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England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Dennis, R (on the application of) v Sevenoaks District Council [2004] EWHC 2758 (Admin) (12 November 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2004/2758.html Cite as: [2004] EWHC 2758 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
THE ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand London WC2 |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
THE QUEEN ON THE APPLICATION OF DENNIS | (CLAIMANT) | |
-v- | ||
SEVENOAKS DISTRICT COUNCIL | (DEFENDANT) |
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Computer-Aided Transcript of the Stenograph Notes of
Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited
190 Fleet Street London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7404 1400 Fax No: 020 7831 8838
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
MR D EDWARDS and MR J PIKE (instructed by Richard Buxton & Co) appeared on behalf of the CLAIMANT
MR R LEWIS (instructed by Sevenoaks District Council) appeared on behalf of the DEFENDANT
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Crown Copyright ©
Introduction
The statutory framework
"(1) Subject to the following provisions of this section, in this Act, except where the context otherwise requires, 'development' means the carrying out of building, engineering, mining or other operations in, on, over or under land, or the making of any material change in the use of any buildings or other land.
(1A) For the purposes of this Act 'building operations' includes --
(a) demolition of buildings;
(b) rebuilding;
(c) structural alterations of or additions to buildings; and
(d) other operations normally undertaken by a person carrying on business as a builder."
"'building' includes any structure or erection, and any part of a building, as so defined, but does not include plant or machinery comprised in a building."
"The erection, construction, maintenance, improvement or alteration of a gate, fence, wall or other means of enclosure."
"The carrying out on agricultural land comprised in an agricultural unit of 5 hectares or more in area of --
(a) works for the erection, extension or alteration of a building; or
(b) any excavation or engineering operations, which are reasonably necessary for the purposes of agriculture within that unit."
"Subject to paragraph (3), development consisting of --
(a) the erection, extension or alteration of a building;
(b) the formation or alteration of a private way;
(c) the carrying out of excavations or the deposit of waste material (where the relevant area, as defined in paragraph D.4 below, exceeds 0.5 hectare); or
(d) the placing or assembly of a tank in any waters
is permitted by Class A subject to the following conditions --
(i) the developer shall, before beginning the development, apply to the local planning authority for a determination as to whether the prior approval of the authority will be required to the siting, design and external appearance of the building, the siting and means of construction of the private way, the siting of the excavation or deposit or the siting and appearance of the tank, as the case may be."
"The conditions in paragraph (2) do not apply to the extension or alteration of a building if the building is not on article 1(6) land except in the case of a significant extension or a significant alteration."
"'building' --
(a) includes any structure or erection and ... includes any part of a building, as defined in this article; and
(b) ... does not include any gate, fence, wall or other means of enclosure."
Factual background
"Cows have access to the existing clamp for self feeding from the east side, but access to the new clamp would be from the west side, because that is convenient in relation to [a] building and the open yard and space for loading is restricted at the eastern end. The new clamp would be sited on a location where green plastic-wrapped silage bales are currently stored, and would probably be used in the main for maize silage."
"... in order that the full impact of the proposal may be considered having regard to the close proximity of the adjacent residential property, which is statutorily Listed as being of Special Architectural and Historic Interest."
"Both the floor of the barn and the area immediately adjoining it were hard surfaced, composed partly of concrete and partly of hardcore, including broken tiles. The surface had failed in places, and this had allowed grass and weeds to come through. In addition, grass and weeds were growing on mud that had been deposited on the hard surface by tractors and by the general coming and goings of the farm."
"I attach a notification in respect of a silage pit to be erected at Hilders Farm ... The pit is to be constructed of metal channels and sleeper walls. The size is 13m x 35m x 2m (maximum).
"The silage is to be cut and fed and is not self-feed. There is an existing arrangement within the farmyard for dealing with run-off water. The fodder is needed to provide winter keep for the dairy herd and followers kept on this farm which extends to about 600 acres."
"Since our meeting further representations have been made by the applicant's agent to confirm the detailed works involved, and I have made a more detailed examination of the proposals. After considering the matter, it appeared to me that the proposals may benefit from 'permitted development', in which case planning permission may not be required for the creation of the silage clamp. After seeking advice from the Council's Legal Section, this view was confirmed. By way of explanation, I set out in brief the reasoning for this below.
"The relevant legislation is Part 2 and Part 6 of Schedule 2, Article 3, of the Town and Country Planning (General Permitted Development) Order 1995. This legislation provides for certain works to be undertaken without the prior requirement to obtain express planning permission. Whilst silage clamps are not specifically listed, there are 3 main components to examine as to whether the legislation imposes control. These comprise the concrete surface, the erection of a means of enclosure and the use of the hard surface for the storage of silage.
