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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 >> English, R (on the application of) v East Staffordshire Borough Council & Anor [2010] EWHC 2744 (Admin) (02 November 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2010/2744.html Cite as: [2011] ACD 34, [2011] JPL 586, [2010] EWHC 2744 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
B e f o r e :
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THE QUEEN on the application of IAN FRAZER ENGLISH |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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EAST STAFFORDSHIRE BOROUGH COUNCIL |
Defendant |
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-and- |
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NATIONAL FOOTBALL CENTRE LIMITED |
Interested Party |
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Graham Machin (instructed by David Duckitt Head of Legal and Democratic Services) for the Defendant
Peter Village QC and Andrew Sharland (instructed by Berwin Leighton Paisner LLP) for the Interested Party
Hearing date: 21 October 2010
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Flaux:
"how 28 detached houses (open market) will 'fill' about 50% of the funding gap. Whilst less than the 'minimum' that is required to secure the delivery of St George's Park, the funding that has already been secured from other sources will enable the development of the revised proposals for the NFC to commence. It is expected that additional funding will be secured should planning permission be granted. A planning permission indicates a scheme is certain and deliverable which results in greater interest from developers/lenders/sponsors and investors. … Residential development is required to enable the delivery of the revised proposals and, for the reasons given in the application documents is acceptable."
"The financial viability exercise that seeks to demonstrate this, is not in the public domain and cannot be scrutinised by objectors, so no one has had the opportunity establish how robust such an analysis actually is. There is no parallel between enabling development to support Listed Buildings upon which the applicants seek to rely and this scheme. In any event those financial appraisals relating to listed buildings are always in the public domain and are open to scrutiny by the public, that is not the case here.
There is no justification that the funding gap should be made up from a housing development in the open countryside and objectors may well ask where does this reasoning end. Does this mean that any one who has a funding gap on a significant project should adopt this approach, seek development in the open countryside and then not make the viability assessment open to scrutiny. …."
"A confidential Financial appraisal has been submitted in relation to the applicant's submission that the proposed housing development is required to help close a funding gap, and hence 'enable' the NFC sport/hotel scheme at St Georges Park.
….
Barton Parish Council and CPRE also raised issues over the 'funding gap'
Burton Civic Society objected asking: "Has the FA exhausted all other possible sources of funding before seeking to contravene the Local Plan?"
"Financial information submitted seeks to demonstrate that the development of the NFC will be funded principally by the FA, Umbro, 'the football family', sponsorship, development of the hotel and public sector grants. The issue for the FA is that even with these funding streams, there is what they describe as a 'funding gap'. They cite this as the reason for submitting this associated planning application for 28 dwellings, and refer to how this is 'inextricably linked' to the NFC proposals.
The Council has obtained independent verification of the financial information provided by the FA through DVS...
On balance therefore the benefits of the NFC outweigh any residual harm caused by the housing development proposed, and the principle of housing here (linked through an appropriate Section 106 Obligation to the substantial completion of the NFC) is acceptable."
"Let's be clear that housing in this location is fundamentally contrary to your planning policy and principles that I referred to earlier, there's no doubt about that. There are however significant economic benefits from the NFC itself. But the question is could they be delivered by other means. Most importantly I think for this afternoon the discussion on housing is whether housing is perhaps the least harmful form of enabling development if you subscribe to the view that enabling development is important and necessary."
"the commentary that Janet Hodson referred to…in terms of this closing only 50% of the funding gap, just to correct the latest analysis verified by our advisors is that it would fill something approaching 85%".
"The applicant accepted that the development would be contrary to policy, but put it forward as necessary to enable the development of the NFC, by generating a profit which would be applied to partially close a gap in the funding available for the NFC scheme. The Applicant provided, in confidence, financial information to justify this contention, which was subject to independent scrutiny on behalf of the Council by DVS Property Specialists (the commercial arm of the Valuation Office Agency)."
"There is a genuine funding gap
The housing development would fill more than half of the gap (50% on the Applicant's initial calculation but 85% on valuation by DVS)
The contribution from the housing development would generate sufficient confidence to enable the remaining gap to be bridged
Without the enabling housing development there was a severe risk that the Applicant would be unable or unwilling to proceed with the NFC development, and
The grant of permission for the housing development would make it very likely that the NFC development would proceed."
Ground 1. The process / procedure adopted by the Council was unfair and the Claimant was substantially prejudiced thereby. In particular the Claimant was not given any sufficient information as to the financial justification for the enabling development, to which the Council plainly gave decisive weight, so as to be able to investigate and test the basis on which it was being advanced. Both NPC Ltd's financial justification and the DVS report were not made available to the Claimant in either their original or a redacted form. In addition without sight of these documents, the committee was plainly unable to assess whether the objections by the Claimant and others to the non-availability of the information, and the lack of transparency in the process, had real substance.
Ground 2. The members of the Planning Committee who authorised the grant of permission for the residential development did not see NPC Ltd's financial justification or the DVS report. These were documents which they were required to see pursuant to the Town and Country Planning (Environmental Impact Assessment Regulations 1999 ("the EIA Regulations"). Without sight of them, the Committee was plainly unable to assess whether the objections by the Claimant and others had real substance.
