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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 >> Powergen UK Plc v Leicester City Council & Anor [2000] EWCA Civ 165 (19th May 2000) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2000/165.html Cite as: [2000] EWCA Civ 165 |
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Case No: QBCOF 1999/1210/C
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF JUDICATURE
COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE HON. MR. JUSTICE DYSON
Royal Courts of Justice
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL
Friday 19 May 2000
POWERGEN UK PLC |
Appellant | |
- and - |
||
LEICESTER
CITY COUNCIL |
Respondent |
1. Introduction
This appeal by developers raises two points specific to its facts and one
point of some general importance in relation to the scope of the powers given
to a local planning authority on an application made under s.73 of the Town
and Country Planning Act 1990 for a planning permission subject to conditions
different from those which were applied to an earlier planning permission in
respect of the same land. Such an application is commonly referred to as an
application to modify conditions imposed on a planning permission.
2. The background to the present dispute lies in s.92 of the Town and
Country Planning Act 1990. That section was enacted to prevent the
accumulation of unimplemented permissions. That is undesirable because, when
further planning decisions have to be made in relation to an area, it is a
help to good planning not to be inhibited by past grants of permission. On the
other hand, landowners clearly must have some time in which to implement
grants of permission. The section is a compromise between these two
desiderata. It is convenient to set out parts of the section because it forms
the background to much of the argument.
(1) .... "outline planning permission" means planning permission granted .....
with the reservation for subsequent approval ..... of matters not
particularised in the application ("reserved matters").
(2) ...... where outline planning permission is granted ....... it shall be
granted subject to conditions to the effect-
(a) that, in the case of any reserved matter, application for approval must be
made not later than the expiration of three years beginning with the date of
the grant of outline planning permission: and
(b) that the development to which the permission relates must be begun not
later than-
(i) the expiration of five years from the date of the grant of outline planning
permission; or
(ii) if later, the expiration of two years from the final approval of the
reserved matters or, in the case of approval on different dates, the final
approval of the last such matter to be approved.
(3) If outline planning permission is granted without the conditions required
by subsection (2), it shall be deemed to have been granted subject to those
conditions.
(5) [the authority concerned with the terms of an outline planning permission] may also specify ..... separate periods under paragraph (a) of subsection (2) in relation to separate parts of the development to which the planning permission relates; and, if they do so, the condition required by paragraph (b) of that subsection shall then be framed correspondingly by reference to those parts, instead of by reference to the development as a whole.
3. On the 25th January 1995 Leicester City Council ("LCC") granted outline
planning permission for "Redevelopment of site for retail use (Class A1),
Business use (Class B1) Petrol Filling Station (Sui Generis), Public
House/Restaurant (Class A3) and Public open space" on a site of approximately
15 hectares. I shall refer to this as the Total Site.
4. The Total Site is the site of a former power station. In reliance upon the
grant of planning permission Powergen have undertaken the demolition of the
power station, remediated the whole site, decontaminated the site, constructed
a road-link and paid LCC a licence fee at a total cost of £5.7 million.
The preparation of the site for development involved a time consuming process
longer than was anticipated at the time planning permission was applied for.
5. The planning permission was subject to 25 conditions which, however, did
not include a condition on the lines suggested by s. 92(5). Condition 1
provided that:-
Application for approval of reserved matters shall be made within 3 years from
the date of this permission and the development shall be begun not later
than:
(a) 5 years from the date of this permission; or
(b) if later, 2 years from the date of the final approval of all the reserved
matters.
6. The reason given for this condition was "to comply with section 92 of the
Town and Country Planning Act 1990".
