BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Liverpool Open And Green Spaces Community Interest Company, R (On the Application Of) v Liverpool City Council [2019] EWHC 55 (Admin) (18 January 2019) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2019/55.html Cite as: [2019] EWHC 55 (Admin) |
[New search] [Printable PDF version] [Help]
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
PLANNING COURT
1 Bridge Street West Manchester M60 9DJ Judgment handed down at: The Central Criminal Court Old Bailey, London EC4M 7EH |
||
B e f o r e :
____________________
THE QUEEN on the application of LIVERPOOL OPEN AND GREEN SPACES COMMUNITY INTEREST COMPANY |
Claimant |
|
- and - |
||
LIVERPOOL CITY COUNCIL |
Defendant |
|
(1) REDROW HOMES LIMITED (2) ARTHUR BROOKS (on behalf of MERSYSIDE LIVE STEAM AND MODEL ENGINEERS |
Interested Parties |
____________________
Paul Tucker QC and Constanze Bell (instructed by Liverpool City Council) for the Defendant
David Manley QC and Anthony Gill (instructed by Redrow Homes Limited) for the First Interested Party
The Second Interested Party did not appear and was not represented.
Hearing dates: 5th and 6th November 2018
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Kerr :
Introduction:
Facts:
"[o]verall … the proposed conversion and alterations of the designated heritage assets … will sustain and enhance their significance and … any harm to the setting of Beechley Stables and any other heritage assets would be classed as less than substantial, being outweighed by the wider public/regeneration benefits delivered from the proposed development as a whole …."
Law:
"The existence of the statutory duty under section 66(1) does not alter the approach that the court takes to an examination of the reasons for the decision given by the decision-maker: Mordue v Secretary of State for Communities and Local Government [2016] 1 WLR 2682. It is not for the decision-maker to demonstrate positively that he has complied with that duty: it is for the challenger to demonstrate that at the very least there is substantial doubt whether he has. Where the decision-maker refers to the statutory duty, the relevant parts of the NPPF and any relevant policies in the development plan there is an inference that he has complied with it, absent some positive indication to the contrary: Jones v. Mordue at [28]. In examining the reasons given by a local planning authority for a decision, it is a reasonable inference that, in the absence of contrary evidence, they accepted the reasoning of an officer's report, at all events where they follow the officer's recommendation: R v Mendip District Council, Ex p Fabre (2000) 80 P & CR 500, 511 and R (Zurich Assurance Ltd (trading as Threadneedle Property Investments)) v North Lincolnshire Council [2012] EWHC 3708 at [15]."
Issues, Reasoning and Conclusions:
Ground 1: heritage assets and the weighted balancing exercise
"not such as to be considered significant" and "on balance the level of benefits … outweighed this in terms of the relocation of and provision of new enhanced facilities for Beechley Riding Stables and the Model Railway".
"a recessed landscape design element that creates a vertical barrier while preserving an uninterrupted view of the landscape beyond. The design includes a turfed incline which slopes downward to a sharply vertical face, typically a masonry retaining wall".
"Therefore any such impact, no matter how limited they, [sic] are not necessarily such that they would be unacceptable. It is for the decision maker to weigh the balance of the scale of any harm against the public benefits of any proposals."
"Modern fencing, erected in connection with equestrian centre, across lower section of private grounds to SE of main house and terrace, will be removed. 3 detached houses erected in a row in front of shelter belt of mature trees which enclose whole grounds. New houses linked to development to N by access road through the shelter belt to NE. Fence separating development land from main grounds … would be on line of existing paddock fence nearest to footprint of pavilion demolished by end of C20 visible in NE corner…
Level of harm would be less than substantial but alteration not acceptable due to impact on setting of main house and Ha Ha. Grounds have remained substantially in tact [sic] and in single ownership. Only built structure in area now proposed for 3 houses was mid-C20 pavilion for use in connection for use in connection with recreation facilities, footprint of which was located next to shelter belt trees."
