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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 >> Royal Borough of Kingston Upon Thames v Secretary of State for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities & Anor [2023] EWHC 2055 (Admin) (07 August 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2023/2055.html Cite as: [2023] EWHC 2055 (Admin) |
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KING'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
PLANNING COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
THE ROYAL BOROUGH OF KINGSTON UPON THAMES |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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SECRETARY OF STATE FOR LEVELLING UP, HOUSING AND COMMUNITIES |
Defendant |
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- and - |
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MRS LAURA WILLIAMS |
Second Defendant |
____________________
Mr Hugh Flanagan (instructed by Government Legal Department) for the Defendant
Mr Stephen Cottle (instructed by Community Law Partnership) for the Second Defendant
Hearing dates: 30 March 2023
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Crown Copyright ©
Mrs Justice Lieven DBE :
The relevant policy
"149. A local planning authority should regard the construction of new buildings as inappropriate in the Green Belt. Exceptions to this are:
a) buildings for agriculture and forestry;
b) the provision of appropriate facilities (in connection with the existing use of land or a change of use) for outdoor sport, outdoor recreation, cemeteries and burial grounds and allotments; as long as the facilities preserve the openness of the Green Belt and do not conflict with the purposes of including land within it;
c) 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;
d) the replacement of a building, provided the new building is in the same use and not materially larger than the one it replaces;
e) limited infilling in villages;
f) limited affordable housing for local community needs under policies set out in the development plan (including policies for rural exception sites); and
g) limited infilling or the partial or complete redevelopment of previously developed land, whether redundant or in continuing use (excluding temporary buildings), which would:
- not have a greater impact on the openness of the Green Belt than the existing development; or
- not cause substantial harm to the openness of the Green Belt, where the development would re-use previously developed land and contribute to meeting an identified affordable housing need within the area of the local planning authority.
150. Certain other forms of development are also not inappropriate in the Green Belt provided they preserve its openness and do not conflict with the purposes of including land within it. These are:
a) mineral extraction;
b) engineering operations;
c) local transport infrastructure which can demonstrate a requirement for a Green Belt location;
d) the re-use of buildings provided that the buildings are of permanent and substantial construction;
e) material changes in the use of land (such as changes of use for outdoor sport or recreation, or for cemeteries and burial grounds); and
f) development, including buildings, brought forward under a Community Right to Build Order or Neighbourhood Development Order." [emphasis added]
"A.64 The Government considers that a number of other changes to Green Belt policy could also be made for the purposes of clarity and consistency. It proposes to amend the National Planning Policy Framework to make clear that:
…
• appropriate facilities for existing cemeteries are not to be regarded as 'inappropriate development' in the Green Belt;"
"Following the Court of Appeal judgment in R (Timmins and Lymn Family Funeral Service) v. Gedling Borough Council and Westerleigh Group Limited [2015 EWCA Civ 110]."
"We are proposing to make it explicit that rural exception sites can be created in Green Belt, and that development under neighbourhood development orders and changes of land-use for outdoor sport and recreation or provision of burial grounds is 'not inappropriate' in Green Belt if it preserves its openness and would not conflict with its purposes."
"The housing White Paper also proposed a number of other changes to Green Belt policy that are reflected in the chapter – to:
c) provide that facilities for existing cemeteries, and development brought forward under a Neighbourhood Development Order, should not be regarded as 'inappropriate development' (paragraphs 144b and 145f)."
"Current policy allows buildings in the Green Belt in association with uses such as outdoor sport and cemeteries, but does not allow material changes in the use of land for such purposes, even if there would be no harm to openness. To allow a more consistent approach, paragraph 145e provides that material changes of use that preserve openness are not inappropriate development in the Green Belt."
"e) material changes in the use of land that would preserve the openness of the Green Belt and not conflict with the purposes of including land within it (such as changes of use for outdoor sport or recreation, or for cemeteries and burial grounds, so long as the development would preserve openness); and"
"145. A local planning authority should regard the construction of new buildings as inappropriate in the Green Belt. Exceptions to this are:
…
b) the provision of appropriate facilities (in connection with the existing use of land or a change of use) for outdoor sport, outdoor recreation, cemeteries and burial grounds and allotments; as long as the facilities preserve the openness of the Green Belt and do not conflict with the purposes of including land within it;
…
146. Certain other forms of development are also not inappropriate in the Green Belt provided they preserve its openness and do not conflict with the purposes of including land within it. These are:
…
e) material changes in the use of land (such as changes of use for outdoor sport or recreation, or for cemeteries and burial grounds); and
…"
The Planning Policy for Traveller Sites
"5. To benefit those engaged in planning for traveller sites, specific planning policies for traveller sites are clearly set out in this separate document. …"
"23. Applications should be assessed and determined in accordance with the presumption in favour of sustainable development and the application of specific policies in the National Planning Policy Framework and this planning policy for traveller sites."
"16. Inappropriate development is harmful to the Green Belt and should not be approved, except in very special circumstances. Traveller sites (temporary or permanent) in the Green Belt are inappropriate development. Subject to the best interests of the child, personal circumstances and unmet need are unlikely to clearly outweigh harm to the Green Belt and any other harm so as to establish very special circumstances."
