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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 >> Midcounties Co-Operative Ltd, R (on the application of) v Wyre Forest District Council & Ors [2010] EWCA Civ 841 (29 July 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2010/841.html Cite as: [2011] JPL 173, [2010] 32 EG 60, [2010] EWCA Civ 841 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
The Hon Mr Justice Ouseley
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LADY JUSTICE SMITH
LORD JUSTICE RIMER
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The Queen on the Application of Midcounties Co-Operative Limited |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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Wyre Forest District Council & Ors |
Respondent |
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- and - |
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(1) Tesco Stores Limited |
Interested Parties |
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(2) Santon Group Developments Limited |
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(3) Stourport Corporation NV |
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(4) Worcestershire County Council |
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WordWave International Limited
A Merrill Communications Company
165 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2DY
Tel No: 020 7404 1400, Fax No: 020 7404 1424
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Mr Ian Dove QC and Mr Hugh Richards (instructed by Wyre Forest District Council) for the Respondent
Mr Russell Harris QC (instructed by Berwin Leighton Paisner LLP) for the 1st and 2nd Interested Parties
Hearing dates: 15 April 2010
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Laws:
INTRODUCTION
"The food store hereby approved shall not exceed the following floor space allocations (maxima);
Gross external up to 4209 sq metres measured externally
Nett retail sales up to 2919 sq metres, unless otherwise agreed with the Local Planning Authority.
Reason
In the interest of clarity, in order to define the permission and to ensure that it accords with Policies RT.1 and RT.4 of the Adopted Wyre Forest District Local Plan."
BRIEF FACTS
THE APPELLANTS' CASE
(1) The planning permission granted more than was applied for: 2919 sq metres rather than 2403 sq metres for nett sales or retail trading. It was therefore unlawful, since a local planning authority has no power on a planning application to grant more than had been sought by the application. (So much, I accept, is as a matter of law elementary.)
(2) Condition 6 is unlawful as being uncertain. The two figures (2919 and 2403 sq metres) are obviously inconsistent and there is no definition of nett sales (or retail sales) area such as might demonstrate an objective distinction between them.
(3) The planning permission granted consent for a larger nett sales area than had been assessed in studies which were submitted with the application (as I have indicated these addressed the lesser area of 2403 sq metres).
(4) (This argument was added by permission of Dyson LJ.) The planning permission was ultra vires Regulation 3 of the Town and Country Planning (Environmental Impact Etc) Regulations 1999, which prohibits the grant of permission for EIA development unless the local planning authority has first taken into account the "environmental information" reasonably required to assess the environmental effects of the development. The Environmental Statement prepared for the purpose of the assessment referred to a "nett sales area" of 2403 sq metres, not 2919.
(1) What is the meaning of the planning permission? If, of course, the planning permission is so uncertain that the question cannot be answered, then it would be void and the judicial review would succeed on that short ground.
(2) In light of the answer to Question (1), was more granted by the planning permission than had been applied for/appraised by the experts/subject to environment assessment?
Question 1 addresses Points (1) and (2) of the appellants' four points. If it cannot be answered because of the planning permission's uncertainty, the appellants must succeed on Point (2). If it can be answered and the answer shows (Question 2) that the permission granted more than was applied for, the appellants succeed on Point (1) – and on Points (3) and (4), as it were, into the bargain. There is on analysis no free-standing case on Points (3) and (4).
LAW
THE APPELLANTS' PRIMARY CASE CONFRONTED
"16. The 2403 sq metres cannot be a separate area additional to the 2919 sq metres in a gross external area of 4209 sq metres. I regard it as obvious that the 2403 sq metre area is subsumed within the 2919 sq metre area rather than partly overlapping the 2919 sq metre area and partly overlapping all or part of the remaining 1290 sq metres in the building. Each of the phrases used in connection with the 2919 and 2403 sq metre areas include 'retail' and 'trading or sales'. If the 2403 area overlapped the 2919 and the 1290 areas, it is difficult to imagine what sensible area or distinct use it could relate to. None was suggested. The grant does not conflict with that part of the application referring to 2403 sq metres 'floorspace for retail trading'. That is a subset of the 2919 sq metre area."
