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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 >> DLA Delivery Ltd v Baroness Cumberlege of Newick & Anor (Rev 1) [2018] EWCA Civ 1305 (08 June 2018) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2018/1305.html Cite as: [2018] PTSR 2063, [2018] WLR(D) 358, [2018] EWCA Civ 1305 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
PLANNING COURT
MR JOHN HOWELL Q.C. (sitting as a Deputy Judge of the High Court)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
Lord Justice Moylan
and
Lord Justice Peter Jackson
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DLA Delivery Ltd. |
Appellant |
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- and – |
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(1) Baroness Cumberlege of Newick (2) Patrick Cumberlege |
Respondents |
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- and - |
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Secretary of State for Communities and Local Government |
Interested Party |
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Ms Heather Sargent (instructed by DAC Beachcroft LLP) for the Respondents
The Interested Party did not appear and was not represented.
Hearing dates: 28 February and 1 March 2018
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Lindblom:
Introduction
The issues in the appeal
(1) Did the judge apply the correct test in law in considering whether the Secretary of State's decision was unlawful because he failed to take into account his conclusion on Policy CT1 in his decision letter on the Ringmer appeal?
(2) Did the Secretary of State err in law in failing to take into account his decision in the Ringmer appeal?
(3) Did the Secretary of State misapply regulation 68(3) of the Conservation of Habitats and Species Regulations 2010 ("the Habitats regulations")?
Policy CT1
"Planning Boundary and Key Countryside Policy
CT1 Development will be contained within the Planning Boundaries as shown on the Proposals Map. Planning permission will not be granted for development outside the Planning Boundaries, other than for that specifically referred to in other chapters of the Plan or listed below:
…
(b) new residential development in the Countryside (Policy RES6 & RES7)
…
(e) affordable homes exceptions sites (Policy RES10)
…
(h) any other development in the countryside for which a specific policy reference is made [elsewhere] in the Plan
…
The retention of the open character of the countryside is of heightened importance where it separates settlements and prevents their coalescence. … ."
The Secretary of State's conclusions on Policy CT1 in the Ringmer appeal
"10.39 The appellant agreed that the Council is able to demonstrate a five year supply of deliverable housing sites in accordance with the requirements of the Framework. It was not suggested that there is any objection in principle to a planning boundary policy such as Policy CT1. Nevertheless, the appellant argued that the Policy CT1 planning boundaries should be regarded as out-of-date on the basis that they were drawn in the context of the LP03 for the purposes of meeting housing requirements up to 2011. Further, it was argued that the boundaries would not meet housing requirements up to 2030, that they would need to be varied to accommodate the JCS strategic allocations and neighbourhood plan allocations and that they are bound to be reviewed in the LPPt2. …
10.40 The first point to note is that the CT1 planning boundaries have been retained in the JCS, pending review through the LPPt2. Although originally defined in relation to the LP03, they must now be considered in the context of a development plan context which also includes:
- the JCS strategic allocations
- the JCS planned growth targets for specified settlements
- neighbourhood plan allocations[.]
