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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Supreme Court >> The Health and Safety Executive v Wolverhampton City Council (Rev 1) [2012] UKSC 34 (18 July 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKSC/2012/34.html Cite as: [2012] PTSR 1362, [2012] UKSC 34, [2012] 30 EG 74, [2012] BLGR 843, [2012] 4 All ER 429, [2012] WLR(D) 212, [2012] 1 WLR 2264 |
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Trinity Term
[2012] UKSC 34
On appeal from: [2010] EWCA Civ 892
JUDGMENT
The Health and Safety Executive (Appellant) v Wolverhampton City Council (Respondent)
before
Lord Hope, Deputy President
Lord Walker
Lord Dyson
Lord Sumption
Lord Carnwath
JUDGMENT GIVEN ON
18 July 2012
Heard on 13 and 14 June 2012
Appellant Philip Coppel QC Carine Patry Hoskins (Instructed by Treasury Solicitors) |
Respondent Robert Griffiths QC Estelle Dehon (Instructed by Wolverhampton City Council Legal Services) |
|
Respondent James Maurici (Instructed by Reed Smith LLP) |
LORD CARNWATH (WITH WHOM LORD HOPE, LORD WALKER, LORD DYSON AND LORD SUMPTION AGREE)
Introduction
"In considering under section 97 of the Town and Country Planning Act 1990 whether it appears to a local planning authority to be expedient to revoke or modify a permission to develop land, is it always open to that local planning authority to have regard to the compensation that it would or might have to pay under section 107?"
The Court of Appeal by a majority (Longmore and Sullivan LJJ, Pill LJ dissenting) [2011] PTSR 645 decided it in the affirmative.
The parties
Statutory provisions
"Power to revoke or modify planning permission
"(1) If it appears to the local planning authority that it is expedient to revoke or modify any permission to develop land granted on an application made under this Part, the authority may by order revoke or modify the permission to such an extent as they consider expedient.
(2) In exercising their functions under subsection (1) the authority shall have regard to the development plan and to any other material considerations.
…"
"having regard to the development plan and to any other material considerations, it appears to a local planning authority that [such action] is expedient in the interests of the proper planning of their area (including the interests of amenity) ..."
Background facts
"The assessment indicates that the risk of harm to people at the proposed Development is such that HSE'S advice is that there are sufficient reasons, on safety grounds, for advising against the granting of planning permission in this case."
This advice was in due course reported to the planning committee by the officers, with an indication that though not mandatory it "should not be overridden without careful consideration".
"Despite this warning, when considering the planning application Wolverhampton failed to consult further with the HSE, failed to obtain its own advice as to the safety implications of permitting a substantial amount of residential accommodation in this location and, despite being obliged to do so, failed to give the HSE advance notice of its intention to grant planning permission for the development, and failed to notify the HSE that it had granted permission. The HSE first discovered on 16 December 2008 that planning permission had been granted, over four months after the grant of permission and, since works had commenced prior to the grant of permission, five months after the works had commenced. By the time the HSE became aware of the development, work on three of the blocks, A, B and C, was well advanced. Work on block D, which was the closest block to the LPG facility, had not commenced."
"The Council has now taken some preliminary legal advice and from a careful consideration of all the information available can see no justification for revoking or modifying the planning permission in question…"
Apart from indicating that they were waiting for further information and would keep the HSE informed, they gave no further reasons for this decision, nor any clear indication of the council's view of the problem, or of how, if not by revocation, they proposed to deal with it.
"I do not need to decide whether this is correct since the impact on the interested party coupled with the completion of three of the four blocks and the reasonable view that the HSE's failure to take immediate action shows that the risk could not be regarded as immediate entirely justifies a refusal to revoke or modify. Certainly, the refusal cannot be regarded as irrational." (para 40)
A simple view
Authorities
"A decision maker will often be entitled, if not required, to take into account as a relevant or material consideration the financial consequences of his decision. Consideration of the effects of a decision on others is a normal aspect of the decision-making function and there is no difference of principle between financial effects and other effects. The observations of Nicholls LJ, in Vasiliou v Secretary of State for Transport [1991] 2 All ER 77 as to the relevance of the adverse effects of a ministerial order were directed to the specific context of an order extinguishing or expropriating an individual's rights but are in my view capable of more general application. Nor is the point limited to the effects of a decision on others. It also applies to the financial consequences for the decision maker himself. Where decisions involve the expenditure of public funds, the decision maker will normally be entitled or required to take into account matters such as the availability of funds and competing demands on those funds.
All that, however, is at a level of generality. Whether a particular consideration is one that a decision maker is entitled or required to take into account in the exercise of a statutory power depends ultimately on the statute conferring that power. A statute may restrict the range of permissible considerations either expressly or by implication. Whether it does so is to be determined by reference to its provisions and to the statutory purpose.
In the exercise of their functions under sections 97 and 100 of the 1990 Act with regard to the revocation and modification of planning permissions, local planning authorities and the Secretary of State are required to have regard to "material considerations" (see section 97(2)). What is capable of amounting to a material consideration for this purpose must in my view be the same as in relation to the initial determination of planning applications, i.e. the "material considerations" referred to in sections 70(2) and 54A. Although the courts have adopted a flexible approach towards the concept, a consideration must in broad terms be a "planning" consideration in order to be material for that purpose. Any consideration which relates to the use and development of land is capable of being a planning consideration (see Stringer v Minister of Housing and Local Government [1970] 1 WLR 1281, 1294).
