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High Court of Ireland Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> High Court of Ireland Decisions >> Mountcharles v. Meath County Council [1996] IEHC 43; [1996] 3 IR 417; [1997] 1 ILRM 446 (17th December, 1996) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ie/cases/IEHC/1996/43.html Cite as: [1996] 3 IR 417, [1997] 1 ILRM 446, [1996] IEHC 43 |
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1. The
Applicant is the owner of Slane Castle Demesne, County Meath. That estate
comprises in excess of 600 acres of land. The Respondent is the planning
authority for the area in which the demesne is situate.
2. In
these proceedings, the Applicant seeks to quash a warning notice which was
served on him pursuant to Section 26 of the Local Government (Planning &
Development) Act, 1976 as amended. That notice was dated the 17th September,
1996. It recited that it appeared to the Respondent that an unauthorised use
of part of Slane Castle Estate was likely to be made by the carrying on of an
unauthorised musical concert or performance thereon. The notice went on to
require that this unauthorised use should not commence. In addition, it warned
that proceedings might be taken if there was a failure to comply with the
requirements of the notice.
3. In
order to understand the basis upon which it is said this notice should be
quashed, it is necessary that I set forth a brief history of the lands in
respect of which the notice was served.
4. Up
until 1981, the lands in respect of which the notice was served had been used
purely for agricultural purposes. These lands, which amount to about 22 acres
in all, are part of the entire demesne which has at all material times been
used for agricultural purposes.
5. In
1981, there was held on these lands, the first of a series of open air
concerts. Planning permission was not sought for this or any of the subsequent
concerts which were held on the same site. Similar open air concerts were held
in 1982, 1984, 1985, 1986, 1987, 1992, 1993 and 1995.
6. These
open air concerts attracted very large numbers of people ranging from as few as
20,000 to as many as 100,000 approximately.
7. The
evidence satisfies me that these concerts were of considerable assistance to
the local economy but I am also satisfied that they gave rise to a good deal of
disquiet on the part of persons resident in the general area.
8. The
Affidavit of Mr. Foley sworn on behalf of the Respondent sets out in
considerable detail the sort of problems which were encountered with these
concerts going right back to 1982. These difficulties included robberies,
violence, riots, drug offences, drunkenness, stabbings and drownings. So bad
was the situation that on one occasion the local District Judge held a special
sitting of the District Court in Slane Village from 10.00 a.m. to 10.00 p.m. on
the day of the concert in order to deal with offenders.
9. In
the light of this evidence, I do not accept the contention made on oath by the
Applicant that every open air concert "
passed
off without major incident
".
10. Given
this history, it is perhaps remarkable that the Respondent did not take any
action of the type which is now challenged in these proceedings until the
current year.
11. As
far back as 1984, the Respondent was engaged in correspondence with the
Department of the Environment arising out of the problems encountered at the
open air rock concert of that year. In subsequent years, such correspondence
was conducted with the Departments of Justice and the Environment.
12. Far
from seeking to restrain such events as being in breach of the Planning Acts,
the local authority cooperated in the organisation of these concerts from 1992
onwards. Mr. Foley confirms in his Affidavits that consultations involving the
Respondent have taken place concerning the organisation of these concerts since
1992. There has been exhibited the minutes of meetings held in 1995 to plan
for the concert of that year which were attended by officials of the
Respondent with no suggestion being made that such an event required planning
permission.
13. All
of this changed in 1996. I am told by Counsel that the reason for this change
was that, for the first time, the Respondent in common with other local
authorities realised that concerts of this type might fall within the ambit of
the Planning Act. That was, it is said, not generally appreciated prior to the
present year.
14. On
the 9th April, 1996, the Respondent wrote to the Applicant advising him that it
was the Respondent's opinion that the holding of a concert at Slane Castle was
a development which required planning permission. He was furthermore informed
that if he wished to hold any such concert in the future, he would have to
obtain such a permission. This letter was responded to on the 18th April, 1996
and a meeting took place between the Applicant and the Respondent's
representatives on the 23rd May, 1996. At that meeting, the Respondent's
representatives made it quite clear that planning permission would be required
for any open air concert in the future. Because of this, the Applicant
announced that no concert would take place in 1996 nor did one.
