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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 >> Evans v The Secretary of State for Communities And Local Government [2014] EWHC 4111 (Admin) (12 May 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2014/4111.html Cite as: [2014] EWHC 4111 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
PLANNING COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
(sitting as a Deputy High Court Judge)
____________________
CLIVE EVANS |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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THE SECRETARY OF STATE FOR COMMUNITIES AND LOCAL GOVERNMENT |
Defendant |
____________________
WordWave International Limited
A Merrill Communications Company
165 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2DY
Tel No: 020 7404 1400, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Ms Clare Parry (instructed by Treasury Solicitor) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 19th November 2014
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
NEIL CAMERON QC :
Introduction
i) Under ground 1 it is contended that the inspector misinterpreted paragraph A.2(c) of Class A of Part 1 of Schedule 2.
ii) Under ground 2 it is contended that the inspector misinterpreted Article 3(5).
The Background Facts
"4. The Appellant has constructed a first floor rear extension which does not extend beyond what was believed to be the original single storey lean to and a single storey extension of 4m depth from the outer wall of the lean to. There is no first floor extension above this 4m extension and the LPA has acknowledged that these works were carried out in good faith being permitted development
..
6. .On land within an AONB, the enlarged part of the dwelling house may, if it is only one storey, extend up to 4m beyond the wall of the "original" dwelling house and may be up to 4m in height. The "enlarged part" which is 4m in depth is only a single storey extension extending from the rear wall of the original lean to and therefore is permitted development. It does not have a floor above it and so cannot be considered to be a two storey extension see attached correspondence with the Council and the planning lawyer's advice given to Council (Doc 3).
7. With regard to the first floor extension, this is directly above the original lean to and does not extend beyond the rear wall of the original lean to as outlined in the red line drawing. Article 2(c) of the Schedule 2 to the Town and Country Planning General Permitted Development Order 1995 (sic) provides that an enlargement of more than one storey should not extend beyond the rear wall of the "original dwellinghouse" and therefore is permitted development. .
.
10. The Appellant submits, for the reasons set out at paragraphs 7-9 above, that the extension which has been constructed benefits from Permitted Development rights or alternatively that the majority of the development benefits from permitted development rights and that what has been constructed is not materially different from that which would be designated as permitted development and therefore planning permission should be granted.
11. In addition to the rear Permitted Development rights, the property also benefits from Permitted Development rights which allow the Appellant to construct a substantial two storey extension to the front of the property, as shown at Doc 7. ..
13. If planning permission is granted for the extension which has been constructed the Appellant would be prepared to forego his right to exercise his permitted development rights to the front of the building. ..
.
15. In addition the Appellant submits that the planning permission should be granted as what has been constructed is significantly more appropriate to the Green Belt than what he could construct to the front and rear of the property under permitted development rights which is the fall back position.
."
The Inspector's Decision
5. The previous Inspector's decision was set aside by consent on the basis that he
"ought to have considered whether the Claimant's proposed development benefitted from permitted development rights and failure to do so rendered the decision unlawful." It was however accepted that not all of the works shown in the above plans could be permitted development, whether under Class A,
Part 1, Schedule 2 of the Town and Country Planning (General Permitted Development) 1995 (as amended) ["the GPDO"] or otherwise. The works carried out to date, at least to the house, are indisputably part of a single building project. As a preliminary issue therefore, it is necessary to determine not how much of the full proposal amounts to permitted development, but rather, the extent of any permitted development rights available before the works began, having regard to the relevant provisions of Class A. Put another way, those rights would constitute the 'fallback' position, meaning what the Appellant would have been able to do lawfully without having to seek permission and strictly, what would thus be lawful with any unlawfully erected extensions removed.
