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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 >> Cherwell District Council, R (on the application of) v First Secretary of State [2004] EWHC 724 (Admin) (06 April 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2004/724.html Cite as: [2004] EWHC 724 (Admin) |
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QUEENS BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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R(Cherwell District Council) |
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First Secretary of State |
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Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited, 190 Fleet Street
London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7421 4040, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Mr Philip Sales & Ms Sarah Moore (instructed by the Treasury Solicitor) for the Defendant
Mr Keith Lindblom Q.C. & Mr Rupert Warren for the Secretary of State for the Home Department (Interested Party).
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Collins:
"Demolition of existing buildings and erection of a Home Office -Immigration and Nationality Directorate – Accommodation Centre – Outline Proposal utilising existing access from the public highway
AT: land at DSDC, Bicester, Oxfordshire
RESERVED MATTERS: Siting, design, external appearance and landscaping".
"The notification is an outline notification to include access, with all other matters to be reserved for a future submission. The Home Office wishes to secure the planning principle for the development of the site and there will then be a design, build and operate (i.e. DBO) tender for all the Accommodation Centres. The Home Office will retain ownership of the site but the Centre will be operated by the chosen contractor (i.e. the successful DBO bidder). The Home Office will work with the chosen contractor on the detailed design of the Centre. However, it will be the Home Office who submits the details to the Council (i.e. to seek approval of reserved matters and discharge conditions) and continues to undertake all discussions with the Council".
In Paragraph 3.7 this was said: -
"The Home Secretary has announced that Administration Centres will be outside the main urban areas. This is because of the need to acquire large, discrete sites which have the capacity to facilitate on-site services without the need to put pressure on mainstream local services".
"Under the DBO contract the contractor will be granted a lease of the [development site] to allow the Contractor to undertake the development … The term of that base will be co-terminus with the DBO Contract".
The agreement also reflected concerns about enforcement and records (Paragraph H1) that 'all stipulations and restrictions on the designing, building and operating of the Development should be contained in planning obligations entered under Section 299A' of the Town and Country Planning Act 1990 as amended (the 1990 Act). I shall explain the significance of that when I deal with the relevant statutory provisions in due course. The agreement under s.299A was concluded on 14 April 2003. Enforcement is dealt with in Clause 11. The Home Office undertakes to co-operate with the councils in dealing with any breaches.
(1) the failure to follow a sequential approach to site selection;
(2) impact on the countryside;
(3) the unsustainable location of the sites;
(4) the adverse impact upon services provided for the local community by public agencies and the fear of an increase in crime and problems with public order; and
(5) site contamination and foul surface water drainage matters".
"In making the overall decision it is my view that greater weight should be attached to the factors against the proposal than for it. I say this for 3 reasons. First, the need to create a more sustainable pattern of development lies at the very heart of the Government's well-established approach to land use planning in this country. It would, in my view, be inappropriate for the Government to make an exception in respect of its own development. Second, the necessity for, and the benefits of, the proposed Accommodation Centre being in this rural area were not, in my view, shown by the Home Office to be convincing or overriding. The proposal seems to me to be driven by the availability of some surplus Government-owned land and by an undemonstrated belief that this rural location would aid the self-containment of the Centre. Third, the risk of road accidents involving pedestrian asylum seekers and others is, in my view, a very real, practical worry that was given insufficient attention by the Home Office. My overall conclusion is, therefore, that on balance, the First Secretary of State should not give approval to the proposed development".
The first two reasons are based on policy considerations, the inspector's view being that it had not been established that the development was appropriate in a rural area. The third was based on particular concerns about road safety.
"There is no reason to suppose that he had in mind that the Crown might need to get planning permission in respect of any other land or an interest in any other land".
"CROWN LAND AND CROWN DEVELOPMENT.
Part IV of the Circular deals with development by government departments. Paragraph 4, so far as material, reads:-
"Development by the Crown does not require planning permission. But Government departments will consult local planning authorities before proceeding with development (including material changes of use) which would otherwise require planning permission".
My attention is drawn to paragraphs 26 and 27. Material parts of these paragraphs read:-
"Unless the developing Department, when submitting the Notice of proposed Development, exceptionally asks for a longer period in which to start the development, and this longer period is agreed by the local planning authority, they will start that development within five years, …
If the developing department do not submit details of the reserved matters or do not commence development within the appropriate period and still intend to carry out the development they will submit a fresh Notice …"
"(1) This section has effect for the purpose of enabling Crown Land, or an interest in Crown land, to be disposed of with the benefit of planning permission …
(2) Notwithstanding the interest of the Crown in the land in question, an application for any such permission … may be made by –
(a) the appropriate authority; or
(b) any person authorised by that authority in writing;
and, subject to subsections (3) to (5), all the statutory provisions relating to the making and determination of any such application shall accordingly apply as if the land were not Crown land.