15. On
the 23rd July, 1996, the Applicant wrote to the Respondent indicating that he
had obtained the advice of Counsel. I set out that letter in full:-
17. This
letter was replied to on the 9th August, 1996. In that letter, the Applicant
made it clear that it was his intention to proceed with the concert in 1997
without making a planning application. He furthermore pointed out that he was
involved at that stage in extensive planning and negotiation in relation to the
event.
18. The
Applicant wrote to the Respondent again on the 16th August, 1996 expressing
both surprise and disappointment at the Council's attitude. He pointed out
that he had been holding these concerts over a period of 15 years and was at a
loss to know why the Council felt the need to refer the matter to the Courts at
that stage. He asked the Council to revise its attitude on the matter. That
letter was acknowledged on the 29th August, 1996 and finally, on the 12th
September, 1996, the Applicant again wrote to the Respondent. In the course of
that letter, he pointed out that he had furnished the Respondent with the legal
opinion which he had received and wished to make it clear that he was
proceeding with the 1997 concert, arrangements in respect of which were by then
"very specific". He went on to point out that he had been verbally informed by
the Council that he was to receive a warning notice. This is indeed what
happened and it is that notice which it is now sought to quash in these
proceedings.
19. On
the 25th September, 1996, leave was given by McCracken J. to seek judicial
review of the notice issued by the Respondent to which I have already referred.
it is the Applicant's contention that this warning notice is barred by the
statutory provisions contained in Section 26(3A) of the Local Government
(Planning & Development) Act (as amended) which provides that such a
warning notice "
shall
not be served after the expiration of a period of five years beginning on the
day on which such unauthorised use first commenced
".
The Applicant argues that the alleged unauthorised use commenced in August
1981 and, accordingly, the service of the warning notice in this case is
prohibited by the foregoing provision.
21. What
he does say however is that the use of the lands in question on an annual or
semi-annual basis for the purposes of open air concerts became in effect part
of the normal use of the lands albeit that such was unauthorised.
22. The
Respondent for its part contends that the concerts involved for the short
periods of their duration a material change of use requiring planning
permission but that such user never became part of the normal use and,
accordingly, they are not time barred with their Warning Notice.
23. After
the conclusion of the Applicant's case and when the Respondent's case had
begun, leave was sought to adduce additional evidence on the part of the
Applicant. I gave leave so to do and the Respondent was afforded an
opportunity to file additional evidence in response if required.
24. The
new Affidavit evidence from the Applicant was filed with a view to
demonstrating the existence of permanent features on the lands in suit which
are referable to the holding of the concerts in question.
25. It
is alleged by the Applicant that major improvements were carried out in 1982 to
an entrance to the site which now serves as the main exit. This consisted in
widening the entrance which is now 40 feet wide approximately and providing a
concrete apron designed to take crowd control barriers which is 50 feet
approximately in length with retaining concrete block walls and four linked
steel sheeted gates 10 feet high approximately. The Respondent alleges that
whilst the entrance may have been widened in 1982, the steel sheeted gates were
only erected since 1992. The Applicant counters by saying that they were put
in place in 1982 but that their height was increased in recent years.
26. The
second permanent feature alleged to exist is a new entrance between the
farmyard and the avenue which enables heavy vehicles and trucks to travel to
the backstage area. This work was completed in 1981. There is no controversy
concerning this.
27. The
third feature is a roadway at the rear of the castle which was reinforced and
improved to enable heavy trucks and vehicles to travel to the backstage area.
Again, there is no controversy in relation to this.
