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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 >> Heronslea (Bushey 4) Ltd, R (On the Application Of) v Secretary of State for Housing, Communities And Local Government [2022] EWHC 96 (Admin) (20 January 2022) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2022/96.html Cite as: [2022] EWHC 96 (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 :
____________________
THE QUEEN on the application of HERONSLEA (BUSHEY 4) LIMITED |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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SECRETARY OF STATE FOR HOUSING, COMMUNITIES AND LOCAL GOVERNMENT |
Defendant |
____________________
Richard Honey QC and Ben Du Feu (instructed by the Government Legal Department) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 14 & 15 December 2021
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mrs Justice Lang :
i) Ground 1: whether the Inspector erred in law in concluding in his Decision Letter ("DL") that, on a proper interpretation of regulation 51(7)(a) of the CIL Regulations, the Council was entitled to withdraw social housing relief, in the sum of £320,034.73, by reason of the Claimant's failure to comply with the requirement, in regulation 67(1), to submit a commencement notice before the chargeable development commenced;
ii) Ground 2: whether the Inspector erred in law in concluding that, on a proper interpretation of regulations 31(3) and 71(2) (which he wrongly identified as regulation 70), the date on which payment of the CIL was due, for the purpose of triggering the late payment surcharges in regulations 85(1) and (2), was 19 June 2019 (the deemed commencement date), and not 11 February 2020 (the date on which the Council issued the second demand notice).
Facts
Planning permission
CIL
"…..
Claims for relief from CIL must be made by submitting a Relief Claim form to be received and decided by the Council prior to commencement.
…..
One of the development parties must notify the Council of the intended commencement date of the chargeable development by submitting a Commencement Notice to the Council no later than the day before the day on which the chargeable development is to be commenced. …..The submission of a Commencement Notice to the Council will be formally acknowledged by the Council in writing, and this written acknowledgment will represent confirmation that the commencement notice has been submitted to the Council as required. If a Commencement Notice has not been submitted to the Council in accordance with these requirements, this will affect the CIL amount payable and may affect entitlement to any relief previously applied for."
The Notice referred the Claimant to online sources of further information, and invited the Claimant to contact the Council if it required further information or had any queries.
"This form should be used to claim charitable relief, social housing relief and/or exceptional circumstances relief prior to the commencement of development. Otherwise the full levy charge will be payable."
"I understand:
…..
- That my claim for relief will lapse where:
- development commences on this chargeable development prior to the collecting authority informing me of its decision
- a commencement notice is not submitted prior to commencement of development of the chargeable development to which this relief applies
….."
"Changes in social housing relief eligibility
Under Regulation 51 of the Community Infrastructure Levy (CIL) Regulations 2010 (as amended) the chargeable development ceases to be eligible for social housing relief if, before that chargeable development is commenced –
- a commencement notice is not submitted to the collecting authority;
…….
Next steps
…….
One of the development parties must notify the Council of the intended commencement date of the chargeable development by submitting a Commencement Notice to the Council no later than the day before the day on which the chargeable development is to be commenced.
Please email the completed Commencement Notice to [email protected]
Alternatively, you can post the Commencement Notice to ….
This development will cease to be eligible for social housing relief if a Commencement Notice is not submitted to the Council before the development is commenced.
Payment of the CIL chargeable amount will be due in full on the day that development commences. If a valid commencement notice has not been submitted to the collecting authority and you have not received a valid acknowledgment of commencement notice from the collecting authority before development commences, payment of the CIL amount will be due in full on the day that the collecting authority believes the development to have commenced. This will mean loss of any reliefs granted, and interest and surcharges may also be applied.
…..
Consequence of non payment
If you fail to follow the payment procedure described above, the collecting authority may impose surcharges on this liability.
….."
"When will this CIL amount be due for payment?
If the payment procedure is followed correctly, this CIL amount will be payable 60 days after commencement.
You must notify Hertsmere Borough Council of the date on which you intend to commence development by submitting a valid Commencement Notice.
Payment of the CIL chargeable amount will be due in full on the day that development commences. If a valid commencement notice has not been submitted to the collecting authority and you have not received a valid acknowledgment of commencement notice from the collecting authority before the development commences, payment of the CIL amount will be due in full on the day that the collecting authority believes the development to have commenced. This will mean loss of any reliefs granted, and interest and surcharges may also be applied…."
"Next Steps
One of the development parties must notify the Council of the intended commencement date of the chargeable development by submitting a Commencement Notice to the Council no later than the day before the day on which the chargeable development is to be commenced….
Please email the completed Commencement Notice to [email protected]
Alternatively, you can post the Commencement Notice to ….
……
The submission of a Commencement Notice to the Council will be formally acknowledged by the Council in writing, and this written acknowledgment will represent confirmation that the Commencement Notice has been submitted to the Council as required. If a Commencement Notice has not be submitted to the Council in accordance with these requirements, this will affect the CIL amount payable and may affect entitlement to any relief previously applied for. On receipt of the Commencement Notice the Council will issue a Demand Notice to the liable person(s) setting out the total CIL chargeable amount payable on commencement of the development and precise details of payment arrangements."