(3) Any planning permission granted by virtue of this section shall apply only –
(a) to development carried out after the land in question has ceased to be Crown land; and
(b) so long as that land continues to be Crown land, to development carried out by virtue of a private interest in the land".
By virtue of definitions contained in s.293, Crown land means land in which there is a Crown interest and the appropriate authority is the government department which has the management of that land. A disposal includes the grant of a lease: s.336(1).
"No enforcement notice shall be issued under section 172 in respect of development carried out by or on behalf of the Crown after July 1 1948 on land which was Crown land at the time when the development was carried out".
Subsections (2) to (7) deal with special enforcement notices and do not apply in the circumstances of this case. Section 299A enables the Crown to enter into planning obligations which echo those referred to in s.106(1)(a) to (d). There is such an agreement in this case. Breaches of any of the obligations can be enforced against by injunction, but by s.299A(5), the appropriate authority (in this case the Home Office) must consent to any such action. In the agreement, it had agreed to offer all reasonable co-operation in this respect and any failure would be enforceable through the court.
"The expression by or on behalf of the Crown is not to be interpreted, whether for the purposes of the common law principle of Crown immunity or for the purposes of s.294 of the TCPA 1990, by a strict application of the private law definitions of master and servant and principal and agent. I agree with Mr. Elvin that a wider and less restricted interpretation of those words is appropriate, at the very least when considering whether, as in the present case, the matter whereby the Crown seeks to achieve its purpose in the development of land is 'development by or on behalf of the Crown'
Where, (as in the present case) the context and subject matter, which is provided by the contractual provisions and other relevant circumstances relating to the development in question, demonstrate a significant degree of control by the Crown over the work being or to be carried out by the independent contractor and show that the purposes of the Crown, from which it will derive significant benefit, are to be achieved by the particular method which has been adopted for developing Crown land, the essentially factual conclusion, that the development in question is 'development by or on behalf of the Crown', may well be justified, as in the present case".
"The task of searching the country for a better available site and finding one, within a reasonable time-scale, that is demonstrably more acceptable to local people borders on the impossible. The Council's approach would, in my view probably be fatal to the Accommodation Centre concept".
The defendant agreed with the inspector.
" … all these materials broadly point to a general proposition , which is that consideration of alternative sites would only be relevant to a planning application in exceptional circumstances. Generally speaking … such circumstances will particularly arise where the proposed development, though desirable in itself, involves on the sites proposed such conspicuous adverse affects that the possibility of an alternative site lacking such drawbacks necessarily itself becomes, in the mind of a reasonable local authority, a relevant planning consideration upon the application in question".
Examples given by Simon Brown J in Trusthouse Forte Hotels Ltd v Secretary of State (1986) 53 P&CR 293 of developments having such significant adverse affects were airports, coalmining, petro-chemical plants, nuclear power stations and gypsy encampments. I venture to doubt whether an accommodation centre necessarily falls within the category to which Laws LJ has referred – he used the adjective conspicuous – but, even if it does, the weight of the planning objections to it on the site in question are material. The site itself, though rural, is not one where no development had thitherto existed and it was on the edge of other developments including HM Prison Bullingdon. The inspector was entirely justified in saying that the identification of alternative sites would have been a virtual impossibility. The Home Office accepted that the site was not ideal, but contended that the objections should not prevail. In my judgment, the inspector was correct and there is no error of law in the approach taken to the relevance of alternative sites.
'national policy requires a sequential approach to development'
The inspector regarded that as an over-simplification, stating that an urban focus was what was needed and a specific sequential approach was unnecessary. The defendant agreed.
"Where the footprint of the building only occupies a proportion of a site of which the remainder is open land (such as an airfield or a hospital) the whole site should not normally be developed to the boundary of the curtilage".
"As we have always said the Centres must be large enough to be self-sufficient so that they do not impact on local services and for this reason health and education facilities will be provided within the centre".
