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Guidance on planning conditions restricting the occupancy of land and buildings

The invalid condition imposed by the local planning authority (“LPA”) in R (on the application of Sienkiewicz) v South Somerset District Council (see PP 2014/5), with the intention of restricting the occupancy of the land and building to the applicant, was – to say the least – unhappily worded. In considering its effect or otherwise, the court also referred to the guidance contained in Circular 11/95: The Use of Conditions in Planning Permissions.

The effect of section 75(1) of the Town and Country Planning Act 1990 is that any grant of planning permission to develop land inures for the benefit of the land and of all persons for the time being interested it, except insofar as the permission otherwise provides. It is accepted generally that, if a personal restriction is to be imposed, it should be done so by means of an express condition. Words of limitation otherwise expressed, such as within the description of the permitted development, may not be similarly construed and would not, in any event, enable a breach of condition notice to be served by way of enforcement.

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