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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 >> Giordano Ltd, R (On the Application Of) v London Borough of Camden [2018] EWHC 3417 (Admin) (13 December 2018) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2018/3417.html Cite as: [2018] EWHC 3417 (Admin), [2018] WLR(D) 762, [2019] PTSR 735 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
PLANNING COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
THE QUEEN on the application of GIORDANO LIMITED |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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LONDON BOROUGH OF CAMDEN |
Defendant |
____________________
Simon Bird QC (instructed by Legal Services) for the Defendant
Hearing date: 28 November 2018
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Crown Copyright ©
Mrs Justice Lang :
Facts
"Change of use of third floor offices (class B1a) and vacant first and second floors (class B8) to create 6x two-bedroom flats (class C3), including rear extensions at first, second, third and fourth floors and associated external alterations (Ref 2010/5167/P)."
"Change of use of third floor offices (class B1a) and vacant first and second floors (class B8) to create 3 x three bedroom flats."
"In the Council's view, the wording in regulation 40(7)(ii): "able to be carried on lawfully and permanently without further planning permission in that part" means that the floorspace should be capable of the intended use under the chargeable development without the need for further physical adaptation. This requires more than demonstrating that the intended use is lawful. If the intention was that regard be had simply to the status of the use of the retained floorspace, the regulation would have said "may be carried on lawfully".
The purpose of CIL is to address the impact of development which, in this case, is residential use. No residential use of the property had occurred at the time planning permission 2016/0397/P was first permitted so to charge CIL on the total residential use floorspace is considered to be the correct approach in the line with the CIL regulations."
Statutory framework
"… shall aim to ensure that the overall purpose of CIL is to ensure that costs incurred in supporting the development of an area can be funded (wholly or partly) by owners or developers of land in a way that does not make development of an area economically unviable."
"In setting rates (including differential rates) in a charging schedule, a charging authority must strike an appropriate balance between—
(a) the desirability of funding from CIL (in whole or in part) the actual and expected estimated total cost of infrastructure required to support the development of its area, taking into account other actual and expected sources of funding; and
(b) the potential effects (taken as a whole) of the imposition of CIL on the economic viability of development across its area".
"A charging authority may set differential rates-
(a) for different zones in which development would be situated;
(b) by reference to different intended uses of development;
(c) by reference to the intended gross internal area of development;
(d) by reference to the intended number of dwellings or units to be constructed or provided under a planning permission."
"… the development for which planning permission is granted"
"Charging authorities may also set differential rates by reference to different intended uses of development. The definition of "use" for this purpose is not tied to the classes of development in the Town and Country Planning Act [sic] (Use Classes) Order 1987, although that Order does provide a useful reference point....."
"(7) The value of A must be calculated by applying the following formula—
(GR × E) GR - KR - G
where—
G = the gross internal area of the chargeable development;
GR = the gross internal area of the part of the chargeable development chargeable at rate R;
KR = the aggregate of the gross internal areas of the following—
(i) retained parts of in-use buildings, and
(ii) for other relevant buildings, retained parts where the intended use following completion of the chargeable development is a use that is able to be carried on lawfully and permanently without further planning permission in that part on the day before planning permission first permits the chargeable development;"
""retained part" means part of a building which will be—
(i) on the relevant land on completion of the chargeable development (excluding new build),
(ii) part of the chargeable development on completion, and
(iii) chargeable at rate R."
""in-use building" means a building which-
(i) is a relevant building, and
(ii) contains a part that has been in lawful use for a continuous period of at least six months within the period of three years ending on the day planning permission first permits the chargeable development;"
The Claimant's grounds
Conclusions
"Can existing buildings be taken into account when calculating a new levy charge?
In certain circumstances the floorspace of an existing building can be taken into account in calculating the chargeable amount. Each case is a matter for the collecting authority to judge.
Where part of a building has been in lawful use for a continuous period of 6 months within the past 3 years parts of that building that are to be demolished or retained can be taken into account…
Where an existing building does not meet the 6-month lawful use requirement, its demolition (or partial demolition) is not taken into account. However, parts of that building that are to be retained as part of the chargeable development can still be taken into account if the intended use matches a use that could have lawfully been carried out without requiring a new planning permission. The detailed requirements are set out in regulation 40 (as amended by the 2014 Regulations). Because there must be a lawful use, parts of that building where the use has been abandoned cannot be taken into account here (Paragraph 57)"
"A building will also be able to get credit where planning permission would not be required for the building to be used in the same way as the completed development will be used."