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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 >> Ewing v Director of Public Prosecutions & Anor (Rev 2) [2010] EWCA Civ 70 (11 February 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2010/70.html Cite as: [2010] EWCA Civ 70 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM QBD, ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
LORD JUSTICE MOSES
CO10798/07
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LADY JUSTICE SMITH
and
LORD JUSTICE ELIAS
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Terence Patrick Ewing |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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Director of Public Prosecutions |
Respondent |
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Hastings Magistrates Court |
Interested Party |
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Keith George Davis |
Interested Party |
____________________
WordWave International Limited
A Merrill Communications Company
165 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2DY
Tel No: 020 7404 1400, Fax No: 020 7404 1424
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Ms Samantha Broadfoot appeared as an Advocate of the Court
Hearing date : 14 January 2010
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Crown Copyright ©
Lady Justice Smith:
"Restriction of vexatious legal proceedings.
(1) If, on an application made by the Attorney General under this section, the High Court is satisfied that any person has habitually and persistently and without any reasonable ground—
(a) instituted vexatious civil proceedings, whether in the High Court or any inferior court, and whether against the same person or against different persons; or
(b) made vexatious applications in any civil proceedings, whether in the High Court or any inferior court, and whether instituted by him or another, or
(c) instituted vexatious prosecutions (whether against the same person or different persons),
the court may, after hearing that person or giving him an opportunity of being heard, make a civil proceedings order, a criminal proceedings order or an all proceedings order.
(1A) In this section—
"civil proceedings order" means an order that—
(a) no civil proceedings shall without the leave of the High Court be instituted in any court by the person against whom the order is made;
(b) any civil proceedings instituted by him in any court before the making of the order shall not be continued by him without the leave of the High Court; and
(c) no application (other than one for leave under this section) shall be made by him, in any civil proceedings instituted in any court by any person, without the leave of the High Court;
"criminal proceedings order" means an order that—
(a) no information shall be laid before a justice of the peace by the person against whom the order is made without the leave of the High Court; and
(b) no application for leave to prefer a bill of indictment shall be made by him without the leave of the High Court; and
"all proceedings order" means an order which has the combined effect of the two other orders.
(2) An order under subsection (1) may provide that it is to cease to have effect at the end of a specified period, but shall otherwise remain in force indefinitely.
(3) Leave for the institution or continuance of, or for the making of an application in, any [civil] proceedings by a person who is the subject of an order for the time being in force under subsection (1) shall not be given unless the High Court is satisfied that the proceedings or application are not an abuse of the process of the court in question and that there are reasonable grounds for the proceedings or application.
(3A) Leave for the laying of an information or for an application for leave to prefer a bill of indictment by a person who is the subject of an order for the time being in force under subsection(1) shall not be given unless the High Court is satisfied that the institution of the prosecution is not an abuse of the criminal process and that there are reasonable grounds for the institution of the prosecution by the applicant.
(4) No appeal shall lie from a decision of the High Court refusing leave required by virtue of this section."
Recusal
"The question is whether the fair-minded and informed observer, having considered the facts, would conclude that there was a real possibility that the tribunal was biased."
The appeal - Jurisdiction to hear this appeal
The substantive issue – Is section 42 leave required before the commencement of the proposed proceedings for judicial review?
Discussion – the wider argument
"(1) No person shall be liable, whether on the ground of any want of jurisdiction or on any other ground, to any civil or criminal proceedings to which he would have been liable apart from this section in respect of any act purporting to be done in pursuance of this Act or any regulations or rules made under this Act … unless the act was done in bad faith or without reasonable care. (2) No civil proceedings shall be brought against any person in any court in respect of any such act without the leave of the High Court… . "
"In my judgment the words of section 139 do not provide the clear and explicit words that are necessary to exclude the jurisdiction of the court to grant the remedy of certiorari. On the contrary, the words "civil proceedings", unless specially defined, are apt only to cover civil suits involving claims in private law proceedings. The words are not apt to include proceedings for judicial review."
From that passage and in particular from the last two sentences, Mr Ewing derives the proposition that proceedings for judicial review are not civil proceedings. I am afraid that he has taken the passage out of context. When the judgment is read as a whole, it is clear that Ackner LJ construed the section as providing protection for a potential defendant (usually a doctor who had to make decisions under the provisions of the Act) against harassment by a private law claim but as not preventing the bringing of public law challenges to his decisions. In short, he was not saying that proceedings for judicial review were not civil proceedings. He was saying that, in the context of section 139, the term 'civil proceedings' referred only to private law actions and not public law proceedings.
"Under the present legislation the court may make a "civil proceedings order" (as it did in this case) or a "criminal proceedings order" or an "all proceedings order", this last having the combined effect of the other two orders. The principle of construction for which Mr Ewing contends is sound. But there is no ambiguity or lacuna in the present section and it seems clear to us that the draftsman intended all court proceedings to be comprised under heading of either civil or criminal proceedings. He intended "all proceedings" to be just that, and cannot have intended to leave a well defined class of proceedings uncovered.
Ex parte Waldron [1986] QB 824 concerned section 139 of the Mental Health Act 1983. The issue was whether that section precluded a mental patient from applying for leave to move for judicial review. The Court of Appeal held that it did not.
Mr Ewing submits, quite correctly, that there are strong similarities between the language of section 139 and that of section 42 and he relies strongly on the court's conclusion that "civil proceedings" did not cover applications for judicial review. Ackner LJ concluded that Parliament had not intended to bar the court's supervisory jurisdiction "because, had it done so, there would indeed have been no remedy to quash a compulsory admission to hospital made a result of a reasonable misconstruction of a public official's powers" and that this "would have disclosed a serious inadequacy in the power of the courts to protect the citizen from an actual or potential loss of liberty arising out of a serious error of law:" see [1986] QB 824 at 846G.
….
The background and object of section 139 of the Act of 1983 and section 42 of the Act of 1981 are, however, so very different that we see no reason to conclude that Parliament intended the same result to follow in each case. …. But in the ordinary case, we can see no reason why Parliament should not have intended a vexatious litigant seeking judicial review to obtain leave under section 42(3) as well as leave to move.
…
Mr Ewing is correct in submitting that the Court of Appeal in Ex parte Ewing [1991] 1 WLR 388 (that is the Highbury Corner Magistrates case) was not referred to Ex parte Waldron [1986] QB 824 of which he was then unaware. But we do not think reference to that case would have altered the court's decision. In our view the manifest purposes of section 42 compelled the court to reach the conclusion it did. "
Discussion – the narrower argument
"The matter can be tested in this way. So far as these proceedings are concerned, that is to say, Mr Gleaves' application for judicial review, … there is no prosecutor and there is no defendant. Indeed, …. the intended defendant in the Magistrates Court is not necessarily a party to these proceedings.
This is an application by Mr Gleaves and the respondent is the Tottenham Magistrates Court. These are civil proceedings. Mr Gleaves seeks to invoke the powers of the civil courts admittedly for the purposes, as he sees them, of the criminal proceedings which he seeks to institute in the magistrates court but does not alter the fact in my view that he is invoking the powers of the civil court and that an application under O 53 at all its stages, even when the application relates to a criminal cause or matter, is nevertheless properly to be regarded as a civil proceeding."
Lord Justice Elias
Lord Justice Sedley