"20... I regard it as plain from the application, its description of the development and the layout plan that the gross external area of the store would encompass the staff facilities, administration offices, storage, food preparation areas and so on, to which the shopping public would not have access but without which the store could not function. It was not in issue but that the store would need those areas and that they would be within the gross external area of 4209 sq metres.
21. This clearly, to my mind, explains what the difference between the next largest figure, 2919, and the 4209 figure comprises. These are the two figures in the condition, and it is obvious that they refer to the two critical facets: how big is the building, how much is support or non-public, as opposed to selling and public? The staff and administration side, broadly put, complement with the shopping public side to which the words 'retail' or 'trading' floor space naturally apply, when used to distinguish an area from the whole gross external floor space of the shop. That makes good sense of the description applied to it in condition 6 and appearing in the layout plan. It is not vague or uncertain; there is nothing odd about it as a concept in retail planning. The condition thus controls the size of the development by reference to the gross external area and the internal area to which the public has access. So 2919 sq metres is the upper limit to the area within the 4209 sq metre gross external to which the shopping public can have access. Neither the condition, nor the planning permission are [sic] void for uncertainty. The condition could have controlled the size of the floor space by reference to the figure of 2403 sq metre, whatever that may cover, but the council was not obliged to choose whatever that measured as opposed to the 2919 sq metre figure, which measured the areas to which the shopping public would have access. The 2403 sq metre figure cannot be the limit of the areas to which the public have access without depriving the concept underlying the figure of 2919 of any meaning. No alternative concept was suggested.
22. It is not necessary for these purposes to reach a view as to what the 2403 sq metre figure represents, although it is well-known that a distinction exists between the public areas outside the checkout and the public area inside and including the checkouts. If there is a reference to a smaller retail sales area within a layout it is probable that that is the area to which the smaller figure refers."
"7.31 The likely turnover of the store has been identified by multiplying a turnover per sq metre with the net floorspace of the proposed store, being the area used for the sale and display of goods and including the checkouts and customer counters, but excluding lobbies, customer services and circulation areas.
7.32 In this instance, the net floor area amounts to 2401 sq.m. The proposed sales area of the store will comprise some 1527 sq.m of food floorspace and some 874 sq.m of non-food floorspace."
The judge observed:
"33. The relationship between the 2403 and 2919 is clear, albeit implicit. The former excludes the area on the exit side of the checkouts where the lobbies, customer services and circulation space are; the latter includes it."
"61... [I]t takes no great effort of understanding to see from the retail study that the 2403 sq metre area is the area including and within the checkouts, that the other larger area to which the words 'net' and 'retail' are attributed includes it and lies, in part, beyond it, and that beyond that area of 2919 sq metres are the staff areas. There is really no other sensible meaning that can be given to those areas... The use of extrinsic material thus leads to the same result as I had already reached."
THE S.106 AGREEMENT
"45. Mr Holgate submitted then that the store could in fact be built with more than 2403 sq metres behind and including the checkouts and that that could extend to the whole of the 2919 sq metres increasing the assumed turnover. In law, or at least in theory, that is correct. The 2403 figure is not used in the condition to control this aspect of the development. But the full difference of 516 sq metres could not be used for that purpose without making it impossible for the public to enter or leave the store. There is no evidence from Midcounties to show that a store of 2919 sq metres for the public access area would or could be sensibly laid out with so much less than 516 sq metres on the exit side of the checkouts, and with the balance then switched to the inner side of the checkouts, as to create a material difference to the need, capacity and impact assessments or to the Wyre Forest District Council decision. Certainly there is no evidence that that is contemplated by Tesco/Santon. There is no evidence therefore that a material consideration was ignored or that the store is not in reality controlled to what was assessed.
46. I am not prepared to assume on the basis of theoretical legal argument that the store was assessed by the District Council on the basis either that only the bare minimum area would be provided, whatever that might be, for an uncertain number of customers at any one time to pass into the area where goods are displayed for sale and to pass out of the store with trollies and baskets, or that that is what would happen. I am not prepared in the absence of evidence, which Midcounties would have been well placed to provide were there any substance in this point, to assume that whatever of the 516 sq metres might then be left for incorporation into the area where goods were on display for sale could make any difference to the retail assessments or conclusion. This legal point as to materiality is utterly hollow unless there is some evidence as to its potential materiality in reality..."
CONCLUSION ON THE APPEAL
COSTS
Lady Justice Smith:
Lord Justice Rimer: