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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 >> Tesco Stores Ltd, R (on the Application of) v Forest of Dean District Council & Ors [2014] EWHC 3348 (Admin) (14 October 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2014/3348.html Cite as: [2014] EWHC 3348 (Admin) |
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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 TESCO STORES LIMITED |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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FOREST OF DEAN DISTRICT COUNCIL - and - JD NORMAL LYDNEY LIMITED ASDA STORES LIMITED WINDMILL LIMITED MMC LAND & REGENERATION LIMITED |
Defendant Interested Parties |
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Paul Stinchcombe QC and Graeme Keen (instructed by Thomas Eggar LLP) for the Second and Third Interested Parties
Hearing date: 2 October 2014
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Crown Copyright ©
Mrs Justice Patterson:
Introduction
"Demolition of existing finishing shop and erection of new finishing shop, offices with car parking and associated works. Erection of retail store of 3827 sq.m. gross internal floor area (Class A1), petrol filling station, car parking, service areas and associated development. Erection of 4 No. B1 units and 4 No. B1/B8 units."
i) the proposal would be contrary to the advice of the National Planning Policy Framework and policy CSP.12 of the core strategy in that there is insufficient need for a store of the size proposed and due to its scale would have a significant impact on the vitality and viability of the town centre;ii) the proposal would be contrary to the advice of the National Planning Policy Framework and Policy CSP.12 of the core strategy in the applicants have failed to satisfy the sequential test by failing to show sufficient flexibility and have discounted a sequentially preferable site which could be available in the town centre;
iii) the proposal would be contrary to Policy CSP.1 of the core strategy and the advice of the National Planning Policy Framework in that satisfactory information has not been submitted to demonstrate that the proposal would not result in an unacceptable adverse impact on European Protected Species;
iv) The proposal fails to make provision for the necessary contributions to mitigate the impact on the town centre via a section 106 legal agreements or undertaking. As such the proposal would be contrary to the National Planning Policy Framework and policy CSP.12 of the core strategy.
"that authority be given to the Group Manager, Planning and Housing, to grant planning permission subject to conditions including the requirement that the offices and finishing shop for JD Norman be completed and operational before work on the supermarket commences, and subject to satisfactory completion of a section 106 agreement to provide a shuttle bus for a period of not less than 5 years between the new store and the High Street via Cambourne Place…"
i) the proposal would safeguard existing jobs at JDNL;ii) the proposal would create new jobs;
iii) the impact arising from the proposal would be mitigated through an agreement under section 106 of the Town and Country Planning Act 1990.
Agreed list of issues
i) whether the council breached its statutory duty under section 38(6) of the Planning Compulsory Purchase Act 2004;ii) whether the council:
a) was required to consider the operation of Landlord and Tenant Act 1954 and, if so, whether it erred in law by failing to consider the operation of the Landlord and Tenant Act;b) whether the council took an illogical/irrational approach to the threatened loss of jobs at JDNL, in particular, whether the council failed to ask the relevant questions and/or failed to take reasonable steps to obtain the relevant information in relation to the threatened loss of jobs at JDNL.iii) whether the council irrationally relied on condition four and/or whether condition 4 does or does not sufficiently safeguard the continued existence of JDNL;
iv) whether the section 106 is CIL compliant and/or otherwise lawful and whether the council acted properly in giving weight to it.
Legal framework
"All one knows is that at the second that the resolution was passed the majority were prepared to vote for it. Even in the case of an individual who expressly gave his reasons in council half an hour before, he may well have changed them because of what was said subsequently in debate."
"(2) A planning obligation may only constitute a reason for granting planning permission for the development if the obligation is—
(a) necessary to make the development acceptable in planning terms;
(b) directly related to the development; and
(c) fairly and reasonably related in scale and kind to the development."
Planning policy
"In order to enhance the role of the town, the core strategy will support the proposed development of land east of Lydney for a new neighbourhood and will promote a new mixed development including amenity land along the access between the harbour and the town centre. The development of the town centre including improvements following the implementation of the highway strategy and the improvement of key retail sites will be supported. This will…improve the town centre and develop up to an additional 600 sq. m. convenience retailing and about 1,500 sq. m. for comparison goods principle within the south eastern part of the town centre."
"7.27 the development of Lydney is critical to the district as a whole. To rely on incremental growth in the (often declining) sectors present in the town's economy or not to intervene in the town centre would result in a declining town and one that could not support the wider area in the manner envisaged…
…
7.31 although there is possibly a case for the remodelling of the stores, indications are that there is unlikely to be major scope for additional convenience retailing in the town, though a modest increase will be planned."
"Economic development will be promoted throughout the district in accordance with a spatial strategy and its allocations. This will encourage new and more diverse types of employment and supporting infrastructure to be established by making land and premises available."
"As part of its promotion of employment uses the policy encourages the retention of employment in locations presently used for employment, unless they are allocated for another purpose or can be shown to be unsuitable. Its scope is not confined to traditional areas or uses (B1, B2, B8 for example). The intention is to allow as broad a range as possible of alternative employment generating proposals to be considered on any given site. This range will be limited by the location and nature of the site concerned. Sites in established employment estates will not be suitable for the same uses as some in or close to town centres. Retailing may be considered as suitable where it doesn't conflict with the need to protect shopping in a town centre. By being flexible with the types of employment, a better range will be established through time. It will be a long term process but given the variety of sites (some of which are in exceptional locations), it will deliver welcome change over a wide area."
The Officer Report
"Policy CSP.12 of the Core Strategy focuses on Lydney and identifies that in order to support the role of the town centre the proposed development to the east of Lydney for a new neighbourhood will be supported. The land identified for the neighbourhood centre is outside of land subject of this application and is located further to the north. This, along with other measures, would enable employment generating uses to be developed. The proposal for a new supermarket will generate jobs, and although this is a different type of employment to that previously approved, it remains an employment generating use. However, although this is the case, the supporting text to policy CSP.12 identifies that uses which conflict with the broader claims of economic regeneration and could harm the town centre will not be permitted. This will be assessed in greater depth below. Policy CSP.12 also identifies that an additional 600 sq. m. con convenience goods retailing and about 1500 for comparison goods is to be provided principally within the south eastern part of the town centre. The proposal would be contrary to this due to its location and amount of convenience goods floor space, as 1462 sq. m. is proposed."
"In conclusion it is considered that, in the wider sense, the principle of a store in that it creates employment rather than the employment uses envisaged by the existing planning permission is accepted however the store provides greater convenience retailing envisaged within the core strategy and this, and the other issues of material consideration which must be assessed are considered below. The principle of the provision of B1, B1/B8, new finishing shop and offices is considered acceptable and this element of the scheme would accord with the policy CSP.7 of the core strategy."
Impact on town centre vitality and viability and consumer choice
"The information provided has been assessed by the council's retail consultant who has concluded that the trading effects of the proposed store will have a clear adverse impact on the financial turn over in Lydney town centre. When combining the convenience and comparison good sectors, the cumulative impact will be a loss of 31% of the retail annual turn over in 2017."
"Due to the concerns identified above the council's retail consultant has undertaken their own analysis of financial impact in relation to the convenience good sector. This concludes that the impact of the Asda proposal will result in an overall cumulative loss of trade to Lydney town centre of 38% at 2017. The impact on existing stores in Lydney is different for each. The impact on trade for the existing Tesco store would be 37% with £11.5 million diverted to the proposal. For the Co-op the impact would be 26% with £2 million trade diversion. …As a result of this analysis it is considered that there would be a noticeable effect on the trading performance of the Tesco store. Although it is considered that this store would not close, the level of impact is likely to have knock-on consequences for the town centre. In relation to the Co-op store it is already trading at a level below the 2011 Lydney retail study benchmark figure and the development would worsen their situation. The store is considered to have a modest trading performance but is distinctly less well-used than the Tesco store. There is therefore already pressure on the Co-op store without the Asda store opening. …it is considered that the proposal would divert £15.9 million from the town centre retail sector which would have a marked effect on the future trade performance of the town centre. In addition, the loss of linked trips to Tesco and spin off benefits this may provide in the form of linked trips is key. …The proposal is in an out of town location, and at the present time isolated, although it is acknowledged that there are extant permissions for both residential and employment development. The store is located approximately one kilometre from the town centre and linked trips are far more unlikely. Whilst there is a footpath link that is to be provided there is no intervisibility with the town centre. A store of the nature proposed is more likely to offer a one-stop 'shopping experience' than a store within the town centre where there are opportunities for linked trips and the benefits that this bring which are both for convenience goods retailers and other services … Overall it is considered that the trading effects of the Asda store will have a clear adverse impact upon financial turnover in Lydney town centre. The retail sector in the town could be impacted upon by 31% with the impact on the convenience goods sector at 38% it is therefore considered that the proposal would be contrary to the aims and aspirations of policy CSP.12. …the NPPF asks LPAs to consider whether the impacts associated with the development can be classed as 'significant adverse impacts'. For the reasons identified within this section is it considered that the impact of the proposed Asda can be classed as significantly adverse."
"In conclusion, it is considered that the proposal fails to demonstrate compliance with the sequential test and the NPPF identifies where this is the case though the application should be refused. The NPPF also identifies that if there is a 'significant adverse impact' then the application should be refused. In this case, it is considered that there are significant adverse impacts due to the scale and financial impacts on the town centre, possibility of store closure and the loss of town centre vitality. It is, therefore, considered that the proposal is contrary to the advice in the NPPF and policy CSP.12 of the Core Strategy."
Other material considerations
"The information provided by the applicants is welcomed, but raises a number of questions. Firstly no evidence has been provided that the lease finishes at the end of 2014. If it were provided it would help support the applicants' position and it is acknowledged that to have the facilities on land within their ownership would provide greater security. There is no reason to doubt that the lease does not finish at the end of 2014, in which case the applicants have been asked to demonstrate what alternative provisions are in place to continue to deliver the planned orders which the supporting information highlights is in place until 2017 with major world wide manufacturers. …the applicants have been asked to provide further information to demonstrate how granting permission for the Asda store would enable the development of the new finishing store and offices in financial terms and have confirmed that £1.5 million of investment will be provided to allow the construction … the applicants are of the opinion that the proposal will secure the existing jobs at JDN and the opportunity of further jobs at the site. It would be possible to ensure that the new finishing shop and offices were built prior to the commencement of the development of the new store thereby giving the opportunity to secure the business. Whilst it is acknowledged that there is planned work to 2017 which indicates the likelihood of the business continuing to operate, should market forces dictate there would be no guarantee that the actual jobs would be retained. It is also important to recognise the other job opportunities which would arise from the other B1 and B1/B8 development, but this should be balanced with the concerns raised regarding the potential for store closures or downsizing within the town centre and associated potential for job losses. …it is therefore considered that the proposal does offer wider benefits to which a great degree of weight can be attached. Greater weight could have been attached if further supporting information had been provided. Notwithstanding this, the consequences of allowing the proposal would mean that it would run contrary to the need to recognise town centres as the heart of communities and to pursue policies to support their vitality and viability as identified within the NPPF."
