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Kingsley Ventures Ltd., R (on the application of) v Secretary of State for Transport, Local Government and the Regions & Anor

[2003] EWHC 792 (Admin)

Neutral Citation Number: [2003] EWHC 792 Admin CO/5896/2002
IN THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
THE ADMINISTRATIVE COURT

Royal Courts of Justice

Strand

London WC2

Thursday, 27 March 2003

B E F O R E:

MR JUSTICE COLLINS

THE QUEEN ON THE APPLICATION OF KINGSLEY VENTURES LTD

(CLAIMANT)

-v-

THE SECRETARY OF STATE FOR TRANSPORT, LOCAL GOVERNMENT AND THE REGIONS

(FIRST DEFENDANT)

and

KERRIER DISTRICT COUNCIL

(SECOND DEFENDANT)

Computer-Aided Transcript of the Stenograph Notes of

Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited

190 Fleet Street London EC4A 2AG

Tel No: 020 7404 1400 Fax No: 020 7831 8838

(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)

MR EDWARDS (instructed by RALPH & CO) appeared on behalf of the CLAIMANT

MR COPPEL (instructed by TREASURY SOLICITOR) appeared on behalf of the FIRST DEFENDANT

The SECOND DEFENDANT was not represented and did not attend

J U D G M E N T

(As Approved by the Court)

Crown copyright©

1.

MR JUSTICE COLLINS: This is an application pursuant to section 288 of the Town and Country Planning Act 1990 by Kingsley Ventures Limited, who seek to challenge the decision of an inspector given on 18th November 2002, whereby she dismissed an appeal by the claimants against the failure by the Kerrier District Council to determine a planning application in time.

2.

The application was an outline application for a residential development on a site in Redruth. The site itself has an area of some 1.5 hectares and is at present an open space, which lies on the east side of a road called Coach Lane and behind properties fronting on to a road called West End, which leads to the Redruth town centre. It is known locally as Fairfield, the reason for that being that it was purchased about 100 years ago to provide a permanent site for a Whitsun fair. It seems that the fair has been held on that site annually for approximately that length of time. The fair itself lasts for some five days and the operators remain on site for about nine days in total. The land is at other times of the year used to accommodate occasional temporary parking of caravans and storage of fairground equipment. There are regular car boot sales and Guy Fawkes Night bonfires, and on occasion circuses have made use of the site. Apparently, members of the public walk dogs over it. It appears that the storage of equipment, the parking of caravans, and the walking of dogs, is not expressly permitted but is tolerated by the owners. The site is private land and there is no public right of access to it but, as I have indicated, over the period the public have used it by permission of the owners, whether express or implied. There is a building on the site which is described as a small toilet block in one corner -- I have no evidence as to the actual extent of it -- and some of the site is surfaced with compacted rubble, no doubt to enable the fairground entertainments to be stationed on the site.

3.

The relevant plans which were material within the meaning of section 54(A) of the 1990 Act were the Structure Plan of Cornwall County Council, which was dated December 1997, and the Local Plan of Kerrier District Council, which was dated June 1985. The District Council were in the process of promoting a new Local Plan. There had been a draft prepared in 1999 but there was a fresh draft prepared in 2000, described in the inspector's decision and in this case as the RDD. The significance of the new proposals were these. In the 1985 Local Plan this particular site was earmarked for housing development. The same applied in the draft which had been prepared in 1999. It was there stated that the proposal for this site was:

"45 medium to higher density dwellings to include affordable housing (site carried forward by Camborne-Redruth Local Plan)"

That was the original 1985 plan. However, the proposal in the RDD changed and what was then proposed under heading RL668 was as follows:

"Maximum of 8 low density dwellings and remainder of site to be retained for community recreation purposes (site carried forward from the CRLP)(Urban Framework Plan site)."

4.

What had led to the change of approach to this site was a combination of the new approach in PPG3, which is the planning policy guidance which deals with housing, and a document known as the UFP prepared by consultants for the District Council, for the Cornwall County Council, for the South-west of England Regional Development Agency, and for the Prince of Wales' Foundation. This document was prepared following public consultation and with a considerable degree of community participation. Its policies have been fed into the Local Plan process and that has identified the Camborne, Poole, Redruth area as a key strategic location for investment, and a significant amount of public investment is likely to take place.

5.

