BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Anderson & Ors v Basildon District Council [2021] EWCA Civ 363 (16 March 2021) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2021/363.html Cite as: [2021] EWCA Civ 363 |
[New search] [Printable PDF version] [Help]
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
(QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION)
Mr Anthony Metzer QC (sitting as a Deputy High Court Judge)
QB-2020-004209
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE NEWEY
and
LORD JUSTICE WARBY
____________________
(1) CHARLES ANDERSON (2) BRIAN McGINLEY (3) FREDDIE ANDERSON (4) GERRY (JERRY) ANDERSON (5) BRIDGET McDONAGH (6) JOHN McDONAGH (7) PATRICK COLLINS (8) THOMAS CLEARY |
Appellants/ Defendants |
|
and |
||
BASILDON DISTRICT COUNCIL |
Respondent/Claimant |
____________________
Wayne Beglan (instructed by Basildon District Council) for the Respondent
Hearing date : 12 March 2021
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Peter Jackson:
Introduction
"14. On Saturday 28 November 2020, the Council was contacted by Essex Police following reports of extensive work being undertaken on the Land. At 11.55, two police officers, PC Hadlow and PC Messenger, visited the Land. There they saw between 80 and 100 people working on the Land, with diggers and several large trucks in operation and numerous vehicles driving on and off the Land. Footage taken by an unmanned aerial vehicle operated by the police showed a substantial quantity of hardcore had been deposited on the Land, with several large trucks, numerous vans and an excavator in operation. The Land was in the process of being divided into plots (of which six had already been created). An access track had also been created from Hovefields Drive. PC Hadlow was told by one of those working on the Land that they were due to finish work on Sunday, and that those working had come "from all over the place".
15. At 8.30 am the following morning, Mr Ian Cummings, one of the Council's Planning Enforcement Officers, visited the Land. He saw a large HGV dumper truck leaving the Land, and the excavator in operation. There were a number of workmen (although fewer than 10) working, and a large-scale engineering operation appeared to be underway. However, no caravans or mobile homes were seen, nor are any to be seen in the photographs Mr Cummings took on this visit. Mr Cummings returned to the Land with a number of colleagues, including Ms Christine Lyons, at around 1pm that day to serve copies of an Enforcement Notice and a Stop Notice, issued following an emergency meeting of the Council's planning committee that morning. At the time of the visit, work was continuing on the Land, with about 30 men in attendance. As Mr Cummings sought to enter onto the Land to serve the Notices, an individual (now known to be Mr Patrick Collins, one of the Defendants) refused to allow entry, becoming agitated and aggressive. Mr Collins threatened to kick both Mr Cummings and Ms Lyons "between the legs" if they did not leave. The Council's party were required to leave, and Mr Cummins and Ms Lyons were followed by a large group of men as they did so. Mr Cummings left copies of the Notices stapled to a telephone pole, on a post near the entrance to the Land and across a fence line near the entrance to the Land. In the course of this visit, Mr Cummings did not see any mobile homes or caravans on the Land, and a number of photographs taken by him, which offer a wide view of the Land, do not show any mobile homes or caravans either. The Stop Notice was brought by the Council to the attention of Ms Jennings, and I was told at the hearing (and accept) that she advised the Defendants to comply with it.
16. "Before" and "after" photographs of the Land show the significant scale of the work and its impact on the appearance of the Land."
"A striking feature of this case is that the applicants do not seek to defend their behaviour in seeking to outrun any attempt by the respondent Council to prevent their occupation of land without having previously obtained planning permission. Having built a bridgehead on the land in that way, they seek to maintain it because they contend that there was insufficient consideration given to the interests of those occupying the land and their families if the position in relation to occupation was returned to that before they entered on it. This is a highly unattractive argument."
The committal proceedings
"34. Bearing in mind those submissions, and also taking into account other factors which are relevant…, albeit of background relevance, including the poor health of some of these Defendants and their relatives, and the uncertainty created in relation to the Covid times in which we are living, I take the view that although it would have been open to me to make terms of immediate sentences of imprisonment, I am able to suspend those terms of imprisonment."
"a. The Defendants shall by 4pm on 3 March 2021 remove from the Land any static caravans, mobile homes and touring caravans.
b. The Defendants shall thereafter not (a) bring any caravan, mobile home or any other structure intended for or capable of habitation on to the Land; or (b) erect on the Land any structure or building capable of or intended to be put to residential use; or (c) allow any person to occupy the Land.
c. The Defendants shall remove all of the works undertaken in relation to their respective individual plots by 10 April 2021."
"AND UPON THE COURT DECLARING:
1. It shall not be in the public interest for there to be a prosecution of any of the Defendants in relation to any offence committed in contravention of the Coronavirus Regulations, or the Planning Acts, as a necessary and direct result of compliance with this Order of the court in leaving the land.
2. It shall not be in the public interest for there to be a prosecution of any of the Defendants in relation to any offence committed in contravention of the Coronavirus Regulations, or the Planning Acts, insofar as it is necessary for them to visit other land to access facilities for drinking, eating and/or washing."
The appeal
(1) The Judge erred in law in committing the Appellants for breaches arising at a time when it would have been illegal for them to comply with the order because of Covid restrictions.
(2) The Judge should not have sentenced with reference to breaches of the order of Cutts J as the order of Foxton J extended the time for compliance from 2 December to 14 December.
(3) The time given by the Judge for vacating the site was inadequate in the light of the lockdown and the Appellants' personal circumstances.
(4) The Judge's order required the Appellants to break the law by moving from the land, and the declarations did not remedy that.
Conclusion
Lord Justice Newey
Lord Justice Warby