"The creation of a new concrete surface would constitute 'development' as it comprises an engineering operation. However, under the legislation referred to above, as would be the case here, it does not comprise works for accommodating livestock. It does not fall within the exceptions in para A.1(d) of Part 6 and being development which is reasonably necessary for the purposes of agriculture within the unit, it would comprise permitted development and does not require the prior benefit of planning permission. Furthermore, the concrete hardstanding is not subject to the prior notification procedure set out within condition A.2(2) to Class A. Therefore the view is taken that the Council as Planning Authority would have no means nor controlling its siting, form or appearance. Most importantly in the current case however is the fact that the agent has now confirmed that the existing hardstanding would be used and no new hardstanding created.
"With regard to the enclosure formed around the edge of the concrete hardstanding to contain the clamp, as this would not now exceed 2m in height, it too would benefit from being permitted development as a Minor Operation under Class A, Part 2 of the Town and Country Planning (General Permitted Development) Order 1995. Consequently the prior benefit of planning permission would not be required.
"With regard to the use of the concrete pad, a silage clamp comprises an agricultural use, which by definition does not constitute development. In the circumstances, the Planning Authority are not in a position to exercise control over such use. No material change of use would be involved.
"In light of the above and the confirmed nature of the works which are different to those originally put forward, the Council has come to the conclusion that the creation of the silage clamp in this instance comprises works which do not require express planning permission, and do not fall within the remit of the prior notification requirements. This is to be confirmed in writing to the applicants' agents within the next 5 days, who have independently raised the issue of the current proposed works constituting permitted development.
"In doing so the Council recognises that the applicant is entitled to exercise permitted development from within more than one Class of the Town and Country Planning (General Permitted Development) Order 1995. The order is so drafted that restrictions in any one Class do not preclude the benefit of permitted development if specific development is wholly in compliance with the provisions of another Class."
"1. The proposed 'silage pit' comprises walls made of sleepers, less than 2m in height, which are to be erected on two sides of a pre-existing concrete base.
2. The proposed development is merely the erection of walls, which is permitted development as being a wall or other means of enclosure within Class A Part 2, or, in the alternative, is an engineering operation within Class A(b) of Part 6.
3. If all parts of the construction were to be built together, it might be appropriate to look at the totality of the construction. In this case, the base already exists and the proposal merely consists of two walls."
"4. I saw an existing concreted area, at one end of which silage was being stored under a plastic covering. There was some temporary fencing dividing off the area. On the case file I had seen some photographs taken by Ms Butterfield in May 2003, copies of which I now produce ... It is my recollection that what I saw on my visit was very much the same as shown in the photographs, namely a silage store already in use on an existing concrete base.
5. Having seen the site and examined the planning files in detail, it occurred to me that the proposal might not require planning permission. I was aware of a report, written by another colleague, Gerry Harle, in relation to an earlier application that had been made in relation to the silage clamp, and which sought the Council's determination as to whether its prior approval to siting etc. was necessary. In that report Mr Harle had noted that the silage clamp was on the site of a former barn adjacent to an existing silage clamp. It appeared to me that the base of the clamp had utilised the floor of the former barn, even if some work may have been carried out to it. A copy of Mr Harle's report is now produced ...
6. I had also read two letters on the file from the Council's agricultural consultant, Richard Lloyd Hugues, dated 23 May and 20 June 2003 ... The earlier of the two letters confirmed that silage was being stored on the existing concrete pad. The letter also contained the suggestion that the proposal was permitted development as being a 'minor operation' under Schedule 2 Part 2, Class A of the [Order]. In his second letter, under the heading 'Conclusions', Mr Lloyd Hughes had stated that Mr Vicary had confirmed to him that the concreted area would continue to be used as a silage pad, even if permission was not granted for the surrounding walls.
7. I referred Mr Lloyd Hughes' comments to the Council's solicitor in order to obtain his legal opinion as to whether they were correct. He said that they were. As a result, I concluded that the proposal was permitted development. My conclusion was based on the knowledge that the concrete base already existed and that the proposal, in effect, merely consisted of the erection of walls less than 2m in height. They would form a rectangular structure, enclosed on three sides, and I regarded what was proposed as the formation of an 'enclosure', permitted by the GDPO.
