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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 >> Langley Park School for Girls, R (on the application of) v Bromley London Borough Council [2009] EWHC 324 (Admin) (25 February 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2009/324.html Cite as: [2009] JPL 1210, [2009] EWHC 324 (Admin), [2009] BLGR 509 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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THE QUEEN (on the application of THE GOVERNING BODY OF LANGLEY PARK SCHOOL FOR GIRLS |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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BROMLEY LONDON BOROUGH COUNCIL |
Defendant |
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- and - |
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LANGLEY PARK SCHOOL FOR BOYS |
Interested Party |
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Mr John Steel QC and Mr Andrew Sharland (instructed by Director of Legal Services of the Defendant) for the Defendant
Mr Thomas Hill (instructed by Messrs Trowers and Hamlins Solicitors) for the Interested Party
Hearing dates: 5th-6th February 2008
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Wyn Williams :
Background and Relevant Facts
"After an examinations of the plans, the governors of the Langley Park School for Girls expressed the view that they were generally satisfied with the plans as presented although this will need to be further discussed and agreed with the full Governing Body of the School. The Governors agreed to share and discuss the plans with the Governing Body"
"The proposal in fact constitutes the least efficient use of the site…… The existing buildings include those that are three actual storeys or three storeys in height…… When combined with the footprint that must be taken into account …… it is apparent that there is adequate land within the existing built part of this site….. to provide new buildings (in what is the dismissed option 1 called "front of school") without increasing the height from that of existing buildings. When one expunges the irrelevant planning considerations and adds the relevant planning considerations, "front of school" is the only siting option which could potentially be in accordance with the development plan, PPG2 and PPS1."...see page 224)
"More specifically in respect of the "front of school" option 1, it was rejected for unjustified reasons which can be given no material weight. Schools routinely have building works undertaken. The alleged need for four storeys is not made out by reason of the conflation of defective calculations ………….The alleged flexibility of siting in the potential configuration of built form of option 3 compared to option 1 is not accepted………. The 'front of school' option was the only approach that, with significant modification, might have been in accordance with the development plan." (see page 225)
"It is noted that Frankham 02 drawing admits "front of school" / "Option 1" represents the "least impact upon residential areas" yet fails to mention that this equally applies to the girls' school and, incorrectly under "option 3" contends "least impact on…… the girls' school ….." (see page 226)
"Members, having considered the report, objections, representations and the advice of the acting Chief Planner, on balance RESOLVED that PERMISSION BE GRANTED (Councillor Fawthrop recorded his contrary vote) as recommended SUBJECT TO ANY DIRECTION BY THE GOVERNMENT OFFICE FOR LONDON OR THE MAYOR OF LONDON and subject to the conditions ………….."
Grounds of Challenge
Ground 1
"22 (1) When the local planning authority give notice of a decision or determination on an application for planning permission or for approval of reserved matters and -
(a) planning permission is granted, the notice shall include a summary of their reasons for the grant and a summary of the policies and proposals in the development plan which are relevant to the decision;"
It is to be observed that the obligation imposed upon the local planning authority is to give a summary of its reasons for the grant of planning permission. It is common ground that the grant of planning permission is constituted not by a resolution to grant permission made by a committee of the local planning authority but by the issue of the notice. On a plain reading of the language of Article 22, therefore, it seems to me that the obligation of the local planning authority is to give a summary of the reasons which motivated the issue of the notice which granted planning permission.
"55. The new requirement [to give summary reasons] does not impose an undue burden upon local planning authorities. Officers' reports customarily include recommended reasons for refusal of planning permission or for the imposition of conditions. Members are free to debate those recommendations and agree or disagree with them, adding or striking out reasons for refusal or conditions. When officers recommend the grant of planning permission there is no reason why their reports should not similarly contain recommended summary grounds for so doing. Very often the conclusions in an officers' report will in effect be a summary of the grounds for granting planning permission. The members will be able to adopt or amend the officers' summary grounds, but the requirement to set out summary grounds in the decision notice will ensure that the members decide in public session why they wish to grant planning permission [my emphasis]."
56. A failure to include the summary reasons in a decision notice will not render the grant of planning permission null and void .............. If the defective decision notice is challenged in an application for judicial review the court will have a discretion to quash the notice. How it exercises that discretion will depend upon the particular facts of the case……..
58. The new requirement to give summary reasons for the grant of permission will be particularly valuable in cases where members have not accepted officers' advice, where the officer has felt unable to make a recommendation, where the officer's report fails to take account of a material consideration, but that omission is said to have been remedied by the members during the course of their discussions, or where an irrelevant factor has been relied upon by some members during the course of their discussions and it is important to ascertain whether it was one of the Committee's reasons for granting planning permission. In such cases - and I emphasise that these are merely examples - there would have to be very powerful reasons for not quashing a decision notice which did not include the local planning authority's summary reasons for granting planning permission. To allow extrinsic post hoc evidence as to what the local planning authority's reasons were in such cases would perpetuate the very problems that Parliament intended the substituted article 22(1) to address.
