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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Butler v Bath And North East Somerset District Council & Ors [2003] EWCA Civ 1614 (30 October 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2003/1614.html Cite as: [2003] EWCA Civ 1614 |
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IN THE COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
(Mr Rabinder Singh QC)
Strand London, WC2 |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE WALLER
LORD JUSTICE CARNWATH
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MRS M BUTLER | Claimant/Appellant | |
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BATH AND NORTH EAST SOMERSET DISTRICT COUNCIL & OTHERS | Defendants/Respondents |
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Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited
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MS NATHALIE LIEVEN (instructed by Sharpe Pritchard, London WC1V 6HG) appeared on behalf of the Respondents.
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Crown Copyright ©
LORD JUSTICE CARNWATH:
Introduction
The Structure Plan
Policy 37
"Local plans will set out policies to secure an appropriate level of site provision for gypsies and travellers within their area, including the provision of temporary stopping places to reduce unauthorised encampments.
Permanent sites should be located within a reasonable distance of local services and facilities, readily accessible from main roads, avoiding the encroachment of open countryside and minimising noise, visual impact and disturbance.
Sites should not normally be located within the Green Belt, on areas of open land subject to special policies on conservation and/or restriction of development, or on the best and most versatile agricultural land.
Mixed use sites will be considered where appropriate incorporating provision for residential and small scale light business use undertaken by gypsies and travellers.
The monitoring of the provision of facilities by Local Authorities will be coordinated in order to ensure that provision reflects the level and changing pattern of need."
"A separate policy should be inserted in the Plan which requires that suitable locations for gypsy and traveller sites will be identified in Local Plans, that the provision of sites will be encouraged in accordance with local assessment of need and that sites should be located close to services and facilities including schools, readily accessible from main roads, and wherever possible should be suitable for mixed residential and business uses in accordance with gypsies and travellers' needs." (emphasis added)
National policy
"Repeal of the statutory duty will make it all the more important that local planning authorities make adequate gypsy site provision in their development plans, through appropriate use of locational and/or criteria-based policies. Structure plans and Part I of unitary development plans should continue to set out broad strategic policies, and provide a general framework for site provision. Local plans and Part II of unitary development plans should continue to provide detailed policies." (Para 9)
There followed the passage on which the appellant particularly relies:
"Local plans and Part II of unit development plans should wherever possible identify locations suitable for gypsy sites, whether local authority or private sites. Where this is not possible, they should set out clear, realistic criteria for suitable locations, as a basis for site provision policies." (Paragraph 12)
"The Minister agreed that the Department would draw the authorities' attention to these concerns and remind them of the emphasis in Circular 1/94 on identifying suitable locations for Gypsy sites in plans, wherever possible. The key message of the Circular will be underlined in the revised version of Planning Policy Guidance Note 12 on Development Plans, which is due to be issued shortly."
"The Council has done little to meet the identified need. It has been unable to allocate any sites through the Local Plan process and to my mind it is unreasonable to expect the appellants to do so with fewer resources. It has also disposed of large areas of land which could possibly have been used to provide sites. Despite the existence of criteria-based policies in the extant and emerging development plans it has consistently refused applications and accepts that the local need is unlikely to be met in the forseeable future."
The Secretary of State in the decision letter said that, for the reasons given in those paragraphs, he considered that there was "a substantial local and regional need for Gypsy sites". He found that need to be sufficiently important to outweigh the Green Belt policy objections in that case.
"The location of sites for mobile homes will generally be subject to the same planning policies as other residential developments; requiring access to local services and facilities, especially for sites in long-term use, and reflecting local environmental considerations. A site for mobile homes is not appropriate in the Green Belt and may be unacceptable in some locations where permanent housing would be permitted ... Sites to accommodate mobile homes for gypsies and travellers, which may involve special requirements, will be addressed in local plans... ."
"Policy 33 of the Deposit Draft was a combined policy for mobile homes and Gypsy sites. It was one of three policies (Policies 31 to 33) concerned with housing numbers and with qualitative aspects of housing including affordability and housing mix. It sought to address the needs of Gypsy and traveller sites and other mobile homes, as special kinds of housing need requiring special consideration ..."
He noted that there were objections from various groups representing Gypsies, who called for "a more positive and prescriptive policy" for the provision of Gypsy sites in local plans.
The EIP Panel
"... no sites for travellers or gypsies have been provided in Bristol after 20 years of seeking, and that there has been 100% refusal rate of gypsy site applications by South Gloucestershire Council and its predecessor authority, despite the very great pressure in the Plan area for accommodation for gypsies and travellers."