8. It seemed to me that the two elements -- the concrete base and the walls respectively, were two separate schemes, with the former already constructed, in use, and destined to remain in use whether or not walls were later added. Had it been Mr Vicary's intention to construct the silage clamp as a single structure, I would not have thought it appropriate to examine its individual components separately. However, in the light of all the circumstances, I concluded that they were more accurately to be regarded as separate schemes, and I wrote to Mr Dennis on 3 December 2003 confirming that both the base and the walls were permitted by the GPDO."
"The site of the clamp is to be on the site of a former Atcost barn and adjacent to an existing silage clamp. The pit is to be constructed of metal channels and sleeper walls measuring 13m x 35m x 2m in height."
"As indicated above, the application for the silage walls is currently the only matter for determination: however Mr Kernon, in passing, has stated that the concrete pad itself does not have planning permission, and he also questions whether it is outside the permitted development procedure, (in Part 6 of Schedule 2 of the GPDO) and potentially at risk of enforcement action. I believe this is not the case, for the reasons set out below.
"As I understand the position, the concrete pad (if not merely a repair of an existing surface) would have comprised an engineering operation, not a building."
"I consider the starting point, with regard to the current planning application, is the existence of the concrete pad which has planning consent by virtue of the GPDO. The storage of silage on the pad (either in a makeshift straw clamp, or in plastic bags) is an agricultural use and not development. I see no mechanism under planning provisions for barring this activity, and Mr Vicary has made it clear that in the event of not being able to go to the further stage of erecting permanent walls to the pad, he would continue to use it for maize silage in its current form. Mr Kernon's suggestion that the pad should be abandoned and an alternative pad erected in another location does not appear realistic, nor is it the likely outcome if planning consent for the walls were refused."
"As explained in my letters, in my view the chosen site is preferable because it utilises an existing concrete pad, next to the existing open silage clamp used for grass silage, laid to falls to an existing dirty water drainage system. Silage is stored on the pad already (the remainder of last year's maize silage clamp is evident on the site) but apart from the use of the existing sleeper wall to the other clamp on the north side, Mr Vicary has been limited to containment at the sides of the clamp through the use of large rectangular straw bales. This restricts the capacity of the clamp and is less efficient in ensuring a well-sealed clamp (which helps to ensure the maize is in good condition and does not cause odour through rotting).
...
"I gather if the permanent walling were not approved for any reason, Mr Vicary would investigate other possible options for temporary free-standing containment. It appears inevitable, and indeed appropriate from the point of view of efficient farm management, that storage of maize silage could and would continue in this position in one form or another irrespective of the outcome of this application."
"The Council accepts that, if considered 'holistically', the silage clamp would be a 'building'. However, in all the circumstances the Council was entitled to treat its two elements -- the walls and the floor -- separately. So considered, the clamp was not a 'building' and the prior approval condition did not apply.
"The Council was entitled to treat the two elements separately because:
(i) the floor of the clamp comprised an existing base, the base of a barn that had been demolished; and
(ii) silage was being stored on the base, and would continue to be stored there, whether or not surrounding walls were constructed."
"What I intended to convey in paragraph 7 was that, at the time I made my decision on 3 December 2003, I was aware that the base of the clamp was already in existence. That belief was correct, and Mr Dennis's statement confirms that the base had, in fact, been provided by 1 October 2001.
"On re-reading my first statement, I can understand why Mr Dennis and Mr Kernon [a consultant appointed by Mr Dennis] made the assumption that they did. However, the assumption was not right, and I believe it important that I clarify the point."
"In 2001 I re-surfaced the whole of the hard-surfaced area. The new concrete therefore extended beyond the floor of the barn itself, which I demolished, but it did not extend beyond the area that had always been hard-surfaced.
"The purpose of that re-surfacing was not simply to provide a base for a new silage clamp. The hard surface had always been used for general farm purposes, including silage storage, and in particular for providing access for both animals and farm vehicles around that part of the farm. The new surface serves the same purpose, although I am currently storing more silage there than in the past. About three-quarters of the concrete area is taken up with silage storage at the present time. That area will, of course, reduce as the winter progresses.
"I have not constructed sleeper walls for the silage given the present proceedings. The silage is presently enclosed by straw bales. If I am unable to construct sleeper walls I will continue with this method."
