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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 >> Jayes, R (On the Application Of) v Hamilton [2017] EWHC 874 (Admin) (13 April 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2017/874.html Cite as: [2017] EWHC 874 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
VICE PRESIDENT OF THE UPPER TRIBUNAL (SITTING AS A DEPUTY HIGH COURT JUDGE)
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The Queen on the application of Anthony Jayes |
Claimant |
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Flintshire County Council |
Defendant |
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Mr L. Hamilton |
Interested Party |
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John Hunter (instructed by Flintshire County Council Legal Services) for the Defendant
No representation or appearance for the Interested Party
Hearing date: 8 December 2016
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Crown Copyright ©
C. M. G. Ockelton :
INTRODUCTION
PLANNING HISTORY
THE DECISION UNDER CHALLENGE
"No details of the applicants or the site's resident's specific personal circumstances have been put forward other than that they have a need for lawful accommodation in this area where they can continue to live together as an extended family group and where they can obtain adequate health care and regular schooling for children. There are children living on the site, however the exact numbers and ages have not been provided by the applicants."
"These considerations are material considerations in making a decision as to the impact any decision would have on the children residing on the site. If permission is refused then the impact of not having a settled base would need to be considered and weighed in the planning balance as a primary consideration."
Children on site:
Plot 3 – John and Jane Hamilton – 3 children
Plot 4 – Tracey and Edward Hamilton – 4 children
Plot 4a – Lavinia Hamilton – 3 children
Plot 5 – Acer and Leanne Hamilton – 1 child.
All primary age children attend Glan Aber primary school.
Medical conditions
Lavinia Hamilton has arthritis and is under a consultant at Glan Clwyd
Kathleen Hamilton is under a consultant at Glan Clwyd
Len Hamilton has diabetes and high blood pressure and is under the doctors in Holywell.
Debbie Price has arthritis and is under doctor in Holywell.
"The families on the site are related or part of an extended social network and therefore support each other. The adult site residents also have medical conditions which benefit from a settled base. The main family on the site are the Hamilton family. Len and Kathleen Hamilton are in their sixties and both have medical conditions requiring continued attention. Kathleen has had a number of operations including knee replacements and suffers from arthritis and is under a consultant at the hospital. Len Hamilton has diabetes and high blood pressure and is under the doctors at Holywell. The other Hamilton families have children."
"I also contacted the Council's Education Department to obtain any information they had about the children on the site. I did not receive a response at the time but since I have been told by the Inclusion and Progression Unit that the Council currently has a record of the following pupils on roll at Glan Aber Primary School, Baglit who give Dollar Park as their address:
Tony Joe Jones d o b 25.12.05 Plot 1
Natalia Jones d o b 25.01.09 Plot 1
Valentine Jones d o b 17.01.12 Plot 1
Kacie Hamilton d.o.b. 13.03.13 Plot 5
Atlanta McDonagh d o b unknown due to start nursery 03.10.16 Plot 2
The Inclusion and Progression Unit within Education only has records of the children who are registered at schools. The other children on the site are therefore not counted within their information. This will therefore not include those children who may be home educated or not attending school due to their age (ie over 11 as gypsy and traveller children do not generally attend secondary school). It will also not include younger children who are not yet old enough to attend school. While the latest information from education suggests that there may be more children living at the site than I was told about by the applicant at the time this would not have made any difference to my advice to the committee given that it is clear on either basis that there are children living at the site of which several attend the local school."
