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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> The Open Spaces Society v Secretary of State for Environment, Food And Rural Affairs [2020] EWHC 1085 (Admin) (05 May 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2020/1085.html Cite as: [2020] PTSR 1626, [2020] WLR(D) 279, [2020] EWHC 1085 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
PLANNING COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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THE OPEN SPACES SOCIETY |
Claimant |
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- and – |
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SECRETARY OF STATE FOR ENVIRONMENT, FOOD AND RURAL AFFAIRS |
Defendant |
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Mr Ned Westaway (instructed by Government Legal Department) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 7 April 2020
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Crown Copyright ©
Mrs Justice Lieven :
(1) Where it appears to a council as respects a footpath , bridleway or restricted byway in their area (other than one that is a trunk road or a special road) that, in the interests of the owner, lessee or occupier of land crossed by the path or way or of the public, it is expedient that the line of the path or way, or part of that line, should be diverted (whether on to land of the same or of another owner, lessee or occupier), the council may, subject to subsection (2) below, by order made by them and submitted to and confirmed by the Secretary of State, or confirmed as an unopposed order,—
(a)create, as from such date as may be specified in the order, any such new footpath, bridleway or restricted byway as appears to the council requisite for effecting the diversion, and
(b)extinguish, as from such date as may be specified in the order or determined in accordance with the provisions of subsection (3) below, the public right of way over so much of the path or way as appears to the council requisite as aforesaid.
An order under this section is referred to in this Act as a "public path diversion order".
(2)A public path diversion order shall not alter a point of termination of the path or way—
(a)if that point is not on a highway, or
(b)(where it is on a highway) otherwise than to another point which is on the same highway, or a highway connected with it, and which is substantially as convenient to the public.
…..
(6)The Secretary of State shall not confirm a public path diversion order, and a council shall not confirm such an order as an unopposed order, unless he or, as the case may be, they are satisfied [Test 1] that the diversion to be effected by it is expedient as mentioned in subsection (1) above, and further [Test 2] that the path or way will not be substantially less convenient to the public in consequence of the diversion and [Test 3] that it is expedient to confirm the order having regard to the effect which—
(a)the diversion would have on public enjoyment of the path or way as a whole,
(b)the coming into operation of the order would have as respects other land served by the existing public right of way, and
(c)any new public right of way created by the order would have as respects the land over which the right is so created and any land held with it,
so, however, that for the purposes of paragraphs (b) and (c) above the Secretary of State or, as the case may be, the council shall take into account the provisions as to compensation referred to in subsection (5)(a) above.
(6A)The considerations to which—
(a)the Secretary of State is to have regard in determining whether or not to confirm a public path diversion order, and
(b)a council are to have regard in determining whether or not to confirm such an order as an unopposed order,
include any material provision of a rights of way improvement plan prepared by any local highway authority whose area includes land over which the order would create or extinguish a public right of way.
The facts
The decision letter
44. I have concluded above that the Order is expedient in the interests of the landowners and occupiers on the grounds of privacy. The proposed route will not be substantially less convenient. There would be a diminution in public enjoyment, but this would not be significant in terms of the effect on the use of the path as a whole.
45. The judgment in R (oao) Young v SSEFRA is authority that in deciding whether to confirm an order, the criteria in s119(6) should be considered as three separate tests, two of which may be the subject of a balancing exercise. Where, as in this case, the proposed diversion is considered expedient in terms of test (i), is not substantially less convenient in terms of (ii), but would not be as enjoyable to the public, the Inspector must balance the interests raised in the two expediency tests i.e. the interests of the applicant (i), and the criteria set out in s119(6)(a)(b) and (c) under (iii) to determine whether it would be expedient to confirm the order.
46. The OSS invites me to take a contrary approach to the followed in Young. It submits that on a proper reading of section 119(6) if the diversion fails any one of tests comprised in section 119 then the diversion must fail. According to the OSS no balancing exercise should be undertaken.
47. However, Young is settled law and I see no reason to depart from it. In this case, there is a relatively minor loss of public enjoyment of the path as a whole which must be weighed against the interests of the owners/occupiers. On balance, I consider that the benefits to the owners and occupiers outweigh the loss of public enjoyment. As such it would be expedient to confirm the Order.
