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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 >> Turner v Secretary of State for Communities And Local Government & Anor [2015] EWHC 1895 (Admin) (03 July 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2015/1895.html Cite as: [2015] EWHC 1895 (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 :
(SITTING AS A DEPUTY HIGH COURT JUDGE)
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Jonathan Turner |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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1. Secretary of State for Communities and Local Government 2. South Buckinghamshire District Council |
Respondents |
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Mr Gwion Lewis (instructed by The Government Legal Department) for the First Respondent
Hearing date: 13 March 2015
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr C M G Ockelton :
"Without planning permission, the intensification of more than four vehicles on part of the land shown [with that lawful use] on the plan and the intensification of more than two storage containers on part of the land [with that lawful use] on the plan along with the use of the land as a whole for the storage of vehicles and containers, the hire of containers for self-storage and the storage of builders/building materials, waste and equipment and other non-horticultural/forestry materials on the land." [The substituted words reflect a different colouring convention for the plan attached to the notice.]
"A very simple one, namely, that the alleged MCU has not occurred, because the site can lawfully be used for the storage of motor vehicles, containers, builders/building materials, waste and equipment and other non-horticultural/forestry materials in an unrestricted manner."
None of that raises any complaint from the appellant. The Inspector went on to note that the appellant's argument before him included an assertion that the Inspector's conclusions in the appeal in 2010 were incorrect. Those conclusions had been based in part on a period of inactivity in or about 2003, which stopped the clock running for the purposes of ten years use. The Inspector rejected the appellant's assertion. At the beginning of the ten-year period prior to the Certificate of Lawfulness of Existing Use, the existing use of the site was described as a "nursery" and horticultural or forestry use was confirmed by the aerial photographs of about that time. Whatever may have happened immediately thereafter, the Inspector's findings of fact in 2010 included a finding that there was, in 2003, "a phase of almost total inactivity, in terms of vehicle and container storage on this site".
"17. The increase in the scale of the storage activities has some off-site impacts which are likely to have planning consequences. For example, some of the storage containers are hired to customers on and off the site which is accessed via a residential street. In my view, more comings and goings associated with these storage activities is likely to be noticeable. In turn, the increase in the nature, level and frequency of traffic to and from the site would potentially have some affects upon residential amenities in terms of vehicle movements, noise and general disturbance.
18. Drawing all of the above threads together, as a matter of fact and degree, I find that the storage of more than four motor vehicles and two containers along with the use of the land as a whole for the storage of motor vehicles and containers, the hire of containers, the storage of building materials, waste and equipment and other non-horticultural and forestry materials has significantly changed the definable character of the use of the site as a nursery with a low-key and passive storage use due to the scale of the storage operations. The evidence presented points to the probability that the type of storage activities taking place at the time of the notice's issue had reached a point where a MCU had occurred through intensification, because of materially different planning consequences both on and of[f] the site."
"35. I find that the presented evidence by these witnesses about the nature of the site's use prior to the relevant date is insufficient to show that the unauthorised development started on or before the relevant date. This is because it lacks in detail as to when it started.
36. Additionally, this information relates to 2009, 2011 and 2013. While the witnesses give details about the number of motor vehicles and containers and other items stored on the site during these periods, their testimony does not assist Mr Jonathan Turner's case. This is because it relates to periods after the relevant date."
"177(1) on the determination of an appeal under section 174, the Secretary of State may –
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(c) determine whether, on the date on which the appeal was made, any existing use of the land was lawful, any operations which had been carried out in, on, over or under the land were lawful or any matter constituting a failure to comply with any condition or limitation subject to which planning permission was granted was lawful and, if so, issue a certificate under section 191".
"Lest there be any doubt about it, I wish to make it clear that the appellant is entitled under the Planning Acts to continue the user as it was in 1959 and may also, of course, have a right under the Planning Acts to intensify that user provided he does not thereby occasion a material change in use, and the Minister, in making his amendment should also bear that factor in mind".