THE GROUNDS OF CHALLENGE AND THE RESPONSE TO THEM
The Law
Children and Planning Decisions
"i) Given the scope of planning decisions and the nature of the right to respect for family and private life, planning decision-making will often engage article 8. In those circumstances, relevant article 8 rights will be a material consideration which the decision-maker must take into account.
ii) Where the article 8 rights are those of children, they must be seen in the context of article 3 of the UNCRC, which requires a child's best interests to be a primary consideration.
iii) This requires the decision-maker, first, to identify what the child's best interests are. In a planning context, they are likely to be consistent with those of his parent or other carer who is involved in the planning decision-making process; and, unless circumstances indicate to the contrary, the decision-maker can assume that that carer will properly represent the child's best interests, and properly represent and evidence the potential adverse impact of any decision upon that child's best interests.
iv) Once identified, although a primary consideration, the best interests of the child are not determinative of the planning issue. Nor does respect for the best interests of a relevant child mean that the planning exercise necessarily involves merely assessing whether the public interest in ensuring planning controls is maintained outweighs the best interests of the child. Most planning cases will have too many competing rights and interests, and will be too factually complex, to allow such an exercise.
v) However, no other consideration must be regarded as more important or given greater weight than the best interests of any child, merely by virtue of its inherent nature apart from the context of the individual case. Further, the best interests of any child must be kept at the forefront of the decision-maker's mind as he examines all material considerations and performs the exercise of planning judgment on the basis of them; and, when considering any decision he might make (and, of course, the eventual decision he does make), he needs to assess whether the adverse impact of such a decision on the interests of the child is proportionate.
vi) Whether the decision-maker has properly performed this exercise is a question of substance, not form. However, if an inspector on an appeal sets out his reasoning with regard to any child's interests in play, even briefly, that will be helpful not only to those involved in the application but also to the court in any later challenge, in understanding how the decision-maker reached the decision that the adverse impact to the interests of the child to which the decision gives rise is proportionate. It will be particularly helpful if the reasoning shows that the inspector has brought his mind to bear upon the adverse impact of the decision he has reached on the best interests of the child, and has concluded that that impact is in all the circumstances proportionate. I deal with this further in considering article 8 in the context of court challenges to planning decisions, below."
Officers' Reports and the Decision at the Meeting
"90. A great many of LBC's grounds involve criticisms of the officers' reports to CBC's committee. Accordingly, it is necessary to refer to the legal principles which govern challenges of this kind. I gratefully adopt the summary given by Mr Justice Hickinbottom in the case of The Queen (Zurich Assurance Ltd trading as Threadneedle Property Investments) -v- North Lincolnshire Council [2012] EWHC 3708 (Admin) at paragraphs 15-16.
"15. Each local planning authority delegates its planning functions to a planning committee, which acts on the basis of information provided by case officers in the form of a report. Such a report usually also includes a recommendation as to how the application should be dealt with. With regard to such reports:
(i) In the absence of contrary evidence, it is a reasonable inference that members of the planning committee follow the reasoning of the report, particularly where a recommendation is adopted.
(ii)When challenged, such reports are not to be subjected to the same exegesis that might be appropriate for the interpretation of a statute: what is required is a fair reading of the report as a whole. Consequently:
"[A]n application for judicial review based on criticisms of the planning officer's report will not normally begin to merit consideration unless the overall effect of the report significantly misleads the committee about material matters which thereafter are left uncorrected at the meeting of the planning committee before the relevant decision is taken" (Oxton Farms, Samuel Smiths Old Brewery (Tadcaster) v Selby District Council (18 April 1997) 1997 WL 1106106, per Judge LJ as he then was).
(iii) In construing reports, it has to be borne in mind that they are addressed to a "knowledgeable readership", including council members "who, by virtue of that membership, may be expected to have a substantial local and background knowledge" (R v Mendip District Council ex parte Fabre (2000) 80 P & CR 500, per Sullivan J as he then was). That background knowledge includes "a working knowledge of the statutory test" for determination of a planning application (Oxton Farms, per Pill LJ).
16. The principles relevant to the proper approach to national and local planning policy are equally uncontroversial:
(i) The interpretation of policy is a matter of law, not of planning judgment (Tesco Stores Ltd v Dundee City Council [2012] UKSC 13).
(ii) National planning policy, and any relevant local plan or strategy, are material considerations; but local authorities need not follow such guidance or plan, if other material considerations outweigh them.
