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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Aireborough Neighbourhood Development Forum v Leeds City Council [2020] EWHC 2183 (Admin) (07 August 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2020/2183.html Cite as: [2020] EWHC 2183 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
PLANNING COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
AIREBOROUGH NEIGHBOURHOOD DEVELOPMENT FORUM | Claimant | |
and | ||
LEEDS CITY COUNCIL | Defendant | |
and | ||
SECRETARY OF STATE FOR HOUSING, COMMUNITIES AND LOCAL GOVERNMENT | ||
AVANT HOMES (ENGLAND) LIMITED | ||
GALLAGHER ESTATES LIMITED | Interested Parties |
____________________
Juan Lopez (instructed by Leeds City Council Legal Services) for the Defendant
The First Interested Party was not represented and did not attend
Charles Banner QC and Matthew Fraser (instructed by Walker Morris LLP) for the Second Interested Party
James Corbet Burcher (instructed by Shoosmiths LLP) for the Third Interested Party
Hearing dates: 4 and 5 February 2020
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Crown Copyright ©
Mrs Justice Lieven DBE :
?(7) The High Court may
(a) quash the relevant document;
(b) remit the relevant document to a person or body with a function relating to its preparation, publication, adoption or approval.
(7A) If the High Court remits the relevant document under subsection (7)(b) it may give directions as to the action to be taken in relation to the document.
(7B) Directions under subsection (7A) may in particular
(a) require the relevant document to be treated (generally or for specified purposes) as not having been approved or adopted;
(b) require specified steps in the process that has resulted in the approval or adoption of the relevant document to be treated (generally or for specified purposes) as having been taken or as not having been taken;
(c ) require action to be taken by a person or body with a function relating to the preparation, publication, adoption or approval of the document (whether or not the person or body to which the document is remitted);
(d) require action to be taken by one person or body to depend on what action has been taken by another person or body.
(7C) The High Court's powers under subsections (7) and (7A) are exercisable in relation to the relevant document
(a) wholly or in part;
(b) generally or as it affects the property of the applicant
7. In my judgment the amendments to s.113 make it clear that, instead of quashing the plan (or part), the court may remit it to an earlier stage in the process with appropriate directions. If the plan were quashed, it would no longer be possible to remit it to an earlier stage because the plan would no longer exist. For example, it would not be possible to direct that the plan be treated as having been submitted for public examination because there would be no plan to examine. In this example, subsection (7B) makes clear that, if remitted, the court may direct that the plan be treated as not adopted and require the public examination to take place again. In effect, the court may direct that the plan be remitted to any earlier stage in the process prior to adoption with a direction that the statutory steps be retaken from that point."
"The University did not pursue an argument that the Inspector's decision was irrational, therefore it would have been open to him in principle to accept the Council's housing figure of 14,000 dwellings. In those circumstances I consider the starting point is that the examination of the relevant policies should be reconsidered. It was only at this stage that any illegality occurred and the illegality could be remedied by going through the examination process again."
"The passage of time may well require the Council to update its evidence and, potentially, to invite the Inspector to recommend modifications to policies. That may require an SEA and further consultation. However, this is a not an unusual procedure and although it will extend the process I consider that the delays and expense to objectors and the Council will be less than if the process has to go back to the start. Further, it is by no means a foregone conclusion that the Inspector would take the same view as that of the BANES Inspector or that the Council would agree that the Core Strategy should be withdrawn. In any event, decisions as to how best to progress the Core Strategy are for the Council. To quash the relevant policies would predetermine further decisions of the Council and an Inspector about the Core Strategy which are matters of planning judgment for them and not the court."
"29.The court's powers to grant appropriate relief under section 113(7), (7A), (7B) and (7C) are widely drawn. They afford the court an ample range of remedies to overcome unlawfulness in the various circumstances in which it may occur in a plan-making process. As was recognized by the judge in University of Bristol, the provisions in subsection (7A), (7B) and (7C) were a deliberate expansion of the court's powers to grant relief where a local plan is successfully challenged under section 113. They introduce greater flexibility in the remedies the court may fashion to deal with unlawfulness, having regard to the stage of the process at which it has arisen, and avoiding when it is possible to do so uncertainty, expense and delay. They include a broad range of potential requirements in directions given under subsection (7A), all of which go to "the action to be taken in relation to the [relevant] document". The four types of requirement specified in subsection (7B) are stated to be requirements which directions "may in particular" include. None of them, however, would warrant the substitution by the court of its own view as to the issues of substance in a plan-making process, or as to the substantive content of the plan its policies and text. They do not allow the court to cross the firm boundary separating its proper function in adjudicating on statutory challenges and claims for judicial review in the planning field from the proper exercise of planning judgment by the decision-maker."
"All those parts of the Leeds SAP which allocate sites for housing development within the Green Belt (and which thereby take those sites out of the Gren Belt) are quashed."
"[T]he Secretary of State submits that it would not be appropriate to remit the SAP for immediate further examination by the Planning Inspectorate. The question of what should or should not be quashed in the SAP is most appropriately a matter for the Claimant and Defendant rather than the Secretary of State. It will subsequently be open to the Defendant Council to prepare a revised/updated/new SAP, taking into account the matters identified in the judgment, which would subsequently be submitted for examination in due course."
Conclusions