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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 >> Risby v East Hertfordshire District Council & Ors [2019] EWHC 3474 (Admin) (18 December 2019) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2019/3474.html Cite as: [2019] EWHC 3474 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
PLANNING COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
Sitting as a Deputy Judge of the High Court
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Clive Douglas Risby |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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East Hertfordshire District Council |
Defendant |
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- and - |
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(1) East Hertfordshire District Council (as developer) (2) Hertfordshire County Council (3) Highways Department Hertfordshire County Council (4) Bishop's Stortford Town Council |
Interested Parties |
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Saira Kabir Sheikh QC (instructed by Victoria Wilders, Legal Services Manager,) for the Defendant
The Interested Parties did not appear and were not represented
Hearing dates: 26th and 27th November 2019
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Crown Copyright ©
Rhodri Price Lewis QC :
Introduction:
The Facts:
The Initial Application
"Erection of a Multi Storey Car Park (MSCP) over six levels providing 546 spaces, open air surface car parking for 27 spaces to the north of the cark park. Erection of a 4 storey building with commercial use at ground floor and 15 residential flats arranged over the upper 3 levels, a multi-use games area (MUGA) and associated highway and public realm works. Removal of fence and retaining wall" ("the Initial Proposal"; "the Initial Application").
"8.63 The NPPF [the Government's National Planning Policy Framework] sets out the weight to be given to the impact of development proposals in relation to heritage assets. In that respect, it is not considered that these proposals will result in substantial harm or the total loss of significance of a designated heritage asset (NPPF para 133). It is considered that there will be some harm, but that this will be less than substantial. In these circumstances (NPPF para 134) it is necessary to weigh the harm against the public benefits of the proposal.
8.64 In relation to the character of the Conservation Area, there is a duty placed on the planning authority, in determining applications, to ensure that the character is either preserved or enhanced. In respect of this, the character of an area will clearly change, but this is not considered necessarily to be harmful in respect of character. As a result, the duty placed on the planning authority would be met if the proposals were to be approved.
8.65 There are some elements of the proposals that are considered to be harmful in character, design and visual impact terms. The loss of the trees for example, the relationship between the Northgate End Building and the new building to the south and the requirement for the significant enclosure to the MUGA. Whilst the scale of change is considered to be significant, given the positive elements of that change, well designed buildings and the use of appropriate design solutions, the overall impact is assigned neither positive or negative weight."
"9.4 With regard to other matters set out in this report, the proposals are considered to have an impact to which weight is assigned neutrally. As a result it is concluded that the substantial positive weight that can be assigned to the social and economic benefits of the proposals is greater than the weight that can be assigned to its harmful impacts."
"3. The Defendant Council concedes that the said decision should be quashed on the grounds that:
a. The Judge considered that the determination of the application, reference 3/18/0432/FUL, was arguably unlawful in not expressly dealing with the provisions of section 72(1) of the Planning (Listed Building and Conservation Areas) Act 1990 concerning "appearance" […]
4. The Defendant accepts that the Officer's Report to the relevant Committee of the Defendant Council did not expressly deal with "appearance" within section 72(1) and, therefore, the determination was unlawful for the reasons given by the Learned Judge."
The Amended Application
"Erection of Multi Storey Car Park (MSCP) over six levels providing 546 spaces, open air surface car parking for 27 spaces to the north of the car park. Erection of a 4 storey building with commercial use at ground floor and 15 residential flats arranged over the upper 3 levels, provision of open space and associated highway and public realm works. Provision of emergency vehicle access between adjacent Youth Services site and land to external parking area to north of MSCP. Removal of fence and retaining wall."