"When will this CIL amount be due for payment?
If the payment procedure is followed correctly, this CIL amount will be payable 0 days after commencement."
"Reason for issuing demand notice:
Development is deemed to have commenced.
A surcharge has been imposed.
A disqualifying event for relief purposes has occurred."
It was common ground before the Inspector that the reference to a "disqualifying event" wrongly implied that relief had been withdrawn under regulation 53. The Council's case was that the Claimant had ceased to be eligible for relief, by virtue of regulation 51(7)(a).
"- Five percent of the outstanding amount where payment is still overdue after 30 day, subject to a £200 minimum.
- Five percent of the outstanding amount where payment is still overdue after six months, subject to a £200 minimum.
- Five percent of the outstanding amount where payment is still overdue after 12 months, subject to a £200 minimum."
"The total outstanding CIL monies payable regarding this development (Lincolnsfield) are now £1,542,766.30. This is broken down as follows:
• £1,131,864.58: original CIL liability that was due within 60 days of commencement.
• £320,034.73: the amount originally granted by way of social housing relief but is no longer applicable due to failure to comply with the regulations in terms of completing and submitting the relevant forms to the Council at the times specified within the regulations. It is worth noting the Council does not have any local policy to apply any discretion over this.
• £2,500: surcharge payable for failure to submit a commencement notice
• £72,594.98: surcharge for 30 days late payment from 5 August when the Demand Notice was sent.
• £15,772.01: late payment interest from 5 August when the Demand Notice was sent until 6 December 2019.
Total amount (as at 6 December 2019): £1,542,766.30".
i) a chargeable amount of £1,451,889.58;
ii) a surcharge of £2,500 pursuant to regulation 83 of the CIL Regulations, imposed for failure to submit a commencement notice;
iii) two surcharges totalling £148,819.71 for late payment pursuant to regulation 85(1) and (2);
iv) interest in the sum of £24,433.68 pursuant to regulation 87.
"Development is deemed to have commenced
A surcharge has been imposed".
The appeal
Appeal under regulation 117(b)
i) The first liability notice issued on 14 May 2019 satisfied regulation 65(2) (DL4).
ii) In breach of regulations 7 and 67(1), the Claimant failed to submit a commencement notice before chargeable development commenced (DL5, DL6, DL18). This was a "flagrant breach of the regulations" and "marked a significant turning point in the site's history" (DL11).
iii) By regulation 68, the Council had to determine a deemed commencement date, which was to be included in a demand notice under regulation 69(2) (DL5).
iv) The Council was required to issue a second liability notice on 5 August 2019, as the loss of the social housing relief was a material change to the first liability notice, which ceased to have effect when the second notice was issued (DL7).
v) The second liability notice was not invalid; it was not required to include reasons for withdrawing relief (DL10, DL11).
vi) The Council issued a demand notice on 5 August 2019, stating a deemed commencement date of 19 June 2019, and gave the following reasons (1) development is deemed to have commenced; (2) a surcharge has been imposed; (3) a disqualifying event for relief purposes has occurred. At DL8, the Inspector said:
"Counsel submits that the DN is invalid because it refers to a "disqualifying event". In the context of social housing relief, a disqualifying event has a specific meaning. The CA [Collecting Authority] acknowledge that it misapplied CIL Regs 53 subs (1) to (10), because the DN erroneously referred to a disqualifying event: I have no reason to disagree."
vii) The Council did not act beyond its powers in issuing a second demand notice on 11 February 2020, which omitted the reference to a disqualifying event, and imposed surcharges. It was entitled to issue the second demand notice under regulation 69(3), and the first demand notice then ceased to have effect (DL9).
viii) The amendments to the CIL Regulations which came into force on 1 September 2019, and omitted sub-paragraph (a) of regulation 51(7), did not apply retrospectively in relation to a liability notice issued before 1 September 2019, as in this case (DL13).
Appeal under regulation 117(a) and (c)
ix) At DL16 - DL20, the Inspector held:
"16. CIL Regs 85(1) states that where: (a) a person (P) is liable to pay an amount (A) under these [CIL] Regulations; and (b) A is not received in full after the end of the period of 30 days beginning with the day on which payment of A is due, the CA may impose a surcharge on P equal to five per cent of A or £200, whichever is the greater amount. If any part of payment is not received after the end of the period of six months beginning with the day on which payment is due, the CA may impose a surcharge equal to five per cent of the unpaid amount or £200, whichever is the greater amount. CIL Regs 87 permits the charging of interest on late payments.
17. Contrary to the appellant's submissions, the day on which the payment is due should be calculated by reference to CIL Regs 31(2) and 70. The former provides that a person who assumes liability is liable on commencement of the chargeable development. The latter makes provision as to how a payment date is to be identified. If the CA has received a CN, the levy is payable in accordance with any instalment policy or otherwise after 60 days. If the CA has determined a deemed commencement date and a CN has not been submitted, the full CIL amount is due on the deemed commencement date. In such circumstances the right to pay in instalments is lost. To me, the question of liability to pay, the quantum and date of payment are not determined by service of a LN or DN. It is CIL Regs 70 that determines the payment date and regulation 31(2) that determines the liability.
18. At risk of repetition, the evidence presented clearly shows that the appellant failed to submit a valid CN. The CA determined the deemed commencement date as 19 June 2019. The total levy for the chargeable development was therefore due immediately. The CA issued the first DN in August 2019 demanding payment straightaway and then a revised DN was issued in February 2020 demanding payment to be made immediately. The revised LN records that CIL amount will be payable in "0" days after commencement. The appellant says a payment of £1,131,865.85 was paid in March 2020, which is well after the day on which the payment was due.
19. Turning to CIL Regs 117 c) appeal, the amount due, including the social housing relief element, became due immediately. Payment was not made the day on which the payment was due, and surcharges were imposed. The evidence presented shows surcharges were correctly calculated.
20. Pulling all the above points together, I find that the claimed breach, which led to the imposition of the surcharges, did occur and the late payment surcharges, as stated on the DN, have been calculated correctly. CIL Regs 117 a) and c) appeals therefore fail."
Statutory framework
Interpretation and definition of key terms
""commencement notice" means a notice submitted under regulation 67;"
""deemed commencement date" has the meaning given in regulation 68;"
""demand notice" means a notice submitted under regulation 69;"
""liability notice" means a notice submitted under regulation 65;"
""relief" means an exemption for residential annexes or exemptions, an exemption for self-build housing, charitable relief, social housing relief or relief for exceptional circumstances;"
""social housing relief" means relief under regulation 49 or 49A;"
"(2) Development is to be treated as commencing on the earliest date on which any material operation begins to be carried out on the relevant land."
Assumption of liability
"A person who assumes liability for CIL before the commencement of development becomes liable when development is commenced in reliance on planning permission".
"A person who assumes liability in accordance with this regulation is liable on commencement of the chargeable development to pay an amount of CIL equal to the chargeable amount, less than the amount of any relief granted in respect of the chargeable development."
Payment is due
"70. Payment periods
(1) This regulation applies where
(a) a person has assumed liability to pay CIL in respect of a chargeable development (D);
(b) the collecting authority has received a commencement notice in respect of D;
(c) the collecting authority has not determined a deemed commencement date for D."
"(2) The amount of CIL payable (A) to all charging authorities in respect of D is payable in accordance with the following paragraphs."
"(7) In all other cases, A is payable in full at the end of the period of 60 days beginning with the intended commencement date […].
(8) Where an amount payable in accordance with this regulation is not received in full on or before the day on which it is due –
(a) the unpaid balance of A becomes payable in full immediately; and
(b) the collecting authority must send a copy of any demand notice which it serves as a result of the non-payment to each person known to the authority as an owner of the relevant land."
"71. Payment in full
(1) The amount of CIL payable in respect of a chargeable development (D) is due in full on the intended commencement date if:
(a) nobody has assumed liability to pay CIL in respect of D;
(b) the collecting authority has received a commencement notice in respect of D; and
(c) the collecting authority has not determined a deemed commencement date for D.
(2) Where the collecting authority determines a deemed commencement for a chargeable development, the amount of CIL payable in respect of that chargeable development is due in full on the deemed commencement date."
Exemptions and relief
"51. Social housing relief: procedure
(1) A person wishing to benefit from social housing relief must submit a claim in accordance with this regulation.
(2) The claimant must—
(a) assume liability to pay CIL in respect of the chargeable development for which relief is claimed; and
(b) be an owner of the relevant land.
(3) The claim must—
(a) be submitted to the collecting authority in writing on a form published by the Secretary of State (or a form to substantially the same effect);
(b) subject to paragraph (4A), be received by the collecting authority before commencement of the chargeable development;
(c) include the particulars specified or referred to in the form; and
(d) be accompanied by—
(i) a relief assessment, and
(ii) evidence that the chargeable development qualifies for social housing relief (by reference to the conditions mentioned in regulation 49, the criteria mentioned in regulation 49A(2) or regulation 49C).
(4) Subject to paragraph (4A), a claim for social housing relief will lapse where the chargeable development to which the claim relates is commenced before the collecting authority has notified the claimant of its decision on the claim.
(4A) Paragraphs (3)(b) and (4) do not apply where the provision of qualifying dwellings or qualifying communal development in respect of a chargeable development changes after the commencement of that development.
(5) As soon as practicable after receiving a valid claim for social housing relief, the collecting authority must notify the claimant in writing of—
(a) its decision on the claim and the reasons for the decision; and
(b) if relief is granted, the qualifying amount.
(6) If social housing relief is granted in respect of the chargeable development the claimant is deemed to benefit from an amount of relief equal to the qualifying amount.
(7) A chargeable development ceases to be eligible for social housing relief if, before that chargeable development is commenced—
(a) a commencement notice is not submitted to the collecting authority;
(b) the claimant's assumption of liability is withdrawn or otherwise ceases to have effect; or
(c) the claimant transfers liability to another person in accordance with regulation 32.