7. Condition 2 provided that :-
Detailed plans and particulars of the siting, design, external appearance and a
means of access to the development, and the landscaping of the site (referred
to in condition 1 as reserved matters) shall be submitted to and approved by
the City Council as Local Planning Authority before the development is begun
and shall have regard to:
(a) the size and height of the development including details of the materials
to be used on all external elevations and roofs;
(b) the provision of necessary footway crossings;
(c) a landscaping scheme showing the treatment of all parts of the site to
remain unbuilt upon, and including:
(a) details of the position and spread of all existing trees, shrubs and
hedges to be retained or removed;
(b) new tree and shrub planting, including planttype, size, quantities and
locations;
(c) means of planting, staking and tying of trees, including tree-guards;
(d) other surface treatments;
(e) fencing and boundary treatments;
(f) any changes on levels;
(g) the position and depth of surface and/or drainage runs.
8. The reason given for the condition was "to secure the satisfactory
development of the site".
9. Condition 8 provided:
"If the development is carried out in phases, then the approved landscaping
scheme shall also be carried out in phases, each phase of the landscaping
scheme to be carried out within one year of completion of the phase of
development to which it relates"
10. The reason given for the imposition of this condition was "in the interests
of amenity."
11. As I have pointed out, although condition 8 envisages development possibly
being carried out in phases, it is clear that the outline permission imposed
the conditions envisaged in s.92(2) and it did not follow the course indicated
in s. 92(5) as a possibility.
12. It will be seen that the effect of these conditions was that
(1) No development could be begun until detailed plans of the reserved matters
had been approved by the Authority
(2) Application for approval of the reserved matters had to be made before
25.1.1998
(3) The development could only proceed if it was begun within the later of the
two time periods set out in condition 1.
13. Matters proceeded slowly and it became apparent to Powergen that unless
they secured a relaxation of conditions they might be unable to develop. Mr.
Busby of the Authority's Development Control Group on 26th November 1997 wrote
a letter to Powergen which included the following:
"The Council is concerned about what will happen to the rest of the site and
whether the remainder will make sense in terms of the overall planning of the
site. This is likely to affect the Council's consideration of the application
unless other reserved matters, e.g. public open space, nature area, footpath
and cycle path networks, are submitted at the same time and it can be
demonstrated how the proposed supermarket will relate to the remainder of the
site. The deadline for all reserved matters is 24th January 1998 barring some
details that could be the subject of planning conditions should permission be
granted."
14. Mr. Busby wrote again on 19th December saying:
"Reserved matters for the other aspects of the outline scheme should be
submitted to agree with the description. If they are not submitted before 25th
January 1998 the outline permission may lapse."
15. On the 8.1.1998 Powergen submitted an application for the approval of
reserved matters pursuant to the planning permission for "83000 sq. foot food
superstore and petrol filling station with carwash and 585 car parking spaces
together with landscaping and public open space". The land occupied by the
development the subject of the reserved matters application occupied a
substantial part of the Total Site. I shall refer to it as the "Food Store
Segment".
16. On 12.1.1998 Powergen made an application to extend the time period
specified in condition 1. That application was refused by the Authority on
15.3.1999 and no challenge has been raised to the legal correctness of that
refusal or as to the length of time taken to arrive at the decision. The
policy background justifying the refusal of what had previously been permitted
in principle was that central and local government policies had changed since
1995 and therefore the Authority were anxious not to do anything which would
permit the outline permission to be implemented.
17. On 3.8.1998 an application was made which purported to be for a variation
of condition 2 and for consequential variations of various other conditions.
The nature of the variation asked for appears from the suggested wording of a
new condition 2, namely, "Before the development or phase of the
development is begun detailed plans and particulars of ..... the
development or phase of the development .... shall be submitted to and
approved by .....". The effect of granting that application would have been to
enable the "reserved matters" referred to in condition 1 to comprise, not all
the matters relating to every part of the site, but only those relating to
that part of the site with which the applicants were at any particular time
anxious to proceed. It is submitted to be a consequence of this that the
application made on 8.1.1998 would have been made within the time limit
specified in condition 1.
18. That would have had a number of advantages from the applicants' point of
view. Legally they would be able to assert that condition 1 had been fulfilled
by the making of the application for the Food Store Segment. Commercially they
would be relieved of the pressure to produce plans for and/or to carry out
various landscaping measures, parking provisions, investigations for
archaeological remains or for the protection and enhancement of sites of
wildlife or other ecological significance.
