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Planning Enforcement bites back

Izindi Visagie • 22 September 2020

Sharks!

Inspired by the Headington Shark, a new art installation in Hoxton has captured the imagination of journalists, the wrath of the local authority and the opposition/ambivalence/adulation of local residents and passers-by. The installation won the Architecture Foundation’s 2020 Antepavilion contest. Once fully installed, the artist’s proposed family of five ‘leaping and lunging’ sharks would emit amplified music and lectures and laser beams.

In anticipation of the installation, the London Borough of Hackney secured an interim injunction on 20 August 2020 prohibiting the use of the Hoxton Docks site for the installation of art, etc. Around the same time, 4 of the 5 sharks were installed. 

Last week The Honourable Mr Justice Murray sitting in the High Court had to decide whether to continue the interim order and grant mandatory relief to remove the 4 sharks, against a number of defendants including Shiva Limited, the competition sponsor, represented by a Mr Gray. 

The Guardian of 18 August 2020 describes the sponsor of the competition as: 

“Gray has a long record of baiting the authorities. He once parked a tank on a site in Southwark over a feud with the council. Its gun is still pointing at the planners' offices. More recently, he has locked horns with Hackney council”

The article quotes Mr Gray as saying: 
" 'We don't do planning, or regulations, or any of that bollocks.'” 

For balance, , it should be said that Mr Gray told the court he was misquoted.

This was not the first time the Council has had to intervene on this site, after previously issuing two enforcement notices aimed at structures. The first notice has still not been complied with and the 2nd (which alleges operational development rather than material change of use of the land) is under appeal. 

The Council claimed that the injunction application was necessary and expedient, and that the reasons for seeking injunctive relief included the flagrancy of the breach, the planning harm occasioned by it and the planning history which showed that other planning enforcement action had not been successful. The Antepavilion competition brief was, the court heard, designed to test and challenge the planning process.

Mr Gray made much of the fact that the site had been used for the production and display of art and related activities for 25 years and that the installation is therefore consistent with the lawful use of the site.

One important area considered by the court was whether there was any change of use of the land at all. The Thames Heliports Plc v London Borough of Tower Hamlets (1996) 74 P&CR 164 (CA) case was given an airing. The Council relied on the case for the proposition that the installation is capable of constituting a change in use of the land for the purposes of s55 of the Town and country Planning Act 1990. Mr Gray submitted that the case does not support the proposition that the positioning of the sharks on pontoons on the canal would constitute a material change of use, but merely that it might. He felt in any event that the case could be distinguished because he did not feel the environmental impact of 5 life-sized model sharks in a sheltered section on the Regent’s Canal can be sensibly compared with a floating heliport on the tidal section of the Thames.

As this was an interim injunction, the full merits of the case were not considered. Instead, following the American Cyanamid principles, the following questions were dealt with by the court: 

1. Is there a serious issue to be tried? Yes, the Council believes that the use of the land has materially changed and that the art installations are not consistent with the site’s lawful use. Mr Justice Murray said that the fact that the Council’s previous notice did not address a material change of use may suggest some inconsistency in the Council’s approach but did not prevent the Council from now relying on the argument that the installation was a material change of use. He said it was not for him to resolve that issue on this occasion.

2. Where does the balance of convenience lie? After a difficult balancing exercise of the many considerations, Mr Justice Murray felt that the balance of convenience fell on the side of granting the injunctive relief, both as to continuation of the prohibitions in the interim injunction order and granting the mandatory relief sought by the Council. He considered (i) whether the Council acted expeditiously and justifiably in seeking and obtaining the Interim Order on an urgent without notice basis, (ii) whether damages would be an adequate remedy for either party, (iii) whether the continuation of the prohibitory relief granted by the Interim Order and the giving of the mandatory relief sought by the Council would be just and proportionate measures in the circumstances of this case and (iv) other factors relevant to the balance of convenience. 

The Architecture Foundation, one of the defendants, made a statement to the effect that they do not endorse any action that involves a breach of planning control. The Council did not seek any further relief against the foundation. 

The exact scope of the injunction order will decided on 14 October 2020, taking account of written submissions to be made in the interim. 

The case can be read here


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