28. The
next feature relied on is that the old front drive to the main entrance to the
castle was improved and made accessible to facilitate persons attending the
concert and coming from the Dublin direction. The Applicant says that this
roadway, which is one mile from the site, is cleaned and prepared for every
concert. Again, this is not controverted. The next feature relied on is the
existence of extensive security chain linked fencing approximately 8 feet in
height which is set in concrete and was installed on the site. It is said on
behalf of the Respondent that there is approximately 400 metres of security
fencing erected along the bank of the river and immediately to the front of the
castle forecourt. This was additional fencing which was erected in or around
1992.
29. The
Applicant also avers that other improvements were carried out on the concert
site during the 1980s including the installation of telephone lines and poles
to facilitate the backstage area, ducting under the backstage roadway to carry
water and power, the installation of a grassed hard-core area in the backstage
area to facilitate the movement of heavy vehicles and to assist in vehicle
movements during the construction of the stage in bad weather. Furthermore, in
1984, two concrete urinals were installed, one on the front drive and one on
Lady's Walk. Certain other works were carried out in 1992 but they do not
appear to me to be relevant to what I have to consider here since that was well
within the five year period relied upon by the Applicant. None of these works
apparently were the subject of a planning application to the Respondent and
they contend that planning permission was required for them. I have had
photographic evidence of these works produced to me. They demonstrate fairly
rudimentary works of the type described in this part of the judgment.
30. Finally,
evidence was proffered that although the concerts themselves are staged for a
single day, work commences on the site about two weeks before the concert
occurs. Subsequent to the concert, decommissioning of the site must take place
and that also takes about two weeks or thereabouts. Substantial numbers of
persons are involved in these works.
31. It
is alleged by the Applicant that the holding of the rock concerts constitutes
the most intensive use of the concert site during any annual period since they
commenced in 1981 and, furthermore, is the most significant source of income
from those lands. Apart from contending that I am not entitled to have regard
to such matter, the Respondent says that during the 15 years since the concerts
first commenced, there were only nine concerts held in all. There was a period
of five years between 1987 and 1992 when there were no concerts at all. They
furthermore say that even with the works which have been carried out, the
agricultural nature and usage of the property in suit was not altered. They
have put in evidence three aerial photographs of the site taken in 1973, 1986
and 1991 which demonstrate an essentially agricultural use of the site in
question.
32. The
issue which I have to address in this case is one which I am told has not been
the subject of determination by an Irish Court. It is this. Can it be said
that the Applicant's lands, the subject matter of the warning notice, have a
normal use which consists of two different activities and which has continued
for a period in excess of five years prior to the 17th September, 1996? If it
can and if in fact it has acquired a second activity as part of its normal use,
namely, the staging of pop concerts in addition to the agricultural activities,
then the Respondent's warning notice is time barred. If, on the other hand,
the holding of each concert is to be regarded as a separate development for
which planning permission was required on each occasion, since it involved a
material change of use from agricultural use to concert use and did not become
part of the normal use, then the service of the warning notice is not prohibited.
33. The
legal issue involved in this case has attracted the attention of the English
Courts. The principal authority which is relied upon by the Applicant is the
decision of the Court of Appeal in
Webber
-v- Minister of Housing and Local Government
(1967) 3 All E.R. 981.
34. In
that case, the appellant farmer used his four acre field for a camping site
between Easter and September and, in the winter, for grazing cattle, except on
Saturdays when it was used for football. This seasonal use had been followed
since April 1960. He appealed against an enforcement notice served on him in
September 1965 requiring him to remove the caravans from the site. A ground of
appeal was that the enforcement notice had not been served within four years as
required by Section 45(2)(a) of the Town and Country Planning Act, 1962. So
far as material, that statutory provision provided
35. It
was held by the Court of Appeal that the field's normal use could be determined
by looking at its use from year to year over a considerable period, and so
regarded, the field's normal use from year to year was for two purposes viz.:
winter grazing and summer camping; this normal use had continued for over four
years before the enforcement notice was served, and the seasonal change from
camping to grazing or vice-versa did not involve a material change in use for
the purposes of the planning legislation.
40. The
approach of the Court of Appeal in Webber's case appears to me to be sound,
persuasive
and to have implications for the present case. I am of opinion that land may
have as part of its normal use different particular uses or activities. I
accept the submission of the Applicant that the question whether a particular
activity forms part of the normal use of the land is a question of fact and
degree in each particular case. That much appears to me to be acknowledged by
the judgments in Webber's case.
41. I
therefore propose to approach this case by reviewing the manner in which the
land has been used over a period so as to come to a conclusion as to what can
be said to be its normal user. In taking that approach two matters which were
at issue between the parties call for attention. The first concerns the period
over which this review should take place. The second concerns the portion of
the lands of the demesne which ought to be considered.
42. The
Respondent submits that the appropriate period to be taken for determining what
use is made of the land is the period of five years prior to the service of the
Warning Notice in September 1996. The Applicant on the other hand contends
that I ought to look at the period from 1981 onwards.
43. Because
of the limitation period of five years which is prescribed by the legislation,
I must certainly look at the position which obtained during the five years
prior to the service of the Notice but in attempting to ascertain the normal
user of the land I do not think that I am confined to such period.
44. If
one looks at the five year period immediately prior to the service of the
Notice there is an immediate difficulty from the Applicant's point of view. No
concert was held in 1991 or 1994. Indeed none was held in 1996 but that was
only as a result of the intervention of the Respondent. The failure to hold a
concert in 1991 and 1994 means that there was no actual user of the lands in
those years for concert purposes. So therefore in the five years in question
only three concerts were held.
45. Given
the history of the land which I have outlined, it appears to me that it would
be more appropriate that I should seek to ascertain what is the normal use of
the land by reference to the longer period of fifteen years going back to 1981.
If I am satisfied that the use of the lands in suit for concert purposes can be
regarded as normal and that that use has not changed or been abandoned during
the five years prior to the service of the Notice then the Applicant ought to
succeed.
46. In
so far as the land which is to be the subject matter of my examination is
concerned, the Applicant contends that it should be confined to the twenty-two
acres upon which the concerts have been carried out. He says that the warning
notice does not relate to the demesne as a whole but only to a part of it and
must clearly be referable to that part upon which the concerts have
traditionally been held. The Respondent on the other hand contends that I must
look to the demesne as a whole and that therefore the use of this particular
twenty-two acres forms a very small part indeed of the entire demesne which is
used for agricultural purposes.
47. I
believe the Applicant to be correct in the contention which he makes on this
question. It appears to me that I am only concerned here with the land which
is the subject matter of the Warning Notice. It is common case that that
relates to approximately twenty-two acres of the demesne upon which the rock
concerts have traditionally been held.
Before
leaving this part of the Judgment I should mention that a number of other
English authorities were cited. The principal one relied on by the Respondent
was that of the Court of Appeal in
South
Buckinghamshire District Council -v- Secretary of State for the Environment
(58 P. & C.R.121). The facts of that case were that a company called
Strandmill Limited held a market on grazing land at Beaconsfield on Sunday 1st
December, 1985 and on seven Sundays in January and early February 1986. The
Appellant Council then served a direction under Article 4 of Schedule 1 to the
Town and Country Planning General Development Order 1977 stating that the
permission that existed by virtue of Article 3 of the Order was not to apply to
the holding of markets. Strandmill held a market on three further Sundays in
defiance of the Direction. The Council then served an Enforcement Notice on
Strandmill on 14th March, 1986 and also issued a Stop Notice. Strandmill
appealed against the Enforcement Notice to the Secretary of State. An
inspector acting on behalf of the Secretary of State allowed the appeal on the
grounds that once the first market had been held in December 1985, Strandmill
became entitled to hold markets on fourteen days in the calendar year and the
Council were not entitled to serve a Direction under Article 4. As Strandmill
had only held seven of the remaining thirteen at the time that the Council
served its Direction, they were still entitled to hold the next three markets
and so there had been no breach of planning control. The Council appealed to
the High Court where their appeal was dismissed. They then appealed to the
Court of Appeal. In that Court the appeal was allowed. It was held by the
Court of Appeal that the development permitted by Article 3 of the Town and
Country Planning General Development Order 1977 occurred when there was a
change of use on the Sunday when the land was actually used for the holding of
a market and the development ceased when the land reverted to normal
agricultural use for the rest of the week. There was then a fresh development
on the next occasion that the land was used to hold a market. Consequently the
local planning authority had been entitled to serve the Direction on the 19th
February, 1986 under Article 4 of Schedule 1 to the 1977 Order stating that the
permission under that Order should not apply to the holding of markets. The
decision was therefore valid in law and the Enforcement Notice was also valid.