19. On the other hand the granting of that application had various
disadvantages from the point of view of the Authority. In particular it would
have enabled the Food store development to go ahead although this was by now
against the Authority's policy. It would have prevented the Authority from
having an overall scheme for the site before them before any part of the
development took place -- something which they obviously thought desirable. It
would also remove the cut off date by which the authority would know that the
permission could no longer be implemented.
20. On 15th March 1999 LCC refused planning permission for the section 73
applications. As I have already said, no complaint is made in relation to the
refusal of the application relating to condition 1. In relation to the
application relating to condition 2 the refusal was for the following
reasons:
1. The effect of varying condition 2 would be to allow work to begin on a
food superstore having reserved matters approval. That development would be
contrary to Policy S6 of the City of Leicester Local Plan which states that
planning permission will not normally be granted for additional super-stores in
the City.
2. There is no quantitative need for additional large food stores in the
Central Leicestershire area.
3. The regeneration of the site by development of retail use is in
preference to other more central sites also identified for regeneration and
which have been identified as being available, suitable and viable, could
have an adverse effect on the continuing investment in the City and other
centres by competing for investment.
21. The Construction of Condition 2
Powergen's primary submission before Dyson J. and before us was that they have
complied with condition 1. They submit that the reference in condition 2 to
"the development" is a reference to "such part of the development as the
developer chooses to proceed with". The judge rejected this construction of
the permission for reasons which he set out in full. He rejected Powergen's
submission that such a construction of the permission produced a result which
was commercially absurd because, there being no obligation to carry out all of
the development, it was pointless for the company to produce, and for the
Council and its officers to consider, plans for development which there was no
present intention to carry out.
22. It is plain from an examination of s.92 that, absent any specification of
separate periods under subsection (5), in that section "reserved matters"
refers to every matter reserved by the outline planning permission for
subsequent approval of the authority and "development" refers to the
development as a whole. Either the permission granted by LCC echoes the
section faithfully or conditions having that effect are to be implied - see
s.92(3). In those circumstances the resolution of the construction point may
not matter. However, I agree with Dyson J. for the reasons which he set out in
full, that construing this permission in its context it is clear that
throughout the document development refers to the development of the whole.
23. The effect of dealings between the parties
Powergen's secondary submission was to the effect that by reason of the
dealings between the parties they are entitled to implement that part of the
outline permission which relates to the retail development. This submission
turns on the details of the dealings between the parties and whether these
gave to Powergen any legal rights to proceed with the building of the Food
Store without further permissions. The Judge held that the officers, whose
words were relied upon as preventing the authority from now taking any point
in relation to time, had neither actual nor ostensible authority to make
representations to that effect and rejected an argument to the effect that the
doctrine of legitimate expectation entitled Powergen to such rights. He went on
to hold that the words relied on could not give rise to the expectation
asserted and that in any event they had not been relied on. I agree with the
reasoning and conclusion of Dyson J. that on the facts of this case it is not
possible to show that the doctrine of legitimate expectation operates so as to
entitle Powergen to proceed to build the Food Store.
24. The scope and character of the powers given by s.73
Introduction
Powergen submit that the decision in relation to condition 2 is legally
flawed because the Authority were not permitted to refuse that application for
the reason which they gave. Before turning to the law, I should note the
following additional matters of fact.
25. In May 1998 LCC resolved to approve the reserved matters which had been
submitted on 8.1.1998 in relation to the Food Store Segment. In recommending
approval of the reserved matters application LCC's Director of Environment and
Development advised that an indicative lay-out had been submitted by the
applicants in relation to what I shall call the Remaining Segment. He stated
that whilst this particular block layout would probably not be acceptable in
that form, the final form of development (which would be the subject of a
separate planning application) was in his view capable of meeting the general
requirements of the planning brief and that the design of the super-store and
the general lay-out were satisfactory.
26. On 4th January 1999 LCC resolved to grant planning permission for some, but
not all, of the Remaining Segment to be developed as Offices, Restaurant and
Public House. I assume that at some time a full planning permission in respect
of this part of the Remaining Segment was issued.