In the UFP, it is proposed that the acquisition of this site should be sought to formalise its use as public open space for Redruth. It notes that the site requires improvement and substantial landscaping, and it suggests that there should be some small-scale infill housing. The inspector refers to this perfectly properly because it is accepted that it is a material consideration, but states that she doubts whether the success of the UFP strategy as a whole would be seriously threatened if the appeal were to be allowed. Undoubtedly the provision of quality open space was an important component of the regeneration strategy.

6.

The approach in PPG3, paragraph 30, is that there should be:

"A search sequence, starting with the re-use of previously-developed land and buildings within urban areas identified by the urban housing capacity study, then urban extensions, and finally new development around nodes in good public transport corridors."

In paragraph 31, there are set out in five bullet points the criteria which should be applied. It is not necessary for me to read those into this judgment. The essential point is that previously-developed land should be used so far as possible, and that is defined in Annex C to PPG3 as follows:

"Previously-developed land is that which is or was occupied by a permanent structure (excluding agricultural or forestry buildings), and associated fixed surface infrastructure[1]. The definition covers the curtilage of the development[2]. Previously-developed land may occur in both built-up and rural settings. The definition includes defence buildings and land used for mineral extraction and waste disposal[3] where provision for restoration has not been made through development control procedures[4].

"The definition excludes land and buildings that are currently in use for agricultural or forestry purposes, and land in built-up areas which has not been developed previously (e.g. parks, recreation grounds, and allotments - even though these areas may contain certain urban features such as paths, pavilions and other buildings). Also excluded is land that was previously developed but where the remains of any structure or activity have blended into the landscape in the process of time (to the extent that it can reasonably be considered as part of the natural surroundings), and where there is a clear reason that could outweigh the re-use of the site - such as its contribution to nature conservation - or it has subsequently been put to an amenity use and cannot be regarded as requiring redevelopment[5]."

7.

This particular site, in the view of the inspector, did not qualify within that definition as previously-developed land, although it is right to say that in the RDD it was presented as a site which was partially brownfield, that is to say partially developed, and partially greenfield, that is to say partially undeveloped. The inspector reached her conclusions in relation to that in paragraphs 10 and 11 of her decision letter. She summarises the definition, which I have already read, in Annex C. She then makes the point that there was no evidence that the site had ever been occupied by buildings, apart from the toilet block which was constructed to provide facilities for people attending or working at the annual Whitsun fair. She states that the hard standing was not associated directly with the toilet block and could not be regarded as forming the curtilage of it. In those circumstances, she formed the opinion that:

"The site would not fall within the definition of previously-developed land as set out in PPG3, notwithstanding that the RDD categorises the site as a mixed brownfield/greenfield site."

That is of some importance because it influenced the inspector in reaching her decision; that the appeal should be dismissed and that planning permission should be refused.

8.

The claimant raises a number of different grounds upon which the decision of the inspector is attacked. I shall deal with them in the order in which they were put in the submissions to me, which is not the order that is set out in the claim form. There was before the inspector the usual Rule 6 statement and the proofs of evidence of the various witnesses who were called. So far as the Rule 6 statements were concerned, they were not, certainly from the point of view of the Council, perhaps as helpful as they might have been because this was, of course, an appeal against deemed refusal on the basis of no determination. It is to be noted that the Council does not specifically refer to any particular policy in either the Structure or the Local Plan, or indeed the emerging plan. However, what it does say is that the appeal will be assessed against the sustainable development and housing, transport infrastructure, mining, recreation, and environment policies in the development plan, which comprised the Cornwall Structure Plan and additional policies of the Cornwall Structure Plan First Alteration, and Camborne-Redruth Local Plan. It is a little difficult to follow quite what relevance mining, for example, would have had. All possibly relevant policies were no doubt intended to be referred to but it was a somewhat unhelpful approach in as much as it was general rather than particular.

9.

They also went on to say that the appeal would be assessed against equivalent policies in the emerging Local Plan and that it was anticipated that the RDD would be published, and its consultation period would have expired before the public inquiry, so that that version of the emerging Local Plan would constitute a material consideration deserving weight in the determination of the appeal. In fact, as I understand it, the consultation period did not expire until a day after the conclusion of the public inquiry; although, of course, by the time the inspector reached her decision it had expired. There has as yet, as I understand it, been no inquiry in relation to the emerging plan and there are objections to the relevant policy to which I have already referred which affects this particular site. Not surprisingly, an objection has been lodged by the claimants.

