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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> ISIS Housing Cooperative v Evelyn [2019] EWCA Civ 1299 (20 June 2019) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2019/1299.html Cite as: [2019] EWCA Civ 1299 |
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ON APPEAL FROM LEEDS COUNTY COURT
(HIS HONOUR JUDGE SAFFMAN)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
and
LORD JUSTICE MALES
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ISIS HOUSING COOPERATIVE |
Respondent |
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- and - |
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EVELYN | Appellant |
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8th Floor, 165 Fleet Street, London, EC4A 2DY
Tel No: 020 7404 1400 Fax No: 020 7404 1424 Web:
www.epiqglobal.com/en-gb/ Email: [email protected]
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
The Respondent did not appear and was not represented
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Crown Copyright ©
LORD JUSTICE MALES:
"11. Mr Evelyn is the freehold owner and registered proprietor of a small property at 53 Reginald Street in Leeds. He acquired the property in 2000. It is situated at the rear of the garden of 53 Sholebroke Avenue, which runs parallel to Reginald Street. 53 Sholebroke Avenue and two adjoining properties are owned by Isis.
12. In 1953, Mr Evelyn's predecessor in title, a Mr Lidgard, bought the property at 53 Reginald Street from the then owners of 53 Sholebroke Avenue. At that date, 53 Reginald Street consisted of shop premises where Mr Lidgard carried on business as a fishmonger and greengrocer. By the conveyance dated 2 April 1953, he and his successors in title were granted two easements over an L shaped area of land immediately adjacent to the side and rear walls of the property, thereby permitting access from Reginald Street to the back of the premises. One easement was a right of way on foot and the other was a right of carriage for vehicles delivering goods to the premises. The L-shaped area was coloured brown on the plan annexed to the conveyance.
13. After the words of grant of the easements, there followed a qualification in the following terms: 'Such rights to be exercised only for the purposes of carrying goods to and from the rear of the said premises in the course of the purchaser's business of a fishmonger and greengrocer and for no other purpose whatsoever.'
14. A question arises whether the limiting proviso which I have just quoted was intended to apply to both of the easements or only to the right of carriage with vehicles. When Mr Evelyn became the owner of the property, he thought that the latter view was correct and that the right of way on foot was, therefore, unlimited. Isis disagreed with this interpretation of the conveyance.
15. Eventually, Mr Evelyn brought proceedings against Isis alleging interference with his right of way. A trial took place in the Leeds County Court, as it then was, on 9 May 2011. His Honour Judge Grenfell gave judgment in favour of Isis, and a copy of that judgment is included in our bundle. He held that both of the rights, which are referred to in the plural in the proviso, were subject to the same limitation. Reading the conveyance as a whole, he said, it was clear that what was being conveyed was a small shop which was to be run as a fishmonger and greengrocery business. The purpose of the easements was to allow access to the rear of the property for deliveries.
16. There was no appeal from that decision, which seems to me to have been clearly correct as a matter of construction of the conveyance. Must unfortunately, however, Mr Evelyn has never felt able to accept that the court has determined this issue against him. At various times and in various ways, he has tried to reopen the question without success, meanwhile frequently treating the right of way on foot as if it were unlimited. As a result, he has trespassed on the land belonging to Isis at the rear of 53 Sholebroke Avenue because, under the conveyance, he had no right to be there.
17. This conduct led to Isis applying to the court for an injunction against Mr Evelyn. On 21 August 2012, His Honour Judge Langan made the first of the orders upon which the present application is based. The order prohibited Mr Evelyn from entering upon the property of Isis: 'save for the purposes as set out in the conveyance dated 2 April 1953, namely in exercise of his rights of way and/or carriage solely in relation to the conduct of business as a fishmonger and greengrocer.'
18. The order also contained a prominent penal notice warning Mr Evelyn that, if he disobeyed it, he might be held to be in contempt of court and might be imprisoned or fined.
19. Regrettably, this order did not lead to a change in Mr Evelyn's behaviour and on no fewer than three occasions over the next two years, he was found to be in breach of the injunction and sentenced to terms of imprisonment.
20. First, on 12 April 2013, he was sentenced by Her Honour Judge Belcher to 56 days' imprisonment. Secondly, on 31 July2013, Judge Saffman sentenced him to a term of six months.
21. The matter then came back before the court again on 21 August 2014, when Judge Saffman ordered him to remove a number of items which he had deposited on Isis' land and to take down a metal fence which he had erected. He was also once more restrained from entering or being on the Claimant's land at any time thereafter, save for the purpose of complying with the mandatory orders made against him and with a further saving in the same terms as before relating to the 1953 conveyance. That was the second of the injunctions on which the present application is based. In addition, it was on that third occasion that Mr Evelyn was found guilty of further breaches of Judge Langan's order and was sentenced to the 12 month term suspended for two years which I mentioned at the start of this judgment.