27. The Legal Background
Section 73 of the 1990 Act provides:
1. This section applies, subject to sub-section (4), to applications for
planning permission for the development of land without complying with
conditions subject to which a previous planning permission was granted.
2. On such an application the Local Planning Authority shall consider only
the question of the conditions subject to which planning permission should be
granted, and
(a) if they decide that planning permission should be granted subject to
conditions differing from those subject to which the previous permission was
granted, or that it should be granted unconditionally, they shall grant
planning permission accordingly; and
(b) if they decide that planning permission should be granted subject to the
same conditions as those subject to which the previous permission was granted,
they shall refuse the application.
4. This section does not apply if the previous planning permission was granted
subject to a condition as to the time within which the development to which it
related was to be begun and that time has expired without the development
having been begun.
28. Some preliminary points
The background to this section was considered by Sullivan J. in his judgment
in Pye v Secretary of State for the Environment [1998] 3 PLR 72.
Sullivan J. said the following:-
"An application made under section 73 is an application for planning
permission: see section 73(1). The Local Planning Authority's duty in
deciding planning applications is to have regard to both the development plan,
which brings into place section 54A, and to any other material considerations:
section 70(2).
In general terms, the practical consequences of imposing a condition on a grant
of planning permission must be a material consideration that a Local Planning
Authority should consider, unless prevented from so doing by some other express
provision in the statutory code.
.................Prior to the enactment of (what is now) section 73, an
applicant aggrieved by the imposition of the conditions had the right to appeal
against the original planning permission, but such a course enabled the Local
Planning Authority in making representations to the Secretary of State, and the
Secretary of State when determining the appeal as though the application had
been made to him in the first instance, to "go back on the original decision"
to grant planning permission. So the applicant might find that he had lost his
planning permission altogether, even though his appeal had been confined to a
complaint about a condition or conditions.
It was this problem which section 31A, now section 73, was intended to
address.......
While section 73 applications are commonly referred to as applications to
"amend" the conditions attached to a planning permission, a decision under
section 73(2) leaves the original planning permission intact and un-amended.
That is so whether the decision is to grant planning permission unconditionally
or subject to different conditions under paragraph (a), or to refuse the
application under paragraph (b), because planning permission should be granted
subject to the same conditions.
In the former case, the applicant may choose whether to implement the original
planning permission or the new planning permission; in the latter case, he is
still free to implement the original planning permission. Thus, it is not
possible to "go back on the original planning permission" under section 73. It
remains as a base line, whether the application under section 73 is approved or
refused, in contrast to the position that previously obtained.
The original planning permission comprises not merely the description of the
development in the operative part of the planning permission..... but also the
conditions subject to which the development was permitted to be carried
out.........
Considering only the conditions subject to which planning permission should be
granted will be a more limited exercise than the consideration of a "normal"
application for planning permission under section 70, but as Keene J. pointed
out, at page 207 of the Frost[1] case,
how much more limited will depend on the nature of the condition itself. If
the condition relates to a narrow issue, such as hours of operation or the
particular materials to be employed in the construction of the building, the
Local Planning Authority's consideration will be confined within a very narrow
compass.
Since the original planning permission will still be capable of implementation,
the Local Planning Authority, looking at the practical consequences of imposing
a different condition as to hours or materials, will be considering the
relative merit or harm of allowing the premises to remain open until, say, 10
o'clock rather than 8 o'clock in the evening, or to be tiled rather than
slated.
Equally, if an application is made under section 73 within the original time
limited for the submission of reserved matters, while implementation of the
planning permission is still possible and is not precluded by the provisions of
section 93 (4), for a modest extension of time for the submission of reserved
matters, the Local Planning Authority's role in considering only the question
of conditions subject to which planning permission should be granted will be
more confined than in a normal section 70 case. The practical effect of
submitting details one year later than would otherwise be allowed may be very
limited.
