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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 >> EU Plants Ltd v Wokingham Borough Council [2012] EWHC 3305 (Admin) (22 November 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2012/3305.html Cite as: [2012] EWHC 3305 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT IN WALES
(BRISTOL HEARING CENTRE)
2 Redcliff Street, Bristol, BS1 3TS |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
EU Plants Ltd |
Applicant |
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- and - |
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Wokingham Borough Council |
Respondent |
____________________
Hugh Flanagan (instructed by Wokingham Borough Council Legal Solutions Department) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 8 November 2012
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Beatson :
Introduction
The background to the TPO
"in January 2012 Council Officers were made aware of development proposals being considered for…Manor Farm. Following receipt of this information, Council Tree Officers considered that the trees were at significant risk from potential damage or removal".
No explanation for the difference in the dates was given by Mr Flanagan, who appeared on behalf of the Council. The claimant did not, however, challenge Ms Ramsey's evidence or rely on the difference. The January date may be the time at which the writer of the report, the Head of Development Management, became involved.
The provisional TPO
"Following a change of ownership and the removal of trees in this location, the Borough Council considers that the site may be subject to development in the future. Specific development along the permissive pathway appears to be to install a roadway, which would potentially cause significant harm the roots and canopy of the trees (sic). This would reduce their amenity value to members of the public viewing from the pathway and from the Lower Sandhurst Road, the Ridges, and Jubilee Road. These trees are growing along a ditch, and their age implies a long association between trees and the ditch field boundary line. As such, this group is of additional historic importance.
Wokingham Borough Council therefore considers it expedient to include the trees to the west of the pathway in a Tree Preservation Order now. This is to ensure that they are adequately protected and will continue to make a long-term contribution to the visual amenity of the local area. It will also ensure that only appropriate works are undertaken to the trees."
The applicant's objections
(i) Thrings' letter
(ii) Crown Consultants' submission
"3.2 …in the Secretary of State's view, it would be inappropriate to make a TPO in respect of a tree which is dead, dying or dangerous.
3.3 …visibility: the extent to which the trees or woodlands can be seen by the general public will inform the LPA's assessment of whether its impact on the local environment is significant. If they cannot be seen or are just barely visible from a public place a TPO might only be justified in exceptional circumstances.
3.4 [under the heading of expediency] …it is unlikely to be expedient to make a TPO in respect of trees which are under good arbicultural or sylvicultural management.
…
3.17 …the LPA may limit the TPO's protection to those species within the area which make a significant contribution to amenity…the area classification has its drawbacks. Firstly, it is possible that trees will be included in the TPO that do not merit protection. Secondly, unlike woodlands, the TPO protects only those trees standing at the time the TPO was made. Over time, as new trees are planted or grow within the area, it may become difficult to say with certainty which trees are actually protected.
3.18 In the Secretary of State's view the area classification should only be used in emergencies, and then only as a temporary measure until the trees in the area can be assessed properly and reclassified [and replaced] with individual or group classifications where appropriate."
Area Orders are Orders such as that in the present case, designating all trees within a defined area on a map. Group classifications are Orders which identify the protected trees by species type. Individual classification is a self-explanatory category.
The report to the Planning Committee
"Visibility of the trees:
Having viewed the trees and the surrounding landscape, Council tree officers can confirm the trees are visible in views from Lower Sandhurst Road, Jubilee Road and the Ridges, and from Dell Road. The trees make an important contribution to the mature tree cover in the local area.
Safety and requests:
Trees that are considered as dead or dangerous are exempt from TPO legislation. All other applications for tree work can be made by using the application for works form and, once granted, consent will be valid for two years. In this way, the protected trees can still be appropriately managed within the Tree Preservation Order legislation and confirming the [TPO] will not prevent appropriate health and safety tree works being undertaken in future. …
Expediency:
[The terms of section 198(1) of the 1990 Act are summarised].
Change of land ownership is not usually a criterion to create TPOs, but in this case, the new owner was a business proposing and demonstrating a change in working practices on the site; hence inclusion of the trees in a TPO is justified.
Where trees are considered to be under sound arboricultural management and not subject to any known threat (such as from inappropriate pruning work, development proposals, or are being considered for removal) then a TPO is not usually considered to be either expedient or justified. However, Council tree officers are aware that trees have already been pruned prior to making the Order. The pruning cuts are evident as not being in accordance with the British Standard 3998/2010 (Tree Work Recommendations). Photographs attached with this report show evidence of pruning works undertaken to trees just prior to making of this order.
Felling:
Crown Consultants state that "no trees have been felled other than self-sown trees". It is rarely appropriate to give different values to trees based on whether they are considered to be planted or "self-sown". The means of establishment for many trees is often difficult to determine and has no weighting on the immediate visual significance of the mature tree. For the purposes of the TPO legislation, the High Court has determined that a "tree" is anything which ordinarily one would call a tree; this would include self-sown trees. The statement from Crown Consultants therefore confirms that trees have been removed, thus underlining the expediency of the Tree Preservation Order.