(8) In this regulation "relief assessment" means an assessment of the extent to which the chargeable development is eligible for social housing relief which—
(a) identifies the qualifying dwellings and the gross internal area of those dwellings;
(aa) identifies the qualifying communal development (if any) and the gross internal area of that development; and
(b) includes a calculation of the qualifying amount.
(9) Paragraph (10) applies where a charging authority issues a statement (in accordance with regulation 49B(3)(a)) giving notice that discretionary social housing relief will no longer be available in its area.
(10) Any claim for discretionary social housing relief received by the collecting authority on or before the day mentioned in regulation 49B(3)(a) in respect of a chargeable development situated in the charging authority's area must be considered by the collecting authority."
"53. Withdrawal of social housing relief
(1) This regulation applies whenever a disqualifying event occurs before the end of the clawback period in respect of a chargeable development for which social housing relief has been granted.
(2) A disqualifying event is any change in relation to a qualifying dwelling or qualifying communal development such that it ceases to be a qualifying dwelling or qualifying communal development.
(3) The material disposal of a qualifying dwelling or qualifying communal development does not cause it to cease being a qualifying dwelling or qualifying communal development if—
(a) the proceeds of sale are spent on a qualifying dwelling;
(b) the proceeds of sale are transferred to the Secretary of State, the Welsh Ministers, a local housing authority, the Greater London Authority or the Homes and Communities Agency;
(c) the disposal is made to the Welsh Ministers under paragraph 15 or 27 of Schedule 1 to the Housing Act 1996;
(d) the disposal is made to the Regulator of Social Housing under section 167 or 253 of the Housing and Regeneration Act 2008; or
(e) discretionary social housing relief has been granted in relation to the dwelling or qualifying communal development, and the dwelling or development (as the case may be) is disposed of in accordance with regulation 49A(2).
(4) The relevant person is liable to pay an amount of CIL ("the withdrawn amount") equal to the difference between the qualifying amount immediately before the disqualifying event and the qualifying amount immediately after the disqualifying event.
(4A) Where—
(a) the relevant person is liable to pay the withdrawn amount; and
(b) the dwelling in respect of which the relevant person is benefitting from social housing relief was (immediately before it ceased to be a qualifying dwelling) a qualifying dwelling which satisfied condition 5 of regulation 49,
for the purposes of regulation 87 (late payment interest), payment of the withdrawn amount is to be treated as being due on commencement of the chargeable development.
(5) The qualifying amounts mentioned in paragraph (4) must be calculated in accordance with regulation 50, and for the purposes of that calculation the value of E is the value of E as calculated at the time social housing relief was granted in respect of the chargeable development.
(6) The relevant person must notify the collecting authority in writing of a disqualifying event before the end of the period of 14 days beginning with the day on which it occurs.
(7) The notification must—
(a) state the gross internal area of the dwelling which has ceased to be a qualifying dwelling (if any);
(aa) state the gross internal area of the development which has ceased to be qualifying communal development (if any); and
(b) be accompanied by a map or plan which identifies the location of the dwelling mentioned in sub-paragraph (a) or the development mentioned in sub-paragraph (aa).
(8) As soon as practicable after receiving notice of the disqualifying event, the collecting authority must notify the relevant person in writing of the withdrawn amount.
(9) The notification must be accompanied by an explanation of how the withdrawn amount was calculated.
(10) In this regulation "relevant person" means the person benefiting from social housing relief in respect of the dwelling which has ceased to be a qualifying dwelling, or the development which has ceased to be qualifying communal development."
Administration
"65. Liability Notice
(1) The collecting authority must issue a liability notice as soon as practicable after the day on which a planning permission first permits development.
(2) A liability notice must—
(a) be issued on a form published by the Secretary of State (or a form to substantially the same effect);
(b) include a description of the chargeable development;
(c) state the date on which it was issued;
(d) state the chargeable amount;
(da) where the chargeable amount may be paid by way of instalment, include a copy of the charging authority's current instalment policy (if any);
(e) state the amount of any exemption for residential annexes or extensions, charitable relief or relief for exceptional circumstances granted in respect of the chargeable development;
(f) where social housing relief or an exemption for self-build housing has been granted in respect of the chargeable development, state -
(i) the particulars of each person benefiting from the relief or exemption, and
(ii) for each of those persons, the amount of relief or exemption from which the person benefits; and
(g) contain the other information specified in the form.
(3) The collecting authority must serve the liability notice on –
(a) the relevant person;
(b) if a person has assumed liability to pay CIL in respect of the chargeable development, that person; and
(c) each person known to the authority as an owner of the relevant land.
(4) The collecting authority must issue a revised liability notice in respect of a chargeable development if—
(a) the chargeable amount or any of the particulars mentioned in paragraph 2(e) or (f) change (whether on appeal or otherwise); or
(b) the charging authority issue a new instalment policy which changes the instalment arrangements which relate to the chargeable development.
(5) A collecting authority may at any time issue a revised liability notice in respect of a chargeable development.
(6) A liability notice issued in accordance with paragraph (4) or (5) must be served in accordance with paragraph (3).