In my view, however, the position is different where.... an application is made
under section 73 to alter a condition, so as to extend the period for
submission for reserved matters at a time when the original planning permission
is no longer capable of implementation by reason of the effect of section 93
(4), because time for submission for reserved matters has expired.
While the Council are constrained to consider only the question of the
conditions subject to which planning permission should be granted, in deciding
whether to grant a planning permission subject to different conditions under
paragraph (a), or to refuse the application under paragraph (b), are they
required to ignore the fact that the original planning permission is no longer
capable of implementation, so that if they adopt the latter course it will not
be possible for the development to take place, whereas if they adopt the former
course, it will be possible for the development to take place?
In my view, there is nothing in section 73 that requires the Local Planning
Authority to ignore the practical consequences generally of imposing a
different condition, and this is surely a most important practical consequence
of granting an application for planning permission under paragraph (a) or
refusing the application under paragraph (b),
It may well be that the case since the original grant of planning permission,
the arguments for carrying out development have strengthened...........
[sc. in such circumstances] Granting a planning permission subject to a
condition providing for an extended period for submission of details would
enable the development to be carried out, whereas as refusing the application
would mean that a permission for a much needed building could not be
implemented.
I do not see why, in such circumstances, the Council, in considering the
application under section 73, should be required to shut their eyes to those
practical consequences. If that is correct, I do not see why the position
should be any different if the planning policies have changed since the grant
of the original planning permission so that its implementation has become less
desirable in planning terms.
The Local Planning Authority have to have regard to the factual circumstances
as they exist at the time and to have regard to the facts that exist at the
time of their decisions. If at that time the original planning permission is
incapable of implementation by reason of section 93 (4), I can see no basis in
the statutory code for requiring the Local Planning Authority to ignore that
important fact.
Much less do I see any justification for requiring the Local Planning Authority
to base their decision upon a hypothesis: comparing the merits of development
proceeding now with the merits of its having proceeded at some time in the past
when it is known that the hypothesis does not accord with reality.
29. I express my concurrence with what is there said.
30. Subsection (4) indicates that the section clearly does not apply where
the application purportedly made pursuant to it is made at a time when
development had not been begun within the time specified by a condition.
However, what is the position where the application is made in time but the
consideration by the authority of that application is after the expiry of
time? Does the Authority lose jurisdiction by reason of the expiry of time? In
my judgment, based in part on the use of the verb "apply" in both subsections
(1) and (4), the crucial time is the time of the application and there is no
subsequent loss of jurisdiction to consider the matter. We have heard no
submissions to the contrary.
31. The question can arise whether, on an application which asks for a
variation of one particular condition, the authority can grant a new
permission subject to a number of conditions which were not the subject of the
application to vary. Mr Taylor submitted that a proper reading of subsections
(1) and (2) of s.73 led to the conclusion that only the condition the subject
of the application was to be the subject of consideration by the authority. I
disagree. Just as on an application for permission to carry out a development
the authority can impose conditions on a permission for development which they
would find objectionable unless such conditions were imposed, so on an
application to carry out development without complying with one condition the
authority can impose a different new condition or a number of new conditions
and/or remove another condition subject to which the earlier permission was
granted. An example given by Mr Ouseley Q.C., who appeared for the second
respondent, was a situation where a retail operator wished to have deliveries
for longer hours than was permitted under the original permission. In such
circumstances the Authority might be content to grant this but only on
condition that the warehouse was sited further away from nearby dwellings
than had been regarded as acceptable at the time of the grant of the original
permission.
32. Submissions and Conclusions
Mr John Taylor Q.C., who appeared for Powergen, drew attention to the opening
words of s.73(2)
... the Local Planning Authority shall consider only the question of the
conditions subject to which a previous planning permission was granted.
33. He submitted that these words had the result that an authority faced with a
s.73 application was not allowed to refuse it just because it now disapproved
of a permission which it or the Secretary of State had granted in respect of
the land on an earlier occasion. To refuse for such a reason would be to
exercise the power of refusal for an impermissible purpose, namely, to
prevent, without paying compensation, the implementation of a permission which
had been lawfully granted.