The Law
"23. In my view in the light of the authorities the following principles emerge as to how questions of interpretation of planning policy of the kind which arise in this case are to be resolved:
i) The question of the interpretation of the planning policy is a question of law for the court, and it is solely a question of interpretation of the terms of the policy. Questions of the value or weight which is to be attached to that policy for instance in resolving the question of whether or not development is in accordance with the Development Plan for the purposes of section 38(6) of the 2004 Act are matters of judgment for the decision-maker.
ii) The task of interpretation of the meaning of the planning policy should not be undertaken as if the planning policy were a statute or a contract. The approach has to recognise that planning policies will contain broad statements of policy which may, superficially, conflict and require to be balanced in ultimately reaching a decision (see Tesco Stores at paragraph 19 and Hopkins Homes at paragraph 25). Planning policies are designed to shape practical decision-taking, and should be interpreted with that practical purpose clearly in mind. It should also be taken into account in that connection that they have to be applied and understood by planning professionals and the public for whose benefit they exist, and that they are primarily addressed to that audience.
iii) For the purposes of interpreting the meaning of the policy it is necessary for the policy to be read in context: (see Tesco Stores at paragraphs 18 and 21). The context of the policy will include its subject matter and also the planning objectives which it seeks to achieve and serve. The context will also be comprised by the wider policy framework within which the policy sits and to which it relates. This framework will include, for instance, the overarching strategy within which the policy sits.
iv) As set out above, policies will very often call for the exercise of judgment in considering how they apply in the particular factual circumstances of the decision to be taken (see Tesco Stores at paragraphs 19 and 21). It is of vital importance to distinguish between the interpretation of policy (which requires judicial analysis of the meaning of the words comprised in the policy) and the application of the policy which requires an exercise of judgment within the factual context of the decision by the decision-taker (see Hopkins Homes at paragraph 26)."
The Decision Letter
a. In para 8 of DL he referred to para 150(e) of the NPPF. He observed: "Paragraph 150 lists other forms of development which may be considered not inappropriate. This includes material changes of use of land under paragraph 150(e). This criterion includes within the accompanying brackets, examples of the type of use which may be applicable. However, this is not a closed list, and the wording says "such as" and therefore highlights examples. I have not been presented with persuasive or clear evidence that demonstrates that the criterion would exclude the change of use of land for a caravan form consideration under paragraph 150(e)".
b. In para 9 of DL, the Inspector stated: "Indeed, my conclusion is that the proposal can be considered under para 150(e) of the Framework".
c. In paras 10-16 the Inspector considered the impact of the proposal on openness. He concluded in para 16 that the proposal would preserve the openness of the Green Belt in both spatial and visual terms. The Claimant does not challenge that planning judgment in these proceedings.
d. In paras 17-20 the Inspector considered whether the development conflicted with the purposes of including land within the Green Belt. He concluded that it would not. The Claimant does not challenge that planning judgment in these proceedings.
e. The Inspector therefore approached Green Belt issues on the basis that the "requirements of paragraph 150 of the Framework would be met and the scheme would not be inappropriate development. Consequently, there would not be the need to demonstrate very special circumstances to justify the development" (paras 21).
f. Having so concluded, the Inspector referred to the PPTS in paras 22-26 of DL. He held that it did not alter his conclusion because the NPPF post-dated the PPTS (see para 25 of DL).
g. Thus, the Inspector's planning balance was struck on the basis that the proposal would not be inappropriate development in the Green Belt (para 57 of DL) (and there was no need for the Second Defendant to demonstrate very special circumstances to justify the development).
h. On that basis, the Inspector allowed the Second Defendant's appeal and granted planning permission.
The submissions
"11. It will be noted that a possible textual issue arises from the way in which the PPG2 policies have been shortened and recast in the NPPF. In the PPG the openness proviso is in terms directed to forms of development other than mineral extraction (it also appears in the section on re-use of buildings: para 3.8). By contrast, mineral extraction is not expressly subject to the proviso, but may be regarded as not inappropriate, subject only to "high environmental standards" and the quality of restoration. In the shortened version in the NPPF these categories of potentially appropriate development have been recast in para 90, and brought together under the same proviso, including the requirement to preserve openness.
12. I do not read this as intended to mark a significant change of approach. If that had been intended, one would have expected it to have been signalled more clearly. To my mind the change is explicable as no more than a convenient means of shortening and simplifying the policies without material change. It may also have been thought that, whereas mineral extraction in itself would not normally conflict with the openness proviso, associated building or other development might raise greater problems. A possible example may be seen in the Europa Oil case discussed below (para 26)."
"In my judgment the words "such as" state clearly that what follows are examples of something. Examples of what? They can only be examples of the more general expression that precedes them, namely "land in built-up areas". As a matter of ordinary English I cannot see that any other meaning can be given to this sentence. "Land in built-up areas" cannot mean land not in built-up areas. It is argued that this interpretation means that other parts of the NPPF are in conflict with each other. Even if that were true it is not the business of an interpreter to go searching for possible ambiguities or conflicts in order to detract from the obvious meaning of the words to be interpreted."
"I have already pointed out in C. Maurice & Co. Ltd. v. Minister of Labour [1968] 1 W.L.R. 1337 , 1345, though regrettably in a dissenting judgment, that the rule of construction "expressio unius exclusio alterius" is not appropriate where that which is expressed is introduced by a phrase such as "such as." And that applies whether the draftsmanship is legal or non-legal. But before you include in the expression introduced by "such as" an activity which is not expressly described you must discover from the context in which the expression appears what are the relevant common characteristics of the activities expressly described, and then decide whether the undescribed activity shares those characteristics. The sections of construction work in relation to an industrial building which are expressly described are in my view all concerned with the construction of a building in which, upon completion, industrial activities will take place. They are not concerned with the assembly on the site from its component parts of machinery to be used for carrying out those industrial activities. They are concerned with making a building suitable to work in — not with the machinery to be used for the particular kind of work which will be done there."
Conclusions