At the Inquiry the Council accepted that the JCS Inspector did not find the retained policies sound in the sense of examining them individually against an evidence base. However, he found the JCS as a whole sound, including its provisions to save certain policies pending review under LPPt2. To my mind that is an important point, particularly given that the JCS was adopted as recently as May 2016. It seems to me that, in finding the JCS as a whole sound, the JCS Inspector was accepting the approach of allocating some of the development sites now, whilst retaining the CT1 boundaries for the time being pending review through LPPt2. That is a strong indication that the CT1 planning boundaries should be regarded as up-to-date. …
10.41 Nevertheless, it is relevant to consider the practical consequences of the approach that has been taken. The JCS housing requirement up to 2030 is 6,900 dwellings, or around 345 dwellings per year. After making allowances for completions, commitments, windfalls and rural exception sites there is a balance of 3,597 dwellings which is to be met from strategic site allocations … (which have already been identified), planned growth at specified levels in identified settlements and about 200 units in locations to be determined. The residual figure of 200 is therefore a relatively small amount, amounting to less than one year's requirement. …
10.42 The JCS requirement for Ringmer and Broyle Side is 385 dwellings. Allowing for commitments, completions and the strategic allocation at [Bishop's] Lane leaves a balance of 217 units. The RNP has already allocated sites for 184 units leaving just 33 still to be determined. The Council suggested that all of these could be accommodated by increasing delivery at Caburn Field, a site currently allocated for 40 units. Given that the site extends to some 1.3ha, and is centrally located within the village, it seems reasonable to assume some uplift on the current figure … . However, in the absence of further information about the prospective scheme for this site it is not possible to form a view on whether as many as 70 is likely to be achievable. That said, even if no allowance is made for additional delivery at Caburn Field, 33 is still a relatively small number amounting to less than 10% of the total growth planned for Ringmer up to 2030. …
10.43 It is possible that some of the 200 units in locations still to be determined will ultimately be allocated to Ringmer and/or Broyle Side. However, it seems likely that the local planning authority would look first to the four towns in the District, as these are likely to offer the most sustainable locations. Moreover, the exercise of seeking locations for those units will no doubt have regard to the infrastructure constraints at Ringmer identified by the JCS Inspector. …
10.44 The broad conclusion is that a large proportion of the total growth planned, or likely to be planned, for Ringmer up to 2030 has already been provided for in the JCS and RNP. Bearing in mind that:
- the district has a five year supply of housing sites
- the JCS has been adopted, and the RNP has been made, very recently and
- there is an identified process for allocating the balance of the housing sites required[.]
I conclude that Policy CT1 should be regarded as up-to-date for the purposes of this appeal."
"10.45 Reference was made to three recent appeal decisions in Lewes District, relating to sites at North Chailey, Wivelsfield and Bishop's Lane, Ringmer. The appellant contended that these decisions support the proposition that CT1 should be regarded as out-of-date. At North Chailey, the Inspector found the planning boundary to be out-of-date in circumstances where the boundary was tightly drawn and it was common ground that it could not accommodate the level of housing required by the JCS. There was no neighbourhood plan. This contrasts with the situation in Ringmer where there is a neighbourhood plan which, together with the JCS, has made provision for most of the relevant housing requirement. …10.46 The situation at Wivelsfield was different in that the Inspector there did not expressly find Policy CT1 to be out-of-date. Instead, she concluded that it 'does not fully accord with the Framework', a position which the Council appears to have agreed with in that case … . The arguments appear to have been put rather differently in that appeal. In the present appeal, there was no suggestion from any party that Policy CT1 is, in principle, inconsistent with the Framework. In any event, the Wivelsfield decision appears to have turned on the fact that the scheme was found to accord with the emerging JCS (at it then was) and was a preferred site in an emerging neighbourhood plan. The facts are therefore quite different to the current appeal.
10.47 From my reading of the [Bishop's] Lane Inspector's Report, it does not appear that the Inspector found Policy CT1 to be out-of-date. Rather, he found that it was outweighed by the compliance of the appeal scheme with the emerging development plan context, albeit that there was a degree of conflict with the emerging RNP. This reasoning was accepted by the Secretary of State … . Consequently, while I have noted all three of the decisions referred to, they do not alter my findings as set out above. …".
"10.48 There was no suggestion from any party that any relevant policy other than Policy CT1 should be regarded as out-of-date or inconsistent with the Framework. I therefore conclude that the development plan context for this appeal should be regarded as up-to-date."
"14. Having carefully considered the Inspector's arguments at IR10.39-10.48, the Secretary of State agrees with his conclusion at IR10.42 and IR10.48 that JCS Policy CT1 should be regarded as up-to-date for the purposes of this appeal."
His conclusions on the planning balance also matched those of the inspector. He did not apply the so-called "tilted balance" under the policy for the "presumption in favour of sustainable development" in paragraph 14 of the NPPF. He said that "the development plan is up-to-date and no reasons have been identified to reduce the weight to be attached to any of the policies relevant to this appeal" (paragraph 22). And he found that the balance of other considerations was "not sufficient to indicate that the appeal should be determined other than in accordance with the development plan" (paragraph 23).
