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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 >> Eastleigh Borough Council v Secretary of State for Housing Communities and Local Government & Ors [2019] EWHC 1862 (Admin) (17 July 2019) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2019/1862.html Cite as: [2019] EWHC 1862 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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Eastleigh Borough Council |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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Secretary of State for Housing Communities and Local Government |
1st Defendant |
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Mr Robert Janaway |
2nd Defendant |
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Mr Simon Bull |
3rd Defendant |
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Leon Glenister (instructed by Government Legal Department) for the 1st Defendant
Christopher Boyle QC & Andrew Parkinson (instructed by Moore Blatch LLP) for the 2nd & 3rd Defendant
Hearing dates: 9th & 10th July 2019
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Garnham :
Background
"1. The proposals represent an inappropriate and unjustified form of development which would have an unacceptably urbanising and visually intrusive impact upon the designated countryside, to the detriment of the character, visual amenity, and the quality of the landscape of the locality. The application is therefore contrary to Saved Policies 1.CO, 18.CO, 20.CO of … of the Eastleigh Borough Local Plan Review (2001-2011), and the provisions of the National Planning Policy Framework.
2. The site is considered to be in an unsustainable and poorly accessible location such that the development will not be adequately served by sustainable modes of travel including public transport, cycling and walking. The application is therefore contrary to the requirements of Saved Policy 100.T of the Eastleigh Borough Local Plan Review 2001-2011 and Paragraphs 17 and 35 of the National Planning Policy Framework."
The Appeal and the Planning Inspector's decision
- The Developers were proposing a considerable housing development in the countryside contrary to Policy 1.CO of the extant Development Plan;
- The proposal would also permanently urbanise an open field causing harm to an area designated for landscape improvement contrary to Policies 18.CO and 20.CO of the Development Plan;
- The proposal also breached Policy 100.T in that the shortest route (walking) to the secondary school, health centre and railway station was unsafe and that children, the vulnerable and the frail would consequently be at risk;
- It had a considerable surplus above the 5YHLS called for by paragraph 47 NPPF 2012,
- The policies were not out of date by reference to the HLS nor could theybe rendered out of date because they predated the NPPF or because they were in a Plan which was time-expired;
- The countryside policies were all either broadly consistent or completely consistent with the NPPF, and that therefore, consistent with all recent Decision Letters ("DL"s) in Eastleigh, between considerable/significant and full weight had to be attached to the breaches of the countryside policies;
- It was irrelevant that, in the past and on certain sites, it had chosen to permit development in breach of countryside policies in order to secure its 5YHLS;
- So far as Policy 100.T was concerned it was fully aligned with Part 9 of the 2018 NPPF;
- The policies were being breached in circumstances in which the 'tilted balance' could not apply because an Appropriate Assessment was required and therefore the statutory presumption in favour of the Development Plan applied; and
- The appeal should be dismissed by straightforward application of the statutory presumption in favour of the Development Plan.
The Grounds
The Law
"(1) Decisions of the Secretary of State and his inspectors in appeals against the refusal of planning permission are to be construed in a reasonably flexible way. Decision letters are written principally for parties who know what the issues between them are and what evidence and argument has been deployed on those issues. An inspector does not need to "rehearse every argument relating to each matter in every paragraph" (see the judgment of Forbes J. in Seddon Properties v Secretary of State for the Environment (1981) 42 P. & C.R. 26, at p.28).
(2) The reasons for an appeal decision must be intelligible and adequate, enabling one to understand why the appeal was decided as it was and what conclusions were reached on the "principal important controversial issues". An inspector's reasoning must not give rise to a substantial doubt as to whether he went wrong in law, for example by misunderstanding a relevant policy or by failing to reach a rational decision on relevant grounds. But the reasons need refer only to the main issues in the dispute, not to every material consideration (see the speech of Lord Brown of Eaton-under-Heywood in South Bucks District Council and another v Porter (No. 2) [2004] 1 WLR 1953, at p.1964B-G).
(3) The weight to be attached to any material consideration and all matters of planning judgment are within the exclusive jurisdiction of the decision-maker. They are not for the court. A local planning authority determining an application for planning permission is free, "provided that it does not lapse into Wednesbury irrationality" to give material considerations "whatever weight [it] thinks fit or no weight at all" (see the speech of Lord Hoffmann in Tesco Stores Limited v Secretary of State for the Environment [1995] 1 WLR 759, at p.780F-H). And, essentially for that reason, an application under section 288 of the 1990 Act does not afford an opportunity for a review of the planning merits of an inspector's decision (see the judgment of Sullivan J., as he then was, in Newsmith v Secretary of State for [Environment, Transport and the Regions] [2001] EWHC Admin 74, at paragraph 6).
