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R (on the application of Muir) v Wandsworth London Borough Council

 Lease – Common land – Private nursery – Appellant local authority granting long lease of premises on common land to limited company to operate private nursery – Respondent applying for judicial review – High Court granting application – Appellant appealing — Whether company operating indoor facility for “recreation” – Whether limited company constituting “organisation” – Whether Order regulating open spaces permitting proposed use — Appeal dismissed

The appellant local authority was the freehold owner of Wandsworth Common in the London Borough of Wandsworth. The land was common land. The appellant granted a long lease of premises known as Neal’s Farm Lodge and Cottage situated on the Common to the interested party for use as a private children’s nursery for up to 62 pre-school children aged 2 to 5 years. As the premises were situated on the Common, they were subject to significant restrictions on use under the Greater London Parks and Open Spaces Order 1967, scheduled to the Ministry of Housing and Local Government Provisional Order Confirmation (Greater London Parks and Open Spaces) Act 1967.

The respondent, who had proposed an educational and recreational facility for use by local maintained schools, applied for judicial review of the decision to grant the lease. He contended, amongst other things, that: (i) the provision of child care at a private nursery run by a private company, which had exclusive use of the premises and could restrict entry to members of the public, fell outside the scope of the 1967 Order as it was not a facility for public recreation and use; and (ii) the proposed nursery use fell outside the meaning of the term “recreation” as used in the heading to article 7 (“Facilities for public recreation”) and in article 7(1)(a)(v) and (vi) of the Order, contrary to the appellant’s argument that the proposed use came within the scope of article 7(1)(a), either as an indoor facility for recreation under article 7(1)(a)(v) or as a centre or other facility for an organisation whose objects or activities were of a recreational or educational character, under article 7(1)(a)(vi). The application was granted on the basis that the nursery did not constitute a facility for “recreation” within article 7(1)(a)(v) or (vi), which meant “public recreation”, and the interested party was not an “organisation” within the meaning of article 7(1)(a)(vi), as it was a profit-making business: see [2017] EWHC 1947 (Admin); [2017] PLSCS 162.

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