34. He pointed out that s.73(2)(a) contemplated the grant of unconditional
planning permission, submitted that this would conflict with the requirements
of s.91 and 92 of the Act as to time limits and submitted that therefore the
permission granted pursuant to s.73 must in some way relate to the earlier
permission.
35. He submitted that to construe s.73 as envisaging the grant of an
independently viable permission would produce absurd results in situations
where details had already been approved under the earlier outline permission.
They would need to be submitted and approved afresh under the later
permission. In such circumstances there would be no advantage in making a s.73
application rather than starting afresh.
36. He argued that if each permission pursuant to a s.73 application were to be
regarded as an independently viable permission then the time limits for
submission of reserved matters and commencement of development would start
afresh.
37. He submitted that the Frost and Pye cases to which I have
already adverted were cases where what was sought was an extension of the
period within which something had to be done whereas the present, in form at
any rate, was not.
38. These are powerful arguments and they were skilfully put. Nonetheless, I
am not persuaded by them. The purpose behind the imposition of time limits in
sections 91 and 92 is to enable the Planning Authority and others to know what
outstanding permissions are capable of implementation and which, if I may
borrow a term from food retailing, have reached their expiry date. That expiry
date can be reached in one of two ways - the expiration of the time within
which application for details must be made or the expiration of the time
within which the development must be begun. In the uncertain world of planning
that at least limits the amount of uncertainty and provides a basis on which
decisions have to be reached as to what is to happen to that land and land
nearby in the future. There is no doubt that the effect of granting a new
planning permission in the terms sought by the appellants would be to enable a
development to proceed after the expiry date of the permission. The appellants
accept the legal correctness of the Authority's refusal to extend the time
period specified in condition 1 of the earlier permission. They argue that
they should be allowed to achieve substantially the same end by altering the
terms of condition 2. In my judgment that would clearly fly in the face of
the policy behind sections 91 and 92.
39. That would not dispose of the point if the words in s.73(2) "shall consider
only the question of the conditions subject to which a previous planning
permission was granted" clearly prevented the Authority from taking into
account the fact that the earlier permission had reached its expiry date. I do
not consider that they do. My reasoning is essentially the same as that of
Sullivan J. in the Pye case set out above. I accept that there the
court was concerned with an application in terms to extend the time for
submission of details whereas in the present case the court is only concerned
with an application which has that effect, This however seems to me to be a
distinction of no significance. If Sullivan J.'s reasoning is correct, as I
think it is, then it must apply to both situations.
40. I accept that s.73(2)(a) contemplates the grant of an unconditional
planning permission but I do not accept Mr Taylor's submissions to the effect
that therefore it is wrong to regard a permission granted pursuant to a s.73
application as not being an independently viable permission because of any
application of sections 91 and 92. Those sections also contemplate the grant
of unconditional permissions and provide that if permission is granted
unconditionally then it shall be deemed to have been granted subject to time
conditions.
41. Nor do I accept his argument in relation to having to resubmit details
which had already been approved. Sometimes the alteration of a condition which
is asked for will involve alterations as to previously approved details,
sometimes it will not. In those cases where it does not there is no difficulty
in referring to the old plans and it may well be that the Authority will be
inhibited by the opening words of s.73(2) from considering their merits.
42. The most seductive way in which Mr Taylor put his submissions was to my
mind as follows. He submitted that the Authority must focus on the condition
mentioned in the application ("condition x" - in the present case condition 2)
and ask themselves "were we to substitute condition y for condition x what
harm would result which does not result from the grant of permission with
condition x?". I agree that, if it does not now matter from a planning point
of view whether the future development of the site is governed by condition x
as imposed on the old permission or condition y as suggested by an applicant,
then the authority would be wrong to refuse permission just because they
objected to the development in principle. An example might be a proposed
change in the fenestration in a building.
