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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 >> Samuel Smith Old Brewery (Tadcaster) & Ors, R (on the application of) v Darrington Quarries Ltd [2017] EWHC 442 (Admin) (07 March 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2017/442.html Cite as: [2017] EWHC 442 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
PLANNING COURT IN LEEDS
1 Oxford Row, Leeds LS1 3BG |
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B e f o r e :
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THE QUEEN ON THE APPLICATION OF SAMUEL SMITH OLD BREWERY (TADCASTER) (AN UNLIMITED COMPANY) OXTON FARM (AN UNLIMITED COMPANY) |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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NORTH YORKSHIRE COUNTY COUNCIL |
Defendant |
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- and - |
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DARRINGTON QUARRIES LIMITED |
Interested Party |
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Nathalie Lieven QC and Hannah Gibbs (instructed by Legal and Democratic Services,
North Yorkshire County Council) for the Defendant
Jonathan Easton (instructed by Walker Morris LLP) for the Interested Party
Hearing date: 17 February 2017
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Hickinbottom :
Introduction
The Legal Principles
i) Section 70(2) of the Town and Country Planning Act 1990 ("the 1990 Act") requires that planning authorities, in dealing with an application for planning permission, must have regard to all "material considerations", which include relevant statements of policy. Since March 2012, statements of central government policy have been set out mainly in the NPPF.
ii) Planning policies are not statutory or contractual provisions, and should not be construed as if they were. The correct interpretation of planning policy, including the NPPF, is a matter of law for the court to determine objectively in accordance with the language used, read purposively in its proper context. When construing particular provisions of the NPPF, the context is the NPPF looked at as a whole. Because relevant planning policy is a material consideration, and policy cannot be properly applied if it is misconstrued, where a planning decision-maker fails properly to understand relevant policy, that is an error of law in respect of which the court may intervene, if it is material (see Tesco Stores Limited v Dundee City Council [2012] UKSC 13 at [17]-[21] per Lord Reed JSC, R (Timmins) v Gedling Borough Council [2015] EWCA Civ 10 at [24] per Richards LJ, and Suffolk Coastal District Council v Secretary of State for Communities and Local Government [2016] EWCA Civ 168 especially at [26]-[27] per Lindblom LJ).
iii) Whereas what amounts to a material consideration is a matter of law, the weight to be given to such considerations is a question of planning judgment and is a matter entirely for those to whom the task of planning decision-making has been assigned. An application for judicial review does not provide an open opportunity for a disappointed party to contest the planning merits of a decision. The court will intervene, and will only intervene, on conventional public law grounds, which focus on process (see Newsmith v Secretary of State for the Environment, Transport and the Regions [2001] EWHC 74 (Admin) at [6] per Sullivan J, and Tesco Stores Limited v Secretary of State for the Environment [1995] 1 WLR 759 at page 780F-H per Lord Hoffmann).
iv) In relation to process, a local planning authority usually delegates its planning functions to a committee of councillors, who act on the basis of information provided by case officers in the form of a report. Such a report usually also includes a recommendation as to how the application should be dealt with. In the absence of contrary evidence, it is a reasonable inference that, where a recommendation is adopted, members of the planning committee follow the reasoning of the report. The officers' report is therefore often a crucial document. It must not mislead the decision-makers; and it must be sufficiently clear and full to enable councillors to understand the important issues and the material considerations that bear upon them, and decide those issues within the limits of planning judgment that the law allows them (see Oxton Farms and Samuel Smith Old Brewery (Tadcaster) v Selby District Council (18 April 1997) 1997 WL 1106106 per Judge LJ, and R (Lowther) v Durham County Council [2001] EWCA Civ 781 at [97]-[98] per Pill LJ). If an officers' report, as supplemented by any further oral report at the planning committee meeting, is insufficient to enable the planning committee to perform its function, or if it is materially misleading, the decision taken by the committee on the basis of the report may be challengeable.