The case law on s.119 HA 1980
3. The Inspector reached his decision following an inquiry at which a number of individual objectors and, in particular, the Bodicote Parish Council (though at one point a supporter) had expressed their opposition to the order. The Inspector said in his conclusions, in relation to the order being confirmed, this:
"Confirmation of the Order would lead to a significant decrease in public enjoyment of the path between Bodicote and Bloxham, although not greatly so (paragraph 59). It would lead to a very significant increase in the privacy and a significant increase to the security of the applicants. It seems to me that I should take into account that the effect on public enjoyment might be lasting whereas the applicants will benefit only for as long as they occupy the Mill although, as I noted above, future owners would probably benefit too. I should also take into account, I consider, that the enjoyment of a greater number of people would be affected while only those resident at the Mill would immediately benefit from confirmation of the Order. On the other hand people's enjoyment of the path would be affected principally only when they were walking the diverted path, while the benefit to the applicants would be felt continually. It is a difficult balance to make, but overall I conclude that the interests of the applicants prevail, and that it is expedient to confirm the Order."
4. In paragraph 70, under the heading "Other matters", the Inspector said:
"I mention here two arguments which were each raised in a number of objections. The first is that because the applicants knew of the existence of the footpath when they bought the Mill it is not legitimate for them to expect that it should be diverted. The second argument is that if this diversion is allowed it might set a precedent for the diversion of other paths which pass close to nearby mills. Understandable though these arguments might be, they are not relevant to the tests for confirmation set out in s119 of the 1980 Act."
5. It is conceded by the Secretary of State and by the two individual defendants and asserted by the claimant that the Inspector erred in law in treating those two matters as irrelevant. The Secretary of State was indifferent initially as to whether the decision should be quashed, but accepted in the end that he could not say that without those errors the Inspector's decision would inevitably have been the same. The Westons contend that the decision would plainly and inevitably have been the same.
28. Mr Laurence's submissions accepted, at least at some stage as I understood them, that the expediency issue in section 119(6) was not confined to the specific factors in sub-paragraphs (a) to (c), nor to the effect of compensation on the land onto which the path might be diverted. It could encompass the factors said to be unlawfully omitted in paragraph 70, and indeed the fact of historical integrity. In my judgment, that is the right approach to section 119(6) and expediency. It covers all considerations that are material. The fact that there is a focus given by the statute to specifying factors does not narrow down the scope of expediency in its application at that stage. That is by clear contrast with the scope of expediency in section 119(1) which is directed to what is expedient for the interests of the land owner.
29. So far as the discretion which Mr Laurence contends arises is concerned, in my judgment it is clear that there is no further discretion. The Secretary of State has different powers where he, as Mr Buley points out, correctly, in his skeleton argument, is the recipient of a report from an Inspector. As he is the decision-maker, he may disagree with the conclusions of the Inspector, and that is why the Secretary of State "may" confirm or not confirm the order. That is because he is entitled to come to a different conclusion on the outcome of the statutory questions from that to which the Inspector has come.
30. Where, however, the Inspector is the decision-maker, there is nothing to suggest that there is a residual discretion to come to a view other than that to which the answer to the questions of section 119(6) would otherwise point. I cannot conceive of circumstances in which, having properly answered the section 119(6) questions and concluded that it was expedient in relation to both questions that the diversion order be made, an Inspector (or Secretary of State) rationally could say that nonetheless the order should not be confirmed. It is difficult to see what factors could animate such a decision which were not relevant to the expediency issues under section 119(6). The fact that such a discretion could only lead, if exercised adversely to the decision which would otherwise be arrived at, to an irrational basis, strongly supports my view that the discretion does not exist at all. A discretion only to act unlawfully is a discretion scarcely worth having.
31. The Inspector, therefore, made no error in the structure of his approach. But even if his structure had been wrong, I cannot see that such an error in structure could conceivably have affected the outcome of his decision-making. I found it difficult to follow how considering the same factor at different stages with a different background could lead to a different conclusion unless it was the result of utter confusion caused by the statutory structure for which Mr Laurence contends.
The submissions
"… if, in a given case, the Secretary of State is satisfied that the order should be confirmed (having had regard to the effect to the contrary which the matters mentioned in paragraphs (a), (b) and (c) may have), the order will be confirmed. Conversely (given the negative terms in which sub-section (6) is drafted ("shall not confirm unless")), if the "effect" of any of the matters to which the Secretary of State is to have regard is negative or adverse, the Secretary of State could and would not ordinarily be satisfied that it was expedient to confirm the order. A failure of the Secretary of State to be satisfied that it is expedient to confirm means that Constraint No. 3 is not overcome, and so the order will not be confirmed".
Conclusions