Hendricks v SoS Environment and Eastbourne BC
Language: English Series: Property and Compensation Reports ; (1990) 59 PCR 443-452(10)Publication details: 1990Subject(s): Summary: QBD 1 September 1989. H applied under Town and Country Planning Act 1971 s53 for a determination as to whether planning permission was required to erect a building to be used for kennels and loose boxes. Following failure of the council (E) to determine the application, H appealed to SoS contending that the structure should be regarded as two separate buildings the kennels coming under Class 1.3 of General Development Order 1977 and the stables under Class 1.1. E claimed the structure was one building primarily a stable. The SoS dismissed the appeal; H appealed. The appeal was allowed on the grounds that where a structure was erected as a single building but there were identifiable component parts, each part could as a matter of law be treated as a separate building and fall within different sections of the General Development Order.| Item type | Current library | Call number | Copy number | Status | Barcode | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Law report | London Journal article | ABS43103 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 1 | Available | 40455-1001 |
QBD 1 September 1989. H applied under Town and Country Planning Act 1971 s53 for a determination as to whether planning permission was required to erect a building to be used for kennels and loose boxes. Following failure of the council (E) to determine the application, H appealed to SoS contending that the structure should be regarded as two separate buildings the kennels coming under Class 1.3 of General Development Order 1977 and the stables under Class 1.1. E claimed the structure was one building primarily a stable. The SoS dismissed the appeal; H appealed. The appeal was allowed on the grounds that where a structure was erected as a single building but there were identifiable component parts, each part could as a matter of law be treated as a separate building and fall within different sections of the General Development Order.