It follows that financial consequences are capable of amounting to a material consideration in so far as they relate to the use and development of land. R v Westminster City Council, Ex p Monahan [1990] 1 QB 87 is an example. The need for a connection with the use and development of land was helpfully spelled out in the application of that decision in Northumberland County Council v Secretary of State for the Environment (1989) 59 P & CR 468.
It also follows, however, that in so far as financial consequences do not relate to the use and development of land, they are not capable of amounting to material considerations. In my view that is fatal to the general proposition for which [leading counsel on behalf of the council] contends, that the cost to the local authority may be taken into account irrespective of land-use consequences. I see no warrant for treating cost as a permissible consideration even where it is not a "material consideration" within the meaning of the legislation. It is wholly consonant with the statutory purpose that decisions under sections 97 and 100 should be guided only by planning considerations. It cannot have been the legislative intention, in introducing provision for the payment of compensation, that the impact of such payment upon a local planning authority's financial position should condition the exercise of the powers to revoke or modify planning permissions. Payment of compensation enters into the picture only after a decision to revoke or modify has been taken. Its purpose is simply to ensure that persons interested in the land are compensated for any loss they suffer by reason of the revocation or modification of the permission." (Emphasis added)
i) The meaning of the term "material considerations" must be consistent throughout the Act, including as between section 70 and section 97.
ii) The authorities show that financial considerations unrelated to the use and development of land are not material in relation to the grant or refusal of planning permission. They cannot therefore be material in relation to the making of a revocation order.
iii) Under the statutory scheme compensation enters the picture only after the order has been made.
"198. An expedient decision would, to my mind, necessarily require attention to be paid to the advantages and disadvantages of taking one or other or none of the available steps under section 102. These advantages and disadvantages should not be confined to those which the subject of the notice would face; they should be measured against the advantages and disadvantages to the public interest at large, including the costs and effectiveness of the various possibilities. The question of whether the cost to the public is worth the gain to the public is, I would have thought, the obvious way of testing expediency. At least, it is difficult to see that expediency could be tested without consideration of that factor."
"The 1990 Act must be read as a whole for the purpose of ascertaining Parliament's intention. Since Parliament expressly provided that the local planning authorities will be liable to pay compensation if they decide that action should be taken under certain powers conferred by the Act, it must be inferred, in the absence of clear words to the contrary, that Parliament expected that a local planning authority would have regard to its liability to pay compensation under one part of the Act when deciding whether or not to exercise a power under another part of the Act. A decision under section 97 is not taken in isolation, it is taken within the statutory framework of the 1990 Act. If that statutory framework imposes a liability to pay compensation if a certain course of action is taken, there is no sensible reason why that liability should be ignored (in the absence of an express instruction to do so) when a decision is reached under the Act as to whether that action should be taken." (para 50)
"The view that the fact and the amount of compensation can never be taken into account by a planning authority has, to my mind, an inappropriately absolute ring to it. A private pocket may be required to pay up although the heavens fall around it, but such a principle can be awkward where the public purse is involved and public authorities have budgets within the limits of which they must, if possible, keep." (para 66)
"They would have to say in terms what the amount of compensation is likely to be and precisely why it is expedient for that sum not to be paid in circumstances in which modification or revocation might otherwise be appropriate. That is unlikely to be an easy or straightforward exercise." (para 67)
"I agree with Richards J in the Alnwick case that what is capable of amounting to a material consideration for the purposes of section 97 must be the same as in relation to the determination of planning applications under section 70. Its use in a context in which compensation may follow from a decision does not affect what is comprehended by the term "material considerations", which are planning considerations related to the character, use or development of the land." (para 76)
"I do not accept that analysis. The consistent theme in the legislation has been that planning decisions should be made in accordance with the development plan and any other material considerations. The 1947 Act introduced the concept of the development plan which became the primary planning document for the local planning authority's area.... A good environment and development were to be achieved by means of a development plan, or a series of development plans. It was not contemplated in 1947 that England (and Wales) would be transformed overnight into Blake's Jerusalem. The route to progress was through the new development plans and not through extensive use of discontinuance orders." (para 87)
"The word expedient must be read in context: is it expedient having regard to the development plan and to any other material considerations? The word permits latitude in an evaluation but the evaluation must be based on matters lawfully taken into account, in my view considerations relating to the character, use or development of the land." (para 91)
The appellants' arguments
(1) Consistency
i) There is a presumption that words are used with a consistent meaning throughout a statute. There is no good reason to depart from that presumption in this case.
ii) The meaning of the phrase "material considerations" in the planning Acts is well-established. It does not include financial considerations, except where they have planning consequences.
iii) Consistent with that principle, it is axiomatic that a planning permission cannot be bought and sold.
iv) The majority were right to accept in principle that the expression "material considerations" should be given the same meaning throughout the planning code.
v) They were wrong to hold in respect of section 97 that either the nature of the decision-making process, or the inclusion of the concept of expediency, altered the range of factors to be taken into account. That term gave the decision-maker a wide latitude when evaluating "the development plan and . . . other material considerations"; but it did not widen the range of matters to which the authority could properly have regard when carrying out that evaluation.
(2) Effective judicial supervision
(3) Self-interest
(4) The importance of the development plan
Discussion
Conclusion