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England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> City of Westminster v Davenport & Anor [2010] EWHC 2016 (QB) (30 July 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2010/2016.html Cite as: [2010] EWHC 2016 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
THE LORD MAYOR AND CITIZENS OF THE CITY OF WESTMINSTER |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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(1) EDWARD DAVENPORT (2) PERSONS UNKNOWN |
Defendants |
____________________
Juan Lopez (instructed by LT Law) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 14 - 15 July 2010
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Eady :
"It seems to me perfectly clear that the judge on a section 187B application is not required, nor even entitled, to reach his own independent view of the planning merits of the case. These he is required to take as decided within the planning process, the actual or anticipated breach of planning control being given when he comes to exercise his discretion "
"The Defendants are forbidden:
(i) from using any part of the Property known as 33 Portland Place, London W1B 1QE ('the Property') as shown outlined in black on the attached plan for any commercial or non-residential purposes.
(ii) from undertaking any development in respect of the Property as defined in section 55 of the Town and Country Planning Act 1990 without the express grant of planning permission. "
"1. THIS FORMAL NOTICE is issued by the Council because it appears to them that there has been a breach of planning control, under Section 171A(1)(b) of the above Act, at the land described below. The Council considers that it is expedient to issue this notice, having regard to the provisions of the development plan and to other material planning considerations.
2. THE LAND AFFECTED
The building and associated land at 33 Portland Place W1B 1QE shown edged with a thick black line on the attached plan.
3. THE BREACH OF PLANNING CONTROL ALLEGED
On 14th July 1960 planning permission was granted for the use of no. 33 Portland Place, St Marylebone for diplomatic purposes by the Commissioner of the Governments of Sierra Leone and Gambia subject to conditions.
One of those conditions was Condition 2 which states:
'This permission shall be personal to the Commissioner of the Governments of Sierra Leone and Gambia and shall not enure for the benefit of the land and in the event of the Commissioner ceasing to use the premises for diplomatic purposes the premises shall not be used for any other purpose than for residential purposes or such other purpose as shall have been previously approved by the Council.'
It appears to the Council that this condition has not been complied with because the premises are being used for a range of commercial and other non-residential activities in breach of this condition.
4. REASONS FOR ISSUING THIS NOTICE
It appears to the Council that the above breach of planning control has occurred within the last ten years.
The use of the premises for commercial and non-residential activities results in a loss of housing to other uses and impacts on neighbouring residential amenity to an unacceptable degree.
As such, the uses are contrary to policies Stra 11, H1 and H10 of the City of Westminster Unitary Development Plan adopted 1997 and policies Stra 14, Stra 16, H1 and Env 13 of the Replacement Unitary Development Plan.
5. WHAT YOU ARE REQUIRED TO DO
Stop using the property for commercial and other non-residential uses and use it only for residential purposes in accordance with condition 2 of the planning permission dated 14th July 1960.
TIME FOR COMPLIANCE:
One month after this notice takes effect "
It was said that these commercial and non-residential uses resulted in a loss of housing to other uses and impacted on neighbouring residential amenity to an unacceptable degree. Underlying the recommendation in the report were clearly a number of planning judgments, which were in due course reflected in the enforcement notice itself.
"(1) An enforcement notice shall state
(a) the matters which appear to the local planning authority to constitute the breach of planning control; and
(b) the paragraph of section 171A(1) within which, in the opinion of the authority, the breach falls.
(2) A notice complies with subsection (1)(a) if it enables any person on whom a copy of it is served to know what those matters are.
(3) An enforcement notice shall specify the steps which the authority require to be taken, or the activities which the authority require to cease, in order to achieve, wholly or partly, any of the following purposes.
(4) Those purposes are
(a) remedying the breach by making any development comply with the terms (including conditions and limitations) of any planning permission which has been granted in respect of the land, by discontinuing any use of the land or by restoring the land to its condition before the breach took place; or
(b) remedying any injury to amenity which has been caused by the breach.
(5) An enforcement notice may, for example, require
(a) the alteration or removal of any buildings or works;
(b) the carrying out of any building or other operations;
(c) any activity on the land not to be carried on except to the extent specified in the notice; "
"Now, I think, is the time to draw the distinction between invalidity and nullity. For example, supposing development without permission is alleged and it is found that no permission is required or that, contrary to the allegation in the notice, it is established that in fact the conditions in the planning permission have been complied with, then the notice may be quashed under section 23(4)(a) [of the 1960 Act]. The notice is invalid: it is not a nullity because on the face of it it appears to be good and it is only on proof of facts aliunde that the notice is shown to be bad: the notice is invalid and, therefore, it may be quashed. But supposing the notice on the face of it fails to specify some period required by subsection (2) or (3). On the face of it the notice does not comply with the section; it is a nullity and is so much waste paper. No power was given to the justices to quash in such circumstances, for it was quite unnecessary. The notice on its face is bad. Supposing then upon its true construction the notice was hopelessly ambiguous and uncertain, so that the owner or occupier could not tell in what respect it was alleged that he had developed the land without permission or in what respect it was alleged that he failed to comply with a condition or, again, that he could not tell with reasonable certainty what steps he had to take to remedy the alleged breaches. The notice would be bad on its face and a nullity, the justices had no jurisdiction to quash it, for it was unnecessary to give them that power, but this court could, upon application to it, declare that the notice was a nullity. That to my mind is the distinction between invalidity and nullity."