(7) A collecting authority may withdraw a liability notice issued by it by giving notice to that effect in writing to the persons on whom it was served.
(8) Where a collecting authority issues a liability notice any earlier liability notice issued by it in respect of the same chargeable development ceases to have effect.
…."
"67. Commencement notice
(1) Where planning permission is granted for a chargeable development, a commencement notice must be submitted to the collecting authority no later than the day before the day on which the chargeable development is to be commenced.
…
(2) A commencement notice must—
(a) be submitted in writing on a form published by the Secretary of State (or a form to substantially the same effect);
(b) identify the liability notice issued in respect of the chargeable development;
(c) state the intended commencement date of the chargeable development; and
(d) include the other particulars specified or referred to in the form.
(3) A person submitting a commencement notice must serve a copy of it on each person known to that person as an owner of the relevant land.
(4) On receiving a valid commencement notice the collecting authority must send an acknowledgment of its receipt to the person who submitted it.
(5) Where charitable or social housing relief has been granted in respect of the chargeable development, the acknowledgement must state the date on which the clawback period ends (on the assumption that the chargeable development is commenced on the intended commencement date).
(6) Subject to paragraphs (6A) and (6B), where a collecting authority receives a valid commencement notice any earlier commencement notice received by it in respect of the same chargeable development ceases to have effect.
…
(7) A person who has submitted a commencement notice may withdraw it at any time before the commencement of the chargeable development to which it relates by giving notice in writing to the collecting authority.
(8) A commencement notice is valid if it complies with the requirements of paragraph (2)."
"68. Deemed commencement of chargeable development
A collecting authority must determine the day on which a chargeable development was commenced ("the deemed commencement date") if it –
(a) has not received a commencement notice in respect of the chargeable development but has reason to believe it has been commenced; or
(b) has received a commencement notice in respect of the chargeable development but has reason to believe that it was commenced earlier than the intended commencement date."
"69. Demand notice
(1) The collecting authority must serve a demand notice on each person liable to pay an amount of CIL in respect of a chargeable development.
(2) A demand notice must -
(a) be issued on a form published by the Secretary of State (or a form to substantially the same effect);
(b) state the date on which it was issued;
(c) identify the liability notice to which it relates;
(d) state the intended commencement date or, where the collecting authority has determined a deemed commencement date, the deemed commencement date;
(e) state the amount payable by the person on whom the notice is served (including any surcharges imposed in respect of or interest applied to the amount) and the day on which payment of the amount is due;
(f) where the amount payable is to be paid by way of instalments state the amount of each instalment and the day on which payment of the instalment is due; and
(g) include the other information specified in the form.
(3) The collecting authority may at any time serve a revised demand notice on a person liable to pay an amount of CIL.
(4) The collecting authority must serve a revised demand notice on a person on whom it has served a demand notice if any of the particulars mentioned in paragraph (2)(d), (e) or (f) change (whether on appeal or otherwise).
(5) Where a collecting authority serves a demand notice on a person, any earlier demand notice served on that person in respect of the same chargeable development ceases to have effect."
Surcharges and interest
Appeals
"117 Surcharge: appeal
(1) A person who is aggrieved at a decision of a collecting authority to impose a surcharge may appeal to the appointed person on any of the following grounds—
(a) that the claimed breach which led to the imposition of the surcharge did not occur;
(b) that the collecting authority did not serve a liability notice in respect of the chargeable development to which the surcharge relates; or
(c) that the surcharge has been calculated incorrectly.
(2) Where the imposition of a surcharge is subject to an appeal under this regulation, no amount is payable in respect of that surcharge while the appeal is outstanding.
(3) An appeal under this regulation must be made before the end of the period of 28 days beginning with the day on which the surcharge is imposed.
(4) Where an appeal under this regulation is allowed the appointed person may quash or recalculate the surcharge which is the subject of the appeal."
Statutory interpretation
"9. The first way in which the local authorities advance their claim that the defendants are liable for the unpaid rates relies on the approach to statutory interpretation associated in the field of tax legislation with the case of WT Ramsay Ltd v Inland Revenue Comrs [1982] AC 300. What has often been referred to as the Ramsay principle or doctrine may be said now to have reached a state of well-settled maturity, not least because of its restatement at the highest level in two 21st century authorities: Barclays Mercantile Business Finance Ltd v Mawson [2005] 1 AC 684 and UBS AG v Revenue and Customs Comrs [2016] 1 WLR 1005. Although usually deployed in relation to tax avoidance schemes, it is not in its essentials particular to tax, being based upon the modern purposive approach to the interpretation of all legislation, one which penetrated the field of tax legislation only at a relatively late stage: see Barclays Mercantile at paras 28–29; and UBS at paras 61–63.
10. There are numerous authoritative statements in modern case law which emphasise the central importance in interpreting any legislation of identifying its purpose. Two examples will suffice. In R (Quintavalle) v Secretary of State for Health [2003] 2 AC 687, para 8, Lord Bingham of Cornhill said:
"Every statute other than a pure consolidating statute is, after all, enacted to make some change, or address some problem, or remove some blemish, or effect some improvement in the national life. The court's task, within the permissible bounds of interpretation, is to give effect to Parliament's purpose. So the controversial provisions should be read in the context of the statute as a whole, and the statute as a whole should be read in the historical context of the situation which led to its enactment."
In Bloomsbury International Ltd v Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Sea Fish Industry Authority intervening) [2011] 1 WLR 1546, para 10, Lord Mance JSC stated:
"In matters of statutory construction, the statutory purpose and the general scheme by which it is to be put into effect are of central importance … In this area, as in the area of contractual construction, 'the notion of words having a natural meaning' is not always very helpful (Charter Reinsurance Co Ltd v Fagan [1997] AC 313 , 391 c, per Lord Hoffmann), and certainly not as a starting point, before identifying the legislative purpose and scheme."
See further Lowe and Potter, Understanding Legislation (2018), paras 3.45–3.48 (and cases there cited).
…
13. The decision of the House of Lords in the Barclays Mercantile case [2005] 1 AC 684 made it clear beyond dispute that the approach for which the Ramsay line of cases is authority is an application of general principles of statutory interpretation. Lord Nicholls of Birkenhead, delivering the joint opinion of the Appellate Committee (which also comprised Lord Steyn, Lord Hoffmann, Lord Hope of Craighead and Lord Walker of Gestingthorpe), identified the "essence" of the approach (at para 32) as being:
"to give the statutory provision a purposive construction in order to determine the nature of the transaction to which it was intended to apply and then to decide whether the actual transaction (which might involve considering the overall effect of a number of elements intended to operate together) answered to the statutory description."
Lord Nicholls also quoted with approval (at para 36) the statement of Ribeiro PJ in Arrowtown, para 35, that:
"the driving principle in the Ramsay line of cases continues to involve a general rule of statutory construction and an unblinkered approach to the analysis of the facts. The ultimate question is whether the relevant statutory provisions, construed purposively, were intended to apply to the transaction, viewed realistically."
14. Almost all statements of principle, however broadly framed, tend to be responsive to the particular facts under review. The above statements refer to "the transaction" and most of the leading expositions of the Ramsay doctrine do the same. This is because most of the provisions being considered taxed, or as the case may be exempted, transactions. But not all do. Some involve a tax (such as stamp duty) on instruments. Others impose charges by reference to the status of a person, or their rights in relation to specified property, such as the owner of unoccupied non-domestic property in the present case. The Ramsay doctrine is no less applicable in such cases. In MacNiven v Westmoreland Investments Ltd [2003] 1 AC 311, 320, para 8, Lord Nicholls said: "The paramount question always is one of interpretation of the particular statutory provision and its application to the facts of the case." No statement of the principle could be more general than that.
…
16. Both interpretation and application share the need to avoid tunnel vision. The particular charging or exempting provision must be construed in the context of the whole statutory scheme within which it is contained. The identification of its purpose may require an even wider review, extending to the history of the statutory provision or scheme and its political or social objective, to the extent that this can reliably be ascertained from admissible material."
i) LB Lambeth v Secretary of State for Housing, Communities and Local Government & Anor [2021] PTSR 1606; [2021] EWHC 1459 (Admin), per Thornton J. at [62] and [70];
ii) In Orbital, Patterson J. said, at [75]:
"The cases relied upon by the defendant underline the importance of a close and clear analysis of what the statute actually requires."
iii) In R (Hourhope Ltd) v Shropshire Council [2015] EWHC 518 (Admin), Judge David Cooke, sitting as a High Court Judge, summarised the test to be applied as follows:
"17 ….. In these circumstances, the question is a normal one of statutory interpretation, starting with the ordinary meaning of the language used, considered in the context of the other provisions of the legislation itself, and the legislative purpose as shown by the terms of the legislation and such external material as it may be permissible for the court to have regard to."
"17. It is, of course, for the courts and not the executive to interpret legislation. However, in general, official statements by government departments administering an Act, or by any other authority concerned with an Act, may be taken into account as persuasive authority on the legal meaning of its provisions. That is the principle stated by Bennion on Statutory Interpretation, 4th Ed, section 232. In the present case we are concerned with Guidance published by the Home Office, which is the government department which had responsibility for the enactment and operation of the legislation in question. In any given case, it may be helpful for a court to refer to the Guidance in the interpretation of the legislation. It may be of some persuasive authority. However, to my mind that is the limit of its influence. It does not differ in that regard from a statement by an academic author in a text book or an article. It does not enjoy any particular legal status. There seems to me to be no satisfactory basis for the submission that it gives rise to a presumption that the views it contains are correct and should be rejected only for good reason."
"5. The question is whether in aid of the interpretation of a statute the court may take into account the Explanatory Notes and, if so, to what extent. The starting point is that language in all legal texts conveys meaning according to the circumstances in which it was used. It follows that the context must always be identified and considered before the process of construction or during it. It is therefore wrong to say that the court may only resort to evidence of the contextual scene when an ambiguity has arisen …..