10.

There is also reference to a Local Housing Capacity Study of 2001, which had contributed to the emerging Local Plan and to the UFP which I have already noted. It also sought to rely, so far as material, on statements in PPG1, 3, 13, 14, 17, and 23. Essentially, the council's approach according to Rule 6 was that the government's policy was based on rigorous urban housing capacity studies. The residential proposal on brownfield sites meant that there was a supply of housing land to meet the target in excess of the 5 years' supply specified in PPG3. There was no current need for the appeal site and there were no other benefits in the proposal. Also there was considerable public objection to the proposal; it should be kept as a public open space, and that should carry overriding weight. So that was the issue which was raised by the Council.

11.

What was not contained in any of the council's evidence was an indication whether this particular site could be acquired for the purpose of public open space, assuming that the owners were not willing to donate it for such use. It was private land; it would have to be somehow acquired and that would mean paying for it. The value would have to be the residential value which would undoubtedly be expensive. The only reference to that issue was contained in the evidence put forward by Mr David Stewart on behalf of the claimants. In paragraph 3.7.5.5 of that statement, Mr Stewart commented:

"Just like the land at West Trewirgie, which the Council dropped as an open space allocation because they could not afford to pay residential value for it, the Council would have to buy out the owners of the site by paying them the full value that the site is worth for housing."

He then went to explain why that was so.

12.

The evidence on behalf of the Council in Appendix 6 set out what is described as a "Preliminary Cost Estimation for the Creation and Maintenance of Fairfield as an Urban Public Park", amounting to a total of just under £300,000, with annual costs for maintenance of something in the order of £45,000. But it was noted that those figures did not include land acquisition costs, and those were likely to be high. I am told that in the course of the inquiry, the council's witnesses were asked whether any discussion had taken place about the question of acquisition costs. The answer given by the witnesses was that none had.

13.

When Mr Horrocks, one of the council's witnesses, was at the end of giving his evidence, the inspector decided that she should ask a question because no one else had on that issue. She asked him about the effect of having to acquire the site at residential land value. She deposes in a statement which is before me that in answer to her question, Mr Horrocks said words to the effect that it would be more difficult but not the end of the project. That was as far as it went.

14.

The solicitor who was appearing on behalf of the claimants did not pursue that matter. He was not given any specific opportunity to do so, in the sense that the inspector asked him whether he wished to pursue any questions in relation to that issue, but that, in my judgment, was not necessary. He could, if he had felt it to be important, have asked to be able to deal with the matter further. The reality is he did not appreciate that it was a matter which was likely to be of any great importance in the ultimate determination by the inspector. There was no particular reason why he should have considered it to be important save, as Mr Coppel submits, that anything asked by an inspector should be regarded as potentially important unless it is obvious that it is a side issue.

15.

Complaint is made that the inspector appears to have relied substantially upon that answer in reaching a key conclusion in her decision. In paragraph 31 of her decision she states:

"According to the evidence, several different sources of funding may be available to implement the proposals in the UFP, and the Council has already undertaken some investigation as to how the proposal could be implemented. Initial costings for a scheme have not taken into account the cost of acquisition of the site, and the only evidence of acquisition costs before me is that of the appellants' witness, who stated that the site would have to be acquired at residential land value. SWRDA [South-west Region Development Authority] have indicated that they remain interested in purchasing the site to secure the objectives of the UFP, although it is not clear that they would be prepared to pay residential land value for it. However, according to the evidence of the Council's Regeneration Officer for Redruth [Mr Horrocks], a residential land value for the site would not prevent the proposal from proceeding. In my view it would be for those acquiring the site to determine whether that represented an appropriate use of regeneration monies."

She then goes on to note that the Council would have the option of using compulsory purchase powers but no consideration had yet been given as to whether it would be prepared to do so. She continues in paragraph 32:

"But the written and oral representations to the inquiry indicate strong support for the UFP proposal, and the partners to the UFP process appear to be committed to the scheme. I consider therefore, on the information at present before me, that there is every likelihood of the scheme proceeding and the bulk of the site being retained as open space. The fact that the site is, at present, in private ownership does not, therefore, lead me to alter my conclusions."

16.