"It is an over-simplification and a misinterpretation of the authorities to contend that an enforcement notice cannot take away lawful use rights. It patently can have that effect in certain circumstances, and that is the undoubted result of section 285(1). Even in the absence of a CLU, a use which is within the existing use rights enjoyed by a piece of land is a lawful use: section 191(2) expressly provides that the use is lawful if it is immune from enforcement action because of the passage of time. Yet it has long been established that such lawful rights will be lost if an enforcement notice is served and the rights are not then raised as a ground of appeal. That is the result of section 285(1) and is recognised in cases such as R v Smith (Thomas George) [1985] JPL 182 and the Vale of the White Horse District Council case (ante). In the latter, the Divisional Court found that the magistrates had been wrong in law in permitting a defendant to a prosecution to lead evidence to show that the land had been used for the purpose enforced against for a period in excess of 10 years prior to the issue of the enforcement notice. Section 285(1) prohibited any such course being adopted: see Otton LJ at page 667, applying the Smith case."
"In short, what this line of cases indicates is that an enforcement notice will be interpreted so as not to interfere with permitted development rights under the General Development Permitted Order or with rights to use land for a purpose ancillary to a principal use which is itself not being enforced against. The authorities go no further than that and certainly do not establish any general right to assert existing use rights at a time when the enforcement notice has come into effect after an unsuccessful appeal or in the absence of an appeal. Such rights must be asserted at the time of appeal against the enforcement notice. If the landowner sleeps on those rights, he will lose them. There is a sound practical reason for this, in that any other course would require the courts, including magistrates courts, to delve into the planning history of a site and into the use made of it over a number of years."
"Where planning permission to develop land has been granted for a limited period, planning permission is not required for the resumption, at that end of that period, of its use for the purpose for which it was normally used before the permission was granted."
"In the Portland Place Special Policy Area, planning permission will normally be granted for use for diplomatic and allied uses, the headquarters of professional, cultural, charitable and learned institutions, associations and trade federations subject to other relevant policies, but permission for developments which displace these specific uses will not normally be granted."
It was therefore said that it would be necessary to show why the building was not required for diplomatic use and that there was no demand for other special policy area uses.
"Our client is anxious to comply with relevant planning legislation and is ensuring that the property is used for the purposes of a private residential house in accordance with relevant planning legislation. Assuring you of our close attention to all these matters on an ongoing basis . . . "
The request was granted. No response was, however, received. This might legitimately be characterised as one example of "playing the system" and "exploiting every opportunity for prevarication and delay": see Porter at [29], per Lord Bingham.
"77. I say that the primary use of the Property is residential. This has never been denied or disputed by me, as clearly shown in correspondence and at meetings.
78. The occasional use of the Property for commercial filming and my business activities are lawful and not a breach of planning.
79. The primary use of the Property as residential premises would and could not be prejudiced by either the scale or the degree of the occasional use of the Property for commercial filming and the owners business activities as with all of these events less than 15% of the premises is used.
80. The occasional use of the Property for commercial filming and my business activities are ancillary to the primary use and will not change the primary use of the Property as a residential unit. This is how the Property has historically been used for the last 100 years.
81. This is a suitable occasional use for part of an historic residence and is accepted as being so by Westminster Council and all other relevant institutions for all similar buildings.
82. Portland Place itself and the other buildings in the street are of such a nature that this use is suitable for the street."
"The Property has been used as a large grand London town house and has carried on the tradition of offering entertainment and impressing guests of the house residents and owner."
That does not, on the other hand, accurately reflect the nature of the commercial activities advertised and taking place over the last few years.
a) to conduct his business affairs from the three offices located in the basement of the property;
b) to permit filming at the property for 21 days each calendar year, with no more than 15% of the area of the property being used at any one time;
c) to permit up to 12 events at the property per calendar year in the nine large reception rooms (at basement, ground and first floor level);
d) to conduct private events at the property.
It seems to me that the appropriate way of dealing with matters of that kind is by way of application for planning permission, rather than by the court attempting in the exercise of the s.187B jurisdiction to regulate the nature and frequency of the uses to which the building may be put.
"The power exists above all to permit abuses to be curbed and urgent solutions provided where these are called for. Since the facts of different cases are infinitely various, no single test can be prescribed to distinguish cases in which the court's discretion should be exercised in favour of granting an injunction from those in which it should not. Where it appears that a breach or apprehended breach will continue or occur unless and until effectively restrained by the law and that nothing short of an injunction will provide effective restraint (City of London Corpn v Bovis Construction Ltd [1992] 3 All ER 697, 714), that will point strongly towards the grant of an injunction. So will a history of unsuccessful enforcement and persistent non-compliance, as will evidence that the defendant has played the system by wilfully exploiting every opportunity for prevarication and delay, although section 187B(1) makes plain that a local planning authority, in applying for an injunction, need not have exercised nor propose to exercise any of its other enforcement powers under Part VII of the Act. In cases such as these the task of the court may be relatively straightforward "
This seems to me to be one of those cases that are "relatively straightforward".