At the inquiry, the Home Office indicated that it was not prepared to undertake that any costs which might be caused to local services would be defrayed by it. The evidence put before the inspector led him to assess Government policy on Accommodation Centres in these words: (Paragraph 14.12):-
"Accommodation Centres for, in total, 3000 asylum seekers should be established away from those areas that have significant numbers at present (including London, Kent and certain inner city areas) so as to share their effects more evenly. They should be as self-contained as possible, to avoid placing excessive burdens on local services, such as schools and doctors. They should be trialed (sic) in both urban and rural areas to see how they perform in out of town as well as in town locations. One part of the trial should be for Centres of 750 persons capacity, with families as well as single persons; another should be for 400 single men. The policy is subject to assessment via the planning process".
Thus the minister's statements were not, as events turned out, entirely accurate since it was accepted that there might be an impact on local services, albeit it was said that that impact would be modest and would certainly not be excessive.
"The proposed Centre would not, however, be temporary. The Home Office see it as a permanent development. Any failings in the trial would lead to operational improvements being made".
"There is, as confirmed by the Home Office, evidence to the inquiry, an urgent need for a trial of accommodation centres for asylum seekers, both in urban and non-urban locations, and this is an essential part of the Government's policy on asylum …
Given this clear national policy background, the [defendant] does not agree with the inspector that it is necessary for the Home Office to demonstrate convincing reasons why it is necessary for such a proposal to be located in a non-urban location".
The Home Office policy was a matter which could properly be taken into account since it established the need. But there was no question of the policy dictating the defendant's decision in this instance. He had to look at the planning objections to the particular development in issue and balance those against the need for and benefits of that development. Thus the claimants reliance on West Midlands Probation Committee v Secretary of State [1998] TPC 388 is misplaced.
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MR JUSTICE COLLINS: Thank you all for your corrections of the various typos and so on. You have all had copies of the judgment. For the reasons given in it, this claim is dismissed.
MR NICHOLLS: My Lord, I appear on behalf of the First Secretary of State this morning. Thank you very much for your Lordship's judgment. May I ask for an order that the Council pay the First Secretary of State's costs?
MR KEEN: My Lord, I appear on behalf of the Council this morning. I cannot and do not oppose that application by the First Secretary of State. I do though have an application in respect of permission to appeal.
MR JUSTICE COLLINS: Let us deal with things one at a time. So far as costs are concerned, yes, presumably to be subject to a detailed assessment if not agreed. Yes, Mr Keen?
MR KEEN: My Lord, I apply for permission to appeal in respect of all of the seven grounds. If I can start firstly with the main ground -- your judgment on ground one -- that the Crown immunity should extend to (inaudible) carried out on the contract of the Crown. My Lord, in my submission, that judgment and the conclusion on that point is a novel and important point. It has always been assumed previously that development under a private interest, even though there is a superior Crown interest, requires permission, and therefore the issue raised by ground one, My Lord, namely whether the developments have been carried out for and on behalf of the Crown, and is therefore immune from planning control, is a point of general public interest and importance because, my Lord, it addresses the limits of Crown immunity. In contrast, the one statutory procedure under Circular 18/84 does not provide the same enforcement mechanisms and does not protect the public interests as would effective planning control.
MR JUSTICE COLLINS: But section 299A does not provide any more protection, does it, than the protection -- when I say protection I mean the enforcement provisions -- than does the extra statutory procedure?
MR KEEN: My Lord, the decision being in one respect you have the remedy under the Town and Country Planning Act; the other the (inaudible) judicial review for the reasons submitted.
MR JUSTICE COLLINS: Not necessarily judicial review. There is of course the procedure under the agreement, but in any event, it may be that the route is different, but the effect is surely the same, is it not?
MR KEEN: The effect is less secure for the Council because of the enforcement mechanism and the need to rely upon the 299A agreement as opposed to having the normal enforcement agreement --
MR JUSTICE COLLINS: Yes, but 299A bites on an agreement and there has to be an agreement. So what is the difference between a 299 and an extra statutory in terms of enforcement?
MR KEEN: My Lord, the mechanism is different.
MR JUSTICE COLLINS: The mechanism may be different but the effect is the same, is it not?
MR KEEN: It is the claimant's position, my Lord, the effect is less comprehensive and less good for the Council in this case, and, my Lord, therefore there are important and controversial issues that arise in relation to the first issue in relation to Crown immunity, and it is the Council's case that there is, firstly, a real prospect of success of persuading the Court of Appeal that the Council is right that the use of the Circular 18/84 procedure was unlawful in this case, but secondly, my Lord, there is also a compelling reason, namely that the issue is one of general public importance and that the implications reach beyond this case. There are, of course, other such centres proposed and indeed other development of Crown land.