It seems to me that the single answer which was given by Mr Horrocks is at best a singularly flimsy basis for reaching a conclusion that there was every likelihood of the scheme proceeding. In that context the inspector accepted that it was not clear that the SWRDA would be prepared to pay residential land value for the site. The complaint, though, is not so much that, but that it was unfair for the inspector to place such reliance upon that answer when the solicitor for the claimants had not been given the opportunity to deal with the matter. There was no evidence, although there might well have been if it was appreciated that this was a matter of importance, as to the actual likely cost of acquiring this land. It might be that the cost was shown to be such that it really was unrealistic to believe that the Council would be prepared to spend the necessary money in order to achieve the desired result that this site remain open space. There was, after all, evidence before the inspector that the trustees who own this land were prepared to sell to the claimants and had reached a decision to do so. Thus it was their intention that the land should cease to be able to be used by the public either for the Whitsun fair or as open space more generally. It was in those circumstances at least on the cards that such a sale might in any event take place, even if planning permission were initially refused on the basis that in those circumstances in reality there was a reasonable prospect that the open space would be achieved. In any event, all this depended in the end upon the proposals in the RDD being approved and this site not being regarded as one where housing development should take place.

17.

Mr Coppel submits that there was no question of unfairness. The inspector had raised the question; if, as they should, the claimants had appreciated that it might be of some materiality, it was open to them to ask for an adjournment in order to obtain any necessary evidence, or alternatively to pursue the matter further with Mr Horrocks, or indeed with any witness that they wished to call on their own account, for example perhaps Mr Stewart.

18.

In those circumstances, Mr Coppel submits that it cannot be said that the inspector's conduct has deprived the claimants of a fair hearing in that regard. It is, it seems to me, very difficult for a representative to appreciate that a particular point may be of importance when it has not been raised by an opposing party in the appeal. If the inspector was going to rely upon it to a great extent, as indeed she clearly did, it seems to me that she ought to have made that plain in circumstances such as these. It would be different, of course, if the issue had been raised as a real issue. It is said it was raised because it was referred to by Mr Stewart and, of course, that to an extent is true, but only to an extent because no evidence had been presented by the Council to rebut the observations made by Mr Stewart in his statement, and of course that could have been done.

19.

That, coupled with what I have described as the flimsiness of it as a basis for reaching the conclusion that the inspector did, persuades me that she has in that regard erred in reaching her decision. Whether that by itself would have persuaded me that this decision could not stand, I do not need to consider in depth because that is not the only error in this decision letter.

20.

I come to what I regard as the most important error. The Structure Plan contained a policy as one would expect in relation to housing. That had been referred to in the questionnaire by the District Council. The relevant policy H2 provides:

"Housing provision should be mainly within or well integrated with the existing built-up areas of towns giving particular emphasis to the importance of larger urban areas as employment and service centres. In rural areas provision should be mostly in the main villages and closely related to the needs arising from the existing population.

"The location, scale and phasing of housing development should:

1)

minimise the need for travel and encourage access by public transport, on foot and by cycle, having regard to the likely overall impact on travel patterns and the degree to which development needs could be met in alternative locations;

2)

minimise any adverse impact on the landscape, the best and most versatile agricultural land, nature conservation, or historic environment;

3)

retain open spaces and avoid town cramming;

4)

achieve a satisfactory balance between where people live and the adequacy of local jobs, shops and other services and provision for primary health care, education and social services; and

5)

facilitate the layout, density and design of housing in ways which will provide attractive conditions for cycling and walking; maximise potential for energy conservation; provide for the needs of less able people and provide adequate open space and play areas."

21.

It is to be noted that there is a subsequent policy which was regarded as material in the questionnaire. SR4 relating specifically to sport and recreation states:

"Development should not lead to the loss of open spaces but contribute to the recreational amenity or environmental quality of the area, unless such spaces can be conveniently replaced in the locality."

The notes in relation to that say among other things that:

"Many ... open spaces, including sports pitches and playing fields, in and around our towns and villages that contribute greatly to the quality of life for local people. This may be either through their recreational value or environmental quality. It is an important objective to both retain these and improve provision in built-up areas. The importance of their retention will always have to be balanced carefully against the need for development and the availability of alternative sites."

22.

