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England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> North Northamptonshire Council v Mongan & Ors [2022] EWHC 536 (QB) (11 March 2022) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2022/536.html Cite as: [2022] EWHC 536 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
(Sitting as a Deputy High Court Judge)
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NORTH NORTHAMPTONSHIRE COUNCIL |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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(1) James Jason MONGAN (2) Edward Paul MONGAN (3) Christopher Joseph MONGAN |
Defendants |
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The Defendants did not attend and were not represented
Hearing dates: 25th February 2022
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Crown Copyright ©
This judgment was handed down remotely by circulation to the parties' representatives by email and release to Bailii. The date for hand-down is deemed to be on 11 March 2022.
Antony Dunne (sitting as a Deputy Judge of the High Court):
Introduction
"1. Until further order, the Defendants shall not (whether by themselves or encouraging or allowing another) undertake any engineering operation on the Land or import, deposit or excavate any material on the Land without the written consent of the Claimant's solicitor. For the avoidance of doubt, the Defendants are forbidden from importing or depositing any material (including hardcore, building material, soil or domestic waste) or excavating/digging up the Land so as to alter the grounds levels.
2. The Land referred to in this order is the Land at plots 10 and 11 at Greenfields, Braybrooke Road, Braybrooke as delineated in red on the attached plan."
"3. The Defendants must fully obey the enforcement notice dated 13 December 2019. To that end, by 4pm on 24 May 2022, the Defendants must remove all of the material which has been brought on to the Land since the summer of 2019. The Defendants shall start the removal by 18 March 2022. In removing the material, the Defendants must:
a) Do so lawfully and they shall not transfer the material on to any land which does not have the benefit of planning permission.
b) Keep adequate records of each removal so that they can satisfy the Claimant and the Court that the requisite minimum volume of material has been removed. By 4pm on 30 May 2022, the Defendants shall provide to the Claimant's solicitor a written record of what material has been removed, specifying the quantity, appending documentary evidence to prove the same (including delivery invoices).
4. The Defendants may not sell or lease the Land without the consent of the Claimant's solicitor until they have fully obeyed this order"
Enforcement action
History of these proceedings
Service and proceeding in the Defendants' absence
a) Personally serve each Defendant with a copy of this order together with the claim form, application and evidence in support;
b) Attach a copy of the order in a transparent waterproof envelope to the entrance of the Land so that it comes to the attention of any visitors; and
c) Display a copy of the order on its website.
The order of 11th February 2022 informed the Defendants that there would be a hearing on 25th February 2022 which would consider whether it was appropriate for the 11th February 2022 order to continue and would consider the issue of a mandatory order requiring full compliance with the enforcement notice.
(a) On 16th February 2022 he made attempts to serve the required documents on the Defendants personally at 125 Everton Drive Stanmore HA7 1EB, the address of the Defendants recorded on the proprietorship register for Plot 10. He was unable to serve the documents on the Defendants personally but posted the documents to the address in envelopes addressed to each of the Defendants.
(b) On 16th February 2022 he served copies of the documents on Plot 10 by securely attaching the documents to a metal container situated on Plot 10.
First, the Claimant had taken sufficient steps to serve the claim form and associated documents for the Defendants to be in a position to ascertain their contents.
Second, no reason had been given by the Defendants for their non-attendance.
Third, an adjournment was unlikely to lead to the attendance of the Defendants. There had been no response from the Defendants to the Claimant's enforcement notice. This was despite the evidence from Ms Lee of: (a) the Service of enforcement documentation on both Plot 10 and to 125 Everton Drive; and (b) her conversations with the first Defendant in October 2020 which show that he was personally aware of the Claimant's enforcement action. There is therefore evidence that the Defendants are deliberately avoiding the Claimant's attempts to take enforcement action in relation to this breach of planning control, which is, in turn, evidence that the defendants are deliberately avoiding these proceedings.
Fourth, the Claimants have made repeated attempts to take enforcement action in relation to Plot 10, which have failed because of the Defendants lack of cooperation with the enforcement process. A further adjournment of these proceedings would further delay the Claimant's legitimate enforcement attempts and would cause unfairness to them.
Relevant law
"(1) Where a local planning authority consider it necessary or expedient for any actual or apprehended breach of planning control to be restrained by injunction, they may apply to the court for an injunction, whether or not they have exercised or are proposing to exercise any of their other powers under this Part.
(2) On an application under subsection (1) the court may grant such an injunction as the court thinks appropriate for the purpose of restraining the breach.
(3) Rules of court may provide for such an injunction to be issued against a person whose identity is unknown."