"… the future of the [sic] all the land within the historic curtilage of Beechley, which forms the principle [sic] setting of all its listed buildings, should be ensured by appropriate management of the whole landscape, not just the areas close to the main house and entrance."
"the proposed planning application would not be supported from a conservation point of view at present because of the adverse impact which one aspect of it would have on the setting of the Grade II listed house. As stated in NPPF paragraph 134, it is for the decision-maker to consider the public benefits of the scheme against the identified harm to the significance of the listed buildings and structures at the Beechley site."
"Planning permission will only be granted for development affecting the setting of a listed building, which preserves the setting and important views of the building…."
"… where harm is identified, the application should be refused however where there would be less than substantial harm, this must be weighed against the public benefits."
"Overall, the Interim Head of Planning is satisfied that the proposed conversion and alterations of the designated heritage assets of Beechley and Beechley Stables will sustain and enhance their significance and that any harm to the setting of Beechley and other heritage assets would be classed as less than substantial, being outweighed by the wider public/regeneration benefits delivered from the proposed development as a whole, in accordance with paragraph 134 of the NPPF."
"… this is a finely balanced application where any identified harm must be carefully weighed against the wider benefits that the proposal would bring.
For the reasons given earlier in this report, the Interim Head of Planning considers that the scheme is, on balance, acceptable having regard to the wider public/regeneration benefits that it would deliver. He considers that matters relating to any identified impacts on openness/greenspace, highways, design, ecology, archaeology, trees and the amenity of nearby occupiers are acceptable, having regard to the impact on the wider Green Wedge, and having regard to the particular characteristics of this part of the Green Wedge. Any impacts on Heritage are considered to be outweighed by the public benefits identified within the report."
Ground 5: misinterpretation of policy OE3
"The City Council will protect and improve the open character, landscape, recreational and ecological quality of the Green Wedges at Calderstones / Woolton and Otterspool by:
i not granting planning permission for proposals for new development that would affect the predominantly open character of the Green Wedges or reduce the physical separation between existing built up areas;
ii requiring that, where new built development is permitted (including conversion or extension) such development:
- has regard to the openness of the Green Wedge and the purposes of including land within it;
- should be in accordance with the criteria set down in policy HD18 and, in particular, uses materials and built forms sympathetic to the character of the area;
- retains existing vegetation and special site features where appropriate; and
- provides and maintains a high standard of landscaping
iii retaining its own land in predominantly open use and supporting proposals which would:
- enhance tree cover by the retention of existing trees and replacement of older trees where necessary;
- enhance the recreational role of the Green Wedges; or
- offer uses and activities which accord with their open character, particularly those that secure the continued use of sports grounds surplus to the owner's requirements, for open space purposes."
"considered that the redevelopment of this portion, with dwellings that have spacious areas around them, in the main, would not unduly impact on the predominantly open character of the wider Green Wedge. In this respect, the Interim Head of Planning considers that the proposal would not conflict with the aims and objectives of part (i) of Saved Policy OE3."
(1) The meaning of a planning policy is a matter of law; planning authorities do not live in the world of Humpty Dumpty and cannot make policies mean what they want them to mean; they must be objectively construed in accordance with the language, read in its proper context (per Lord Reed in Tesco Stores Ltd v. Dundee City Council [2012] UKSC 13,[2012] PTSR 983, at [18]-[20]).
(2) Conflict between a development proposal and a development plan policy must be expressly and openly acknowledged; see section 38(6) of the Planning and Compulsory Purchase Act 2004 and Tiviot Way Investments Ltd (cited above) per Patterson J at [27] and [36]. If an authority fails to appreciate the existence or extent of such a conflict, the decision may be invalidated (Tesco Stores Ltd v. Dundee CC, cited above, per Lord Reed at [23]).