The Secretary of State's conclusions on Policy CT1 in the Newick appeal
"154. The JCS has now been adopted and sets out a requirement to provide at least 6,900 new homes in the District, with a minimum of 100 dwellings in Newick. Although the NNP has proactively allocated sites to meet this figure ahead of the Site Allocations process, it is clearly expressed as a 'minimum', and must be read in the context of a full objectively assessed need for some 10,900 new homes. With this in mind the Council accepts that more sites may be allocated for housing in the village in the Part 2 Site Allocations process … . JCS Policy SP2 also includes roughly 200 units in locations 'to be determined', some of which could be in Newick. As the NNP process demonstrates, achieving the strategic aspirations of the JCS cannot be met by only containing development within the planning boundaries.
155. In summary therefore, whilst the housing requirement for the District and its spatial distribution is up-to-date, the restrictive nature of Policy CT1, based on the old LDLP, is not. Along with its consistency with the Framework this point was acknowledged by the Council in preparation of the JCS, confirming that "The wording of Policy CT1 itself will need amending to ensure that it is consistent with the strategic policies of the Core Strategy and the more permissive approach to development in rural areas set out in the NPPF.""
The policy for the "presumption in favour of sustainable development" in paragraph 14 of the NPPF was therefore engaged (paragraph 156).
"226. … It is … common ground that the proposal conflicts with saved LDLP Policy CT1 by reason of its location beyond the planning boundary for Newick.
227. However, Policy CT1 was adopted in 2003 and seeks to limit development within the planning boundaries defined under the LDLP, which expired in 2011. It does not reflect the housing requirement or spatial distribution set out in the recently adopted JCS, and its protection of the countryside from encroachment by inappropriate development is not, as the Council contend, entirely consistent with the Framework. Based on the evidence provided the weight which can be attributed to this policy conflict is therefore reduced, and for the purposes of the Framework it is out-of-date.
228. In saving CT1 beyond 2007 the Secretary of State confirmed that it must be read in the context of other material considerations. This includes the Framework, and where relevant policies are out-of-date, its presumption in favour of sustainable development. In achieving sustainable development the Framework sets out three dimensions; the economic, social and environmental. It also confirms that these roles are mutually dependant, and I have considered the proposal on the same basis."
"27. For the reasons given by the Inspector at IR227-228 the Secretary of State agrees that saved LDLP Policy CT1 is out of date. As such the Secretary of State considers that paragraph 14 of the Framework is engaged. He has therefore considered whether the adverse impacts of granting permission would significantly and demonstrably outweigh the benefits, when assessed against the Framework policies as a whole."
and (in paragraph 33):
"33. He also finds that the weight that can be given to the conflict with LDLP Policy CT1 is reduced for the reasons set out by the Inspector or IR227, and he gives only limited weight to this conflict."
The Wivelsfield decision
Issue (1) – the relevant test for material considerations
"What has to be emphasised is that it is only when the statute expressly or impliedly identifies considerations required to be taken into account by the authority as a matter of legal obligation that the court holds a decision invalid on the ground now invoked. It is not enough that a consideration is one that may properly be taken into account, nor even that it is one which many people, including the court itself, would have taken into account if they had to make the decision."
But it was the second passage that Lord Scarman found decisive. As he said:
"… [Cooke J.] in a later passage [also on p.183], did recognise that in certain circumstances, notwithstanding the silence of the statute, "there will be some matters so obviously material to a decision on a particular project that anything short of direct consideration of them by the ministers … would not be in accordance with the intention of the Act"."
Those two passages of Cooke J.'s judgment in CREEDNZ were, in Lord Scarman's view, "a correct statement of principle".
"58. … [It] seems to me quite impossible to say that the unincorporated international obligation on the United Kingdom here was "so obviously material" to the coroner's decision whether or not to resume this inquest that he was required to give it "direct consideration. …
59. Even, therefore, had the coroner recognised and felt able to satisfy the international law obligation upon the United Kingdom by reopening the inquest, I for my part would not hold his refusal to do so irrational or otherwise unlawful."