In so far as the Explanatory Notes cast light on the objective setting or contextual scene of the statute, and the mischief at which it is aimed, such materials are therefore always admissible aids to construction. They may be admitted for what logical value they have…
6. If exceptionally there is found in Explanatory Notes a clear assurance by the executive to Parliament about the meaning of a clause, or the circumstances in which a power will or will not be used, that assurance may in principle be admitted against the executive in proceedings in which the executive places a contrary contention before a court. … What is impermissible is to treat the wishes and desires of the Government about the scope of the statutory language as reflecting the will of Parliament. The aims of the Government in respect of the meaning of clauses as revealed in Explanatory Notes cannot be attributed to Parliament. The object is to see what is the intention expressed by the words enacted."
Grounds of challenge
Ground 1
Submissions
Conclusions
a) a commencement notice is not submitted to the collecting authority;
b) the claimant's assumption of liability is withdrawn or otherwise ceases to have effect; or
c) the claimant transfers liability to another person in accordance with regulation 32.
"A chargeable development which comprises or is to comprise qualifying dwellings or qualifying communal development (in whole or in part) is eligible for relief from liability to CIL."
A qualifying dwelling is a dwelling which satisfies at least one of the five conditions in regulation 49, which all relate to the type of occupancy.
"If social housing relief is granted in respect of the chargeable development the claimant is deemed to benefit from an amount of relief equal to the qualifying amount."
Other exemptions and reliefs
"A person who is granted an exemption for residential annexes or residential annexes ceases to be eligible for that exemption if a commencement notice is not submitted to the collecting authority before the day the chargeable development is commenced."
"A person who is granted charitable relief ceases to be eligible for that relief if a commencement notice is not submitted to the collecting authority …. before the day the chargeable development is commenced."
"A person who is granted an exemption for self-build housing ceases to be eligible for that exemption if a commencement notice is not submitted to the collecting authority before the day the chargeable development is commenced."
i) In Gardiner v Hertsmere BC [2021] EWHC 1875 (Admin), Thornton J. observed, at [63], that a failure to submit a commencement notice before the commencement of the chargeable development resulted in the loss of the exemption.
ii) In R (Shropshire Council) v Secretary of State for Communities and Local Government & Anor [2019] EWHC 16 (Admin), Mr C. M. G. Ockleton sitting as a High Court Judge, stated at [40]:
"The Regulations make it perfectly clear that the consequence of failure to comply is loss of the exemption and failure to comply means failure to submit a notice under regulation 7."
iii) In R (Trent) v Hertsmere Borough Council [2021] EWHC 907 (Admin), it was common ground between the parties (the claimant appearing in person) that, under regulation 54B(6) of the CIL Regulations, a person who has been granted an exemption ceased to be eligible for that exemption if a commencement notice was not submitted before chargeable development commenced.
Extrinsic material
"(1) A person ceases to be eligible for relief if a commencement notice in respect of the chargeable development for which relief has been claimed or allowed is not submitted to the collecting authority on or before the day the chargeable development is commenced."
"Universal conditions on relief
4.50 All exemptions or reductions from CIL for charities are subject to three conditions. The first two seek to prevent CIL relief being misused in a way that would help non exempt parties to avoid payment. First, under draft regulations 17(2)(b), 18(2)(c) and 19(2)(a), the charity claiming relief must not own its interest in the land jointly with a non exempt party. This would mean that where a charity jointly owned a freehold or leasehold with a non exempt party it could not be given CIL relief, but it would not prevent relief being given where there were other non exempt interests in the land.
4.51 Second, under draft regulation 17(2)(c), 18(2)(d) and 19(2)(b), CIL relief cannot be claimed by a charity or any other person to avoid paying CIL. This would not stop a charity claiming an exemption where it was claiming for a legitimate qualifying purpose but it would rule it out where the purpose of claiming was to assist a CIL liable party in not paying. Both measures are consistent with safeguards already present in the SDLT regime. Finally, despite being exempt from all, or a portion, of its CIL charge, under draft regulation 22(1) a charity must submit a commencement notice before it starts developing – this is necessary to ensure the period of 'clawback' can be accurately calculated."
"Overall, most respondents supported some form of relief from CIL for non-charitable social housing to complement the exemption provided to the charitable social housing sector. As a result of comments made concerning the need to ensure a 'level playing field' for social housing provided by charities and non-charities, the CIL regulations now give a 100% CIL exemption to developments which will be used as social housing."
"54. The collecting authority must inform the claimant in writing of its decision, the reasons for it, and the amount of relief granted. A valid commencement notice must be submitted for chargeable developments granted social housing relief. The date of commencement determines when the seven-year clawback period expires. Where a commencement notice is not issued, the claimant is no longer eligible for relief from the levy and the full charge plus any surcharge is immediately payable."
