraph (3)(a) of article 4C, namely the specific principles and concepts applied to the amount, layout, scale, landscaping and appearance of the development, and in paragraph 3(b), namely the steps taken to appraise the context of the development and how the design of the development took that into account in relation to the proposed use and each of the aspects specified. Thus, in my view, the Inspector was manifestly able to judge the principle of the outline proposals before him and the likely effects of the development on its surroundings.
31 I therefore accept Mr Warren's submissions on this part of the claimant's challenge. The Inspector was not in breach of any statutory or procedural requirements applying to him. He did not misapprehend the requirements of the GDPO. The application for outline permission before him was not invalid. He dealt with it properly, in accordance with the law. Section 79 of the 1990 Act empowered him to conduct himself as he did. And I see nothing in the submission made by Mr Hill that the Inspector never formed the opinion that the Council as local planning authority could not have granted planning permission. As Mr Warren submitted, once the proposals were in the hands of the Inspector he was not bound by any provision dictating how he was to deal with the GDPO and the proposals' compliance with it. As paragraphs 1 and 2 of the decision letter show, the Inspector was satisfied that he had an application and an appeal before him which he could determine lawfully in accordance with the statutory scheme. And that is what he did. This ground of the claimant's application therefore fails."
Submissions and Conclusions