v) Whilst the officer's report must be sufficient for those purposes, when challenged, such reports are not to be subjected to the same exegesis that might be appropriate for the interpretation of a statute: what is required is a fair reading of the report as a whole, taking into account the fact that it is written for a committee of local councillors who can be taken to be experienced in planning matters and to have considerable local knowledge (R (Siraj) v Kirklees Metropolitan Borough Council [2010] EWCA Civ 1286 at [19] per Sullivan LJ). Furthermore, the courts have stressed the need for reports to be concise and focused, and the dangers of reports being too long, elaborate or defensive (see R (Morge) v Hampshire County Council [2011] UKSC 2 at [36], per Baroness Hale JSC; and R (Maxwell) v Wiltshire Council [2011] EWHC 1840 (Admin) at [43], per Sales J as he then was).
Relevant Policy
"79. The Government attaches great importance to Green Belts. The fundamental aim of Green Belt policy is to prevent urban sprawl by keeping land permanently open; the essential characteristics of Green Belts are their openness and their permanence.
80. Green Belt serves five purposes:
? to check the unrestricted sprawl of large built-up areas;
? to prevent neighbouring towns merging into one another;
? to assist in safeguarding the countryside from encroachment;
? to preserve the setting and special character of historic towns; and
? to assist in urban regeneration, by encouraging the recycling of derelict and other urban land.
81. Once Green Belts have been defined, local planning authorities should plan positively to enhance the beneficial use of the Green Belt, such as looking for opportunities to provide access; to provide opportunities for outdoor sport and recreation; to retain and enhance landscapes, visual amenity and biodiversity; or to improve damaged and derelict land."
Thus, by serving the purposes specified in paragraph 80, the NPPF Green Belt policy seeks to "prevent urban sprawl by keeping land permanently open", the essential characteristics of Green Belt land being "openness" and permanence.
"87. As with previous Green Belt policy, inappropriate development is, by definition, harmful to the Green Belt and should not be approved except in very special circumstances.
88. When considering any planning application, local planning authorities should ensure that substantial weight is given to any harm to the Green Belt. 'Very special circumstances' will not exist unless the potential harm to the Green Belt by reason of inappropriateness, and any other harm, is clearly outweighed by other considerations.
89. A local planning authority should regard the construction of new buildings as inappropriate in Green Belt. Exceptions to this are:
? buildings for agriculture and forestry;
? provision of appropriate facilities for outdoor sport, outdoor recreation and for cemeteries, as long as it preserves the openness of the Green Belt and does not conflict with the purposes of including land within it;
? the extension or alteration of a building provided that it does not result in disproportionate additions over and above the size of the original building;
? the replacement of a building, provided the new building is in the same use and not materially larger than the one it replaces;
? limited infilling in villages, and limited affordable housing for local community needs under policies set out in the Local Plan; or
? limited infilling or the partial or complete redevelopment of previously developed sites (brownfield land), whether redundant or in continuing use (excluding temporary buildings), which would not have a greater impact on the openness of the Green Belt and the purpose of including land within it than the existing development.
90. Certain other forms of development are also not inappropriate in Green Belt provided they preserve the openness of the Green Belt and do not conflict with the purposes of including land in Green Belt. These are:
? mineral extraction;
? engineering operations;
? local transport infrastructure which can demonstrate a requirement for a Green Belt location;
? the re-use of buildings provided that the buildings are of permanent and substantial construction; and
? development brought forward under a Community Right to Build Order."
"… [T]he premise of paragraph 17 [of the inspector's decision], incorrectly, is that mineral extraction including hydrocarbon exploration cannot be appropriate in the Green Belt. However, any correct analysis of the proviso to [paragraph 90 of the NPPF], which is not what paragraph 17 purports to provide at all, has to start from the different premise that such exploration or extraction can be appropriate. The premise therefore for a proper analysis is that there is nothing inherent in the works necessary, generally or commonly found for extraction, which would inevitably take it outside the scope of appropriate development in the Green Belt."