No surfacing on the track:
The purpose of the [TPO] is not to prevent any development in this area; but is to ensure that any road that may be constructed is built so as to minimise impact on the trees in accordance with industry best practice."
The legal framework
"(1) If it appears to a local planning authority that it is expedient in the interests of amenity to make provision for the preservation of trees or woodlands in their area, they may, for that purpose, make an order with respect to such trees, groups of trees or woodlands as may be specified in the order.
(2) An order under subsection (1) is in this Act referred to as a 'tree preservation order'."
"(1) Nothing in Regulation 13 shall prevent –
(a) the cutting down, topping, lopping or uprooting of a tree -
(i) which is dead;
…
(b) the removal of dead branches from a living tree;
(c) the cutting down, uprooting, topping or lopping of tree, to the extent that such works are urgently necessary to remove an immediate risk of serious harm, or to such other extent as agreed in writing by the authority prior to the works being undertaken…"
"Chapter 2
Scope of tree preservation orders
…
Trees and woodlands
2.1…The term 'tree' is not defined in the Act, nor does the Act limit the application of TPOs to trees of a minimum size…The dictionary defines a tree as a perennial plant with a self-supporting woody main stem, usually developing woody branches some distance from the ground and growing to a considerable height and size, but for the purposes of the TPO legislation, the High Court has held that a 'tree' is anything which ordinarily one would call a tree.[1]
Chapter 3
Making and confirming tree preservation orders
…
Power to make a TPO
[3.1 sets out section 198(1) of the 1990 Act]
Amenity
3.2 The Act does not define 'amenity', nor does it prescribe the circumstances in which it is in the interests of amenity to make a TPO. In the Secretary of State's view, TPOs should be used to protect selected trees and woodlands if their removal would have a significant impact on the local environment and its enjoyment by the public. LPAs should be able to show that a reasonable degree of public benefit would accrue before TPOs are made or confirmed. The trees, or at least part of them, should therefore normally be visible from a public place, such as a road or footpath, although, exceptionally, the inclusion of other trees may be justified. … [T]rees may be worthy of preservation for their intrinsic beauty or for their contribution to the landscape or because they serve to screen an eyesore or future development…The value of a group of trees or woodland may be collective only. … In the Secretary of State's view, it would be inappropriate to make a TPO in respect of a tree which is dead, dying or dangerous.
3.3 LPAs should be able to explain to landowners why their trees or woodlands have been protected by a TPO. They are advised to develop ways of assessing the 'amenity value' of trees in a structured and consistent way, taking into account the following key criteria:
…
(2) Individual impact: The mere fact that a tree is publicly visible will not itself be sufficient to warrant a TPO. The LPA should also assess the tree's particular importance by reference to its size and form, its future potential as an amenity…as noted in paragraph 3.2 above, in relation to a group of trees or woodland, an assessment should be made of its collective impact;
…
Expediency
3.4 Although a tree may merit protection on amenity grounds, it may not be expedient to make it subject to a TPO. For example, it is unlikely to be expedient to make a TPO in respect of trees under good arboricultural or sylvicultural management.
3.5 It may be expedient to make a TPO if the LPA believe there is a risk of the tree being cut down or pruned in ways which would have a significant impact on the amenity of the area. It is not necessary for the risk to be immediate. In some cases, the LPA may believe that certain trees are at risk generally from development pressures. The LPA may have some other reason to believe that trees are at risk; changes in property ownership and intentions to fell trees are not always known in advance, and so the protection of selected trees by a precautionary TPO might sometimes be considered expedient.
…
Chapter 6
Applications to carry out work on protected trees
…
Exemptions in the Act
Dead, dying and dangerous trees
6.2 The LPA's consent is not required for cutting down or carrying out work on trees which are dead or dying, or have become dangerous. …
…
6.4 Determining whether a tree is dead, dying or dangerous is not always a straightforward matter. Whether or not a tree has become dangerous for the purpose of the statutory exemption is a question of fact. In deciding whether trees have become dangerous, the courts adopt the sensible approach of a prudent citizen; there must be a present danger, which need not be limited to disease or damage to the trees themselves. The threatened danger does not actually have had to have occurred; it is sufficient to find that, by virtue of the state of the trees, their size, their position and such effect as any of those factors have, one can properly conclude that the trees have become dangerous. …"
"
- The tree(s) must be highly significant when viewed from a public place such as a road or footpath. Trees that can only be viewed from a neighbouring property and are not significant in the wider landscape cannot be included. …
- The tree must be safe and healthy, capable of a reasonably long life and not be contributing to any known damage to buildings…
- It must be expedient to include the trees in a TPO. This usually means that they are under some form of threat, such as from a proposed development. We will not normally protect trees at individual properties, which are perceived as being under threat from more general risks such as changes of ownership. …"
Factual background to the bias ground
Analysis of the planning matters
The bias ground
Note 1 The guidance cites Bullock v Secretary of State for the Environment [1980] 4 P & C R 246, where recently coppiced trees were held to be “trees” under the Act, and Phillips J stated that “anything which ordinarily one would call a tree is a ‘tree’ within…the Act”. [Back]