"1) Section 187B confers on the courts an original and discretionary, not a supervisory, jurisdiction, so that a defendant seeking to resist injunctive relief is not restricted to judicial review grounds; 2) it is questionable whether Article 8 adds anything to the existing equitable duty of a court in the exercise of its discretion under section 187B; 3) the jurisdiction is to be exercised with due regard to the purpose for which was conferred, namely to restrain breaches of planning control, and flagrant and prolonged defiance by a defendant of the relevant planning controls and procedures may weigh heavily in favour of injunctive relief; 4) however, it is inherent in the injunctive remedy that its grant depends on a court's judgment of all the circumstances of the case; 5) although a court would not examine matters of planning policy and judgment, since those lay within the exclusive purview of the responsible local planning authority, it will consider whether, and the extent to which, the local planning authority has taken account of the personal circumstances of the defendant and any hardship that injunctive relief might cause, and it is not obliged to grant relief simply because a planning authority considered it necessary or expedient to restrain a planning breach; 6) having had regard to all the circumstances of the case, the court will only grant an injunction where it is just and proportionate to do so, taking account, inter alia, of the rights of the person or persons against whom injunctive relief is sought, and of whether it is relief with which that person or persons can and reasonably ought to comply."
"32. When granting an injunction the court does not contemplate that it will be disobeyed. Apprehension that a party may disobey an order should not deter the court from making an order otherwise appropriate: there is not one law for the law-abiding and another for the lawless and truculent. When making an order, the court should ordinarily be willing to enforce it if necessary. The rule of law is not well served if orders are made and disobeyed with impunity. These propositions however rest on the assumption that the order made by the court is just in all the circumstances and one with which the defendant can and reasonably ought to comply, an assumption which ordinarily applies both when the order is made and when the time for enforcement arises. Since a severe financial penalty may be imposed for failure to comply with an enforcement notice, the main additional sanction provided by the grant of an injunction is that of imprisonment. The court should ordinarily be slow to make an order which it would not at that time be willing, if need be, to enforce by imprisonment. But imprisonment in this context is intended not to punish but to induce compliance, reinforcing the requirement that the order be one with which the defendant can and reasonably ought to comply."
Discussion and Conclusions
First, I see no reason to depart from the Claimant's view that there have been breaches of planning control on the Land. The photographs and aerial drone footage produced by Ms. Lee clearly show that the Land has been covered in hardstanding and that this is incongruous with the natural landscape.
Second, that there have been flagrant and prolonged breaches of planning control by these Defendants in relation to the Land. The Land comprises of two plots: Plot 10 and Plot 11. The evidence that the Defendants are responsible for breaches of planning control in relation to Plot 10 is compelling: (a) the Defendants own Plot 10; (b) they were served with an enforcement notice in relation to Plot 10 with a return date of 16th January 2020; (c) despite the enforcement notice work in breach of planning control continued; (d) the First Defendant was personally informed of the enforcement action in relation to Plot 10 by telephone in October 2020, though he denied having anything to do with the works; and (e) Plot 10 remains in breach of planning control. The evidence in relation to plot 11 is that: whilst the Defendants are not the owners of Plot 11 the work began on the Defendants' land, Plot 10; this work spilled over onto Plot 11 by November 2019; and photographs from February 2021 show that, by then, the work had covered the whole of Plots 10 and 11. I am therefore satisfied that there is sufficient evidence that the Defendants are responsible for planning control breaches on Plot 11 for the order to cover Plot 11, as well as Plot 10. I am conscious that, in the absence of the Defendants, I have only heard one side of the story. In addition, it is possible that the work on Plot 10 has been carried out by trespassers; however, in light of the lack of any response from the Defendants to enforcement action, I do not consider this likely.
Third, an injunction in this case is one with which the Defendants can and reasonably ought to comply. This is not a case where the Defendants will be displaced by the terms of the injunction.
Fourth, the tests laid down in American Cyanamid Co v Ethicon Ltd [1975] AC 396 are met. First, there is a serious issue to be tried. As set out above, the Claimants have produced cogent evidence that the Defendants have acted in breach of planning control in respect of the Land and will continue to do so unless restrained by this injunction. Second, damages are not an appropriate alternative remedy. The Claimant acts in the public interest and has produced evidence that the damage to the landscape is such that it cannot be remedied by an award in damages. In addition, absent an injunction, it is clear from the circumstances of this case, that the breach of planning control will continue. Third, the balance of convenience favours the making of an injunction. The status quo is that the Land is agricultural land. The injunction requested does no more than require the Defendants to stop further damage to the Land and to restore it to its state before the breaches of planning control upon it. This injunction therefore does no more than seek a return to the status quo. In addition, the Claimant has produced powerful evidence that the Defendants are in breach of planning control and that this breach will continue unless restrained by injunction.
Further Orders
a) Personally serve each Defendant with a copy of this order together with a copy of this judgment. If personal service cannot be effected, a copy of this order and a copy of this judgment for each of the Defendants should be left at the Defendants' last known address, 125 Everton Drive, Stanmore HA7 1EB;
b) Attach a copy of the order in a transparent waterproof envelope to the entrance of the Land so that it comes to the attention of any visitors; and
c) Display a copy of the order on the Claimant's website.