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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Arnold White Estates Ltd v The Forestry Commission [2022] EWCA Civ 1304 (06 October 2022) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2022/1304.html Cite as: [2022] WLR(D) 393, [2023] PTSR 242, [2022] EWCA Civ 1304 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
KING'S BENCH DIVISION
(PLANNING COURT)
MRS JUSTICE THORNTON
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
(SENIOR PRESIDENT OF TRIBUNALS)
LORD JUSTICE HOLROYDE
(VICE-PRESIDENT OF THE COURT OF APPEAL (CRIMINAL DIVISION))
and
LORD JUSTICE COULSON
____________________
ARNOLD WHITE ESTATES LTD. |
Appellant |
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– and – |
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THE FORESTRY COMMISSION |
Respondent |
____________________
Zack Simons and Anjoli Foster (instructed by the Treasury Solicitor) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 28 June 2022
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
The Senior President of Tribunals:
Introduction
The main issues in the appeal
The statutory framework
"(1) A felling licence granted by the appropriate forestry authority shall be required for the felling of growing trees, except in a case where by or under the following provisions of this Part of this Act this subsection is expressed not to apply.
…
(4) Subsection (1) above does not apply to any felling which –
(a) is for the prevention of danger or the prevention or abatement of a nuisance;
(b) is in compliance with any obligation imposed by or under an Act of Parliament, including this Act;
(c) is carried out by, or at the request of, an electricity operator, because the tree is or will be in such close proximity to an electric line or electrical plant which is kept installed or is being or is to be installed by the operator as to have the effect mentioned in paragraph 9(1)(a) or (b) of Schedule 4 to the Electricity Act 1989;
(d) is immediately required for the purpose of carrying out development authorised by planning permission granted or deemed to be granted under the Town and Country Planning Act 1990 or the enactments replaced by that Act.
…".
"(1) An application for a felling licence may be made to the appropriate forestry authority … by a person having such an estate or interest in the land on which the trees are growing as enables him, with or without the consent of any other person, to fell the trees.
(2) Subject to the provisions of this Act … , the appropriate forestry authority may on any such application grant the licence, or grant it subject to conditions, or refuse it, but shall grant it unconditionally except in a case where it appears to them to be expedient to do otherwise –
(a) in the interests of good forestry or agriculture or the amenities of the district, or (b) for the purpose of complying with [its] duty of promoting the establishment and maintenance of adequate reserves of growing trees.
…".
"(1) The conditions which may … be attached to a felling licence are such as the appropriate forestry authority, after consultation with the applicant for the licence, determine to be expedient for securing –
(a) the restocking or stocking with trees of the land on which the felling is to take place, or of such other land as may be agreed between the appropriate forestry authority and the applicant, and
(b) the maintenance of those trees in accordance with the rules and practice of good forestry for a period not exceeding ten years.
…".
"(1) The provisions of this section shall apply if –
(a) any works required to be carried out in accordance with conditions of a felling licence are not so carried out; or
(b) any felling directions given by the appropriate forestry authority are not complied with.
(2) The appropriate forestry authority may give to the person responsible a notice requiring such steps as may be specified therein to be taken within such time (not being less than the prescribed period after the notice has become operative) as may be so specified for remedying the default; and for purposes of this subsection, "the person responsible" is –
(a) in the case of non-compliance with conditions of a felling licence, the person specified in subsection (2A); and
(b) in the case of non-compliance with felling directions, the owner of the trees.
(2A) The person referred to in subsection (2)(a) is –
(a) where the licence relates to land in England and Wales –
(i) the applicant for the licence, if on the date the notice is served he has such estate or interest in the land as is referred to in section 10(1) of this Act; or
(ii) in any other case, the owner of the land …
(3) If after the expiration of time specified in the notice any steps required by the notice have not been taken, the appropriate forestry authority may, subject to the following section, enter on the land and take those steps.
(4) Without prejudice to the powers of the appropriate forestry authority under the foregoing subsection, a person who without reasonable excuse fails to take any steps required by a notice given to him under this section shall be guilty of an offence and be liable on summary conviction to a fine not exceeding level 5 on the standard scale, and proceedings in respect of such an offence may be instituted within six months of the first discovery of the offence by the person taking the proceedings, provided that no proceedings shall be instituted more than two years after the date of the offence.
