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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 >> MWH Associates Ltd v Wrexham County Borough Council (Rev 1) [2012] EWCA Civ 1884 (28 November 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2012/1884.html Cite as: [2012] EWCA Civ 1884 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE UPPER TRIBUNAL
LANDS TRIBUNAL
(MR GEORGE BARTLETT QC and MR AJ TROTT)
B e f o r e :
LADY JUSTICE ARDEN
and
LORD JUSTICE LLOYD JONES
____________________
MWH ASSOCIATES LIMITED |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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WREXHAM COUNTY BOROUGH COUNCIL |
Respondent |
____________________
WordWave International Limited
A Merrill Communications Company
165 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2DY
Tel No: 020 7404 1400 Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Mr Stephen Sauvain QC and Mr Eric Owen appeared on behalf of the Respondent
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Pill:
"(1)Subject to section 116, where planning permission is revoked or modified by an order under section 97, then if, on a claim made to the local planning authority within the prescribed time and in the prescribed manner, it is shown that a person interested in the land or in minerals in, on or under it—
(a) has incurred expenditure in carrying out work which is rendered abortive by the revocation or modification; or
(b) has otherwise sustained loss or damage which is directly attributable to the revocation or modification,
the local planning authority shall pay that person compensation in respect of that expenditure, loss or damage."
"1. The claimant in this reference, MWH Associates Limited, is a waste management company that acquired ownership in February 2005 of a substantially excavated quarry known as Hafod Quarry and Landfill Site, Johnstown, near Wrexham, as a site for the disposal of waste. The quarry and areas adjacent to it contain a population of great crested newts (GCN), a European protected species under Council Directive 92/43/EEC of 21 May 1992 on the Conservation of Natural Habitats and of Wild Fauna and Flora (the Habitats Directive). Part of the quarry and adjacent areas were designated as a Site of Special Scientific Interest (SSSI) in June 2001 and a Special Area of Conservation (SAC) in December 2004.
2. The quarry had been worked under a planning permission granted in October 1988. The Environment Act 1995 required the periodic review of mineral planning permissions and, where necessary, the imposition of revised planning conditions. The compensating authority, Wrexham County Borough Council (WCBC), as the mineral planning authority (MPA) approved revised conditions in respect of the 1988 permission on 4 September 2006. Condition 4 of the revised conditions required the claimant to submit details showing that no mineral extraction would take place within any area notified as a SSSI/SAC or within any adjacent area where the integrity of the SSSI/SAC?s ecological features would be affected.
3. Under the 1995 Act a restriction of working rights under conditions imposed under the review procedure has effect as if a modification order under section 97 of the Town and Country Planning Act 1990 had been made; and under section 107 of the 1990 Act a person interested in the land affected by a modification order is entitled to compensation in respect of any loss or damage which is directly attributable to the modification. The claimant claimed compensation under this provision for expenditure, loss and damage incurred as a result of being unable to win and work minerals from the area of the site affected by the new condition 4 and, as a direct result thereof, for the expenditure, loss and damage incurred as a result of losing void space for landfill.
4. The compensating authority resist the claim for compensation on two principal grounds. They say, firstly, that the claimant did not in fact intend to work the minerals in the land or to use the void space for landfill; and, secondly, that it would in any event have failed to obtain the necessary derogation licence to permit the translocation of the GCN living on the land, so that it could not lawfully have worked the minerals.
5. There is agreement on the amount of the compensation, on the assumption that the council fails in both these contentions, except that the cost of relocation of the GCN is dependent upon the date chosen to assess the size of the GCN population."
"Other imperative reasons of overriding public interest, including those of a social or economic nature, and beneficial consequences of primary importance for the environment."
Reliance is placed by the appellants on the need for landfill facilities in North Wales. That need has been accepted by the NAW, and in the development plan and other policy guidance, as well as in a planning officer's report to the council. Regulation 44(3) provides:
"The appropriate authority shall not grant a licence under this regulation unless they are satisfied (a) that there is no satisfactory alternative, and (b) that the action authorised will not be detrimental to the maintenance of the population of the species concerned and a favourable conservation status in their natural range."
Under Article 1 of the Directive, the conservation status of a species will be taken as "favourable" when "population dynamics data on the species indicate that it is maintaining itself on a long-term basis as a viable component of its natural habitat and the natural range of the species is neither being reduced nor is likely to be reduced for the foreseeable future and "there is and will probably continue to be a sufficiently large habitat to maintain its populations on a long-term basis."