(iii)Whereas what amounts to a material consideration is a matter of law, the weight to be given to such considerations is a question of planning judgment: the part any particular material consideration should play in the decision-making process, if any, is a matter entirely for the planning committee (Tesco Stores Ltd v Secretary of State for the Environment [1995] 1 WLR 759 at page 780 per Lord Hoffman)."
91. I would also draw together some further citations:
"[The purpose of an officer's report] is not to decide the issue, but to inform the members of the relevant considerations relating to the application. It is not addressed to the world at large but to council members, who, by virtue of that membership, may be expected to have substantial local and background knowledge. There would be no point in a planning officer's report setting out in great detail background material, for example in respect of local topography, development plan policies or matters of planning history if the members were only too familiar with that material. Part of a planning officer's expert function in reporting to the committee must be to make an assessment of how much information needs to be included in his or her report in order to avoid burdening a busy committee with excessive and unnecessary detail." (per Sullivan J in R v Mendip DC ex p Fabre (2000) 80 P&CR 500 at 509).
92. In R (Siraj) v Kirkless MBC [2010] EWCA Civ 1286 Sullivan LJ stated at para. 19:
"It has been repeatedly emphasised that officers' reports such as this should not be construed as though they were enactments. They should be read as a whole and in a common sense manner, bearing in mind the fact that they are addressed to an informed readership, in this case the respondent's planning subcommittee"
93. In R (Maxwell) -v- Wiltshire Council [2011] EWHC 1840 (Admin) at paragraph 43 Sales J (as he then was) stated:
"The Court should focus on the substance of a report of officers given in the present sort of context, to see whether it has sufficiently drawn councillors' attention to the proper approach required by the law and material considerations, rather than to insist upon an elaborate citation of underlying background materials. Otherwise, there will be a danger that officers will draft reports with excessive defensiveness, lengthening them and over-burdening them with quotations of material, which may have a tendency to undermine the willingness and ability of busy council members to read and digest them effectively."
94. In Morge v Hants CC [2011] UKSC 2; [2011] PTSR 337 at [36] Baroness Hale of Richmond said:
" … in this country planning decisions are taken by democratically elected councillors, responsible to, and sensitive to the concerns of, their local communities. As Lord Hoffmann put it in R (Alconbury Developments Ltd) v Secretary of State for the Environment, Transport and the Regions [2003] 2 AC 295 , para 69: "In a democratic country, decisions about what the general interest requires are made by democratically elected bodies or persons accountable to them." Democratically elected bodies go about their decision-making in a different way from courts. They have professional advisers who investigate and report to them. Those reports obviously have to be clear and full enough to enable them to understand the issues and make up their minds within the limits that the law allows them. But the courts should not impose too demanding a standard upon such reports, for otherwise their whole purpose will be defeated: the councillors either will not read them or will not have a clear enough grasp of the issues to make a decision for themselves. It is their job, and not the court's, to weigh the competing public and private interests involved."
95. In R (Bishops Stortford Federation) v East Herts DC [2014] PTSR 1035 Cranston J held at paragraph 40:
"The courts have cautioned against undue judicial intervention in policy judgments by expert tribunals within their areas of special competence (see AH (Sudan) v Secretary of State for the Home Department (United Nations High Comr for Refugees intervening) [2008] AC 678 , para 30, per Baroness Hale of Richmond), and this reticence has been applied to considering the decisions of planning inspectors on issues of planning judgment: see Wychavon District Council v Secretary of State for Committees and Local Government [2009] PTSR 19 , para 43, per Carnwath LJ. Arguably, the same applies to experienced planning committees with their training and codes of conduct."
96. A number of the issues raised by LBC in these proceedings were not mentioned in its representations to CBC (e.g. the application of the sequential test). However, LBC correctly makes the point that that does not alter LBC's standing or entitlement to bring a claim for judicial review to quash the planning permission relying on such matters (see Kides v South Cambridgeshire D.C. [2003] 1 P & CR 19 at para 132-134). LBC has a genuine interest in obtaining the relief sought.