(3) Openness is the abstract noun corresponding to the adjective "open", as in "open character". It means simply absence of built development. The concept is found in both green belt and green wedge policies and bears the same meaning; though in the case of the former the acceptability of built development is subject to an "exceptional circumstances" test, whereas in the latter it is not. Land that is open and protected as such need not be green belt only; it can be green wedge or e.g. "metropolitan open land" as in R (Lensbury Ltd) v. Richmond-upon-Thames LBC [2016] EWCA Civ 814, see per Sales LJ at [31].
(4) The authorities support the obvious proposition that openness means the absence of built development; see R (Heath and Hampstead Society v. Camden LBC [2007] EWHC 977 (Admin), [2007] 2 P&CR 19, at [21]-[22], [37]-[38]; R (Lea Valley Regional Park Authority) v. Epping Forest DC [2016] EWCA Civ 404, per Lindblom LJ at [7]; R (Sam Smith's Old Brewery (Tadcaster)) v. North Yorkshire County Council [2018] EWCA Civ 489, per Lindblom LJ at [19].
(5) The concept of openness must bear the same meaning in a green wedge policy as in a green belt policy. Mr Streeten referred me to the supporting text following policy OE3 and to various historic policy papers and documents predating the UDP to make good this submission. The clear principle is that built development is inappropriate in green wedge areas as in green belt areas. It would be strange if it were otherwise. This approach is supported also by policy GEN 2 (and its supporting text) which treats green belt and green wedge land alike as requiring protection against inappropriate development.
(6) Built development that harms openness in a green wedge space necessarily conflicts with policy OE3 i. The LPA conceded in the OR that this proposed development would harm openness in the Calderstones Park green wedge. As such, the development necessarily is in conflict with OE3 i. Whether it is or not is a matter not of planning judgment but of meaning.
(7) The adverb "predominantly" in the phrase "predominantly open character" in OE3, refers to the character of the land, not the extent of proposed interference with its quality of openness. The policy does not allow an examination of whether a development would "unduly" or "in the main" impact on the predominantly open character of the green wedge. Nor is there room for consideration of whether the harm is to the "wider" green wedge by examining the proportion of green wedge space affected; cf. Gilbart J's rejection of that approach in R (Irving) v. Mid-Sussex DC [2016] PTSR 1365, at [56]-[58].
(8) Toleration of built development in green space leads to the "death of a thousand cuts" identified by Sullivan J (as he then was) in Heath and Hampstead at [37]. This might be called a "thin end of the green wedge": once you allow any built development in a green space, however minor, openness is compromised and the precedent for further development set; see also Parker J's observations to the same effect in West Lancashire BC v. Secretary of State for Communities and Local Government [2009] EWHC 3631 at [22] and Supperstone J's in R (Boot) v. Elmbridge BC [2017] EWHC 12 at [40].
(9) The only built development allowed under policy OE3 is development falling outside OE3 i, i.e. development which does not affect the predominantly open character of the green wedges or reduce the physical separation between existing built up areas. Such development (for example, conversions, extensions, sports and recreation facilities, perhaps a cemetery) is not inappropriate and is permitted under OE3 ii, subject to the safeguards in the four bullet points in OE3 ii (use of sympathetic materials, retention of vegetation and so forth).
(10) Mr Streeten also conceded that development may conflict with OE3 i but be permitted under OE3 ii, subject to those same safeguards. In such a case, there is a conflict with policy OE3 but a more limited one. As put in LOGS' skeleton argument: "[i]f development complies with OE3(ii) but not OE3(i), the extent of the conflict with the [UDP] is more limited than if it conflicts with both …." The conflict must be acknowledged but prevention of inappropriate development may, in such a case, more readily be outweighed by public benefits.
(1) Policy OE3 applies where development proposals would adversely affect the "predominantly open character" of green wedge spaces or reduce physical separation between existing built up areas (see OE3 i). Open character is a different concept from openness in the policy statements and jurisprudence relating to the green belt. The term "open character" in OE3 i does not import the effect of the case law relied on by LOGS.