Submissions
(1) It erred in disassembling the silage clamp into its component parts -- concrete base, walls and use for storage of silage -- and in not considering the proposed development -- the provision of a silage pit or clamp -- in a holistic way as a single scheme or project. He relied in particular upon the decision of the House of Lords in Sage v Secretary of State for the Environment, Transport and the Regions [2003] UKHL 22 [2003] 1 WLR 983. I take the facts of that case from the headnote:
"The local planning authority served an enforcement notice on a landowner informing him that he was in breach of planning control in partially erecting a dwelling house, and requiring its removal. No building work was carried out on the structure during the four years preceding service of the notice, and the building was unfit for habitation since the ground floor consisted of rubble, there were no service fittings or staircase, the interior walls were not plastered and the windows were unglazed. The landowner appealed against the enforcement notice on the ground that the building was an agricultural building for which planning permission was not required, or alternatively, that the notice had not been served within the time limit of four years after 'the operations were substantially completed' as specified by section 171(B)(I) of the Town and Country Planning Act 1990. An inspector appointed by the Secretary of State rejected the appeal and held that, having regard to the layout and appearance of the building, it was not an agricultural building but a dwelling house, that the time limit of four years did not begin to run until the whole operation of creating the dwelling house was substantially completed and that, as a question of fact and degree, the house was a building in the course of construction and was not 'substantially completed'. The landowner appealed to the High Court on the ground that since all the work remaining to be done on the dwelling house was either internal work or work which did not materially affect the external appearance of the building it was, pursuant to section 55(2)(a) of the Act, work which did not amount to the development of land for which planning permission was required so that there were no further building operations to which an enforcement notice could apply, and that therefore the operations referred to in section 171B(I) must have been completed. The judge allowed the appeal on those grounds and the Court of Appeal upheld that decision."
"23. When an application for planning consent is made for permission for a single operation, it is made in respect of the whole of the building operation. There are two reasons for this. The first is the practical one that an application for permission partially to erect a building would, save in exceptional circumstances, fail. The second is that the concept of final permission requires a fully detailed building of a certain character, not a structure which is incomplete. This is one of the differences between an outline permission and a final permission: section 92 of the Act. As counsel for Mr Sage accepted, if a building operation is not carried out, both externally and internally, fully in accordance with the permission, the whole operation is unlawful. She contrasted that with a case where the building has been completed but is then altered or improved. This demonstrates the fallacy in Mr Sage's case. He comes into the first category not the second.
"24. The same holistic approach is implicit in the decisions on what an enforcement notice relating to a single operation may require. Where a lesser operation might have been carried out without permission or where an operation was started outside the four-year period but not substantially completed outside that period, the notice may nevertheless require the removal of all the works including ancillary works. [A number of authorities are cited.]
"25. These decisions underline the holistic structure of planning law and contradict the basis upon which the Court of Appeal reached its decision in favour of Mr Sage."
(2) Even if it was open to the defendant to disassemble the silage clamp into its component parts and consider the walls separately, since their only or principal purpose was to retain the stored silage, as opposed to enclosing an area of land, their construction fell within Class A2(2) in Part 6 -- the erection of a "building" (as defined in Article 1(1) of the Order) -- rather than Class A in Part 2 -- the erection of a gate, fence, wall or other means of enclosure.
"The appellants, with a view to extending the terraced area around a house, built a wall on or close to the boundary of the land and surrounding some half of its total perimeter and began to import soil and to dump it behind the wall. The local planning authority served an enforcement notice on them requiring them to remove the soil and to demolish the wall. At that time, the wall was not playing any part as a retaining wall since the soil had not arrived in sufficient quantity. The appellants appealed against the notice, but the Secretary of State upheld it with amendments. The appellants appealed, challenging that part of the notice which required them to demolish the wall, contending that the wall fell within Class II.1 of Schedule 1, Part 1 of the Town and Country Planning General Development Order 1963, which was not limited to walls which were means of enclosure. The Secretary of State contended that a wall to fall within Class II.1 had to fulfil some function as a means of enclosure, and that the wall in the instant case was not a means of enclosure but a structural wall, in view in particular of the fact that it formed part of a single operation of earth moving, terracing and the building of a retaining wall."
"I think that on the proper construction of this paragraph the building of a wall is not authorised unless the wall has some function of enclosure; in other words, it would not extend to someone who places a free standing wall in the middle of his garden in circumstances in which the wall neither encloses nor plays any part in the enclosure of anything ..."
