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Legal

PP 2011/1

Section 187A of the Town and Country Planning Act 1990 allows a local planning authority (LPA) to serve a breach of condition notice (BCN) where planning permission has been granted subject to conditions and one or more of those conditions has not been complied with. This is intended to be a summary remedy, and an alternative both to the issue of an enforcement notice and to proceedings for an injunction. There is no right of appeal to the secretary of state, as in the case of an enforcement notice, because the planning merits are not in question.

What steps can the recipient of a BCN take? If the LPA prosecutes it subsequently for non-compliance with its requirements, it is clear that it can challenge it by way of a defence in the magistrates’ court, at least on limited legal grounds. Otherwise, it must either seek a judicial review or apply, under section 73 of the 1990 Act, to vary or discharge the condition or conditions. This was emphasised by the Court of Appeal in Trim v North Dorset District Council of Nordon [2010] EWCA Civ 1446; [2010] PLSCS 322.

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