48. In
my view this case is largely confined to a consideration of regulations which
are peculiar to it and it has little bearing on the present case. It does have
a relevance, however, in one respect. In the course of his Judgment Nicholls
L. J. (as he then was) said this at page 129:-
49. This
accords with the approach adopted by Diplock L. J. in the Webber case where he
regarded it as natural to consider that land was used for two activities
50. It
seems to me therefore that in so far as that Lord Justice was concerned he did
not regard his decision as in any way departing from or diluting the views
expressed by the Court of Appeal in Webber's case.
51. I
therefore propose to adopt the approach of the Court of Appeal in Webber's case
to the facts of the present case.
52. The
Concise Oxford Dictionary defines normal as "conforming to a standard; regular,
usual, typical". In my view the question of normal use should be approached
without giving to that term any unusual or esoteric meaning. I have already
accepted the notion that the normal use of land may involve more than one
activity being carried on and it may be used for two purposes. However, it
appears to me that before each activity could be regarded as part of the normal
use of the land each would have to be recurrent and would have to account for a
substantial part of the total amount of activity taking place on the land
during the appropriate period. It is necessary to decide whether a particular
activity is carried on to a sufficient extent and with sufficient regularity to
constitute part of the normal use. This is the test which is formulated by
Diplock L.J. in Webber's case.
53. In
approaching this task the first thing to note is that this case is far removed
on its facts from Webber's case. I have already set forth in short form the
facts of that case. There there was a seasonal use over a period of years
where the lands were used as a camping site between Easter and September and
were used in the winter for grazing cattle. Seasonal use had gone on in each
year since April 1960. Given that history it is hardly surprising that the
Court came to the conclusion which it did. As I have said on its facts this
case is far removed from that.
54. In
my view applying the test which I have indicated and which was adumbrated by
Diplock L.J. in Webber's case, I have come to the conclusion that it cannot be
said that the staging of pop concerts on the site the subject of the warning
notice has become part of the normal user of that site. I do not believe that
the activity was sufficiently recurrent nor do I accept that it accounted for a
sufficiently substantial part of the total amount of activity taking place on
the land.
56. The
Applicant submits that in addition to considering the time associated with the
use and the physical structures on the land I ought also to take into account:-
57. I
am very doubtful as to whether it is appropriate that these matters should be
taken into account at all in deciding a question as to what the normal use of
the land is. But even assuming that they are appropriate to be considered they
do not appear to me to advance the Applicant's case in demonstrating that the
concert activity could be regarded as part of the normal use of the lands.
58. In
my view the Applicant has failed to demonstrate that the holding of rock
concerts on the land in question was carried on to a sufficient extent and with
sufficient regularity to constitute part of the normal use of those lands.
Rather I am of the view that it was an occasional use. When the activity was
carried on the normal use of the lands (which was agricultural) was changed to
that of use for a pop concert and when the pop concert came to an end the lands
reverted to their normal use for agricultural purposes.
59. As
it is conceded that the activity in question is one for which planning
permission is required it follows that a permission was required on each
occasion upon which a pop concert was carried out. Future pop concerts must
likewise be subject to planning permission from the Respondent before they can
be carried on in a lawful fashion.
60. It
follows therefore that this Application fails and I refuse to quash the warning
notice which has been served upon the Applicant.