Ground 3. It was perverse of the Council to grant permission for 28 dwellings on the basis that NPC Ltd's case was that about 50% of the funding gap needed to be filled by enabling development (as thereafter the remaining 50% would be provided by as yet unidentified sources) when the DVS report had apparently identified that 28 dwellings of 'enabling development' would fill 85% of the gap. In effect, the Council perversely granted permission for more (harmful) enabling development than was said by NPC Ltd to be needed.
(1) A challenge based on procedural unfairness that the Council acted unfairly in that the NFC Ltd financial report and the DVS independent review were not provided to the Claimant;
(2) An allegation that the Planning Committee should not have made its decision without first seeing the financial report and the DVS independent review, because by doing so, the Committee failed to have regard to a material consideration.
"Moreover, fairness in the planning process is not confined to a consideration of the interests of the objectors. It also needs to respect the confidentiality of the applicant because it is to its figures rather than to DTZ's general appraisal [the confidential report in question] that the claimants' point is addressed. It has the gist of the appraisal. It is this actual appraisal, and within that Arsenal FC's figures, that the claimants want. This is emphasised by their constant references to a £50 million funding gap drawn from an e-mail in which that is referred to. But it would be unfair to Arsenal FC for the local planning authority to be made to reveal what was handed to its advisers in confidence in the clear expectation that it would have a very carefully restricted circulation.
A planning authority needs to be able to examine matters in a confidential manner with applicants, as was done here, and for that purpose to use independent consultants to whom disclosure of the relevant information is made in confidence. This is the same process that the GLA went through. If a local planning authority cannot do that, it will be hindered in its negotiations with developers over the content of publicly beneficial packages such as the extent of affordable housing and other legitimate benefits related to the value of the development and its funding. The public interest would be harmed.
It is quite clear that the information is confidential and disclosure of it would be in breach of confidence. There is nothing unfair in the non-disclosure of that document, with the gist of the DTZ appraisal being available."
"22 The importance of acting promptly applies with particular force in cases where it is sought to challenge the grant of planning permission. In R v Exeter City Council Ex p. JL Thomas & Co Ltd [1991] 1 Q.B. 471 at 484G, Simon Brown J. (as he then was) emphasised the need to proceed "with greatest possible celerity", as he did also in R v Swale BC Ex p. Royal Society for the Protection of Birds [1991] 1 P.L.R. 6. Once a planning permission has been granted, a developer is entitled to proceed to carry out the development and since there are time limits on the validity of a permission will normally wish to proceed to implement it without delay. In the Exeter case, Simon Brown J. referred to the fact that a statutory challenge under what is now s.288 of the Town and Country Planning Act 1990 to a ministerial decision must be brought within six weeks of the decision. Thus if a planning permission is granted by the Secretary of State on an appeal or a called-in application, the objector seeking to question the validity of that decision must act within six weeks, without there being any power in the court to extend that period of time.
23 That factor led Laws J. (as he then was) to conclude in R v Ceredigion CC Ex p. McKeown [1997] C.O.D. 463, [1998] 2 PLR 1 that it was nearly impossible to conceive of a case in which leave to move for judicial review would be granted to attack a planning permission when the application was lodged more than six weeks after the planning permission had been granted. That was perhaps a somewhat extreme statement of the position, and certainly it was rejected by the House of Lords in R. (on the application of Burkett) v Hammersmith and Fulham LBC (No.1) [2002] UKHL 23, [2002] 1 WLR 1593 , where Lord Steyn (with whom the rest of the Appellate Committee generally agreed) said at [53] that from the McKeown case
"the inference has sometimes been drawn that the three months limit has by judicial decision been replaced by a 'six weeks rule'. This is a misconception. The legislative three months limit cannot be contracted by a judicial policy decision."
24 I would respectfully agree that, where the CPR has expressly provided for a three-month time limit, the courts cannot adopt a policy that in judicial review challenges to the grant of a planning permission a time limit of six weeks will in practice apply. However, that does not seem to me to rob the point made by Simon Brown J. and others of all of its force. It may often be of some relevance, when a court is applying the separate test of promptness, that Parliament has prescribed a six-weeks time limit in cases where the permission is granted by the Secretary of State rather than by a local planning authority, if only because it indicates a recognition by Parliament of the necessity of bringing challenges to planning permissions quickly. There are differences between the two situations: for example, where the Secretary of State grants a permission, an objector is entitled to be notified of the decision, which is not the case where a local planning authority grants the permission. Thus where in the latter case an objector is for some time unaware of the local authority decision, the analogy is less applicable. That was not the situation in the present case, where BLEW and its supporters, including the appellant, were very well aware of the decisions by the respondent's committee and then by the full council. My point is simply that, while there is no "six weeks rule" in judicial review challenges to planning permissions, the existence of that statutory limit is not to be seen as necessarily wholly irrelevant to the decision as to what is "prompt" in an individual case. It emphasises the need for swiftness of action.