The Structure Plan contains general proposals. The details will normally be in the Local Plan. It seems to me that when one reads the policy H2 in its context, being a housing policy, the five requirements are in part concerned with where the development should take place, and in part the nature of any such development. So far as requirement 3) is concerned, because of course it relates to "location, scale and phasing", it provides that when there is such development there should be open spaces retained within that development. Indeed, that is precisely what this application provides for because it is for 48 dwellings with open space to be retained, albeit in a much smaller area than the present total of the site, which is of course open space in the sense that it is space which is not built on.

23.

So far as retention of existing open spaces which are used for recreational purposes or which are regarded as environmental amenities is concerned, that is covered by policy SR4. However, the inspector clearly took the view that HR2 was concerned with retention of open space in the sense that there should not be development on open spaces. In paragraph 3, she refers to policy H2 and states that:

"[It] requires housing to be mainly within or well integrated with existing built-up areas. The criteria to be met by housing development include minimising the need for travel and encouraging access by means other than the private car, retaining open spaces and avoiding town cramming."

That, of course, is merely to refer to the salient criteria which I have already read.

24.

She discusses in the course of the determination whether the land in question should be regarded as open space within the meaning of the PPGs and of policy H2. She makes the point that the reference in policy H2 is to be regarded as, on the face of it, much wider than the definition contained in the Town and Country Planning Act 1990. She deals with this in paragraph 18:

"Because the site is well located in relation to Redruth town centre, the development would accord with policy SP2 of the SP. However, as the proposal would result in loss of a large part of this existing open space, there would be some conflict with policy H2, one of whose criteria requires development to retain open spaces. There is nothing in that policy to suggest that the reference to open spaces is confined to a publicly owned open space or to the definition of open space in the Town and Country Planning Act 1990."

25.

As I have already indicated in construing H2 in my judgment, that is an error. Policy H2 has nothing to do with the retention of existing open spaces. It is concerned with the provision of open spaces within housing development. Accordingly, the inspector was wrong to regard H2 as being in conflict with this proposed development. In her conclusion, paragraph 33, she states:

"I conclude, on the main issue, that although the proposal, in terms of its location and accessibility, would meet the requirements of policies SP2 and H4 of the SP and policy H2 of the RDD, there would be conflict with policy H2 of the SP because of the loss of open space."

That, in my judgment, is wrong, and is a clear error of law because it involves a misconstruction of the policy.

26.

Mr Coppel submits that this is a simple matter to substitute SR4 for H2, and if she had done so, she would have reached the same conclusion. So that error, if it be an error, is not one which would have had any material bearing on the final conclusion. I do not accept that. SR4 is on its face narrow. It refers to open spaces that contribute to "the recreational amenity or environmental quality of the area". The inspector herself recognised that the visual amenity was limited because it was only really visible from one side, that is from the lane, the others being either a railway or built-up. When considering recreational amenity, although I accept that the fact that it is in private ownership and not public is by no means fatal in the sense that it takes it out of the category of open space that contributes to recreational amenity, it is an important factor to take into account. If the recreational use can be brought to an end at the desire of the owner, then that is a factor that must be taken into account.

27.

Mr Coppel submits there was no evidence that that might happen. There was equally no specific evidence that it would not and the fact, as I have said, that the trustees were prepared to sell for the purpose of development suggested that that might indeed be the case. In that context, the question of whether there were likely to be the funds available for either compulsory or agreed acquisition was a material consideration. All that would have had to be gone into, in my view, in much greater detail than was the case if policy SR4 were to be regarded as an important and perhaps determining feature.

28.

Accordingly on that ground alone, in my view this decision cannot stand. But that is not the end of the attack. It is submitted that the inspector misinterpreted the standard definition of open space in PPG17 and therefore took account of an immaterial consideration. PPG17 is specifically concerned with planning for open space sport and recreation. In Annex 1, it makes it clear that it goes beyond the definition in the Town and Country Planning Act, which is "land laid out as a public garden, or used for the purposes of public recreation, or land which is a disused burial ground." The examples given include,

"Amenity greenspace (most commonly, but not exclusively in housing areas) - including informal recreation spaces, greenspaces in and around housing, domestic gardens and village greens",

and make it clear, in my view, that it is not, as I say, limited to public open space. The question is whether as a matter of fact the land in question is used for recreational purposes by the public or is an amenity in other respects. As I say, the fact that the public do not have access as of right is, of course, a material consideration but is not a matter which takes the site out of the definition of open space within the meaning of PPG17.

29.

The other claim concerns the attachment by the inspector of significant weight to the aims of proposal RL668 in the RDD. As I have already indicated, the RDD consultation period was due to end after the inquiry. The inspector says this about it in paragraph 28:

"The consultation period in respect of the RDD was due to end shortly after the inquiry closed, and the document is therefore at a relatively early stage. Furthermore, objections to proposal RL668 have been lodged on behalf of the appellants. However, despite this and although the policy remains to be tested through the Local Plan process, I accord a significant amount of weight to the aims of proposal RL668 to keep much of the site free from development. This is because it accords with the thrust of advise in both PPG3 and PPG17, and because of the degree of public and community participation leading up to the adoption of the UFP where it originated. I consider that the conflict with the advise in PPG3 and PPG17 and with RDD policy represents a significant objection to this proposal, clearly outweighing the advantages of site's sustainable location and the proposal's inclusion of affordable housing."

30.

Mr Edwards particularly relies on PPG1 in this context which is the general policy and principles. PPG1 makes plain that the heart of the framework of planning lies within the development plans, which aims to give a measured certainty and predicability to the system. That is undoubtedly correct because one has section 54(A) of the Act which equally says that. He notes paragraph 40 which states:

"The Government is committed to a plan-led system of development control. This is given statutory force by section 54A of the 1990 Act. Where an adopted or approved development plan contains relevant policies, section 54A requires that an application for planning permission or an appeal shall be determined in accordance with the plan, unless material considerations indicate otherwise."

Paragraph 48 of PPG1 deals with the question of whether regard should be had to development policies in emerging plans which are going through the statutory procedures:

"The weight to be attached to such policies depends upon the stage of plan preparation or review, increasing as successive stages are reached."

Then there are various examples, the first of which is:

"Where a plan is at the consultation stage, with no early prospect of reaching deposit, then refusal on prematurity grounds would seldom be justified because of the lengthy delay which this would impose in determining the future use of the land in question."

That, submits Mr Edwards, applies clearly in this case: the consultation period was not at an end; there were objections to the plan; there were reasons to suppose that on financial grounds the proposal might not be able to go ahead. A combination of all those factors might well mean that RL668 could not in the end obtain approval. In any event, as the lapse of time has made plain, there has still been no inquiry in relation to the emerging plan. There would be a wholly unacceptable delay in the use of this land.

31.

Against that Mr Coppel submits that the Local Plan of 1985 was of considerable antiquity. Furthermore, PPG3 represented a sea-change of approach in relation to housing. That was only in March 2000 and it is that change that has been reflected in the approach in the RDD. It is true, as Mr Coppel of course has to accept, that in 1999 the proposal in the emerging Local Plan was the same as in the 1985 plan; namely, that the site should be retained for housing development purposes. So although in one sense it is of considerable antiquity, the proposal for this particular site is not of great antiquity. The only question is whether the change created by PPG3 should make all the difference.

32.

The fact is that this is regarded as a not wholly greenfield site. It qualifies in all respects other than that for housing. It fulfils all the relevant conditions and criteria set out for housing development. The only question is whether the fact that it is not wholly brownfield is likely to make such a substantial change.

33.

It seems to me that it could not be assumed that, despite the public support for the UFP policies, the RDD proposal had reached a stage when it was appropriate to attach what the inspector regards as significant weight to it. Weight is, of course, a matter for the inspector. It is not normally a matter which can be taken into account by this court as a basis for finding against a decision of a planning inspector. But it is important that the guidance in the PPGs is correctly applied and if guidance is incorrectly applied, that is a matter which can result in a decision being upset.

34.

The guidance is that where a plan is at the consultation stage, refusal would seldom be justified. Although it does not talk about weight, it is implicit that it would usually be wrong to regard such a developing plan as being something which could be properly relied on as a basis for refusing a planning permission which accords with the policy in the existing plan. It seems to me that the inspector has misapplied the advice given in PPG1. She has, of course, relied on PPG17 and PPG3 but it is the cumulative effect of the various matters that have led her to the decision which she has reached. In my view, in that respect too she has erred.

35.

That, I think, essentially covers the points which have been pursued before me. In all those circumstances this decision, in my view, cannot stand. Accordingly, this claim succeeds and the matter will be remitted for a fresh consideration.

36.

That is the only course I can adopt, is it not, Mr Edwards?

37.

MR EDWARDS: That is correct, my Lord, and I would ask for an order in that regard. There is also an application for the claimant's costs.