(4) Planning policies are not statutory or contractual provisions and should not be construed as if they were. The proper interpretation of planning policy is ultimately a matter of law for the court. The application of relevant policy is for the decision-maker. But statements of policy are to be interpreted objectively by the court in accordance with the language used and in its proper context. A failure properly to understand and apply relevant policy will constitute a failure to have regard to a material consideration, or will amount to having regard to an immaterial consideration (see the judgment of Lord Reed in Tesco Stores v Dundee City Council [2012] PTSR 983, at paragraphs 17 to 22).
(5) When it is suggested that an inspector has failed to grasp a relevant policy one must look at what he thought the important planning issues were and decide whether it appears from the way he dealt with them that he must have misunderstood the policy in question (see the judgment of Hoffmann L.J., as he then was, South Somerset District Council v The Secretary of State for the Environment (1993) 66 P. & C.R. 80, at p.83E-H).
(6) Because it is reasonable to assume that national planning policy is familiar to the Secretary of State and his inspectors, the fact that a particular policy is not mentioned in the decision letter does not necessarily mean that it has been ignored (see, for example, the judgment of Lang J. in Sea Land Power & Energy Limited v Secretary of State for Communities and Local Government [2012] EWHC 1419 (QB), at paragraph 58).
(7) Consistency in decision-making is important both to developers and local planning authorities, because it serves to maintain public confidence in the operation of the development control system. But it is not a principle of law that like cases must always be decided alike. An inspector must exercise his own judgment on this question, if it arises (see, for example, the judgment of Pill L.J. Fox Strategic Land and Property Ltd. v Secretary of State for Communities and Local Government [2013] 1 P. & C.R. 6, at paragraphs 12 to 14, citing the judgment of Mann L.J. in North Wiltshire District Council v Secretary of State for the Environment [1992] 65 P. & C.R. 137, at p.145)."
Submissions and Discussion
Ground 1 - Unsafe Pedestrian Route
Submissions
Discussion
"plans should protect and exploit opportunities for the use of sustainable transport modes for the movement of goods and people. Therefore, developments should be located and designed where practical to …create safe and secure layouts which minimise conflicts between traffic and…pedestrians…."
Ground 2 - Planning balance – Housing supply and countryside policies
Submissions
(i) the Inspector wrongly determined that the fact that the Council could clearly demonstrate a 5YHLS was not relevant to the weight which should be accorded to breach of the countryside policies;
(ii) he wrongly determined that it was relevant to have regard to how such countryside policies had been applied in the past in order to obtain a 5YHLS, when attributing weight to such breaches;
(iii) he wrongly reduced the weight attached to the breach of countryside policies by reason of their lacking the flexibility enshrined in the NPPF, in that this was contrary to decided authority; and
(iv) he wrongly took into account that the harm occasioned by permanently urbanising the countryside "would be the case in relation to any greenfield development proposal" which was an irrelevant consideration where there was double the HLS requirement and no need to develop any greenfield site.
Discussion
Ground 2 (i)
"Plans and decisions should apply a presumption in favour of sustainable development. … For decision-taking this means:
c) approving development proposals that accord with an up-to-date development plan without delay; or
d) where there are no relevant development plan policies, or the policies which are most important for determining the application are out-of-date, granting permission unless:
i. the application of policies in this Framework that protect areas or assets of particular importance provides a clear reason for refusing the development proposed; or
ii. any adverse impacts of doing so would significantly and demonstrably outweigh the benefits, when assessed against the policies in this Framework taken as a whole" (emphasis added).
Ground 2 (ii)
Ground 2 (iii)
"186 I do not think Mr Cahill's argument gains anything from Kenneth Parker J's analysis of the particular policies of the development plan that he had to consider in Colman's case, in which he compared of those policies with government policy in the NPPF. In any event I do not read Kenneth Parker J's judgment in that case as authority for the proposition that every development plan policy restricting development of one kind or another in a particular location will be incompatible with policy for sustainable development in the NPPF, and thus out-of-date, if it does not in its own terms qualify that restriction by saying it can be overcome by the benefits of a particular proposal. That is more than I can see in what Kenneth Parker J said, and more than I think one take from the NPPF itself. The question of whether a particular policy of the relevant development plan is or is not consistent with the NPPF will depend on the specific terms of that policy and of the corresponding parts of the NPPF when both are read in their full context. When this is done it may be obvious that there is an inconsistency between the relevant policies of the plan and the NPPF. But in my view that was not so in this case."
Ground 2 (iv)
Conclusion