"3.62 The Panel appreciate that since the 1994 Structure Plan the statutory duty of local authorities to provide sites for gypsies has been repealed. The advice in Circular 1/94 anticipated this change and it encourages gypsies and travellers to provide accommodation for themselves. In general, the existing and emerging Local Plans for the Plan area are compatible with this advice so far as they set out criterion-based policies against which planning applications are judged. However, it is abundantly clear that this approach is failing to meet the housing needs of this group within the community.
3.63 We are strongly of the view that the Plan must seek to do more to guide and assist the Unitary Councils in fulfilling their obligations to all sections of the community. Therefore the Plan should set out a broad strategy which will ensure that local planning authorities assist gypsies to find suitable sites in accordance with their needs. This issue should not be treated as an adjunct to a general policy about mobile homes but should have separate policy status. We do not consider that it would be appropriate to set a numerical target for site provision at structure plan level, but we would expect that in monitoring the Plan, the JSPTU will work closely with the Unitary Councils to quantify the need for sites within the area and to review the planning and other measures which may be required to achieve an appropriate level of provision."
Consideration of the Panel recommendation
"The proposed addition of a new policy on gypsy and traveller sites follows the approach recommended by the panel (R21). The new policy is based on guidance to LPAs contained in Circular 1/94 and a DETR/Home Office document 'Managing Unauthorised Camping -- a good Practice Guide' (October 1998)."
The Regulations
"(4) Where the report of the person holding the examination in public contains recommendations that the proposals should be modified in a manner specified in the report and the local planing authority intend not to accept one or more of those recommendations:
(a) the authority shall make a list of recommendations that they do not intend to accept available for inspection from the date on which, and at the places at which, the report is made available for inspection;
(b) the notice given in Form 3, or in Form 4, as the case may be, shall record the authority's intention not to accept those recommendations and invite objections and representations to be made in respect of that intention within six weeks of the date on which the notice is first published in a local newspaper."
The issue
The judge's reasoning
"(1) R21 was, essentially, a statement of desirable planning policy, not a statement written by lawyers for lawyers ... It seems to me that Mr Jones' submissions, which advocated careful dissection and parsing of R21 into clauses and subclauses, invited me to fall into the temptation to treat a recommendation such as this with 'the austerity of tabulated legalism'. [That term being taken from Minister of Home Affairs v Fisher [1980] AC 319 at 328H, per Lord Wilberforce]
(2) Although the phrase 'identified in Local Plans' in the first part of R21 by itself might appear to refer to site specific allocations only, the remainder of R21 clearly envisages some criteria-based policies in local plans as well.
(3) R21 should be understood in its context, as both sides accept, including the factual history. What the Panel was responding to was principally to recommend alteration to the wording of the draft Policy 33, not least because the reference to gypsy sites was very much an add-on at the back of a policy which was otherwise to do with mobile homes generally. Its focus was not on the suggested distinction between locational and criteria-based policies.
(4) Policy 37, as finally formulated, does not require criteria-based policies only. It simply enables the defendants to have a choice as between site specific allocations and criteria-based polices, or both.
(5) Such an approach is consistent with national policy, in particular paragraphs 9 and 12 of Circular 1/94, which I have already cited. Although national policy is not binding on local planning authorities, it is a material consideration, and if the Panel had intended to recommend departure from it, they could, and would, have said so in terms.
(6) It is in the expert view of the Joint Committee, as reflected in Mr Daniels' witness statement before this court, undesirable that an excessively rigid approach should be adopted, no matter what their different circumstances, particularly because the Structure Plan is to cover four different local planning authority areas."
Before us Miss Lieven has substantially adopted and repeated the judge's points.
"There are significant differences between the four council areas that make up the joint structure plan, in terms of the needs of and provision for gypsies ... and the physical opportunities and constraints of each area for sites ... In these widely varying circumstances, the Joint Committee considered that a policy based on a single approach to be used in all four council areas would be unlikely to succeed in delivering appropriate provision."
"It is unlikely, in my view, that the Panel would have intended to recommend that there should be a rigid approach requiring identification on a site specific basis in the local plans, where experience in at least one of the defendant's areas was that they had simply been unable to identify further sites to meet need."
"My conclusion as to the interpretation which it was reasonably open to the defendants to reach in relation to R21 is also supported by the fact that what regulation 15(4) focuses on, as I have emphasised in the quotations from it above, is the 'intention' of the relevant planning authority. Intention is usually regarded in law as a subjective concept. It is difficult to see how the defendants could be said to have intended to depart from R21 when they considered that they were not doing so, unless their subjective view was irrational. But for the reasons I have already given, I do not consider that their subjective view was irrational. Accordingly, in my judgment, the procedural obligations imposed by regulation 15(4) have not been breached in this case."
Order: Appeal allowed with costs.