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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 >> Pathfield Estates Ltd v London Borough of Haringey [2023] EWHC 1790 (Admin) (14 July 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2023/1790.html Cite as: [2023] EWHC 1790 (Admin) |
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KING'S BENCH DIVISION
DIVISIONAL COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
and
MR JUSTICE HOLGATE
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PATHFIELD ESTATES LIMITED |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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LONDON BOROUGH OF HARINGEY |
Respondent |
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Charles Streeten (instructed by London Borough of Haringey Legal Services) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 27 June 2023
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Crown Copyright ©
LADY JUSTICE WHIPPLE:
Introduction
Facts
i) To stop using the property as five self-contained flats.
ii) To remove from the Property all fixtures and fittings in relation to the unauthorised conversion.
iii) To restore the Property as two flats (this is "requirement 3").
iv) To remove from the Property any materials and debris associated with the unauthorised conversion.
"On 23 October 2008, I recommended the case for closure… I arrived at that conclusion on the basis that the use as five flats had ceased and the building was to be used as a single dwelling, as proposed by the agent, thereby reducing the number of flats from five separate planning units to one unit. The resulting single unit was considered in my view as being capable of being used as a single dwelling, whilst still meeting the aims of the enforcement notice, which is to remove the over-intensification of the use to the property and to address the unsatisfactory living conditions of the occupants. An outcome of one dwelling in my view was considered reasonable as it was a further reduction of the units stated in requirement 3 of the notice to less than two flats. Also in my view, the owner would still have the option of converting the single dwelling to two flats at a future date and would not be in breach of requirement 3 of the notice if they chose to do this."
"…having undertaken a compliance visit, I can confirm that the Enforcement Notice served as a result of the above breach of planning control has now been complied with to the satisfaction of the local planning authority. Accordingly the Council is taking no further action and is recommending that this case be closed."
"Between the 8th day of April 2016 and the 5th May 2021 at 13 Bounds Green Road, London N22 8HE, you did fail to comply with the requirements of an Enforcement Notice served on you as the owner of the property by the London Borough of Haringey on 28 March 2008, which required you to restore the property to two flats by 15 August 2008 contrary to Section 179(2) Town and Country Planning Act 1990."
Legislation
"(3) An enforcement notice shall specify the steps which the authority require to be taken, or the activities which the authority require to cease, in order to achieve, wholly or partly, any of the following purposes.
(4) Those purposes are –
a) remedying the breach by making any development comply with the terms (including conditions and limitations) of any planning permission which has been granted in respect of the land, by discontinuing any use of the land or by restoring the land to its condition before the breach took place; or
b) remedying any injury to amenity which has been caused by the breach."
Section 173(9) provides that an enforcement notice must specify the period for compliance with it.
"(1) The local planning authority may –
a) Withdraw an enforcement notice issued by them; or
b) Waive or relax any requirement of such a notice and, in particular, may extend any period specified in accordance with section 173(9).
(2) The powers conferred by subsection (1) may be exercised whether or not the notice has taken effect.
(3) The local planning authority shall, immediately after exercising the powers conferred by subsection (1), give notice of the exercise to every person who has been served with a copy of the enforcement notice or would, if the notice were re-issued, be served with a copy of it.
(4) The withdrawal of an enforcement notice does not affect the power of the local planning authority to issue a further enforcement notice."
Ruling
"46. In our judgment, the key evidence as to whether a decision was made to waive a requirement in the enforcement notice is that of the planning enforcement officer who carried out the site visits and who recommended the case for closure … . Her evidence was agreed by the Appellant. She states that she recommended the case for closure on the basis that the use as five flats had ceased, and the building was to be used as a single dwelling which "still met the aims of the enforcement notice" and which she considered to be a reasonable outcome as it reduced the number of units to fewer than the two stated in requirement 3. She expressly refers to the continuation of requirement 3 of the notice, such that a conversion by the owner of the property to two flats at a future date would not breach the enforcement notice. There is nothing in the reasoning of the planning enforcement officer which suggests that there was a waiver of requirement 3.
47. This evidence of [Ms Oloyede] is consistent with the language in the contemporaneous note in the records dated 10 October 2008 that the removal of the kitchen units and entry door intercom "is acceptable for compliance" and the language in the letters which were sent out at the time, that the enforcement notice "has now been complied with to the satisfaction of the local planning authority" (our emphasis in bold). There is nothing in the file notes which suggests that the local authority was actually waiving a requirement in the enforcement notice rather than simply agreeing what it considered to be a satisfactory outcome which still met the aims of the enforcement notice.
48. Alan McPherson's evidence based on his own view of the records was that the local authority appeared to have taken the approach that there had been an acceptable compliance or sufficient level of compliance with the enforcement notice rather than full compliance. This is also consistent with the agreed evidence of [Ms Oloyede]."
"55. In our judgment, there is sufficient evidence on which we would be entitled to be sure that the local planning authority did not waive requirement 3 of the enforcement notice in October 2008 (or at any time)."
Submissions
Discussion
"18. ... the appellant accepts that the formal provision for varying an enforcement notice is contained in section 173A of the TCPA 1990. He accepts that there was no formal variation. In my judgment, the email dated 12 March 2018 did not purport to vary the enforcement notice. It simply offered a view on how the respondent would approach the enforcement of the requirements set out in the enforcement notice…".
Conclusion
MR JUSTICE HOLGATE: