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High Court of Ireland Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> High Court of Ireland Decisions >> Murray v. An Bord Pleanala [2000] IEHC 10; [2000] 1 IR 58 (28th January, 2000) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ie/cases/IEHC/2000/10.html Cite as: [2000] 1 IR 58, [2000] IEHC 10 |
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1. In
these proceedings the Applicant wishes to seek relief by way of Judicial Review
of a decision of An Bord Pleanala dated the 10th day of May, 1999 whereby the
Board refused the Applicant permission for the retention and completion of a
house at Pound Street, Ramelton in the County of Donegal and the parties have
applied to this Court to determine a preliminary question as to whether the
application is now time-barred, having regard to the provisions of Section
82(3A) of the Local Government (Planning and Development) Act, 1963 (hereafter
referred to as the 1963 Act) as amended by Section 19(3) of the Local
Government (Planning and Development) Act, 1992 (hereafter referred to as the
1992 Act).
2. In
brief, the Applicant, on 26th March, 1993 received a gift of certain property
at Pound Street in Ramelton in Co. Donegal comprising a derelict dwellinghouse
and in or about 1994 he caused the dwellinghouse to be demolished so that he
could build a new house on the site for himself and his family.
3. On
18th August, 1995 he received a grant of planning permission from Donegal
County Council to build a dwellinghouse on the site and on 22nd October, 1998
he received a further grant of planning permission in respect of the same
dwellinghouse which, inter alia, provided that the dwellinghouse would have
four windows at ground level to its rear.
4. The
Notice Parties appealed against the decision of Donegal County Council and on
the 10th day of May, 1999 An Bord Pleanala determined that appeal in favour of
the Notice Parties and refused the Applicant permission for his proposed
development on the grounds that it would "... injure the amenities of the
adjoining property by reason of overlooking and would therefore be contrary to
the proper planning and development of the area".
5. On
the 9th day of July, 1999 the Notice of Motion and other documentation required
by law to ground the proceedings herein were served upon the Respondent and the
Notice Parties but no such Notice of Motion or other documentation was served
upon Donegal County Council and the Respondent contends that the Applicant is
not and cannot be entitled to the relief which he seeks herein because he is
time-barred, having regard to the provisions of Section 19(3) of the 1992 Act.
6. The
term "party to an appeal" is defined in Section 1 of the 1992 Act in the
following terms:-
7. Counsel
on behalf of the Applicant has (quite properly) conceded that Donegal County
Council comes within the definition of a party to the appeal which is the
subject of his application herein, that is to say, the decision of the
Respondent dated the 10th day of May, 1999. Furthermore, he freely concedes
that Donegal County Council did not receive the Notice of Motion grounding the
proceedings herein or any of the other documentation required by the 1992 Act
and the Rules of the Superior Courts within the period of two months required
by Section 82(3B) of the 1963 Act as amended.
8. Evidence
has been adduced on Affidavit to the effect that, by letter dated the 4th day
of October, 1999, Messrs V.P. McMullin, Solicitors on behalf of Donegal County
Council wrote to the Applicant's solicitors in relation to the proceedings
herein in the following terms:-
9. It
is contended on behalf of the Applicant that, having regard to the contents of
that letter, the objection taken by the Respondent to the application is wholly
technical in nature and there is no rational purpose in having Donegal County
Council joined as a party to these proceedings.
10. In
support of his contention the Applicant relies upon the decision of Geoghegan
J. in the case of
Frank
McCarthy -v- An Bord Pleanala & Ors.
,
(the High Court - unrep. 15th May, 1998).
11. In
that case the applicant was one of three objectors whose appeal against a
decision of South Dublin County Council was dismissed by An Bord Pleanala and
who sought to judicially review the Board's decision. He brought the required
motion against South Dublin County Council and against other interested parties
within the two month period prescribed by Section 82 of the 1963 Act as amended
by Section 19(3) of the 1992 Act but the motion was not served on his two
co-appellants on the appeal to An Bord Pleanala. Both of those appellants
adduced evidence on Affidavit waiving any objection to the non-service, stating
that the substantive point at issue in the proposed Judicial Review application
did not concern them and did not relate to any submissions which they had made
at the appeal before An Bord Pleanala and further stating that they were not
interested in participating in the proceedings.
12. In
the course of argument, Geoghegan J. was referred to the decision of the
Supreme Court (Finlay C.J.) in the case of
K.S.K.
Enterprises Limited -v- An Bord Pleanala
,
[1994] 2 I.L.R.M. 1 and expressed the view that he should not regard that case
as authority for the point which he was required to determine indicating, inter
alia:-
13. In
the instant case, it can scarcely be argued with any conviction that the
interests of Donegal County Council are in no way relevant to these proceedings
since Donegal County Council is the planning authority which is responsible for
the proper planning and development of the county in which the lands which are
in question in these proceedings actually lie.
14. The
fact that in these particular proceedings the solicitors for Donegal County
Council have indicated that their clients were disposed to agree with a
suggestion made by the Applicant's solicitors that "...the issue herein appears
to be between the named parties..." does not alter the foregoing and it is
further to be noted that the suggestion made by the Applicant's solicitors was
contained in a letter written some seventeen days after the expiration of the
prescribed time limit.
15. However,
in any event, I am inclined to the view that the proper construction of Section
19(3) of the 1992 Act, when applied to the facts of the instant case, cannot
accommodate or result in an investigation by this Court into whether or not the
interests of Donegal County Council may or may not be relevant to the issues
which fall to be determined in the proceedings which the Applicant wishes to
commence.
16. Since
"the planning authority against whose decision an appeal is made" is
expressly
defined as a "party to an appeal" within Section 1 of the 1992 Act, it is
inescapable
that Donegal County Council comes within the category of a party which is
provided for mandatorily within subsection (19)(3) of the 1992 Act because that
subsection requires that an application for relief of the type which is sought
herein
shall
be made within the prescribed two month period "...by motion on
notice...to...the Board and each party...to the appeal...".
17. Discretion
has not been conferred upon this Court either by the Act of 1992 or otherwise
to waive or relax in any respect the statutory
mandatory
requirement which has been imposed by the Legislature upon persons who wish to
seek relief of the kind which the Applicant wishes to seek herein. The
assumption by this Court of such a discretion might reasonably be regarded as a
departure from statutory interpretation and an entry into the realms of
legislation.
18. It
follows from the foregoing that I find that on the facts of this case the
Applicant is barred by the provisions of Section 82 of the 1963 Act, as amended
by Section 19(3) of the 1992 Act, from seeking the relief against the
Respondent which he seeks.