"Mr Slynn on behalf of the Secretary of State submits that a wall within the meaning of the paragraph must fulfil some function as a means of enclosure, and for reasons which I have already given I agree with him. He goes on, however, to contend that a wall does not have that characteristic of being a means of enclosure if it is not, if one may so put it, an enclosing wall but a structural wall. In other words, he says that this wall is clearly intended as part of a structure to be completed in the future and that a wall which has that structural function is not to be regarded as a means of enclosure within the paragraph even though as in this case it happens to follow the line of the landowner's boundary. For my part, on this point I am not impressed by Mr Slynn's argument. If the wall in fact operates as a means of enclosure I do not for my part see why it should lose its privilege, as it were, under paragraph 1 merely because it has some function of retaining the soil as well. It does not seem to me that a wall which encloses and a wall which retains are necessarily two different things, and one might have, as [counsel for the appellant] said, certain walls with a kind of hybrid function in enclosing and retaining, so that I would not be disposed to uphold the Minister's contention on that ground."
"I adhere to the principle which I was endeavouring to express in Garland's case; there will very often be cases in which a single piece of engineering development contains within itself something which can fairly be described as a wall, and, since the development as a whole is not permitted, the development in part will not be permitted either. I can see that such instances will often arise, but I cannot bring myself to say that the present is such an instance. I think that one must look at the situation at the date when the enforcement notice was served. There was then visible on the land a wall which, on the face of it, was fully authorised by Class II.1, and I do not think that one is entitled to say that that wall loses its prima facie authority under the town planning legislation merely because in the future it may be the intention of the landowner to incorporate that wall into some larger engineering operation. It had not been so incorporated; I do not think that the intention of the owner so to incorporate it is necessarily conclusive, and I think that the only fair way of looking at this case is to say that, at the relevant time, the wall fell to be treated in isolation, and treated in isolation it was undoubtedly authorised."
Discussion and conclusions
"... with the former already constructed, in use, and destined to remain in use whether or not the walls were later added."
"Mr Sperryn is currently on leave until the New Year but before departing he did write to your client Mr Dennis setting out the current circumstances pertaining to the case, the legal issues upon which advice was clarified with the Council's Legal Officers, and the conclusions reached by the Council regarding the need for express planning permission ...
"The letter set out the conclusion that the proposed works, now being advanced by Mr Vicary, were not such to require express planning permission and did not fall within the remit of the prior notification requirements. The relevant legal criteria were explained in the letter and I do not intend to repeat them here ...
"As I have stated above the current situation is that Mr Sperryn has considered the matter afresh, on merit, has sought clarification and legal advice with a conclusion being reached that the works now proposed do not require express planning permission. Both myself and Mr Edwards [the Area Planning Officer] have reviewed this information and concur with the conclusion, which is shortly to be confirmed to the agents involved and the application treated as withdrawn."
"6. I have in the end been persuaded, with respect, that the language of the statute is open to a different interpretation and that it makes better sense of the legislation as a whole to adopt the holistic approach which my noble and learned friend has described. What this means, in short, is that regard should be had to the totality of the operations which the person originally contemplated and intended to carry out. That will be an easy task if the developer has applied for and obtained planning permission. It will be less easy where, as here, planning permission was not applied for at all. In such a case evidence as to what was intended may have to be gathered from various sources, having regard especially to the building's physical features and its design.
"7. It is shown that all the developer intended to do was to erect a folly, such as a building which looks from a distance like a complete building -- a mock temple or a make-believe fort, for example -- but was always meant to be incomplete, then one must take the building when he has finished with it as it stands. It would be wrong to treat it as having a character which the person who erected it never intended it to have. But if it is shown that he has stopped short of what he contemplated and intended when he began the development, the building as it stands can properly be treated as an uncompleted building against which the four-year period has not yet begun to run."
"The inspector rightly did not investigate the intentions of Mr Sage at various stages in the history nor the uses he had made of the structure from time to time. The character and purpose of a structure falls to be assessed by examining its physical and design features. The relevance of the assessment is to determine whether or not the building operation is one requiring planning permission. The actual use made of the building does not alter the answer to be given. Keeping a pig in the sitting-room or hens in the kitchen does not turn a dwelling house into an agricultural building even if the humans move out. Permission for a change of use may have to be applied for but that would be a separate question. The starting point for considering the permitted use of a new structure is the character of the building for which permission has been given or does not require to be given (section 75(3)): 'the permission shall be construed as including permission to use the building for the purpose for which it is designed'."
"Had it been Mr Vicary's intention to construct the silage clamp as a single structure, I would not have thought it appropriate to examine its individual components separately."
"It does not seem to me that a wall which encloses and a wall which retains are necessarily two different things, and one might have, as [counsel for the appellant] said, certain walls with a kind of hybrid function in enclosing and retaining." [Emphasis added.]