59. While there can be no objection in principle to a local planning authority amplifying its summary reasons, since by definition they will not be its full reasons for granting planning permission …., it would equally frustrate Parliament's intention if local planning authorities were able to rely post facto on entirely different or wholly new reasons for granting planning permission:…... It is difficult to see why a local planning authority which has failed to include any summary reasons for granting planning permission in its notice of decision should be placed in any better position. It is not suggested that the members did in fact agree their summary reasons at the meeting on 17th March, but due to an administrative oversight those reasons were omitted from the decision notice on 18th March. It would appear that the, then relatively recent, need to provide summary reasons was not appreciated by members and officers, and it was thought that merely listing the relevant policies would suffice.
66. I do not intend to suggest that in an appropriate case a local planning authority cannot remedy a failure to include summary reasons in the decision notice granting permission. …….
68. If there has been a failure to include summary reasons for granting planning permission in a decision notice, and the omission has occurred because the Committee has failed to agree upon the summary reasons for its decision, and the local planning authority wishes to make good that omission, then the proper course would seem to me to be for the officers to take the matter back to Committee at the earliest possible opportunity so that the Committee can decide, in public session whilst members' recollection is still fresh, what were its summary reasons for granting planning permission. It must be borne in mind that those reasons might well have been informed by the views of those who were against the grant of planning permission, as well as those who voted in favour. Adopting such a procedure would not necessarily persuade the court that a defective notice granting planning permission should not be quashed, but the fact that a local planning authority had adopted such a procedure would be a factor to take into account in the exercise of the court's discretion, since in practical terms the local planning authority would have undertaken the same exercise that it would have to undertake if the decision notice was quashed, although it would not have been free to change its mind and refuse planning permission."
Ground 2
"Members noted on behalf of the Langley Park Girls School it was submitted that there was an alternative site for the new school called Option 1. In the opinion of those representing the Girls' school there were significant advantages in locating the new buildings there. However the application which is for full planning permission did not contain that option. Members considered it is the acceptability of the application before the Committee that had to be determined. Members did not regard that it would be appropriate to defer the application for a new proposal based on Option 1 to be brought before them as the applicant was entitled to have the acceptability or otherwise of its own proposal assessed."
"21. The critical question, which it seems to me is one of mixed law and fact, is, therefore, whether the existence of a possible alternative scheme more beneficial in planning terms than that proposed in a planning application is a 'material consideration' for this purpose. The Act [The Town and Country Planning Act 1990] gives no help as to what may constitute such a consideration, but the following words of Cooke J in Stringer v Minister of Housing and Local Government [1970] 1 WLR 1281, at 77, are usually taken as an all context starting point:
"any consideration which relates to the use and development of land is capable of being a planning consideration. Whether a particular consideration falling within that broad class is material in any given case will depend on the circumstances."
Clarke and Jonathan Parker LJJ expressly agreed with the judgment of Auld LJ.
"(1) Land (irrespective of whether it is owned by the applicant for planning permission) may be developed in any way which is acceptable for planning purposes. The fact that other land exists (whether or not in the applicant's ownership) upon which the development would be yet more acceptable for planning purposes would not justify the refusal of planning permission upon the application site.
(2) Where, however, there are clear planning objections to development upon a particular site then it may well be relevant and indeed necessary to consider whether there is a more appropriate alternative site elsewhere. This is particularly so when the development is bound to have significant adverse effects and where the major argument advanced in support of the application is that the need for the development outweighs the planning disadvantages inherent in it.
(3) Instances of this type of case are developments, whether of national or regional importance, such as airports……. coal mining, petro-chemical plants, nuclear power stations and gypsy encampments……. Oliver LJ's judgment in Greater London Council v Secretary of State for the Environment and London Docklands Development Corporation and Cablecross Projects Limited suggests a helpful though expressly not exhaustive approach to the problem of determining whether consideration of the alternative sites is material…….. "comparability is appropriate generally to cases having the following characteristics: first of all, the presence of a clear public convenience, or advantage, in the proposal under consideration; secondly, the existence of inevitable adverse effects or disadvantages to the public or to some section of the public in the proposal; thirdly, the existence of an alternative site for the same project which would not have those effects, or would not have them to the same extent; and fourthly, a situation in which there can only be one permission granted for such development or at least only a very limited number of permissions."
(4) In contrast to the situations envisaged above are cases where development permission is being sought for dwelling houses, officers ….. and superstores ……
(5) There may be cases where, even although they contain the characteristics referred above, nevertheless it could properly be regarded as unnecessary to go into questions of comparability. This would be so particularly if the environmental impact was relatively slight and the planning objections were not especially strong:…………
(6) Compulsory purchase cases are a fortiori to planning cases: in considering whether to make or confirm a CPO it plainly material to consider the availability of other sites upon which the need could be satisfied, particularly where an available alternative site is owned by the acquiring authority itself …….."
As I have said Simon Brown J dismissed the Claimant's challenge accepting that it was permissible for the Secretary of State to have regard to the possibility of development upon an alternative site.
i) The duty of the Defendant is to consider the application before it on its merits and to decide whether it is acceptable in planning terms.
ii) Alternative sites or schemes are only potentially a material consideration and then only in exceptional circumstances.
iii) When considering whether a decision maker has exercised its planning judgment correctly and adopted a lawful approach to alternative sites, the appropriate test to be applied is that of Wednesbury unreasonableness.