…".
"(1) If a person to whom a notice under section 24 is given claims –
(a) that the works in question have been carried out in accordance with the conditions of the felling licence or, in the case of felling directions, that they have been complied with; or
(b) that the steps required by the notice to be taken are not required by the conditions or directions,
he may by a notice served on the Minister where the notice is given in respect of land or trees in England or Wales, in the prescribed manner and within the prescribed period after the receipt of the notice under section 24, request the Minister to refer the matter to a committee appointed in accordance with section 27 below.
(2) A notice under section 24 shall be inoperative until the expiration of the prescribed period for the purposes of subsection (1) above and, where a request to the Minister under that subsection is made, until the conclusion of any proceedings under this section in pursuance of the request.
(3) Where such a request is made by a person receiving a notice under section 24, the Minister shall, unless he is of opinion that the grounds for the request are frivolous, refer the matter accordingly to a committee so appointed.
(4) The committee to whom a matter is referred under this section, after complying with section 27(3), shall make a report on the reference to the Minister … who shall, after considering the report, confirm or cancel the notice to which the reference relates."
Such an appeal must be made within three months of the receipt of the section 24 notice.
The Forestry Commission's guidance
"Important background:
1.1 Once a felling licence has been issued it cannot be withdrawn. And once tree felling has started a felling licence cannot be amended."
"2.7 Development
An exception applies where the felling of trees is immediately required for the purpose of carrying out development that is authorised by the approval of full planning permission … . The approved planning permission will detail the extent of the approved development and may also define the trees that are allowed to be felled or those that must be retained. Any tree felling outside that boundary will require a licence.
The development exception can relate to individual or groups of trees or woodland, and for trees to be exempt from the need for a felling licence at least one of the following conditions must be met:
- trees must be explicitly identified in the planning consent as being permitted for removal;
- the trees must stand within the footprint of the proposed development; or
- the removal of the trees must be necessary in order to carry out the development (e.g. they block an access route to which there is no alternative, or lie in such close proximity to the proposed development that they prevent the carrying out of that development).
The exception does not simply extend to all trees within the boundary of the fully approved proposed development.
Outline planning permission: This status is not sufficient to demonstrate that the felling of trees is immediately required for the purposes of development. A felling licence will be required in these circumstances, unless another reason for exception applies.
…".
"You need a felling licence from the Forestry Commission to fell trees, unless an exemption applies. Full planning permissions, where standing trees would impede the approved development, do not need to directly specify the trees to be felled in their application. However, where there's a desire to remove standing trees, and those trees are not, for example, within the approved footprint of a structure to be constructed, then those trees would need to be explicitly referenced in the planning application and permission in order to allow for their legal felling. Don't assume that all trees included within the 'red line' of an application are implicitly allowed to be felled.
Outline planning permission doesn't provide an exemption to the regulations that control tree felling in the Forestry Act 1967. This is because, until the reserved matters have been addressed and discharged by your local planning authority, your development may not proceed. Consequently there's no immediate requirement for the tree felling under the planning consent."
The outline planning permissions
The meeting on 6 June 2018
"3.1 … There is no requirement to undertake work agreed under a felling licence, but once implemented there is a need to replant. However, a planning permission which then comes into force overrides the need to replant."
The felling licence granted on 19 October 2018
"This licence gives you permission under section 10 of the Forestry Act 1967 as amended to fell the trees described in Part 1 and shown on the attached map.
Tree felling under this licence has been approved by the Forestry Commission as being in accordance with government policy for the sound management of a renewable resource.
This licence expires on: 19 Oct 2019
… ."
Part 1 described the trees in specified areas which could be thinned or clear felled. Part 2 set out two "restocking conditions" applying to the licensed felling:
"1. Before 30th June 2020 the land on which the felling took place must be:
a. suitably prepared for restocking
b. Planted with 40% birch (downy/silver) 20% woody shrubs 20% pedunculate/common oak 15% rowan 05% beech to achieve not less than 2000 stems per hectare evenly distributed over the site.