Impact mitigation and section 106 requirements
i) £25,000 for town centre management advice which would be paid to an expert town centre management adviser to work with the town council and local traders to suggest improvements with a view to attracting more shoppers and visitors;ii) Town centre improvements - for which £210,000 would focus on physical improvements to the town centre;
iii) Market square – a feasibility study was to be undertaken and £20,000 was allocated towards the implementation of recommendations from that study;
iv) Additional CCTV camera coverage later confirmed to be £15,000;
v) Shop front improvement grants of £5,000 each for up to twenty shops linked to the town council's neighbourhood plan design guide;
vi) A shuttle bus to be provided from Asda to the High Street via Camborne Place for a period of five years or less if a commercial operator took over the service sooner;
vii) Transport/path link to town centre contributions to the town centre in the sum of £75,000.
"It was suggested to the applicants on a number of occasions during the course of the application, that they may wish to provide evidence to support the material considerations which they had identified. For understandable reasons a copy of the lease between MMC and Federal Mogul has been provided on a confidential basis. The purpose of its provision is to demonstrate that the lease will expire at the end of December 2014 and there is no alternative. It is the case that the lease expires at the end of December 2014 and the tenant's right to occupy ceases at this point. However, this does not preclude the lease being extended by the landlord or a new lease being negotiated. In addition, the tenant could refuse to leave and therefore 'holding over' on the lease terms. Therefore, it cannot be agreed that there is no alternative to the granting of the planning permission to enable the offices and finishing shop to be constructed for JDN."
"In conclusion, therefore, whilst it is acknowledged that there are material considerations to be taken into account, they do not outweigh the development plan or the advice in the NPPF. The recommendation remains one of refusal but with the removal of the second and third suggested reasons."
The Committee Meeting
"This development of a brown field site would safeguard existing and create new jobs and that the impacts arising from the development would be mitigated by the 106 obligations offered. This motion was subject to a condition requiring the offices and finishing shop being completed and operational before work on the supermarket commenced and that any further conditions be delegated to officers to draft."
- Town centre management;
- Town centre improvements;
- Market square;
- Additional CCTV coverage;
- Shop front improvement grants.
"Prior to the works commencing on the retail store hereby permitted, the finishing shop and its associated offices hereby permitted shall be completed and operational."
Ground 1: Breach of the Council's statutory duty under section 38(6) of the Planning and Compulsory Purchase Act 2004
"23. I reject that argument on two grounds. First, the NPPF in referring to "relevant policies" is plainly directing the mind of the decision maker to the express terms of the relevant policies and requiring the decision maker to compare, for consistency, the express terms with the "cost/benefit" approach of the NPPF. Secondly, and perhaps more importantly, it is a fundamental and long established principle of planning law that something identified as a "material consideration" (such as the putative economic and environmental benefit in the present context) is conceptually distinct from considerations identified in the development plan and does not ceteris paribus carry the same weight as an aim or consideration identified in the development plan itself. It is, therefore, essential, both analytically and in policy terms, to separate objectives or considerations specifically set out in the development plan from something else that can count only as another "material consideration". Mr Cocks' argument confounds elements that fall within different relevant categories, and which have a different character for planning purposes, and it cannot rescue the inconsistency that is obvious on its face between the relevant policies and the NPPF."
Discussions and conclusions
Ground 2
(a) Whether the council was required to consider the operation of Landlord and Tenant Act 1954, and if so, whether it erred in law by failing to consider that the operation of Landlord and Tenant Act 1954; and(b) Whether the council took an illogical/irrational approach to the threat and loss of jobs at JDNL, in particular, whether the council failed to answer the relevant questions and/or failed to take reasonable steps to obtain the relevant information in relation to the threat and loss of jobs at JDNL
Discussions and conclusion
i) In the lease held by JDN sections 24-28 of the 1954 Act are excluded;ii) The lease under which JDN held the premises expires on 28 December 2014;
iii) By paragraph 8 of schedule 4 to the lease the landlord may serve a notice on the tenant at any time after 1 January 2014 extending the term on the lease to 28 December 2015 but no notice has been served by the landlord.
Ground 3: whether the council irrationally relied on condition 4 and/or whether or not condition 4 does or does not sufficiently safeguard the continuing existence of JDN
"To ensure that the benefits which were considered to outweigh the advice in the NPPF and the development plan were delivered."