6. The Department for Communities and Local Government issued Technical Guidance ["the TG"] on the permitted development provisions in August 2010, revised most recently in October 2013. In applying those provisions, the first question is not 'what did parliament intend as restrictions?' but 'what do the relevant parts of the GPDO say and what do they mean?' The meaning of any particular provision is ultimately a matter for the courts. The TG is not a statement of policy where a planning judgment is involved. It is rather the Secretary of State's interpretation and application of a statutory instrument, certainly overseen and approved by Parliament but itself originating from his own department. Comfortably or not, as I stand in his shoes when determining an appeal, his interpretation of the provisions necessarily carries the highest possible weight in the absence of any contrary finding by the courts (or unless that interpretation is so plainly wrong that no reasonable tribunal could agree with it).
7. Turning to the provisions themselves, Class A grants permission for the "enlargement, improvement or other alteration of a dwellinghouse" subject to the exclusions at paragraph A.1. There is no dispute that the house lies within the Chilterns Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty ("the AONB") so that the exclusions at paragraph A.2 also apply. Thus, no permission is granted if "the enlarged part of the dwellinghouse would extend beyond a wall forming a side elevation of the original dwellinghouse" (A.2(b)) or if "the enlarged part of the dwellinghouse would have more than one storey and extend beyond the rear wall of the original dwellinghouse" (A.2(c)).
8. The 'original dwellinghouse' for this purpose means the house as it existed on 1 July 1948 if built before then, as is agreed to be the case here. .
16. The TG is equally unequivocal on the effect of paragraph A.2(c), stating that "an extension from a rear wall is not permitted development if it results in an enlarged area of the house that has more than one storey." Advice on the Planning Portal is even blunter: "on designated land, no permitted development for rear extensions of more than one storey3." While an argument might be made for a different, perhaps simpler, wording in the provision itself, that does not prevent it having the meaning described in the TG and it follows the pattern of the equivalent provision (paragraph A.1(f)) for non-designated land.
In passing, the provision does not exclude all extensions above ground floor level, only those extending from a rear wall.
17. Further, there is no reason why the logic of the guidance in relation to vertically stepped rear walls under paragraph A.1(e) should not be equally applicable to the interpretation of "the rear wall" under A.1(f) and A.2(c) for horizontally stepped walls. Thus it does not mean "the (section of) wall furthest from the front" but rather each (section of) wall at the rear from which the extension is intended to project. As the TG states, the term "more than one storey" might comprise the addition of a storey onto an existing part of the house. Measurement of the extension beyond the rear wall should be made from the base of the rear wall of the original house that the enlargement extends beyond. Were this extension being considered against paragraph A.1(f), that wall would be the former or inner main wall, not the outer wall of the lean-to. The same principle applies however so that paragraph A.2(c) excludes any first floor rear extension from Class A.
18. Guidance documents cannot be expected to give examples covering every eventuality but I can find no good reason to apply any other meaning to paragraph A.2(c) than that given in the TG. Whatever the depth of the lean-to, the extension at first floor level was built out from the (first floor) rear wall and results in the enlarged part of the dwellinghouse having more than one storey.
It is thus not permitted development. That leads to the conclusion that the only form of (rear) extension permitted in this instance would have been one of single storey and no more than 4m in depth and height, pursuant to paragraph A.1(e). I have already concluded on the question of the position of the original rear wall (at ground floor level) from where the 4m measurement should be taken. It follows that even by itself, the ground floor extension would exceed the GPDO provisions. I address other 'fallback' possibilities below.
30. Such an extension would certainly impinge on the openness of the Green Belt, though its limited width would mitigate its visual impact and the design would give it at least partly the appearance of an outbuilding or stables, as the Appellant suggests. In that respect it is only the development certified that could be lawfully erected, given the operation of Article 3(5). I accept that the Appellant might go ahead with it but cannot be certain of that. What this amounts to however is the exploitation of the Council's error, albeit one only now appreciated, in order to obtain permission for an unlawfully erected and inappropriate development in the Green Belt. Put another way, the 'threat' can only be made because of that error.
.