2. For a period of 10 years from the planting:
a. The plants must be protected against damage and be adequately weeded.
b. Any failure or losses should be replaced as necessary to provide a stocking of not less than 2000 stems per hectare evenly distributed over the site.
c. Any replanting must be maintained in accordance with the rules and practice of good forestry."
Those conditions related to areas 1c (Pitts Plantation) and 2b (Gaverick Copse), shown on the "Operations Map" and the "Restocking Map" attached to the licence, which included the parts of the site on which development was permitted under the outline planning permission of 1 June 2016.
The section 24 notice of 28 July 2020
The planning permission granted on 14 September 2020
The correspondence between Arnold White Estates and the Forestry Commission
"On 28th July 2020, a Restocking Enforcement Notice was served by you on [Arnold White Estates] alleging that [it] had not complied with its restocking obligation in relation to the trees felled in accordance with the Licence. The trees felled in those areas fall within the footprint of the permitted developments and require removal to enable those developments to be carried out in accordance with the permission.
Given [Arnold White Estates'] desire to implement, as soon as they are able, the September 2020 detailed consent to provide roads and services within the site, and thus facilitate the subsequent detailed planning of the individual phases/plots, then it seems to us that the requirement to restock those areas covered by the felling licence is redundant. We should point out that we would expect [Teignbridge District Council] to consider landscaping requirements arising from subsequent reserved matters applications for the individual phases and in the circumstances, we would be grateful if you could please confirm that the Enforcement Notice will now be withdrawn."
"…
Your client should be made aware that planning permission granted by the local planning authority for the same area as a Conditional felling Licence, Restocking or Enforcement Notice (served under section 17A or 24 of the Act respectively) does not remove the duties contained within a Felling Licence or Notice. I.e. while planning permission may make the development of the site lawful, it does not make non-compliance with the Licence or Notice lawful. The Town and Country Planning Act 1990 has no provision which neuters or overrides Felling Licences or Notices served under the Forestry Act. However, this does not prevent the local planning authority from granting planning permission if it is so minded.
Your client should also be aware that if they, or any subsequent owner of the land, enact planning permission which renders it impossible to comply with the conditions of the Enforcement Notice, the Forestry Commission will not accept this is a reasonable excuse for non-compliance and will seek the appropriate enforcement action in relation to that non-compliance.
Failure to comply with an Enforcement Notice may constitute an offence under section 24(4) of the Forestry Act 1967, involving a summary conviction and an unlimited fine. …
…
With the above in mind, I can confirm that Enforcement Notice EN03/20-21 is correct and remains in effect.
…" (original emphasis).
"…
Neither the Forestry Act 1967 (from which felling licences and enforcement notices are derived), nor the Town & Country Planning Act 1990, or any other legislation for that matter, provides for planning permission to supersede the conditions of the felling licence. Planning permission allows development to be carried out in such a way so as not to breach planning law. It has no bearing on the validity of felling licence or enforcement notice conditions that may apply to the land in question.
The enacting of planning permission is also entirely voluntary. This is in contrast to the conditions of a felling licence or enforcement notice, which place a legal duty upon someone; i.e. compliance with those conditions is not voluntary. Absent any statutory provision allowing for planning permission to override the duties contained in a felling licence or enforcement notice, those duties must prevail even if planning permission is granted. I am afraid that if you have been advised otherwise, that advice was given in error.
In alignment with Government policies, given the climate and nature emergencies we are currently responding to, the Forestry Commission plays an important role in the drive to plant more trees, particularly in our towns and cities, and to create more woodland cover across England. As such the Forestry Commission cannot lightly agree to a net loss of woodland cover, however, small, even if planning consent is obtained.
With the above in mind, I can confirm the information I provided on the 15th January 2021 is correct, and that Enforcement Notice EN03/20-21 remains in effect, and that the Forestry Commission will not accept planning consent as a reasonable excuse for non-compliance. In the event of non-compliance with the Notice, the Forestry Commission may seek to take enforcement action."