My Lord, as far as the other six grounds are concerned, I can deal with these swiftly. In your judgment, in effect your Lordship dismissing each of the other six, again raises consequences which are, in my submission, plainly much wider than the implications for this case alone.
MR JUSTICE COLLINS: You are really basing this on ground one, are you not? Do you say that any of the other grounds by themselves would justify an appeal if I was against you on ground one?
MR KEEN: My Lord, I do, although I submit that ground one is plainly the major ground. But in respect of the others, they raise matters of public importance to differing degrees, for example the circumstances when it is necessary to consider alternative sites: the issue as to how the First Secretary of State addressed the Home Office Accommodation Centre Policy in terms of providing centres in non-urban locations, and also by way of example, the definition of curtilage that your Lordship has reached. They are all matters upon which the claimant says there are real prospects of success on appeal, and to differing degrees they raise important implications in planning context, and beyond such that there should be leave to appeal. My Lord, unless I can assist you further on any specific grounds?
MR JUSTICE COLLINS: No, thank you.
MR NICHOLLS: My Lord, I oppose this application. The language of your Lordship's judgment makes it quite clear that none of these arguments have any real prospect of success.
MR JUSTICE COLLINS: All you could say is that I formed some clear views but I can always be wrong.
MR NICHOLLS: One recognises, of course, that sometimes judges express themselves with more or less certainty, but from your Lordship's perspective, the certainty and clarity of the views you expressed make it clear that you are of the view that this has no real prospect of success. My friend suggests that the point in relation to Crown immunity is one of general public importance. It does not present itself in that way to your Lordship --
MR JUSTICE COLLINS: I did not really regard myself as breaking particularly new ground. It seemed to me that I was following Dumbarton.
MR NICHOLLS: Precisely so. My Lord, I say on both grounds: lack of a real prospect of success and no other reasons which would justify permission to appeal, if my friend is going to seek permission, he ought to ask the Court of Appeal, and I would respectfully ask you to refuse permission today.
MR WARREN: My Lord, I adopt those arguments with respect to my learned friend, Mr Nicholls. In particular, I adopt the submission that your Lordship's judgment on ground one is based purely on established case law, some of which goes back 50 years, and it is an irony of the case that exactly this point was made by my learned friend, Mr Elvin, in resisting the permission application in the Hillingdon case when he referred to Portus (1949). Of course, the matter is of public interest but the point is secure on established case law and clear in your Lordship's judgment. On that basis, I submit that there is no real prospect of success on it. The same goes, in my submission, for grounds two to seven, which are, as it were, traditional JR grounds which your Lordship has found clearly against the claimant on the facts of the case. So for those two reasons, My Lord, I too oppose permission being granted by your Lordship.
MR KEEN: My Lord, there are plainly distinguishing factors as submitted by Mr Elvin in the substantive hearing of this matter. My learned friend refers to Hillingdon but, of course, your Lordship will be aware there that there were no private rights granted until the development was implemented.
MR JUSTICE COLLINS: I appreciate that that was said to be the distinction.
MR KEEN: Exactly, you have the point. My Lord, but I go back to the submission that this is plainly a matter of general public interest and importance and for that reason it ought to go to the Court of Appeal and have them look at this novel point.
MR JUSTICE COLLINS: Thank you. No, I do not think this is an appropriate case to grant leave to appeal. It seems to me that I was not in fact breaking any new ground in the decision that I have reached. Two to seven depended and depend upon the facts of the case; one is merely following established case law. I appreciate, of course, that there is intense public feeling about this case, but that in itself is no good reason to grant leave to appeal. It is only if I take the view that there is a compelling reason -- and it must be a matter of law rather than of public interest in the case -- that gives rise to such a reason for the Court of Appeal to consider the matter, or of course that there is a real prospect of success. I am afraid I take the view that neither is established here. Of course, this is not the end of the line. If the claimants feel that I am wrong, they can apply to the Court of Appeal and the Court of Appeal will decide whether it is an appropriate case for permission.
MR KEEN: My Lord, I have one further application which is for an extension of time to file the notice.
MR JUSTICE COLLINS: Having regard to the imminence of Easter that does not seem to be unreasonable. How long are you asking for?
MR KEEN: 28 days instead of the 14, my Lord, although there is, as you say, Easter but also the fact that the Council has to go through its decision-making process.
MR JUSTICE COLLINS: I understand that. On the other hand, there has been a considerable delay as a result of these proceedings in the progress in what, I think, is regarded, or at least I am told is regarded, as a rather important development. We have Easter next week so you are really out a week. I think it is reasonable to give you 21 days.