"… I agree with the general thrust of the judge's reasoning, without needing to consider every detail of it. The key point, in my judgment, is that the inspector approached the effect on Green Belt openness and purposes on the premise that exploration for hydrocarbons was necessarily inappropriate development since it did not come within any of the exceptions. He was not considering the application of the proviso to paragraph 90 at all: on his analysis, he did not get that far. Had he been assessing the effect on Green Belt openness and purposes from the point of view of the proviso, it would have been on the very different premise that exploration for hydrocarbons on a sufficient scale to require planning permission is nevertheless capable in principle of being appropriate development. His mind-set would have been different, or at least it might well have been different…".
"A fundamental principle in national policy for the Green Belt, … is that the construction of new buildings in the Green Belt is 'inappropriate' development and should not be approved except in 'very special circumstances', unless the proposal is within one of the specified categories of exception in the 'closed lists' in paragraphs 89 and 90. There is 'no general test that development is appropriate provided it preserves the openness of the Green Belt and does not conflict with the purposes of including land within the Green Belt' (see the judgment of Richards LJ in Timmins, at paragraphs 30 and 31). The distinction between development that is 'inappropriate' in the Green Belt and development that is not 'inappropriate' (i.e. appropriate) governs the approach a decision-maker must take in determining an application for planning permission. 'Inappropriate development' in the Green Belt is development 'by definition, harmful' to the Green Belt – harmful because it is there – whereas development in the excepted categories in paragraphs 89 and 90 of the NPPF is not. The difference in approach may be seen in the policy in paragraph 87. It is also apparent in the second sentence of paragraph 88, which amplifies the concept of 'very special circumstances' by explaining that these will not exist 'unless the potential harm to the Green Belt by reason of inappropriateness, and any other harm, is clearly outweighed by other considerations'."
The Challenged Decision
"Mitigation and 'restoration' measures would soften the landscape and visual impacts, and the nature conservation value of the new landscape would be much greater, but the landscape character and quality would be permanently changed, so the impact cannot be said to be described as neutral."
"… [T]he NPPF reaffirms previous Green Belt policy and states that mineral extraction is not considered to be an inappropriate activity within the Green Belt, provided that developments preserve the openness of the Green Belt and do not conflict with the proposes of including the land in the Green Belt."
"7.121 When considering applications within the Green Belt, in accordance with the NPPF, it is necessary to consider whether the proposed development will firstly preserve the openness of the Green Belt and secondly ensure that it does not conflict with the purposes of including land within the Green Belt.
7.122 It is considered that the proposed development preserves the openness of the Green Belt and does not conflict with the purposes of including land within the Green Belt. Openness is not defined, but it is commonly taken to be the absence of built development. Although the proposed development would be on existing agricultural land, it is considered that because the application site immediately abuts the existing operational quarry, it would not introduce development into this area of a scale considered to conflict with the aims of the preserving the openness of the Green Belt.
7.123 In terms of whether the proposed development does not conflict with the purposes of including land within the Green Belt, the proposed quarrying operations are not considered to conflict with the purposes of including land within the Green Belt. Equally, it is not considered that the proposed development would undermine the objective of safeguarding the countryside from encroachment as it should be considered that this site is in conjunction with an operational quarry which will be restored. The proposed development is a temporary use of land and would also be restored upon completion of the mining operations through an agreed [Detailed Restoration and Management Plan].
7.124 The purposes of including land within the Green belt to prevent the merging of neighbourhood towns and impacts upon historic towns are not relevant to this site as it is considered the site is adequately detached from the settlements of Stutton, Towton and Tadcaster….
7.125 As mentioned in the response from [the First Claimant], one of the purposes of the Green Belt is assisting in urban regeneration which the objector claims will be undermined by the proposed development. Given the situation of the [A]pplication [S]ite, adjacent to an existing operational quarry and its rural nature, and the fact that minerals can only be worked where they are found, it is considered that the site would not, therefore, undermine this aim of the Green Belt.
7.126 The restoration scheme is to be designed and submitted as part of a Section 106 Agreement, it is considered that there are appropriate controls to ensure adequate restoration of the site. Due to the proposed restoration of the temporary quarry and the fact that it is considered the proposal doesn't conflict with the aims of the Green Belt, it is considered that the proposed development would not materially harm the character and openness of the Green Belt, and would, therefore, comply with Policy… SP13 of the… Local Plan and NPPF." (emphasis added).