38.

MR JUSTICE COLLINS: Yes.

39.

MR EDWARDS: I understand that there has been some discussion between those instructing me and the Treasury Solicitor. There is one matter on which I have not been able to take instructions.

40.

MR JUSTICE COLLINS: I do not recall having seen a schedule. That does not mean that I have not; I have had a number of cases and I cannot remember which I have seen and which I have not.

41.

MR EDWARDS: I have a copy from the Treasury Solicitor.

42.

MR JUSTICE COLLINS: I find that the other way round, it is very rare for there to be any objection to the amount, but sometimes there is objection this way round.

43.

MR EDWARDS: This is the only copy that I have. There is a slight objection on a certain matter.

44.

MR JUSTICE COLLINS: Yes.

45.

MR EDWARDS: Could we just look at the schedule. It is in relation to my solicitor's costs. Unfortunately, he is down in Cornwall and I have not been able to take instructions. It is a difference of about £1,200.

46.

MR JUSTICE COLLINS: So it is quite a substantial difference.

47.

MR EDWARDS: Yes, my Lord.

48.

MR JUSTICE COLLINS: Well, I am really not sure from what you tell me that I would be able to reach a decision on this because you need instructions about it. It seems to me that the only sensible thing in those circumstances is to put it to be dealt with by a detailed determination, whatever the expression is, unless of course you can agree; agreed or specially determined.

49.

MR EDWARDS: It may be possible we can agree outside. That would be a sensible way of doing it.

50.

MR JUSTICE COLLINS: Well, that is a matter for you. I do not think it would be right for me to reach a decision without hearing what your explanation was, would it?

51.

MR EDWARDS: No, my Lord, indeed. It is only in relation to solicitor's costs and I have not been able to take instruction.

52.

MR JUSTICE COLLINS: If it was only a couple of hundred pounds then one might adopt a palm tree(?) approach but I think £1,200 is too substantial a sum.

53.

MR COPPEL: My Lord, might I say something in relation to costs. The general approach that your Lordship has indicated is agreeable to the first defendant. But the position of the first defendant is that seven grounds in all were advanced and pursued by the claimant, seven were in the skeleton; some of them were abandoned, one or two fell by the wayside. Another way of putting it is that the first defendant has been successful and that ought to be reflected, even if in a small percentage -- your Lordship nods horizontally. The point about this is of course twofold; first of all, the first defendant has been put to the expense of dealing with this; secondly, the whole purpose of the new scheme is to impose a certain discipline on claimants.

54.

MR JUSTICE COLLINS: I accept that but one has to look at the realities. The fact is that what he has either abandoned or not succeeded on is a tiny part. You cannot really contend that you(?) were involved much in dealing with the human rights ground, and the evidence, of course, was required on the ground on which he succeeded.

55.

MR COPPEL: Well, that is correct, my Lord, but if I may say so it occupied or preoccupied, depending on how you look at it, pages of my learned friend's skeleton which had be read. One always enjoys reading the other side's skeletons, of course, but there it is. So, my Lord, I say --

56.

MR JUSTICE COLLINS: Those should be reflected.

57.

MR COPPEL: Even if modestly to impose a certain discipline on the claimant.

58.

MR JUSTICE COLLINS: In principle I take your point; in practice in this case I do not think it has any merit. No, I do not propose to apportion costs at all. It would seem to me to be a case where it would be right for the claimants to have their full costs.

59.

MR COPPEL: My Lord, that then leaves the issue of permission to appeal, and I do ask for permission to appeal and I do so on three bases; two relate to the fairness ground and one relates to the weight ground. In relation to the fairness ground, it is a matter of general importance to the inspectorate that its inspectors may be under a potential obligation to direct parties to a particular line of reasoning that an inspector is proposing to take --

60.

MR JUSTICE COLLINS: Yes, I take your point but I did not intend to go as far as that. This all depends on whether an issue is one which has in any way been flagged up. If it is an issue which is clear then, as it seems to me, there is really no need for the inspector to indicate anything in particular because it is an issue which is there and the parties know it is there. But here that issue really was not properly flagged up and that is the only reason why I have taken the view that in the circumstances of this case, and I emphasise and if you like I will make it clearer when I correct the transcript, that it is so limited. This is a one-off in my view.

61.