"The designation of the SSSI and subsequently the SAC meant, even in the absence of a modification order, that the claimant faced statutory obstacles to implementing the Mineral and Landfill Permissions. It could only have worked the claim area by applying for a derogation licence on terms that ran contrary to the approach first put forward in their second derogation licence application, or by invoking the exception under regulation 40(3)(c) and "hard-nosing" ahead with the lawful operation defence under Newsum. Realistically the claimant could not be confident of success under either of these strategies. The claimant might have thought it desirable to work the claim area at the valuation date given the possibility of favourable returns but it did not, in our opinion, intend, plan or propose to do so at that time or at any time before or after its acquisition of Hafod Quarry."
"its decision was a clear expression of its intent not to work and subsequently landfill the claim area and one that was based on commercial and economic considerations."
"Our conclusion is that WAG, as advised by CCW, would have refused to grant a derogation licence at the valuation date to translocate GCN from R2 to R1. The depreciation of the value of the claim area was therefore not directly attributable to the deemed modification order arising from the imposition of the ROMP conditions."
"149. Under regulation 44(3)(b) WAG would need to be satisfied, before granting a derogation licence at the valuation date, that the proposed translocation of at least 130 GCN from R2 to R1 would not be detrimental to the maintenance of the population of GCN at a favourable conservation status in their natural range. In our opinion that criterion requires WAG to compare the donor (R2) and receptor (R1) sites in order to determine which of them is best able to maintain the GCN population in that status. If the answer to that analysis is that it is R2 that best achieves this desideratum then translocation of GCN to R1 would, in our opinion, be detrimental for the purposes of regulation 44(3)(b)."
"150. On the evidence there are several reasons for concluding that, at the valuation date, the habitat at R2 was best able to support and maintain the population of GCN at a favourable conservation status in their natural range:
(i) R1 was at or close to its carrying capacity. Between 1999 and 2005 more than 2000 GCN had been translocated from Hafod Quarry, the majority of which (we estimate 1,830) were moved to R1 (although an unknown number of these are likely to have been double counted following their return to the quarry after previous translocations). These numbers were higher than originally anticipated and therefore the habitat of R1 had to be improved. The translocation of at least another 130 GCN from R2 would have required yet further improvements, especially the provision of aquatic habitat. This in turn would have reduced the amount of terrestrial habitat available. Dr Howe described R1 in cross-examination, fairly in our opinion, as being "under pressure" and the translocation of GCN from R2 as putting "all the GCN into one basket."
(ii) The habitat at R2 had been significantly improved to allow the translocation of GCN to it in 2005.
(iii) Unlike R1, R2 was, at that time, free from predatory fish and the invasive Crassula helmsii. The site was defensible from the incursion of the public and therefore future management of this problem would have been easier than at R1.
(iv) Removal of R2 would potentially lead to the isolation of the area of the SSSI/SAC to the south (New Hall Farm) and thereby risk reducing the natural range of the GCN. Its retention would ensure a more geographically diverse range of habitat.
(v) The claimant said that under the first derogation licence it was intended (in a later phase) to translocate the GCN from the claim area to R1. But this did not happen and the circumstances materially changed following the designation of the extended SSSI and the SAC."
"The authority must take appropriate action to remove the potential for harm unless there is no likelihood of the development being carried out or continued."
Paragraph 4:
"If the local planning authorities consider that planning obligations restricting or regulating the use of the land or would safeguard the integrity of the site, they must invite those concerned to enter into them."
I interpose that that invitation was made to the appellants, was declined, and the appellants were entitled to decline it. Continuing the quote:
"Insofar as the adverse effects are not overcome by such obligations, local planning authorities must modify or revoke the permission, or make a discontinuance order in a manner which is sufficient to avoid the potential threat to the integrity of the site."
The tribunal put it in this way at paragraph 63:
"63. In reviewing any planning permission under regulations 50 and 51 the competent authority shall consider, under regulation 56, whether any adverse effects could be overcome by planning obligations under section 106 of the 1990 Act being entered into, and, if they consider that those effects could be so overcome, shall invite those concerned to enter into such obligations. As far as the adverse effects are not thus overcome the competent authority shall make such a modification order under section 97 of that Act as may be required."
"...subject to the submitted modifications, each Order is necessary and sufficient to safeguard: the integrity of the SAC, and populations of great-crested newts and other amphibians within the SAC, the SSSI and the amphibian compensation areas."
At paragraph 8, Laws LJ recorded the CCW as having observed:
"To conclude, we wish to affirm that the outcome of the Modification orders will be to reduce any adverse effects on the environment and will prevent any significant effects on landfill or mineral extraction on statutory sites, their associated features and on the conservation status of European protected species."
"The depreciation of the value of the claim area was therefore not directly attributable to the deemed modification order arising from the imposition of the ROMP conditions."
Lady Justice Arden:
Lord Justice Lloyd Jones:
Order: Appeal dismissed.