On 6 September, the High Court handed down judgment in R (Fiske) v Test Valley Borough Council [2023] EWHC 2221 (Admin), to quash a decision granting planning permission pursuant to S73 TCPA 1990 for a solar farm development in the Test Valley.
Mr Justice Morris held that there are "two distinct restrictions" on the exercise of power under section 73. These are:
1. the S73 permission must not introduce a condition that "creates a conflict or is inconsistent" with the operative wording of the original planning permission and its conditions and;
2. the S73 permission must not "fundamentally alter" the development permitted by the original permission.
In reaching this decision the Judge relied heavily on Finney v Welsh Ministers [2020] PTSR 455 [2019] EWCA Civ 1868.
The Facts
In April 2022 the Claimant, Mrs Chala Fiske, applied for an order to quash a S73 planning permission ("the S73 Permission") to vary conditions within an earlier planning permission granted in 2017 ("the Original Permission"). The Original Permission was for a ground mounted solar farm within 72 hectares of agricultural land at Woodington Farm, Woodington Road, East Wellow. The precise operative wording was:
"Installation of a ground mounted solar park to include ancillary equipment, inverters, substation, perimeter fencing, cctv cameras, access tracks and associated landscaping."
Conditions 2 and 15 approved details for a 33kV substation. Subsequently, the S73 Permission was granted to allow various design changes to the scheme the effect of which was to remove the 33kV substation from the approved plans. The omission of the 33kV was not substantially disputed by the Council as they had relied upon the solar farm working in parallel with a separate planning permission for a DNO substation development that had been approved in May 2021 (Ref:20/00814/FULLS).
Grounds
The Claimant argued that the S73 Permission was unlawful for two reasons:
1. The S73
Permission was ultra vires since removing the substation permitted
by the Original Permission, the Council granted a permission that
conflicted with the operative wording of the Original Permission
and/or that fundamentally altered the development permitted under
the Original Permission; and
2. The Council failed to have regard to a
mandatory material consideration, namely the fact that in granting
the 2022 Permission it would be granting a permission which altered
the Original Permission by removal of the substation.
Legal Issues
Section 73 grants local planning authorities the power to make changes to planning conditions imposed under an existing permission. The question the Judge focused on in this instance was whether, as the Claimant argued, this power was restricted in two ways:
1. (conflict with operative part) and;
2. (fundamental alteration of the permission as a whole) - or, as the Defendant submitted, there was only a single restriction being restriction 2.
J Morris concluded that on the balance of case authorities, and
in particular Finney, both restrictions 1 and 2 apply to
the exercise of power under S73. He rejected the argument that
there was only a single "fundamental alteration"
test.
In his judgment, Condition 2 of the S73 Permission was inconsistent
with and in conflict with the operative wording of the Original
Permission because it effectively removed the ability to develop a
substation as allowed for within the operative wording. For this
reason, the S73 Permission was ultra vires. However, he went on to
also analyse whether the removal constituted a fundamental
alteration of the Original Permission. He concluded that as at the
date of the Original Permission "the existence of the 33kV
substation was a central part of the development" and
that removing such a central element did amount to a fundamental
alteration of the development.
For these reasons, Ground 1 was successful and the need to reach
any conclusion on Ground 2 fell away.
Conclusion
This case highlights the need for care to be taken in relying on
S73 to vary conditions that could conflict with operative wording.
It also illustrates the importance of the proposed new S73B power
to make "non-substantial" changes under the Levelling Up
and Regeneration Bill. If passed, this will allow local authorities
to amend both planning conditions and the description of a
development so long as they are satisfied the changes will not be
substantially different from the existing permission.
James Burton of 39 Essex Chambers and Lewis Silkin Planning
Partner, Sara Hanrahan acted for the Claimant.
Read the full judgement here.
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