MR COPPEL: My Lord, without pushing at a barred door, the position is this. As your Lordship has found that the inspector raised by questioning a particular point, and the position of the inspectorate is that once the inspector does that and the parties are professionally represented that is a sufficient trigger to those professionally represented parties -- if in fact it is to be the case, your Lordship says, in exceptional circumstances that the inspector hearing the inquiry has to go further -- that is a matter of importance because the inspectors do have to be instructed. The circumstances in which they are to identify to professionally represented parties this is the ball --

62.

MR JUSTICE COLLINS: The difficulty is that this is not the right case to take up because you have lost on other grounds, as you have perhaps from what you said accepted that you do not have much of a hope on the H2 point.

63.

MR COPPEL: My Lord, that is what I say in relation to defence. May I deal with the other matter which is, in fact, a matter of considerable importance. I hear what your Lordship says in relation to H2. It is, of course, possible for (inaudible) to give permission to have these pseudo-hypothetical appeals even though it is, as it were, accepted that an appeal fails on other bases. That is the basis upon which I would make this application. The weight issue is a matter of considerable importance to the Secretary of State and --

64.

MR JUSTICE COLLINS: Well, you could have appealed Austin.

65.

MR COPPEL: Yes, my Lord, that is certainly -- I say nothing in relation to that. The position is this: PPG1 says that planning permission is to be "seldom refused" on the basis of what I will term early stage material. "Seldom refused", that phrase contemplates that there will be circumstances, albeit seldom, in which early stage material can be determinative. Your Lordship's ruling is tantamount to the fact that the word "seldom" is to be scribbled out and replaced with the word "never", I would submit.

66.

MR JUSTICE COLLINS: No, just on the facts of this case to say that it should be attributed significant weight was an error because it failed to have proper regard to "seldom".

67.

MR COPPEL: My Lord, the point is that that again goes round upon itself because that is a matter of weight, which is a matter for the inspector, and we say should be left with the inspector, and unless one can say logically --

68.

MR JUSTICE COLLINS: I take your point but what you are really saying is that my approach in Austin v The First Secretary of State and Penwith District Council [2003] EWHC 229 Admin was wrong. That may be correct and that may be in due course a matter which you can take to the Court of Appeal. If you think I am wrong, the inspectors will no doubt disregard it.

69.

MR COPPEL: Well, my Lord I have asked and I hear what your Lordship says.

70.

MR JUSTICE COLLINS: No, this is not the right case, in my view, to justify it. I am bound to say that if I had thought there was anything in that, would I have power to give leave on the basis that you undertake to pay all the costs of the other side, win or lose?

71.

MR COPPEL: My Lord, sometimes this question arises. I have to say I have difficulty with that because either your Lordship is of the view that the matter deserves to go upstairs, or does not.

72.

MR JUSTICE COLLINS: Mm hmm.

73.

MR COPPEL: My agreeing or not agreeing to pay the costs of the other side should not matter.

74.

MR JUSTICE COLLINS: I take your point but the Court of Appeal does that from time to time, as you know, in relation to leave to appeal to the House of Lords.

75.

MR COPPEL: My Lord, I do not always agree with the Court of Appeal.

76.

MR JUSTICE COLLINS: Nor do I, but the fact is they do it, do they not?

77.

MR COPPEL: Yes, my Lord, they do. As I say, I cannot see how one can get round the intellectual impasse of the fact that either it is worth going upstairs or it is not.

78.

MR JUSTICE COLLINS: I entirely take your point. The reality is that they do it on the whole where the point is of desperate importance to the revenue(?) say, but for the unfortunate individual he is, as it were, the fall-guy for an important point. That, I think is the usual situation in which that is done. I do not think it is normally appropriate to be done where one considers that the matter ought to go to appeal for whatever reason, but you have sympathy with one side or the other. That I do not think is a proper use of it. Where it does not arise, because I am not going to give you leave to appeal, you will have to persuade the Court of Appeal if you think it appropriate to do so.

79.

MR COPPEL: Thank you, my Lord.

80.

MR JUSTICE COLLINS: I have to fill in a form. No reasonable prospect of success in any appeal. No reason to isolate particular findings. All right.

81.

I am sorry, we could have finished a bit earlier as it turns out.

Kingsley Ventures Ltd., R (on the application of) v Secretary of State for Transport, Local Government and the Regions & Anor

[2003] EWHC 792 (Admin)

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