Discussion and conclusion
"All you can do if you think that there is merit in the application and the points that are raised as other material considerations in terms of trying to safeguard the jobs at JD Norman is provide the facilities to allow that to happen so that you can require the finishing shop and the offices to be built in advance so that they are available for use prior to commencement of the store. You are not able to guarantee that the business will continue operating from the site. You have to make a judgment as to whether or not that is likely in light of the investment that is made and any other circumstances but we cannot guarantee that."
"In the supporting information that has come with the application it is quite clear that they intend to invest to do that; there is talk of £1.5 million loan to allow that to happen. That is significant investment. So members need to make a judgment as to whether or not that level of investment is a good indicator as to whether or not they realistically want to be there. It is not a guarantee but you can't have guarantees in terms of safeguarding jobs but is that genuine intention to deliver what they say they want to deliver which is new facilities to replace the old and then allow the redevelopment of the existing site with the supermarket and the four business units."
Ground 4: Whether the section 106 is CIL compliant and/or otherwise lawful and whether the council acted properly in giving weight to it ?
i) had no information as to the "town centre improvements" that would be made. Instead, improvements were to be after the grant of permission;ii) had insufficient information about whether a new market square would be feasible;
iii) had no information as to whether the contribution towards shop front improvements depended on matched funding by shop owners and, if so, the likelihood of this being forthcoming; and
iv) had no information about the frequency of the shuttle bus service.
i) a contribution for town centre management advice was desirable but was not necessary to make the development acceptable in planning terms;ii) a contribution of £25,000 for town centre management advice was not reasonably related in scale and kind to the development when the objective was to produce a town centre improvement plan;
iii) it was impossible to conclude that the contribution of £210,000 towards the town centre improvements was necessary to make the development acceptable in planning terms, directly related to the development, and reasonably related in scale and kind to the development when the committee did not know what improvements would be suggested in due course, what they would cost, whether and if so to what extent any such improvements could mitigate the harm identified;
iv) a contribution of £30,000 towards the market square was not necessary to make the development acceptable in planning terms in the absence of any detailed information which also made it impossible to conclude that it was reasonably related in scale and kind to the development;
v) it was impossible to conclude that a contribution of £100,000 towards a shop front grant scheme was necessary to make the development acceptable in planning terms when the basis for calculating that figure and a proper explanation of how the scheme would involve third party shop owners was absent; and
vi) it was impossible to conclude that the proposed shuttle bus was reasonably related in scale and kind to the development when the committee had no information about the proposed frequency of service.
Discussions and conclusions
"57. One of the problems for the Council in defending the first determination before Stewart J was the fact that there was no evidence upon which to base an analysis of how the harm created to the town centre by the development would or might be mitigated by the section 106 contributions. The reports of GVA set out, to an extent, the nature of the harm, e.g. substantial reduction in customers for and possible closure of the Co-op anchor store, with a correlative reduction in in-town linked trips. GVA expressly disagreed with Trilogy's contention that the picture surrounding linked trips was different from the position in 1999. However, they did not address the question of whether, how and to what extent the section 106 measures would or might address that harm. Nor did they do so in the 2013 report. It seems that they were not asked to address that issue which, in the light of Stewart J's judgment, is somewhat curious.
58. I am unable to accept the submission that OR2 remedied the errors of law with regard to the section 106 contributions identified by Stewart J, by its references to the purported changes in local policy and strategy. Indeed, the matters referred to above, as purportedly remedying the errors, were all before Stewart J. OR1 set out all of these matters in substantively the same terms as OR2 (see paragraph 29(vi) above); and Stewart J also expressly referred to them, in this context (see paragraph 26 of his judgment). He referred to the regeneration programme, the Cinderford Northern Quarter Area Action Plan, and the Cinderford Town Centre Regeneration Scheme. In concluding that the officers had failed to analyse how the section 106 contributions would mitigate the harm, the judge therefore had in mind these matters. There is simply nothing new, of substance, in OR2. Consequently, even if I were minded to consider that Stewart J might have been wrong to have made the findings that he did, it would be difficult for me now to come to a different conclusion. His judgment was not the subject of any appeal.