"28. It seems, therefore, that it is not enough that, in the judge's view, consideration of a particular matter might realistically have made a difference. Short of irrationality, the question is one of statutory construction. It is necessary to show that the matter was one which the statute expressly or impliedly (because "obviously material") requires to be taken into account "as a matter of legal obligation"."
Issue (2) – did the Secretary of State fail to have regard to a relevant previous appeal decision?
"The Secretary of State probably should be cognisant of decisions in his own name, whether or not flagged up in the materials before him: [Dear v Secretary of State for Communities and Local Government] [2015] EWHC 29 (Admin) at [32]. The conclusion as to policy CT1 in the [Ringmer] decision was in the circumstances obviously material to the present case (adopting the language of [Derbyshire Dales District Council] at [28]) such that the Secretary of State was required to take the [Ringmer] decision into account as a matter of legal obligation and provide reasons for departing from his prior conclusion as to Policy CT1.
The Secretary of State did not take the [Ringmer] decision into account in determining the [Newick] appeal. He concedes that this was an error of law vitiating the [Newick] appeal."
"140. Planning and the development of land are matters which concern the community as a whole, not only the locality where the particular case arises. They involve wider social and economic interests, considerations which are properly to be subject to a central supervision. By means of a central authority some degree of coherence and consistency in the development of land can be secured. National planning guidance can be prepared and promulgated and that guidance will influence the local development plans and policies which the planning authorities will use in resolving their own local problems. …".
"… It was not disputed in argument that a previous appeal decision is capable of being a material consideration. The proposition is in my judgment indisputable. One important reason why previous decisions are capable of being material is that like cases should be decided in a like manner so that there is consistency in the appellate process. Consistency is self-evidently important to both developers and development control authorities. But it is also important for the purpose of securing public confidence in the operation of the development control system. I do not suggest and it would be wrong to do so, that like cases must be decided alike. An inspector must always exercise his own judgment. He is therefore free upon consideration to disagree with the judgment of another but before doing so he ought to have regard to the importance of consistency and to give his reasons for departure from the previous decision.
To state that like cases should be decided alike presupposes that the earlier case is alike and is not distinguishable in some relevant respect. If it is distinguishable then it usually will lack materiality by reference to consistency although it may be material in some other way. Where it is indistinguishable then ordinarily it must be a material consideration. A practical test for the inspector is to ask himself whether, if I decide this case in a particular way am I necessarily agreeing or disagreeing with some critical aspect of the decision in the previous case? The areas for possible agreement or disagreement cannot be defined but they would include interpretation of policies, aesthetic judgments and assessment of need. Where there is disagreement then the inspector must weigh the previous decision and give his reasons for departure from it. These can on occasion be short, for example in the case of disagreement on aesthetics. On other occasions they may have to be elaborate."
Issue (3) – regulation 68(3) of the Habitats regulations
"(3) Where the assessment provisions apply, outline planning permission must not be granted unless the competent authority are satisfied (whether by reason of the conditions and limitations to which the outline planning permission is to be made subject, or otherwise) that no development likely adversely to affect the integrity of a European site … could be carried out under the permission, whether before or after obtaining approval of any reserved matters."
"Until such a time that appropriate mitigation is delivered, development that results in a net increase of one or more dwellings within 7km of Ashdown Forest will be resisted. …".
"213. Although the appeal site is situated close to the boundary of the 7km 'Zone of Influence', it is nonetheless located outside the designated area. This led to the Council's conclusion that, following assessment by Natural England, the proposal would not result in any likely significant effects on the internationally important features [of] the designated areas, either in isolation or combined with other projects. Based on the evidence provided I have no reasons to disagree."
"7) No development shall take place until a detailed scheme of ecological enhancements and mitigation measures, to include on-going management as necessary, based on the recommendations of the Ecological Assessment (September 2014) by Aspect Ecology Ltd has been submitted to and approved in writing by the local planning authority. The scheme shall be carried out and managed thereafter in accordance with the approved details."
Conclusion
Lord Justice Moylan
Lord Justice Peter Jackson