(2) Where, as in the present case, a development proposal would adversely affect the predominantly open character of a green wedge space, and thus bring OE3 i into play, built development is nonetheless permitted under OE3 ii provided the safeguards in the four bullet points in OE3 ii are respected. In particular, it must be required by the LPA that such development "has regard to the openness of the Green Wedge and the purposes of including land within it".
(3) Thus, as I understand Mr Tucker's argument, he says OE3 ii is a permissive provision which provides the LPA with an alternative to outright prohibition of development of the kind covered by OE3 i. It is not a provision applying to development that affects green wedge spaces but falling outside OE3 i, i.e. development that does not adversely affect the predominantly open character of the green wedge space or reduce physical separation between existing built up areas.
(4) Mr Tucker submits that LOGS' interpretation would render policy OE3 internally inconsistent: development adversely affecting the open character of a green wedge would, at the same time, be prohibited under i, yet allowed under ii. The inconsistency is avoided, he said, by rejecting the notion that the green belt concept of openness is the same as the "open character" of a green wedge. The former, but not the latter, sets the bar high and prohibits development save in exceptional circumstances.
(5) In the latter case, the open character of a green wedge space is not subject to the same rigorous test. The bar is set lower: regard must be had to the predominantly open character of the green wedge but there is not the strong presumption against development that protects green belt land, as OE3 ii recognises. Planning judgment must be brought to bear to determine whether and if so to what extent a development would affect the predominantly open character of a green wedge.
(6) New built development by its very nature cannot keep land free from development but does not prevent regard being had to its effect on openness. It should be a matter of planning judgment whether and to what extent openness is affected by a proposal; cf. the notion of preserving the openness of the green belt in the sense of keeping it safe from harm, explained in Sam Smith's Old Brewery (Tadcaster) (cited above) per Lindblom LJ at [39]. The verb "affect" in OE3 i should be read in the same way.
(7) This interpretation is consistent with policy OE2 dealing with new build development within the green belt, which may only occur in "very special circumstances" other than for specified purposes including essential facilities for "other uses of land which preserve the openness of the Green Belt and do not conflict with the purposes of including land within it". Mr Streeten's invocation of GEN 2 was wrong; rather, in OE2 the noun "openness" is used, rather than the phrase "open character", applying to green belt rather than green wedge land.
(1) In the NPPF paragraphs dealing with the green belt, the concept of 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": per Sales LJ in Turner v Secretary of State for Communities and Local Government [2016] EWCA Civ 466, [2017] 2 P&CR 1, at [14]. Equating openness with simple absence of buildings overlooks this point. Lindblom LJ in the Sam Smith's Brewery case at [19] similarly emphasised that visual effects of a development are relevant to planning judgment on openness in green belt cases.
(2) It is "sophistry" on the part of LOGS to accept that the green belt and green wedge are different creatures and the policies governing them not identical, but "then to seek to argue the distinction away to nothing". The purpose of OE3 is not to protect the openness of the green wedges from development. Openness is "a term of art in planning policy" and does not equate "baldly to the ordinary English word 'open'". The emphasis in policy OE3 is not on openness as such, which appears only once, but on open character and open use.
(3) The content of policy OE2, dealing with the green belt, closely mirrors the content of the then extant (pre-NPPF) "PPG2" guidance (which, all agreed, I could properly look at). There was no equivalent guidance dealing with green wedges and no attempt in the UDP to replicate in policy OE3 the green belt policies, including the "very special circumstances" test, imported into OE2 from the PPG2 guidance.
(4) The reference to inappropriate development in policy GEN 2 does not import the green belt policy, separately contained in policy OE2, into policy OE3, dealing with green wedges. The words "inappropriate development" do not appear in OE3. The supporting text to OE3 (where they do appear) does not include any mention of "openness". The supporting text to GEN 2, in particular paragraph 5.20, points to a differentiated approach as between green belt land and green wedge land.
Ground 2: material error of fact
Grounds 3 and 4: evidence of recreational use and reliance on relocation of facilities
Remedy