97. However, the principle in Kides does not detract from the principle laid down in Fabre, Oxton and related authorities as to the approach to be taken to a judicial review of a local authority's decision to grant planning permission on the basis of an officer's report to committee. It is primarily the function of the officers to judge which issues to address in the report and which to omit, as well as the depth to which any issue included in the report is explored and the amount of information supplied. Quite apart from the Kides issue of standing, there is a separate and crucial question for the Court to determine, namely whether the officer's report can be said to have been defective because it was significantly misleading, applying the tests in Oxton and Fabre. On that aspect a failure by parties to raise an issue in their representations to the local planning authority may be highly material, if not determinative, unless that issue was one which the legislation required the authority to take into account in any event (e.g. the statutory development plan - see section 70(2) of the Town and County Planning Act 1990 and R (St James's Homes Ltd) v Secretary of State [2001] EWHC Admin 30; [2001] PLCR 27)).
98. I should also refer to the decision of the Court of Appeal in R v Secretary of State for the Environment ex parte Powis [1989] IWLR 584 in which the Court of Appeal held that in general judicial review is to be conducted by reference to the material which was before the decision-maker at the time of his or her decision and without regard to fresh evidence. That principle is subject to exceptions, including evidence on whether or not a procedural error has been committed, such as a breach of a legitimate expectation."
"38. [W]hat I do think would be highly unfortunate is if a practice or an "industry" was allowed to grow of obtaining transcripts of meetings of this kind as a matter of course and subjecting every word spoken to minute scrutiny in an endeavour to find the basis for an argument in support of a judicial review claim. That cannot be in the public interest. Whilst it would be impossible to say that such evidence should not be received in appropriate circumstances (because occasionally a transcript may offer the best evidence that a planning committee has or has not erred sufficiently for judicial review purposes), the development of the kind of practice to which I have referred would, to my mind, need resisting strongly.
39. It is important to recognise that a planning committee meeting is just that: a meeting of the members of a local planning committee. Decisions are made by a majority vote when an obvious consensus does not exist. As with most committees, whether of a public or private nature, individuals may come to a meeting with a preconceived notion of the view they will adopt to a particular item on the agenda. However, during the course of discussion, when other views are aired and debated, those preconceived views may change. That is the whole essence of a successful and dynamic committee and of what true service in a public office involves. If, as will sometimes be the case, the opportunity to articulate a changed view does not always present itself at the meeting, the record of someone's oral contribution may be at variance with his or her eventual vote. All sorts of dynamics can occur that may mean that what someone is recorded as having said is not translated into an eventual vote that clearly indicates what was in the individual's mind at the time of voting.
40. Furthermore, the actual articulation of an argument can sound very different when it is heard than how it appears to be from the written word in the form of a transcript. What may appear to have been strongly expressed may have been a "throw away" line and vice-versa. These are just a few considerations that make a fine textual analysis of what is said at such a meeting in the search for some clearly defined error of reasoning fraught with difficulty.
…
128. [After citing the observations of Sullivan LJ about officers' reports in Siraj (above)] I would respectfully suggest that at least the same caution needs to be observed in relation to the oral contributions of members of the committee (including those of the Chair) whose words may have been recorded. Unlike an officer's report, the words will not have been formulated in the quiet of an officer's room with all relevant documentary material to hand. Some words will doubtless have been prepared in advance, but they will need to have been adapted to the circumstances of the debate as it proceeds and, as I have indicated above, views may change during the course of the debate. That is a perfectly understandable and desirable feature of the proceedings of such a committee. It could operate to stifle the kind of open debate that is the lifeblood of effective local decision-making if a close textual analysis of those contributions was permitted to be made too readily."
DISCUSSION
DECISION