"Whilst careful consideration has been given to the massing of the car park through the architectural approach undertaken for the whole scheme, the proposed multi-storey car park is of a fundamentally large building typology of singular grain and bulky massing, which no design considerations can overcome. This singular grain and bulky massing will be visible from various locations in its immediate surroundings. It is considered that the proposed multi-storey car park due to the above singular grain and bulky massing will result in a degree of harm to the character and appearance of the Conservation Area, which we assess to be less than substantial, when compared with the general openness of the existing site. However, this harm is partially limited by the proposed residential and commercial building that will break up the bulk of the massing in views of the site looking along Hadham Road, and by the enclosed nature of the site to the east.
Paragraph 196 of the NPPF states: "Where a development proposal will lead to less than substantial harm to the significance of a heritage asset, this harm should be weighed against the public benefits of the proposal including, where appropriate, securing the optimum viable use." In this instance this less than substantial harm is seen to be outweighed by the significant public benefits of this scheme. Including in the densification of parking in the area (by removing the swathes of unsightly surface level parking), the provision of new residential units and commercial space, and as part of the wider public benefits of the eventual Old River Lane redevelopment to which these proposals are a key part.
Policy HA4 [of the Council's then recently adopted Local Plan] states that new development should "preserve or enhance the special interest, character and appearance of the area", and whilst harm has been identified, the enhancements identified above to the character and appearance of the conservation area are on balance seen to outweigh this harm. It is recommended that permission is granted subject to suitable conditions for samples of materials, details of hard surfacing, and details of landscaping."
The Decision:
The OR2
Amendments
"
- The deletion of the previously proposed multi use games area (MUGA);
- Minor amendments to the commercial/residential building resulting in a need to increase the depth of the building by 450mm for the core area only, increase in balcony depth (without increased projection) and amendment to gable walls to match the geometry of the building so that all plans are consistent;
- Landscaping amendments, resulting in the removal of two further trees and the creation of an emergency access between the parking area to the rear of the Northgate End building and the remaining green space to the rear (east), repositioning landscape strip and footway between youth service building and remaining green space."
Heritage
"8.48 Given that the application site is located within the Bishop's Stortford Conservation Area, section 72(1) of the above Act obliges the Local Planning Authority to pay special attention to the desirability of preserving or enhancing the character or appearance of the Conservation Area when determining planning applications. Consideration will be given to the potential impact of the proposed development upon the character and appearance of the area in this section of the report.
8.49 Compliance with both the development plan policies and the NPPF requires account to be taken also of the desirability of taking opportunities to enhance the character and appearance of the Conservation Area. Case law has established [and there is then a footnote referring to the case of Forge Field Society v Sevenoaks DC, see below] that the finding of harm to a Conservation Area creates a strong but rebuttable presumption against the development to which "considerable importance and weight" is attributed as a start point.
8.50 Given the particular status of Conservation Areas, and the rebuttable presumption in favour of their preservation, the proposed development will be assessed against the appropriate NPPG guidance, policy HA4 of the District Plan, which deals with Conservation Areas, Neighbourhood Plan Policy HDP2 and in addition to HA4 and HDP2 [sic] as part of the statutory development plan.
8.51 The following paragraphs of the NPPF are considered to be relevant to this application:
Para 193: When considering the impact of a proposed development on the significance of a designated heritage asset, great weight should be given to the asset's conservation (and the more important the asset, the greater the weight should be). This is irrespective of whether any potential harm amounts to substantial harm, total loss or less than substantial harm to its significance.
Para 196: Where a development proposal will lead to less than substantial harm to the significance of a designated heritage asset, this harm should be weighed against the public benefits of the proposal including, where appropriate securing its optimum viable use."
…
Para 201: Not all elements of a Conservation Area ...will necessarily contribute to its significance."
"8.80 Turning to the car park building, this is the element where the Conservation and Urban Design Advisor concludes there is harm. However, its frontage immediately onto Link Road will be three storeys in height. To the east it will be well screened by the adjacent long established trees. The remaining storeys will be set back from the frontage. They will be perceived in longer views, but these are also well screened as are view of the foodstore building to the south. In views had close to the site, the upper floors are not likely to be dominant. The frontage height is comparable to the foodstore building to the south. From the west the building will be largely obscured by the commercial/residential building.
8.81 Apart from the frontage, there are few public locations at which the scale of the building will be noticeable. Strong and established tree planting exists along the east side of the site, existing buildings enclose the west. Views to the north will be largely private ones. […] In respect of its impact on the green space to the rear of the youth services building, it is not considered that this space contributes to the significance of the Conservation Area, because of its enclosed and semi private nature.
8.82 Your Officers reach the conclusion then, contrary to that of the Conservation and Urban Design Advisor, that the proposals do not result in harm to the character and appearance of the Conservation Area in respect of the issues set out in part (c) of policy HA4 but are indeed neutral. They therefore do preserve or enhance the character and appearance of the Conservation Area."
"8.94 In this respect, as set out above, the Conservation and Urban Design Adviser sets out that the proposed multi storey building will result in some harm to the character and appearance of the Conservation Area, albeit that he concludes that the development would lead to less than substantial harm. In this situation, para 196 of the NPPF sets out that the harm should be weighed against the public benefits of the proposals. A balanced judgment will be required, having regard to the scale of any harm or loss and the significance of the heritage asset.
8.95 By contrast, the agents Heritage Consultant, following additional detailed assessment of the potential harm against the Conservation Area statutory test, considers that the impact of the proposal would be neutral to the character and appearance and that there would be no harm.
8.96 Your Officers, in assessing the proposals against all aspects of the relevant policies, reach the conclusion that no harm is caused and that the proposals preserve or enhance the character and appearance of the area. It is not necessary then, in respect of the impact of the proposals on the Conservation Area, to undertake the balancing exercise set out in paras 195 and 196 of the NPPF."
"9.2 Given that the application site is located in the Bishop Stortford Conservation Area, section 72(1) of the Planning (Listed Buildings and Conservation Areas) Act 1990, obliges the Local Planning Authority to pay special attention to the desirability of preserving or enhancing the character of the Conservation Area. This requires both character and appearance to be especially considered and raises a strong and important rebuttable presumption against the development if any harm from it is identified. If so, harm falls to be weighed against other factors. Consideration has been given to the potential impact of the proposed development upon the character and appearance of the area whilst taking account of the desirability of taking opportunities to enhance the character and appearance of the Conservation Area.
9.3 The Council's Conservation and Urban Design Advisor considers the proposed multi-storey car park element of the scheme would result in a degree of harm to the character and appearance of the Conservation Area, which is assessed as less than substantial. Submissions from residents and the public have referred to harm.
9.4 Two recent assessments, undertaken by consultants on behalf of the applicant, have however concluded that the effect was neutral in respect of harm to the Conservation Area, i.e. that there was no harm from the development because it was concluded that the application site did not contribute to the distinct historic or architectural significance of the Conservation Area. The impact of the proposal would be neutral.
9.5 Your Officers' view is that harm is not caused to the Conservation Area. The compatibility of the proposals with each element of the relevant policies (District Plan HA4 and Neighbourhood Plan HDP2) has been considered very carefully and is set out in the report above. The conclusion is that no harm is caused and that the proposals therefore preserve or enhance the character and appearance of the Conservation Area.
…
9.13 In conclusion, then, whilst some elements of harm have been identified as a result of the development ( as set out above), it is considered that the benefits of the proposal far outweigh any harm and substantial positive weight can be given to those benefits. In relation to the location in the Conservation Area, special attention has been paid to the desirability of enhancing the character and appearance of the area. The conclusion has been reached that no harm is caused."
The Committee meeting of 13 February 2019
Amendments
Treatment of the Initial Application
"There is no difference, as I said earlier, except the MUGA, the multi-use play area isn't included, but what is different really is not only, as I mentioned, the policy context is different, the National Policy Guidance is different, but also we have had subsequently two detailed reports by experts, not just ordinary – I shouldn't say ordinary planners, we are not ordinary, but by people who don't have a specific qualification in heritage matters, and so two reports have been submitted, and these are on the Council website. One is by Calfordseaden, and this is a 12 page document, very detailed. There is another one, a 14 page study looking specifically at the impact of the proposal on the conservation area, and the difference is that they come to various conclusions which, because of time factors our conservation officer wasn't able to do, the consultants came to the conclusion that this part, this corner of the conservation area wasn't extraordinary, there was lots of surface car parking there which didn't add to the character of the conservation area, the surface car parking was a detraction and, as I say, 12 pages and 14 pages. Now the Conservation Officer, which one of the speakers said we should, you know, hold up and follow, and he mentioned some harm, but that was a one-and-a-half page email to the previous case officer and similar comments were sent forward this time."
Heritage Balance
The Law:
The s.72(1) Duty
"72. — General duty as respects conservation areas in exercise of planning functions.
(1) In the exercise, with respect to any buildings or other land in a conservation area, of any functions under or by virtue of any of the provisions mentioned in subsection (2), special attention shall be paid to the desirability of preserving or enhancing the character or appearance of that area."
"As the Court of Appeal has made absolutely clear in its recent decision in Barnwell, the duties in sections 66 and 72 of the Listed Buildings Act do not allow a local planning authority to treat the desirability of preserving the settings of listed buildings and the character and appearance of conservation areas as mere material considerations to which it can simply attach such weight as it sees fit. If there was any doubt about this before the decision in Barnwell it has now been firmly dispelled. When an authority finds that a proposed development would harm the setting of a listed building or the character or appearance of a conservation area, it must give that harm considerable importance and weight.
This does not mean that an authority's assessment of likely harm to the setting of a listed building or to a conservation area is other than a matter for its own planning judgment. It does not mean that the weight the authority should give to harm which it considers would be limited or less than substantial must be the same as the weight it might give to harm which would be substantial. But it is to recognize, as the Court of Appeal emphasized in Barnwell, that a finding of harm to the setting of a listed building or to a conservation area gives rise to a strong presumption against planning permission being granted. The presumption is a statutory one. It is not irrebuttable. It can be outweighed by material considerations powerful enough to do so. But an authority can only properly strike the balance between harm to a heritage asset on the one hand and planning benefits on the other if it is conscious of the statutory presumption in favour of preservation and if it demonstrably applies that presumption to the proposal it is considering."
The consistency principle
"In this case the asserted material consideration is a previous appeal decision. It was not disputed in argument that a previous appeal decision is capable of being a material consideration. The proposition is in my judgment indisputable. One important reason why previous decisions are capable of being material is that like cases should be decided in a like manner so that there is consistency in the appellate process. Consistency is self-evidently important to both developers and development control authorities. But it is also important for the purpose of securing public confidence in the operation of the development control system. I do not suggest and it would be wrong to do so, that like cases must be decided alike. An inspector must always exercise his own judgment. He is therefore free upon consideration to disagree with the judgment of another but before doing so he ought to have regard to the importance of consistency and to give his reasons for departure from the previous decision."
[…] A practical test for the inspector is to ask himself whether, if I decide this case in a particular way, am I necessarily agreeing or disagreeing with some critical aspect of the decision in the previous case? The areas for possible agreement or disagreement cannot be defined but they would include interpretation of policies, aesthetic judgments and assessment of need. Where there is disagreement then the inspector must weigh the previous decision and give his reasons for departure from it. These can on occasion be short, for example in the case of disagreement on aesthetics. On other occasions they may have to be elaborate." (at page 145).
"i) The principle of consistency is not limited to the formal decision but extends to the reasoning underlying the decision (North Wilts v Secretary of State; Dunster; Baroness Cumberledge; Fox Stategic and Vallis).
ii) Of itself, a decision quashed by the Courts is incapable of having any legal effect on the rights and duties of the parties. In the planning context, the subsequent decision maker is not bound by the quashed decision and starts afresh taking into account the development plan and other material considerations (Hoffman La Roche; and Kingswood).
iii) However, the previously quashed decision is capable in law of being a material consideration. Whether, and to what extent, the decision maker is required to take the previously quashed decision into account is a matter for the judgment of the decision maker reviewable on public law grounds. A failure to take into account a previously quashed decision will be unlawful if no reasonable authority could have failed to take it into account (DLA Delivery Ltd v Baroness Cumberledge of Newark)
iv) The decision maker may need to analyse the basis on which the previous decision was quashed and take into account the parts of the decision unaffected by the quashing (Fox and Vallis). Difficulties with identifying what has been quashed and what has been left could be a reason not to take the previous decision into account (as with the cases of Arun and West Lancashire).
v) The greater the apparent inconsistency between the decisions the more the need for an explanation of the position (JJ Gallagher)."
"viii) Where a planning decision maker differs from an earlier decision-maker on a crucial planning issue (e.g. whether a first floor extension would in principle harm the appearance of a conservation area) he is thus required to "grasp the intellectual nettle of the disagreement" and explain his reasons for disagreeing in terms of analysis."
Reasons:
Officers' Reports
Submissions:
Ground 1(a): Failure to take into account the previous finding of harm to the conservation area
(a) it related to the same site as the Amended Application;
(b) it concerned development which was the same in all material respects to that for which planning permission was sought under the amended application. Indeed, the similarity between the two schemes was a point stressed to members;
(c) The time between the initial OR1 (June 2018) and the OR2 (February 2019) is limited, with no intervening material changes either to the conservation area itself or to relevant policy;
(d) the Council was awarding itself planning permission in circumstances where its previous decision had been criticised by the courts.
Ground 1(b) No adequate reasons were given for the Council's changed view on whether the proposal would harm the Conservation Area.
Ground 2: That the members were misdirected on the issue of harm to the conservation area and on the effect of section 72(1)
Discussion and Conclusions:
"1.1 members will recall that this application (which at the time included a multi-use games area (MUGA) was first considered by the Development Management Committee on 20th June 2018 and subsequently on 18th July 2018. Planning permission was granted with a decision notice issued on 24th July 2018.
1.2 Subsequently, the planning permission has been quashed following the submission of a challenge in the High Court on the basis that section 72(1) of the Planning (Listed Buildings and Conservation Areas) Act 1990, had not been lawfully addressed. Section 72(1) requires that both 'character and appearance' of a Conservation Area be given special attention when development proposals are determined. On the initial consideration of the matter, the Court held that the Officer's report expressly addressed 'character' but not 'appearance'.
1.3 On the basis of the above, leave to appeal was granted. This is not the same as a full hearing. However, at that stage the Council as applicant conceded to judgment. This means that the challenge did not progress to a full hearing and the outcome of what a hearing would have been, were it held, is not known. However, as a result of conceding to judgment to judgement, the planning application has returned to being a 'live' application which the Council, as Local Planning Authority, is required to determine...This report then sets out the considerations for members to take into account in coming to a further decision on the matter.
" 1.7 The decision will now fall to be made in the light of the relevant statutory development plan at the new date of determination and having regard to material considerations – the latter includes the National Planning Policy Framework (NPPF) 2018 and the former is the Council's newly adopted District Plan which forms part of the statutory development plan and was formulated against the NPPF (2012). Therefore, the policy background against which a new determination of the application will be made is different to the previous background of the previous development plan (the East Herts Local Plan 2007) and an emerging development plan (as the District Plan was in July 2018).
1.8 Against that new policy context most of the relevant issues to be considered will remain the same as those presented to members on 18 July 2018, but without reference to the MUGA and with special consideration to the matters contained in the High Court Order. Members are referred to the two previous reports, which were presented to Committee on 20 June 2018 and 18 July 2018, which serve as useful references and within which consultation responses that remain relevant to the determination are set out. These are to be taken into account by members of the committee in this new consideration. These are appended to the report as Essential Reference Papers A and B"