59. However, I consider Stewart J was clearly right.
60. In this case, the Council contend that the section 106 contributions are necessary to make the development acceptable in planning terms. Those contributions are intended to mitigate the harm caused by the development to the town centre – that is their only purpose. It is common ground that that harm will be substantial.
61. The Council was clearly required to be satisfied that the contributions would mitigate that harm. That required some consideration of how, whether and (if at all) the extent to which it would do so. That was not an onerous task, nor did it require any form of mathematical exactitude. But it was a material consideration with which the Planning Committee was required to grapple: and OR2 (and, in its turn, the Committee) failed to do so."
"The issue of impact mitigation is a key consideration as was recently demonstrated in relation to the High Court challenge in relation to the supermarket in Cinderford. It should be noted that the offer put forward is similar to that of the Robert Hitchins Ltd. and Sainsbury's proposal. The offer has been put forward on the basis of mitigating the impacts of a single store. Whilst the applicants' offer is welcomed, there are a number of issues that are raised as a result. Firstly, regarding the expert advice which would ultimately lead to the production of a town centre improvement plan. It would normally be expected that this work would accompany the planning application in order to inform and quantify the impacts that would need to be mitigated against. The danger of having it as part of the s106 package is that without the impacts being quantified, that nothing could be done in order to mitigate the harm that would result to the town centre. Regarding the feasibility study and implementation, it may be the case that it is not feasible to have a market or market square. The result could be that none of this element of the package would come forward and the impacts of the proposal would not be mitigated in either whole or part. Regarding the public realm improvements, a number of the options could make the town centre more attractive, but it should be borne in mind that there are no detailed schemes in place that this money could be spent upon or detailed evaluation as to how such works would offset the significant reduction in town centre trading which has been identified. Whilst it is acknowledged that the Neighbourhood Development Plan is in preparation, it has not been subject to the required referendum and as such, can be given no weight. Specifically relating to shop fronts grants, this could potentially be delivered, but if buildings are owned by third parties and the money is to be match funded with each party providing half the funds, there is a danger that this may not become reality.
Regarding the monies for CCTV provision, this is a contribution that could potentially be secured as it would be possible to identify those areas of the town centre currently not covered by the existing provision. In relation to the provision of the path/transport link, this is a contribution which has already been secured by the residential planning permission on land to the north and as such it is considered that it would not be reasonable to include within this package. The implementation of the link is addressed within the relevant highways section of this report. It is a contribution which at the present time has not been paid but it is understood that separate discussions are on-going regarding this matter.
Finally the bus service, the information provided is not sufficiently detailed to determine as to what this money would provide. The applicants have identified that it would run for a five year period, or less if a commercial operator took the service over sooner. However, there is no information regarding the frequency of the service over this five year period. Once the bus service stops, this mitigation, and the opportunities for linked trips that the applicant identifies, would cease. Overall, due to the lack of detail within the offer, it is not possible to make an informed judgement as to how far the package would mitigate the impacts of the proposal either in whole or part."
"That the application be approved, as this development of a brown field site would safeguard existing and new jobs and that impacts arising from the development would be mitigated by the 106 obligations offered."
"The motion is to approve the application on the basis that it safeguards the jobs at JD Norman and there are other benefits coming from the development in terms of additional jobs with Asda. The mitigation that is in the 106 has been considered and it is considered that in balancing the impact and the harmful impacts that we have identified against the benefits that accrue the balance is that the residual harm is acceptable. You are proposing that there is a condition specifically to deliver the finishing shop and offices before commencement of the retail store."