35. Though not part of the Council's initial refusal, I accept their more recent submission that the extension cannot now be lawful because of Article 3(5) of the GPDO. This provides that the permission granted by Schedule 2 shall not apply if "in the case of permission granted in connection with an existing building, the building operations involved in the construction of that building are unlawful." The "existing building" means as at the date of the application, so including the recent if uncompleted extensions. The definition of a "building" under Article 1 (and under section 336 of the 1990 Act) for this purpose includes part of a building. The rear and side extensions described above have been constructed unlawfully for the reasons given above. It follows that no permission is granted under Schedule 2 at the present time.
Footnote 3 to the decision letter : For the record, I do not know when that advice was first published."
The Legal Framework
"59. Development orders: general.
(1) The Secretary of State shall by order (in this Act referred to as a "development order") provide for the granting of planning permission.
(2) A development order may either
(a) itself grant planning permission for development specified in the order or for development of any class specified; or
"
"60. Permission granted by development order.
(1) Planning permission granted by a development order may be granted either unconditionally or subject to such conditions or limitations as may be specified in the order."
i) Article 3 provides:
"Permitted development
(1) Subject to the provisions of this Order and regulations 60 to 63 of the Conservation (Natural Habitats, &c.) Regulations 1994 (general development orders), planning permission is hereby granted for the classes of development described as permitted development in Schedule 2.
(2) Any permission granted by paragraph (1) is subject to any relevant exception, limitation or condition specified in Schedule 2.
(3) References in the following provisions of this Order to permission granted by Schedule 2 or by any Part, Class or paragraph of that Schedule are references to the permission granted by this article in relation to development described in that Schedule or that provision of that Schedule.
(4) Nothing in this Order permits development contrary to any condition imposed by any planning permission granted or deemed to be granted under Part III of the Act otherwise than by this Order.
(5) The permission granted by Schedule 2 shall not apply if
(a) in the case of permission granted in connection with an existing building, the building operations involved in the construction of that building are unlawful;
(b) in the case of permission granted in connection with an existing use, that use is unlawful.
."
ii) Class A of Part 1 of Schedule 2 provides, so far as relevant:
"Part 1 DEVELOPMENT WITHIN THE CURTILAGE OF A DWELLINGHOUSE
(ClassA)
Permitted development
A.
The enlargement, improvement or other alteration of a dwellinghouse.
Development not permitted
A.1
Development is not permitted by Class A if
(za) ..;
(a) ;
(d) the enlarged part of the dwellinghouse would extend beyond a wall which
(i) fronts a highway, and
(ii) forms either the principal elevation or a side elevation of the original dwellinghouse;
(e) [subject to paragraph (ea), ] the enlarged part of the dwellinghouse would have a single storey and
(i) extend beyond the rear wall of the original dwellinghouse by more than 4 metres in the case of a detached dwellinghouse, or 3 metres in the case of any other dwellinghouse, or
(ii) exceed 4 metres in height;
(ea) until 30th May 2016, for a dwellinghouse not on article 1(5) land nor on a site of special scientific interest, the enlarged part of the dwellinghouse would have a single storey and
(i) extend beyond the rear wall of the original dwellinghouse by more than 8 metres in the case of a detached dwellinghouse, or 6 metres in the case of any other dwellinghouse, or
(ii) exceed 4 metres in height;
(f) the enlarged part of the dwellinghouse would have more than one storey and
(i) extend beyond the rear wall of the original dwellinghouse by more than 3 metres, or
(ii) be within 7 metres of any boundary of the curtilage of the dwellinghouse opposite the rear wall of the dwellinghouse;
(g) the enlarged part of the dwellinghouse would be within 2 metres of the boundary of the curtilage of the dwellinghouse, and the height of the eaves of the enlarged part would exceed 3 metres;
(h) the enlarged part of the dwellinghouse would extend beyond a wall forming a side elevation of the original dwellinghouse, and would
(i) exceed 4 metres in height,
(ii) have more than one storey, or
(iii) have a width greater than half the width of the original dwellinghouse; or
(i) it would consist of or include
(i)
(iv) an alteration to any part of the roof of the dwellinghouse.