"36.A commencement notice must be submitted for chargeable developments granted charitable relief. The date of commencement determines when the seven-year clawback period expires. Where a commencement notice is not issued, the claimant is no longer eligible for relief from the levy and the full charge plus any surcharge is immediately payable…"
"[…] A party claiming social housing relief must submit a commencement notice to the charging authority for a development that is granted relief. The date of commencement determines when the 7-year clawback period expires, apart from dwellings granted social housing relief under regulation 49(7A) for which the clawback period expires 7 years after the dwelling is first let. If development begins without a commencement notice, the claimant is no longer eligible for social housing relief and the full charge plus any surcharge is immediately payable. […]" (1 April 2015 Version - Reference ID: 25-124-20150401)
"7.7 The 2010 Regulations allow for certain development (such as residential extensions and self-build housing) to be exempt, or to gain relief, from CIL. In most cases a developer must submit a Commencement Notice to the charging authority prior to the start of works so as not to lose the exemption or relief. Failure to do so results in the exemption or relief being lost, and the full CIL liability becoming due immediately. This particularly affects smaller developers and self-builders, as they tend to be less familiar with the requirements of the legislation. The Government considers that the immediate application of this penalty is disproportionate to the failure to submit a Commencement Notice on time.
7.8 Under this instrument the penalty for a late Commencement Notice will be reduced from the removal of the exemption or relief to a surcharge equal to 20% of the notional chargeable amount or £2,500, whichever is the lower amount; this mirrors surcharges elsewhere in the 2010 Regulations. This will therefore always be lower than the current penalty of the full CIL liability. This instrument also clarifies that a Commencement Notice is not required at all in relation to an exemption for residential extensions."
"If the developer fails to submit a commencement notice in time, the exemption or relief is lost, and the full chargeable amount becomes payable.
[…]
For each of the relevant exemptions and reliefs, the relevant regulations are amended (as below) so that the exemption is not removed if a commencement notice is not submitted on time. In parallel, Regulation 83 is amended to introduce the surcharge.
[…]
Regulation 51 (Social housing relief: procedure) is amended so that where social housing relief has been granted in relation to a chargeable development and then a section 73 permission allows the development to change after building works have commenced, the developer is allowed to apply for the relief i.e. the relief is not automatically lost on granting of the new permission. It also requires the charging authority to explain the need for a commencement notice to be submitted before commencement ((regulation 67(1)); but deletes regulation 51(7)(a) so if a commencement notice is not submitted beforehand, the social housing relief is not lost."
Overall conclusion on Ground 1
Ground 2
Submissions
Conclusions
"A person who assumes liability for CIL before the commencement of development becomes liable when development is commenced in reliance on planning permission".
"A person who assumes liability in accordance with this regulation is liable on commencement of the chargeable development to pay an amount of CIL equal to the chargeable amount, less than the amount of any relief granted in respect of the chargeable development."
"(7) In all other cases, A is payable in full at the end of the period of 60 days beginning with the intended commencement date."
"(8) Where an amount payable in accordance with this regulation is not received in full on or before the day on which it is due –
(a) the unpaid balance of A becomes payable in full immediately; and
(b) the collecting authority must send a copy of any demand notice which it serves as a result of the non-payment to each person known to the authority as an owner of the relevant land."
"71. Payment in full
(1)…..
(2) Where the collecting authority determines a deemed commencement for a chargeable development, the amount of CIL payable in respect of that chargeable development is due in full on the deemed commencement date."
"The interested party falls into the same error of analysis as that rejected by Swift J. in Oval Estates [2020] PTSR 861, paras 32-34. Liability to pay CIL and the date and quantum of payments is not determined by the issue of liability or demand notices. Rather those notices record the liability and terms of payment."
"….the Defendant was required to issue and serve statutory notice which complied with the requirements in the CIL Regulations, and to do so in the prescribed sequence. In consequence, the Claimant was not under an obligation to pay the CIL, as required by the 2020 demand notice, unless and until the Defendant had issued and served a valid liability notice, in accordance with regulation 65 of the CIL Regulations."
"When will this CIL amount be due for payment?
If the payment procedure is followed correctly, this CIL amount will be payable 60 days after commencement."
"When will this CIL amount be due for payment?
If the payment procedure is followed correctly, this CIL amount will be payable 0 days after commencement."
"Reason for issuing demand notice:
Development is deemed to have commenced.
A surcharge has been imposed.
A disqualifying event for relief purposes has occurred."
Final conclusion
Note 1 By regulation 112(1) of the CIL Regulations, the appeal is made to an “appointed person” which means a person appointed by the Secretary of State in the case of an appeal under regulations 117 or 118. [Back] Note 2 Community Infrastructure Levy Detailed proposals and draft regulations for the introduction of the Community Infrastructure Levy – Consultation – Draft Regulations and Reference documents – July 2009. [Back] Note 3 Community Infrastructure Levy - Detailed proposals and draft regulations for the introduction of the Community Infrastructure Levy – Consultation – July 2009. [Back] Note 4 See version first published 12 June 2014. This paragraph remained in the revised version published on 01 April 2015 but was amended in consequence of the Amendment Regs on 1 September 2019. [Back] Note 5 Community Infrastructure Levy - Detailed proposals and draft regulations for the introduction of the Community Infrastructure Levy – Consultation – July 2009 at paragraphs 4.135 and 4.206. [Back]