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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 >> Great Hadham Country Club Ltd & Anor v Secretary of State for Housing, Communities and Local Government & Anor [2019] EWHC 1203 (Admin) (10 April 2019) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2019/1203.html Cite as: [2019] EWHC 1203 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
PLANNING COURT
IN THE MATTER OF A PLANNING STATUTORY REVIEW
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
Great Hadham Country Club Ltd Neil Morgan |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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Secretary of State for Housing, Communities and Local Government East Hertfordshire District Council |
Defendants |
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Jack Parker (instructed by Government Legal Department) for the First Defendant
The Second Defendant did not appear and was not represented.
Hearing date: 10 April 2019
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Crown Copyright ©
Mrs Justice Andrews:
"The inspector erred in law in concluding that the proposed leisure lodges should be regarded as 'normal residential development' and assessing them as such rather than as leisure lodges, including by misinterpreting a provision of the 2007 local plan. Further, the inspector erred in concluding that a condition could not be imposed to restrict the occupation of the lodges to holiday accommodation as the claimants proposed, in that:
(1) the conclusion was wholly misconceived and flew in the face of government guidance on holiday occupancy conditions;
(2) he misinterpreted the Planning Practice Guidance ("PPG") on the enforceability of conditions in considering the conditions that would be merely impractical or unclear were unenforceable, and thus incapable of being imposed at all;
(3) despite being (wrongly) concerned about the enforceability of the claimants' proposed condition, he failed entirely to consider the conditions proposed by the Council, or indeed any other form of condition which could have addressed the problem that the inspector (wrongly) considered existed."
1(a) nature of the development;1(b) para 3.16.1 of the local plan; and
1(c) conditions;
and developed the claimants' submissions in relation to each of those issues in turn.
"I have now taken instructions from my client, who is no longer seeking to defend ground 1. Accordingly, our client only intends to be liable for reasonable costs up until today...
I will prepare draft consent orders outlining same. However, due to other commitments, I do not expect that I can circulate them until Friday at the earliest."
Mr Morgan responded by email the following day at 9.04 am in these terms:
"Thank you for your email and that is a relief to hear. It is good that some common sense (and some business sense) has finally prevailed. We obviously accept the government's statement/offer to no longer defend ground 1 and to pay reasonable costs to date. Okay, please circulate draft consent orders on Friday, as you mention."
Mr Morgan then made some practical suggestions about a timetable to be inserted in the order for filing and serving the claimants' schedule of costs and any response to that schedule, and for the assessment of those costs to be decided on the papers.
"As we previously agreed, you concede Ground 1, rather than just discrete elements of it, so it is paragraphs 25-58 of the grounds, rather than 45-51."
The Government lawyer sent an email in response at 16:43, which said:
"Apologies if I was unclear in my earlier email. However, paragraphs 45-51 are the only paragraphs which I am instructed to concede on."
This engendered a dispute between the parties as to whether an agreement to settle this claim had been reached on the basis that the Inspector's decision should be quashed for all the reasons given in Ground 1.
"If [the Secretary of State] considers that a particular decision of an inspector… cannot be defended and so ought to be quashed by the court, there is a public interest in knowing precisely why [the Secretary of State] takes that view. If such reasons are given, the other parties will be better able to appraise their respective positions and to decide whether a challenge, or particular part of a challenge, should be persisted in or defended. It is also necessary that such reasons are given in order to ensure the proper management of the finite resources of the planning court and the efficient listing and resolution of cases in general".
He observed that an unexplained concession by a defendant that his decision should be quashed is just as unacceptable as a draft consent order put before the court for its approval, where the reasons for seeking the quashing of the decision are unexplained, ambiguous, or lack sufficient detail. I fully endorse those comments by Holgate J. and the reasoning behind them.
"Applications for planning permission are sometimes received by the district council for a number of special residential uses such as caravans, mobile homes, houseboats and other residential institutions. All of these uses will be considered as though they were for a normal residential building and the policies relating to residential development will apply."