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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 >> Thomas (t/a RT Properties) v National Assembly for Wales & Anor [2009] EWHC 1734 (Admin) (14 July 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2009/1734.html Cite as: [2009] EWHC 1734 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
CARDIFF DISTRICT REGISTRY
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT IN CARDIFF
Birmingham |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
ROY GRANVILLE DAVID THOMAS (trading as RT PROPERTIES) |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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(1) THE NATIONAL ASSEMBLY FOR WALES (2) NEATH PORT TALBOT COUNTY BOROUGH COUNCIL |
Defendants |
____________________
Mr James Maurici for the Defendants
Hearing dates: 30 June 2009
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Wyn Williams:
"The advertisement sign by virtue of its illumination, sighting, size and design will have an adverse impact upon visual amenity to the detriment of the street scene and character of the surrounding area. The proposal is therefore contrary to policies C1, ENV 17 and ENV 25 of Neath Port Talbot Unitary Development Plan".
"We understand that the sign may, in fact, have been sited in this position for over 40 years. A copy of an aerial photograph has been located and blown up detail from it showing the sign is attached as photo 1. This clearly shows the sign in this position, utilising what appears to be the existing supports and framework. It is also understood that this sign was internally illuminated. The fact that the sign refers to Ford, who ceased operations well over 10 years ago, clearly indicates the longevity of the sign."
"What the Secretary of State must do is to state his reasons in sufficient detailed to enable the reader to know what conclusion he has reached on the 'principal important controversial issues'. To require him to refer to every material consideration, however insignificant, and to deal with every argument, however peripheral, would be to impose an unjustifiable burden .. "
"(1) A local planning authority shall exercise their powers under these Regulations only in the interest of amenity and public safety taking account of any material factors and particularly (a) in the case of amenity, the general characteristics of the locality, including the presence of any feature of historic, architectural, cultural or similar interest, disregarding, if they think fit, any advertisement being displayed there."
"(1) No advertisement may be displayed without consent granted by the local planning authority or the Secretary of State on an application in that behalf (referred to in these Regulations as "express consent"), or granted by regulation 6 (referred to in these Regulations as "deemed consent"), except an advertisement displayed in accordance with paragraph (2) below.
(2) "
Regulation 6 provides:-
"(1) Subject to regulation 7 and 8, and in the case of an area of special control also to regulation 19, deemed consent is hereby granted for the display of an advertisement falling within any class specified in part I of Schedule 3, subject
(a) to any conditions and limitations specified in that Part in relation to that class; and
(b) to the standard conditions.
(2) Part II of Schedule 3 applies for the interpretation of that Schedule."
"May an application for a declaration as to the need for listed building consent be determined before an application for consent has been considered by the planning authority and (if necessary) the Secretary of State?"
Before McCombe J it was common ground between the parties that the strict answer to that question was yes. Accordingly, McCombe J reformulated the issue before him as being whether it was appropriate for the Court to entertain such an application in the particular circumstances of the case. In relation to this issue the Defendant's stance was that it was not appropriate since the issue of whether listed buildings consent was necessary could be decided on a statutory appeal to an Inspector and the Claimants should have adopted that procedure. Counsel for the Claimants did not agree. His stance was that neither the local planning authority nor the Secretary of State on appeal had jurisdiction to decide whether listed building consent was necessary. Each, he submitted, was confined to deciding whether consent should be granted, making the assumption that such consent was required.
"30. In the end, I think that it is clear that those concerned in planning matters have for long worked on the assumption that the planning processes are available for determination whether listed building consent is necessary in any individual case. That assumption was made without question all the way to the House of Lords in the Edinburgh case in 1997 [a reference to Edinburgh CC v Secretary of State for Scotland [1997] A.C. 1447] and, although their Lordships did not decide the issue, there is no suggestion that they were in any way concerned that the Reporter [Inspector] had addressed the question of whether consent was required at all. In the intervening years Parliament has not chosen to intervene and there has been no hint from the Secretary of State that such decisions are not ones that should be left to Inspectors. For my part, for reasons already explained, it would seem to me to be highly inconvenient that such questions should routinely have to be decided by the courts before the substantive points could be addressed. In my judgment, it must be implied, therefore, that the initial decision on whether consent is necessary is one for the planning authority and, subsequently if necessary by the Secretary of State on appeal. I find that the High Court's jurisdiction in these questions is not a jurisdiction that excludes these decisions from the planning processes."
"(1) If any person wishes to ascertain whether
(a) the existing use of buildings or other land is lawful;
(b) any operations which have been carried out in, on, over or under land are lawful;
or (c)
he may make an application for the purpose to the local planning authority specifying the land and describing the use, operations or other matter.
(2.) For the purposes of this Act, uses and operations are lawful at any time if
(a) no enforcement action may then be taken in respect of them (whether because they did not involve development or required planning permission or because the time for enforcement action has expired or any other reason); and
(b) they do not constitute a contravention of any of the requirements of any enforcement notice then in force."
"There is, unfortunately, no statutory mechanism by which a planning authority can be required to make a binding determination as to whether or not a particular display of advertisements requires consent under the advertisements regulations
Prior to the 1991 reforms to the statutory regime relating to the enforcement of mainstream planning control, the Court of Appeal held that an application for planning permission for a particular proposal might be regarded as containing an informal invitation to the planning authority to determine that it did not involve any development requiring planning permission. On that basis, if the authority issued a written statement that permission was not required, it would be bound by it, even if it subsequently transpired that the statement was wrong. That approach is no longer possible since the introduction in the Planning and Compensation Act 1991 of a procedure to obtain a binding certificate of lawfulness of existing (or proposed) development but it might still apply in relation to advertisements control, in the absence of an equivalent procedure.
It would also, in theory, be possible to obtain a declaration from the High Court as to the need for advertisements to consent. However, it is very unlikely that the Court will be willing to entertain such an application a declaration is, after all, a discretionary remedy. An application for a declaration as to the need for listed building consent for particular works was thus rejected in Chambers v Guilford BC, with the court holding that the planning authority and the Secretary of State should be invited first to determine whether consent was required and secondly, if it was, to go on to determine whether it should be granted. The same approach would no doubt be taken in relation to an application to determine the need for advertisements consent or indeed any other consent, permit or licence other than planning permission."
"The procedure to ascertain the need for planning permission, is, at least in principle, more straightforward.
It has already been noted that a display of advertisements may constitute development either because it amounts to a building operation or because it constitute a material change in the use of the relevant land.
Where that is so, planning permission is in principle required, but is deemed to be granted so long as the display is in accordance with the advertisements regulations [a reference to section 222 of the 1990 Act].
Where a display constitutes development, therefore, it is possible for anyone interested (not just a prospective advertiser or land owner) to submit an application for a certificate of lawfulness, to discover whether any past or proposed display of advertisements constitutes "development" and, if it does, whether it is in accordance with the Regulations and thus granted deemed permission under section 222. That will effectively require the authority (and on appeal the Secretary of State) to make a binding decision as to whether the advertisement, existing or proposed, is in fact authorised under the Regulations. This procedure therefore may provide in many cases a slightly roundabout way of finding out whether consent is required under the Regulations for a particular display."