The italicised part of paragraph 7.126 is repeated in the conclusion section of the Officer's Report, at paragraph 8.5.
"? It is considered [by the representative of the Head of Planning Services] that the proposed development (including the final restoration scheme) preserves the openness of the Green Belt and does not conflict with the purposes of including the land within the Green Belt; and
? The representative of the Head of Planning Services stated that mineral extraction is not classified as inappropriate development within the Green belt and taking into account that the quarry preserves the openness of the Green Belt and does not conflict with the purposes of including the land within the Green Belt, the proposed extension is considered appropriate development in this instance."
"That subject to the signing of a section 106 agreement controlling the long term restoration, aftercare and management of the site and appropriate lorry [rerouting], planning permission be granted for the reasons stated in the [Officers' Report] and subject to the conditions [attached]."
The Grounds of Challenge
Ground 1: In evaluating the impact of the proposed development on openness, the Officers' Report erred in failing to consider the visual and aural/noise impact of the development.
Ground 2: The findings on openness in the Officers' Report are materially inconsistent.
Ground 3: In proceeding on the basis that "openness" is "the absence of built development", the Officer's Report materially misled the Committee, because "openness" is not restricted to freedom from built development. It is freedom from all development, which includes mining operations.
Ground 4: Paragraph 7.122 of the Officers' Report was also materially misleading because it indicated that, simply because the proposed development abutted an existing operational quarry, it would not be in conflict with the aim of preserving openness of the Green Belt.
Ground 1
"Although the proposed development would be on existing agricultural land, it is considered that because the application site immediately abuts the existing operational quarry, it would not introduce development into this area of a scale considered to conflict with the aims of the preserving the openness of the Green Belt." (emphasis added).
"13. The principal matter in issue is whether the Inspector adopted an improper approach to the question of openness of the Green Belt….
14. The concept of 'openness of the Green Belt' is not narrowly limited to the volumetric approach suggested by [Counsel for the appellant]. The word 'openness' is open-textured and a number of factors are capable of being relevant when it comes to applying it to the particular facts of a specific case. Prominent among these will be factors relevant to how built up the Green Belt is now and how built up it would be if redevelopment occurs (in the context of which, volumetric matters may be a material concern, but are by no means the only one) and factors relevant to the visual impact on the aspect of openness which the Green Belt presents.
15. The question of visual impact is implicitly part of the concept of 'openness of the Green Belt' as a matter of the natural meaning of the language used in paragraph 89 of the NPPF. I consider that this interpretation is also reinforced by the general guidance in paragraphs 79-81 of the NPPF, which introduce section 9 on the Protection of Green Belt Land. There is an important visual dimension to checking 'the unrestricted sprawl of large built-up areas' and the merging of neighbouring towns, as indeed the name 'Green Belt' itself implies. Greenness is a visual quality: part of the idea of the Green Belt is that the eye and the spirit should be relieved from the prospect of unrelenting urban sprawl. Openness of aspect is a characteristic quality of the countryside, and 'safeguarding the countryside from encroachment' includes preservation of that quality of openness. The preservation of 'the setting… of historic towns' obviously refers in a material way to their visual setting, for instance when seen from a distance across open fields. Again, the reference in paragraph 81 to planning positively 'to retain and enhance landscapes, visual amenity and biodiversity' in the Green Belt makes it clear that the visual dimension of the Green Belt is an important part of the point of designating land as Green Belt.
16. The visual dimension of the openness of the Green Belt does not exhaust all relevant planning factors relating to visual impact when a proposal for development in the Green Belt comes up for consideration. For example, there may be harm to visual amenity for neighbouring properties arising from the proposed development which needs to be taken into account as well. But it does not follow from the fact that there may be other harms with a visual dimension apart from harm to the openness of the Green Belt that the concept of openness of the Green Belt has no visual dimension itself."
"The word 'openness' is open-textured and a number of factors are capable of being relevant when it comes to applying it to the particular facts of a specific case" (emphasis added).