"Given my very clear statement of intent to ignore the restocking and maintenance requirements and Ms Littlejohn's directions, you may wish to seek an injunction or a court order against us. I would take any failure to put the matter before the courts as confirmation that you accept our position in this matter and that maintenance of the areas that have already been restocked (an action that I have taken at considerable cost to save both parties' legal fees) will be seen to be unnecessary."
"…
I can confirm that the legal position set out in Ms Littlejohn's correspondence of 16 February 2021 is accurate. There is no statutory position that allows for the legal duties contained within an Enforcement Notice served under the Forestry Act 1967 to be set aside in any way by the granting of planning permission.
I should also note that the Forestry Commission does not have the statutory power to amend or revoke an Enforcement Notice once it has been served.
… Any decision by the Forestry Commission to instigate a criminal investigation in relation to non-compliance with an Enforcement Notice is reserved until after the expiry of that Notice and an inspection of the site has been undertaken by the Commission. I can also confirm that, following a criminal investigation, the decision to initiate proceedings rests with the Crown Prosecution Service, not the Forestry Commission. …
As I have noted, the Commission will reserve taking a decision on whether to escalate this matter until after the compliance date stated within the Notice – 28 October 2021 – and a subsequent inspection. Only at this point will the Commission determine if it is appropriate to commit resources to a criminal investigation.
I note your invitation to seek an injunction against you. The Commission does not consider this to be a good use of public funds, particularly as the situation has been made clear to you in this, and other, correspondence on behalf of the Commission. This does not amount to an acceptance of your position in this matter. As I have noted, a decision on this has yet to be made."
The claim for judicial review
"The decision communicated by way of letter dated 1 April 2021 from Mr James Murdoch … , which stated that:
1. The legal position as set out previously by Ellie Littlejohn was accurate i.e. that planning permission cannot be enacted by the Claimant, or any subsequent owner of the site, where it would render it impossible to comply with the conditions of the notice served under section 24 of the Forestry Act 1967 and that the enacting of planning permission does not remove the duties contained in a felling licence or an enforcement notice; and
2. The Defendant does not have the statutory power to amend or revoke an enforcement notice once it has been served."
The decisions in the court below
Was the claim for judicial review brought too late?
Did the Forestry Commission act unlawfully in maintaining the section 24 notice?
"The current procedure runs together the two stages, in that the notice served by the authority is final and binding in its own right, subject to a successful appeal. It was submitted that it would be inconsistent with the appeals structure under the Act of 1990 to permit an authority to change its mind about the existence of a statutory nuisance and to withdraw a notice once served.
For the council, [counsel] submitted that there must be an implied power of withdrawal. A local authority is both the enforcing and prosecuting authority under Part III of the Act of 1990. Service of an abatement notice is a step in a procedure which may lead to criminal liability. It must be the position … that the authority has a discretion whether to prosecute for breach of an abatement notice. The principles of finality and certainty require that, if the authority decides not to prosecute, it may also formally withdraw the abatement notice itself. Moreover the whole thrust of the relevant provisions is to place upon a local authority a continuing duty of review. … The duty under section 80(1) is to serve a notice where the authority "is satisfied" that a statutory nuisance exists or is likely to occur or recur. It would be very surprising if the authority, having served a notice on the basis that it was satisfied on the evidence available at a particular point in time, were thereafter unable to withdraw the notice even if, because of changes of expert opinion or other changes of circumstances, it ceased to be satisfied that a statutory nuisance existed or was likely to occur or recur. …
I accept [counsel's] submissions on this issue. In the absence of an implied power to withdraw an abatement notice, the enforcement provisions would in my view be unduly rigid. It seems senseless that an authority should be unable to withdraw an abatement notice which, for whatever reason, it no longer considers to be appropriate. It is particularly unsatisfactory that the recipient of the notice should remain subject to it and, by reason of a failure to comply with its requirements, should remain in breach of the criminal law in circumstances where the local authority does not consider the notice to be appropriate and has no intention of bringing a prosecution for breach of it. A power of withdrawal is therefore consistent with, and serves to promote rather than to undermine, the legislative scheme. I see no difficulty in implying such a power."
Conclusion
Lord Justice Holroyde:
Lord Justice Coulson: