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A local planning authority is held not to have fettered its discretion as such

In the context of allegations of bias or predetermination in relation to an application for planning permission, it is important to distinguish between two quite distinct situations. The first is where a member of the planning committee of the local planning authority (LPA) – or an officer – has a personal interest in the outcome. The second is where the LPA has a specific policy that it has resolved to pursue.

In the latter case, the approach of the courts has been simply to ask whether, despite that policy and any actions carried out in respect of it, the LPA genuinely and impartially exercised its discretion when resolving to grant planning permission. (Clearly there will be instances where a planning decision made by a LPA will favour its own interests, but that is to be expected given that a LPA will inevitably have more than one statutory role.) Where the answer is in the affirmative, no further questions – such as what would the fair-minded and informed observer conclude – need to be asked.

The LPA in R (on the application of Khan) v London Borough of Sutton [2014] EWHC 3663 (Admin) was also the waste disposal authority for its area. Having entered into a contract with the interested party for the provision of a waste incinerator, it subsequently granted it the necessary planning permission. The claimant sought judicial review of its decision to do so, one of his grounds being that the decision was driven by contractual considerations and not by planning ones. In other words, the LPA had not assessed the planning application with an open mind.

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