22. That, in short, is the background to the present application, which was prompted by a further incident on 8 May 2016 when Mr Evelyn was allegedly seen once more in the garden of Isis' property pacing up and down and conversing on a mobile phone. A video record of the incident was taken by Ms SandraWiles, who is the secretary of Isis. She exhibited three frames from that video to her affidavit in support of the application, which was issued on 13 May, seeking the committal to prison of Mr Evelyn for further breach of the injunctions.
23. The effective hearing of that application took place on 25August last year, but it had by then been before the court three times, as the judge records in paragraph 4 of his judgment. On those previous occasions, the judge had first committed Mr Evelyn to prison in his absence, being satisfied on the evidence that he was guilty of the breach alleged and that he had been served with the application. Mr Evelyn then applied to have that order set aside. The judge suspended his previous order pending a hearing on 1 August, when directions were given which led to the hearing on the 25th.
24. Mr Evelyn apparently said on 1August that he had a defence to the application because he was in business as a grocer and he said he intended to call witnesses to support his case. The judge says he advised Mr Evelyn of the need to obtain legal representation if he could, but he was unable to do so before the adjourned hearing, when the judge decided that the case should proceed with Mr Evelyn acting in person. According to the judge, Mr Evelyn said he had no difficulty with the matter proceeding in that way.
25. There are no appeals before us relating to any of the judge's previous orders, but on the information before us, I have to say I feel some misgivings about the procedure which the judge adopted. I find it hard to understand how it could have been appropriate to begin by making a committal order in Mr Evelyn's absence without at least giving him a realistic opportunity to obtain legal representation. Criminal legal aid is available as of right for civil contempt proceedings, and the Practice Direction to CPR Part 81 emphasises the need to allow a reasonable time for legal aid to be obtained: see PD 81, paragraphs 15.5 and 15.6. In the event, however, no serious harm seems to have been done because Mr Evelyn was given a reasonable opportunity to prepare his case."
"1. The defendant has failed to vacate the property at 53 Reginald Street, Leeds LS7 3HL in breach of paragraph 1 of the order of 9 August 2017.
2. The defendant has on various times between 17 August 2017 (being the date of service of the order of 9 August 2017) and 17 May 2018 re-entered 53 Reginald Street, Leeds in breach of paragraph 2 of the order of 9 August 2017.
3. The defendant has on various times between 17 August 2017 and 17 May 2018 entered the claimant's property to reposition solar panels serving 53 Reginald Street in breach of paragraph 2 of the order of 21 August 2012 and the second paragraph 1 of the order of 21 August 2014.
4. On or about 10 May 2018 the defendant replaced a kitchen sink on the claimant's premises, which constituted an entry onto the claimant's premises in breach of paragraph 2 of the order of 21 August 2012 and the second paragraph 1 of the order of 21 August 2014."
"81.30
(1) If a committal order is made, the order will be for the issue of a warrant of committal.
(2) Unless the court orders otherwise–
(a) a copy of the committal order must be served on the respondent either before or at the time of the execution of the warrant of committal; or
(b) where the warrant of committal has been signed by the judge, the committal order may be served on the respondent at any time within 36 hours after the execution of the warrant.
(3) Without further order of the court, a warrant of committal must not be enforced more than 2 years after the date on which the warrant is issued."
"Today it is no longer appropriate to regard an order for committal as being no more than a form of execution available to another party against an alleged contemnor. The court itself has a very substantial interest in seeing that its orders are upheld. If committal orders are to be set aside on purely technical grounds which have nothing to do with the justice of the case, then this has the effect of undermining the system of justice and the credibility of the court orders. While the procedural requirements in relation to applications to commit and committal orders are there to be obeyed and to protect the contemnor, if there is non-compliance with the requirements which does not prejudice the contemnor, to set aside the order purely on the grounds of technicality is contrary to the interests of justice. As long as the order made by the judge was a valid order, the approach of this court will be to uphold the order in the absence of any prejudice or injustice to the contemnor as a consequence of doing so."
"35. But what is far more important, in our judgment, is this. It is one thing for Ms Rayne to establish in principle the reasons for serving a committal order. It is another to establish in fact – as she has conspicuously not been able to do – that any of the intended purposes would have been served by formal service of the order. Nowhere does Mr Scriven, or Ms Rayne on his behalf, begin to suggest that had he had notice of the committal order he would have had grounds for appealing it or setting it aside, or that he would have taken any step whatever to purge his contempt and agree to enter the witness box. His attitude has throughout been one of contumacious defiance of the court's process in bankruptcy. Nor does Mr Scriven suggest at any point that he did not know why he was being arrested. In our judgment he knew perfectly well. He had deliberately stayed away from the committal proceedings; he must have known through Ms Rayne, long before the date of his arrest, that a warrant was out for him; and he is unable even now to suggest that it would have made any difference to his course of conduct up to the moment of arrest had the committal order been physically served upon him."
LADY JUSTICE ASPLIN:
Order: Appeal dismissed