A.2
In the case of a dwellinghouse on article 1(5) land, development is not permitted by Class A if
(a) it would consist of or include the cladding of any part of the exterior of the dwellinghouse with stone, artificial stone, pebble dash, render, timber, plastic or tiles;
(b) the enlarged part of the dwellinghouse would extend beyond a wall forming a side elevation of the original dwellinghouse; or
(c) the enlarged part of the dwellinghouse would have more than one storey and extend beyond the rear wall of the original dwellinghouse."
iii) Article 1(2) defines a number of terms, including the following:
"building"
(a) includes any structure or erection and, except in Parts 24, 25, 33 and 40, Class A of Part 31 and Class C of Part 38, of Schedule 2, includes any part of a building, as defined in this article; and
(b) does not include plant or machinery and, in Schedule 2, except in Class B of Part 31 and Part 33, and does not include any gate, fence, wall or other means of enclosure;
"existing", in relation to any building or any plant or machinery or any use, means (except in the definition of "original") existing immediately before the carrying out, in relation to that building, plant, machinery or use, of development described in this Order;
"original" means
(a) in relation to a building, other than a building which is Crown land, existing on 1st July 1948, as existing on that date and, in relation to a building, other than a building which is Crown land, built on or after 1st July 1948, as so built;
(b) in relation to a building which is Crown land on 7th June 2006, as existing on that date and, in relation to a building built on or after 7th June 2006 which is Crown land on the date of its completion, as so built;"
iv) Article 1(5) provides:
"(5) The land referred to elsewhere in this Order as article 1(5) land is the land described in Part 2 of Schedule 1 to this Order (National Parks, areas of outstanding natural beauty and conservation areas etc.)."
v) Part 2 of Schedule 1 provides:
"Land within
(a) ..;
(b) an area of outstanding natural beauty;
(c) "
"It is common ground that the development order is to be construed in what has sometimes been called in argument "a broad or common sense manner," at any rate in the manner appropriate, as counsel say, to a document framed for administrative purposes rather than as an instrument couched in conveyancing language. That has not prevented counsel on either side from spinning elaborate arguments worthy of a more complicated subject matter and drawn from other provisions of the development order itself, from other statutes or statutory instruments, and from reported cases on different documents. While I greatly admire and acknowledge the thoroughness of counsel's endeavours, I do not find in the end that I can get any guidance from those illustrative arguments. It appears to me that having considered all, I have to apply myself to the ordinary meaning of the language used by the Minister in making the development order, in the passages from it which I have just read."
"25 The fallback argument is in truth no more or less than an approach to material considerations in circumstances where there are, or may be, the opportunity to use land in a particular way, the effects of which will need to be taken into account by the decision-maker. That involves a two-stage approach. The first stage of that approach is to decide whether or not the way in which the land may be developed is a matter which amounts to a material consideration. It will amount to a material consideration on the authorities, in my view, where there is a greater than theoretical possibility that that development might take place. It could be development for which there is already planning permission, or it could be development that is already in situ. It can also be development which by virtue of the operation of legal entitlements, such as the General Permitted Development Order, could take place.
26 Once the question of whether or not it is material to the decision has been concluded, applying that threshold of theoretical possibility, the question which then arises for the decision-maker is as to what weight should be attached to it. The weight which might be attached to it will vary materially from case to case and will be particularly fact sensitive. Issues that the decision-maker will wish no doubt to bear in mind are as set out in the authorities I have alluded to above such as the extent of the prospect that that use will occur. Allied to that will be a consideration of the scale of the harm which would arise. Those factors will all then form part of the overall judgment as to whether or not permission should be granted. It may be the case that development that has less harm than that which is being contemplated by the application is material applying the first threshold, and then needs to be taken into account and weight given to it."
Ground 1
" . Whatever the depth of the lean-to, the extension at first floor level was built out from the (first floor) rear wall and results in the enlarged part of the dwellinghouse having more than one storey. It is thus not permitted development."
Ground 2
Conclusion