43. But Mr Taylor's formulation of the question subtly conceals that in the
present case it does matter. The comparison is not between the present effects
of condition x imposed now and the present effects of condition y
imposed now but rather between the present effects of condition x imposed
years ago and the present effect of condition y imposed now. Once it is
clear that this is the right comparison, then it is obvious that in a case
such as the present the difference is enormous. The present effect of
condition 2 imposed years ago is to prevent the Food Store Development going
ahead whereas the present effect of a permission containing the proposed
condition 2 is to permit the Food Store development. It is in my judgment
beyond argument that current planning policy and facts must be taken into
consideration when deciding whether or not to permit that new effect.
44. Mr Taylor had a further argument based on events after the expiry date in
January 1995. He submitted
(a) that no condition should be imposed unless its imposition serves some
planning purpose;
(b) that the purpose of imposing condition 2 on the 1995 Permission was to
secure the approval of the Authority for the details of the development of the
Total Site;
(c) that this purpose had been achieved by 15.3.1999, albeit in two bites,
namely, (1) the approval of the details for the Food Store Segment in May 1998
pursuant to the application made on 8.1.1998 and (2) the resolution of
4.1.1999; and
(d) that in those circumstances it was irrational on 15th March
1999 to refuse to vary the old condition 2.
45. I accept of course that conditions should not be imposed unless their
imposition serves some planning purpose. However, as it seems to me one of the
purposes of the imposition of conditions 1 and 2 on the 1995 permission,
required as it was by s.92, was to secure a situation in which no development
should proceed under that permission unless, amongst other things, application
pursuant to the 1995 Permission for approval of all of the reserved matters
in relation to the Total Site was made before 25.1.1998. That purpose had not
been achieved by 15.3.1999 for three separate reasons. One is that the
application for planning permission which produced the resolution of 4.1.1999
did not as a matter of fact cover the Total Site. The second is that this
application was, I believe, not made before 25.1.1998. The third is that it was
not an application for approval of details under the 1995 permission. The
Authority on 4.1.1999 was dealing with an application to grant a new full
planning permission. In considering that application it was bound to look
primarily at the Remaining Segment which was the subject of this new
application and also to bear in mind that the outline permission which had
been granted in 1995 for the Total Site was no longer capable of
implementation. The conclusion reached by the Authority on the application
which resulted in the resolution of 4.1.1999 is not necessarily the same as
the one it would have reached on an application for approval of details under
the 1995 outline permission for the Total Site.
46. At times Mr Taylor I think came close to submitting that it was irrational
of the Authority to refuse the s.73 application in respect of condition 2. If
that was his submission I would reject it. When the authority came to consider
the application under s.73 to grant a new permission in respect of the Total
Site subject to a different condition 2 it was perfectly rational to refuse to
do so. It might well have been rational to refuse to do so in 1995 but it was
certainly rational to refuse to do so in 1999 when planning policies had
changed. The original conditions were imposed in pursuance of the policy set
out in s.92 of the Act which is to prevent the accumulation of unimplemented
permissions. The application under s.73 was clearly designed to achieve a
result which would be at variance with that policy. There is nothing
irrational in an authority refusing, after the expiration of the 3 years
referred to in s.92(2)(a), to grant such an application in circumstances
where the relevant policies have altered. Indeed, in my view, in present
circumstances to have granted a permission pursuant to an application under
s.73 without considering that a Food Store Development was now governed by
different policies from those which appertained in 1995 would have been just
as unlawful as granting such a permission following a normal application for
full planning permission without such a consideration of current policies.
47. I agree with Sullivan J. that when considering whether or not to grant
planning permission for the development of land without complying with
conditions subject to which a previous planning permission was granted the
authority must take into account the provisions of the development plan and
any other material considerations. If one asks "material to what?" the answer
is material to the application under s.73. Thus, for instance, if the
application is to retain a use of land without complying with a condition
imposed on a previous permission that the use should cease after five years it
must be right to examine that application in the light of facts and policies as
they are at the time of the decision on the new application.
48. In the result, for reasons which are substantially those well set out by
Dyson J. in his judgment, I would dismiss this appeal.
LORD JUSTICE POTTER :- I agree
LORD JUSTICE MORRITT:- I also agree