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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Mid Suffolk District Council v Clarke [2006] EWCA Civ 71 (15 February 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2006/71.html Cite as: [2007] 1 WLR 980, [2007] WLR 980, [2006] EWCA Civ 71 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
NORWICH DISTRICT REGISTRY
SIR JOHN BLOFELD (sitting as a Deputy High Court Judge)
4NR50053
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE GAGE
and
LORD JUSTICE LLOYD
____________________
MID SUFFOLK DISTRICT COUNCIL |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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JOHN EDGAR CLARKE |
Respondent |
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Smith Bernal WordWave Limited
190 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7421 4040 Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Andrew Marsden (instructed by Ashton Graham) for the Respondent
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Lloyd:
"Quite clearly, Mr Clarke accepted loads which he should not have accepted. Consequently, it seems to the Court that one can understand him starting by dealing with too many loads and one can express some degree of sympathy with him, say on 13th August, the first of three dates in a narrow window when there were more loads coming than he should have accepted. One can understand that he might have felt he was undertaking a public duty and no doubt making a rather greater profit, because, as he said in evidence, he was paid by the tonne for the amount of waste that he took in to dispose of.
He was both helping the public and helping himself, but it must have become abundantly clear to him that the smell that was being emitted because of that attitude of his was totally intolerable to the neighbourhood and regrettably, he did not do what he should have done which is to say no, that he would not continue with the many loads. He could only cope adequately with a much smaller amount particularly in this very hot weather.
In those circumstances, I have to decide what is the appropriate penalty. These cases are always extremely difficult. One bears in mind on one hand the fact, as Judge Mellor set out so eloquently, that the public have a right to their reasonable comfort and that comfort was being grossly abused by what was going on at Rookery Farm.
At the same time, this is not a man who was deliberately, in my view, permitting or causing a public nuisance in a reckless or grossly negligent way, but nevertheless he was in breach of his undertaking."
at 611:
"There are various mechanisms which can usefully be employed in order to reflect the agreement of the parties and to enable litigation to be brought to an end. The settlement of differences may be achieved by an agreement outside the court capable of enforcement under the law of contract. The court may be involved and the agreement of the parties reduced to a court order and enforceable by recourse to the court procedures. Another method is by way of undertaking either independent of or as part of a general agreement of the parties which may be recorded by the court within an order. An undertaking freely given after proper explanation is a valuable additional part of the process of obtaining the agreement of the parties rather than the imposition of the decision-making process."
also at 611, quoting from Buckley J in Re Hudson [1966] Ch 209:
"Where, on the other hand, no order for payment has been made but an undertaking has been given to the court to make a payment, the court could at any time upon good cause being shown release or modify the obligation under the undertaking."
at 612:
"In Russell v. Russell [1956] P 283 Jenkins LJ said at page 294:
"Any undertaking given to the court is capable of being discharged by the court whenever it appears to the court that circumstances have arisen which make that course a proper one in the interests of justice."
and at page 297:
"It is always competent to the court to discharge an undertaking given to it, if in its discretion the court comes to the conclusion that that is the proper course in the interests of justice."
at 613:
"One of the main reasons why the court has to retain control over undertakings given to it is the significance of the undertaking. It is a solemn promise made to the court and not to the other party to the proceedings. A breach of that promise is a matter which affects the court itself and may be enforced through committal proceedings for contempt of court. The issue is between the court and the contemnor. The finding that the giver of the undertaking is in contempt to the satisfaction of the court has, unlike civil proceedings, to be to the criminal standard of proof. Once proved it is a matter for the court whether to impose a penalty which includes the power to send to prison. The court must therefore have in the proper case the power to release the giver from the promise made to the court, where for instance, through no fault of the giver the undertaking cannot subsequently be complied with. The court ought not to allow the giver to remain in contempt in such circumstances even if the other party does not seek enforcement of the undertaking. It is not only a matter for the other party. It remains a matter for the court.
I am in no doubt, therefore, that an undertaking wherever recorded which is accepted by the court can be discharged by the court at any stage if it is just to do so. The fact that it is recorded in a consent order does not, in my judgment, change its nature from promise to order."
at 614:
"It is nonetheless important to remember that this undertaking by the appellant formed part of a 'package deal' incorporated into a consent order. Although, as I have set out, I am in no doubt that the Recorder had jurisdiction to release the appellant from its undertaking, as Jenkins L.J. said in Russell v. Russell (supra), the appellant must show that "circumstances have arisen which make that course a proper one in the interests of justice.""
"No offensive odour from the process shall be detectable beyond the site boundary. The operator shall not be in breach of this condition if it can be shown that all reasonable steps were taken and due diligence was exercised to prevent the release of offensive odour."
"No person shall carry on a prescribed process after the date prescribed or determined for that description of process by or under regulations under section 2(1) above (but subject to any transitional provision made by the regulations) except under an authorisation granted by the enforcing authority and in accordance with the conditions to which it is subject."
"that, in carrying on the process to which the authorisation applies, the person carrying it on must use the best available techniques not entailing excessive cost-
(a) for preventing the release of substances prescribed for any environmental medium into that medium or, where that is not practicable by such means, for reducing the release of such substances to a minimum and for rendering harmless any such substances which are so released; and
(b) for rendering harmless any other substances which might cause harm if released into any environmental medium."
"It shall be for the accused to prove that there was no better available technique not entailing excessive cost than was in fact used to satisfy the condition".
"(1) Where a local authority consider it expedient for the promotion or protection of the interests of the inhabitants of their area (a) they may prosecute or defend or appear in any legal proceedings and, in the case of civil proceedings, may institute them in their own name."
Before that provision was made it was necessary, if proceedings for public nuisance were to be brought, for either the local authority or one or more local residents to sue in the name of the Attorney General by way of a relator action.
Lord Justice Gage:
Lord Justice Buxton
i) At least when given as an alternative to a final injunction, an undertaking is equivalent to and of the same effect as an injunction: see for instance Re British Concrete Pipes Association's Agreement [1983] ICR 215, and the account given by Brightman J (applying the decision of Warrington J in Milburn v Newton Colliery 52 SJ 317) in Biba v Stratford Investments [1973] Ch 281 at p 287.
ii) Once sealed, an order of the court can only be displaced by appeal, even in a case where the order has been obtained by fraud. Even in the latter, exceptional, case the only remedy is to bring a further action to set the order aside: see for instance R v Cripps ex p Muldoon [1984] QB 686 at p 695, per Donaldson MR.
iii) Just as an injunction once issued is an obligation to the court, obedience to which is not under the control of the opposite party (see e.g. R v IRC ex p Kingston Smith [1996] STC 1210 at p1217), so an undertaking is given to the court, not to the opposite party, and as Butler-Sloss LJ put it in Kensington Housing Trust at p 613:
"is a solemn promise made to the court and not to the other party to the proceedings. A breach of that promise is a matter which affects the court itself and may be enforced through committal proceedings for contempt of court. The issue is between the court and the contemnor."
"Undertakings are convenient since a party can promise to do or abstain from that which a court would be unable to order. In that way an undertaking may cover a situation not capable of being the subject of a court order"
And, additionally, there was a strong element of reciprocity in Kensington Housing Trust that is absent from our case. All that said, however, it is fairly clear that this court did envisage the setting aside, and thus the alteration, of any undertaking, final or not, in appropriate circumstances. What therefore needs careful scrutiny is the basis on which that jurisdiction can be exercised.
i) That the alteration or discharge was the appropriate course to take in the interests of justice: this being the way in which the ratio of Kensington Housing Trust is expressed in the headnote to the report at 30 HLR 608;
ii) If there has been a material change of circumstances.