On the facts of the specific case before him, he concluded (at [27]), that
"The Inspector was… entitled to take into account the difference in the visual intrusion on the openness of the Green belt as he did…" (again, emphasis added).
"66. … [A]s Green Belt policies [in paragraphs 89 and 90 of the NPPF] demonstrate, considerations of appropriateness, preservation of openness and conflict with Green Belt purposes are not exclusively dependent on the size of building or structures but include their purpose. The same building, as I have said, or two materially similar buildings; one a house and one a sports pavilion, are treated differently in terms of actual or potential appropriateness. The Green Belt may not be harmed necessarily by one but is harmed necessarily by another. The one it is harmed by because of its effect on openness, and the other it is not harmed by because of its effect on openness. These concepts are to be applied, in the light of the nature of a particular type of development.
67. One factor which affects appropriateness, the preservation of openness and conflict with Green Belt purposes, is the duration of development and the reversibility of its effects. Those are of particular importance to the thinking which makes mineral extraction potentially appropriate in the Green Belt. Another is the fact that extraction, including exploration, can only take place where those operations achieve what is required in relation to the minerals. Minerals can only be extracted where they are found….
68. Green Belt is not harmed by such a development because the fact that the use has to take place there, and its duration and reversibility are relevant to its appropriateness and to the effect on the Green Belt. Whether development, capable of being appropriate for the purposes of the proviso to [paragraph 90 of the NPPF], is in fact inappropriate, is a more complex question than the consideration of the effect on the Green Belt, where development has already been concluded to be inappropriate…."
Ouseley J thus indicated that, in addition to spatial impact (and, I add, visual impact), the purpose of the proposed development, its degree of permanence and proposed duration, and the reversibility of its effects are all matters which may, depending on the circumstances of the particular case, be relevant in assessing preservation of openness.
Ground 2
"Due to the proposed restoration of the temporary quarry and the fact that it is considered the proposal doesn't conflict with the aims of the Green Belt, it is considered that the proposed development would not materially harm the character and openness of the Green Belt, and would, therefore, comply with …the NPPF." (emphasis added).
Ground 3
"Openness is not defined, but is commonly taken to be the absence of built development."
i) The wording of which complaint is made merely says that openness is "commonly taken" to be the absence of built development, not that consideration of openness is necessarily restricted to that of such development.
ii) In any event, looking at the Officers' Report as a whole, it is clear that this reference does not suggest that development other than built development is irrelevant in the assessment of openness. The proposed quarry extension was obviously not built development; and, if the officers had intended to convey that development other than built development was irrelevant to the issue of impact on the Green Belt, the report could (and, no doubt, would) simply have said so. In fact, the Officers' Report did not confine itself to a consideration of "built development": paragraph 7.121 sets out the correct proviso tests (including whether the development would preserve the openness of the Green Belt), and the report includes a section of ten paragraphs (paragraph 7.117-7.126) dealing with the merits of "Impacts upon the Green Belt". Plainly, the report was not saying that, as a matter of law or principle, a quarry including no built development could not give rise to an impact on openness.
iii) Nor did that single sentence wrongly suggest that "mineral operations are intrinsically less likely to impact on openness than built development". Ms Lieven submitted that the very effect of paragraph 90 was that the starting point for mineral extraction development is that it is intrinsically less likely to impact on openness than built development; and, certainly, for the reasons I have given when dealing with Ground 1 above, the starting point for mineral extraction (in principle not inappropriate) is different from the starting point for built development (in principle inappropriate). Although I accept that the sentence of which complaint is made is not drafted as precisely as a lawyer might have done, it seems to me merely to reflect the different starting point of built development outside the listed exceptions in paragraph 89, and mining operations that fall within paragraph 90. In any event, I do not consider it is arguable that it was misleading in the manner in which Mr Village suggests.
Ground 4
"Although the proposed development would be on existing agricultural land, it is considered that because the application site immediately abuts the existing operational quarry, it would not introduce development into this area of a scale considered to conflict with the aims of the preserving the openness of the Green Belt." (emphasis added).
Conclusion