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England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> British American Tobacco UK Ltd, R (On the Application Of) v Secretary of State for Health [2014] EWHC 3515 (Admin) (24 October 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2014/3515.html Cite as: [2014] EWHC 3515 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
R (on the application of) BRITISH AMERICAN TOBACCO UK LTD |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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SECRETARY OF STATE FOR HEALTH |
Defendant |
____________________
Ms Sarah Abram (instructed by Treasury Solicitors) for Secretary of State for Health
Mr Tim Ward QC (instructed by Hogan Lovells) for KZPT
Hearing date: 21st October 2014
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Turner:
INTRODUCTION
KRAJOWY ZWIAZEK PLANTATOROW TYTONIU
i) The contribution of KZPT is important.
ii) It is well positioned to assist in the litigation.
iii) Its intervention would be targeted and modest in scope.
iv) There would be no disproportionate costs.
v) KZPT are unable effectively to participate in the challenge to the Directive from within its own country by the operation of Polish law.
INTERVENERS
i) Tann UK and Tannpapier GmbH, who make two components in the manufacture and packaging of cigarettes, namely tipping paper and tear tape;
ii) Deutsche Benkert GmbH & Co KG and Benkert UK Ltd, who manufacture tipping paper for cigarettes;
iii) Joh. Wilh. Von Eicken GmbH, who produce, distribute and sell tobacco products; and
iv) V. Mane Fils, who manufacture and supply flavourings to the tobacco industry, including a range based on menthol.
PARTIES AND INTERVENERS
"(1) Any person may apply for permission –
(a) to file evidence; or
(b) make representations at the hearing of the judicial review.
(2) An application under paragraph (1) should be made promptly."
"It has been the practice of this court for a number of years, well established and beneficial, to allow interventions by groups or bodies, or individuals who have particular knowledge and expertise in the area, whether in terms of the effect which the action at issue may have upon them and their interests, or by virtue of the work which they carry out or through close study of the law, practice and problems in an area, or because of the campaigning experience and knowledge which their activities have brought."
"32 The practice of allowing third persons to intervene in proceedings brought by and against other persons which do not directly involve the person seeking to intervene has become more common in recent years but it is still a relatively a rare event. The intervention is always subject to the control of the court and whether the third person is allowed by the court to intervene is usually dependent upon the court's judgment as to whether the interests of justice will be promoted by allowing the intervention. Frequently the answer will depend upon whether the intervention will assist the court itself to perform the role upon which it is engaged. The court has always to balance the benefits which are to be derived from the intervention as against the inconvenience, delay and expense which an intervention by a third person can cause to the existing parties."
i) It is very unlikely that the formal intervention of KZPT would have any significant impact on the drafting of the proposed reference. There is no discernable conflict between the interests of BAT and those of KZPT. The information contained in the KZPT witness statements does no more than supplement, albeit with a greater level of potentially relevant detail, the evidence already relied upon by BAT in its Statement of Facts and Grounds.
ii) There is no reason why BAT could not seek to deploy the evidence set out in the KZPT witness statements by way of attachment to the reference. It already seeks to rely upon expert evidence which is necessarily based on primary data already gathered from other sources and I do permit BAT to deploy the witness statements in the context of the reference.
iii) The contents of Mr Ostrowski's witness statement are simple and (when translated into English) easy to understand. They are likely to be uncontroversial. I am not persuaded that the intervention of KZPT at any level is likely to add anything of further proportionate value.
iv) The refusal of the application to intervene does not, of course, preclude KZPT from liaising with BAT and assisting it in the preparation of its case and its observations to the CJEU.
v) Subject only to any order made on this application, the parties have agreed the draft terms of reference and schedule for my early consideration. It already provides, as one would expect, for a consideration of the broad issues referred to in the KZPT witness statements relating to menthol cigarettes and, in particular, the likely growth of illegal trading.
vi) KZPT realistically agreed that it is very unlikely that there will be any further proceedings in the national court in which they would be expected to participate following upon the adjudication of the CJEU. In reality, the likely value of their fleeting intervention in these proceedings is de minimis.
ARE INTERVENERS PARTIES?
"... it is desirable to add each of the applicants to the proceedings as claimants because it will assist the court to resolve the fundamental law and policy questions to which the reference gives rise. Each of the applicants does, I believe, offer a perspective on those questions which is different from that of the other applicants and the existing parties."
"…it is apparent... that the applications have been made only with a view to participating in the proceedings before the Court and that the applicants do not intend to play an active part in the proceedings before the national court after delivery of the judgment giving a preliminary ruling.
Although the five legal persons in question have a definite interest in the answers to be given by the Court to the questions referred by the national court, that does not mean that they are to be accorded the status of parties for the purposes of Article 23 of the Statute of the Court. Such a provision would moreover be pointless if any party having an interest were recognised as having the right to participate in the proceedings provided for under Article 267 TFEU".
"9. There has been a dispute in this application as to what the European Court of Justice will do once a party has been categorised as one which ought properly to be heard under order 53, rule 9. The courts, it is said, will only hear parties, in the strict sense, to litigation. There has been a dispute about that. In some cases it appears that the court has heard those who intervene pursuant to order 53, rule 9 and yet it is asserted that in the case of De Cicco v Landesversicherungsanstalt Schwaben [1968] ECR 473 at 479 the court referred to the statute of the court which entitles only parties to the main action to be heard. Precisely what the court meant by "parties" in that context is not clear and has led to the difference of view by way of submission in this case.
10. Suffice it to say that this court, the domestic court, in referring the questions to be heard by the court, regards DIF as a party which ought properly to be heard. Whether that comes within the rules of the European Court of Justice and their statute ought properly to be a matter for the European Court of Justice and not for the domestic court. I need only say that for the reasons I have given it seems to me that DIF are peculiarly well placed to assist any court that has to consider the legal arguments in the context of the milk production legislation and the milk production trade."
I note, however, that order 53 rule 9 is very differently worded to CPR 54.17 and, in particular, refers to a right to be heard without specific reference to any power of the court to limit such right to the filing of written evidence as is to be found in CPR 54.17.
"16 There is, as I understand it, a long-standing practice on the part of the European Court to Justice to accept as parties before it those whom the national courts have ordered to be parties before the national court, which extends to those who are permitted to join as interveners under provisions as broad as the CPR 54.17 . There has been some doubt cast over precisely how far that goes, by the sequence of decisions in Football Association Premier League Limited and QC Leisure & Ors [2008] EWHC 2897 Ch, in which in the course of a private international property litigation, a reference became necessary on what the domestic court thought were issues of interpretation of a Directive.
17 Simply for the purposes of the Reference, rather than for any role which they might play in the domestic litigation, Kitchin J added five people as claimants and made in addition various observations about their role and the procedure the ECJ should adopt in relation to that. In certain respects it can have come as no huge surprise that the President of the court made an order on 16th December 2009, in what had by then become joint cases C403 and 429 of 08, to the effect that although the persons joined had a definite interest in the answers to be given by the court to the referred questions, that did not mean they were to be accorded the status of parties for the purpose of Article 23 of the statute of the court. There appear to be two reasons for that. The first is that they were made parties to the litigation after the order for the reference had been made. So they were not parties to the domestic court proceedings before the reference was made and in effect that was seen as making them simply parties to the Reference, which was for the European Court of Justice to decide. The other and related point was that their role was confined to the Reference. It was confined expressly by the judge and that gave further emphasis to the point that the domestic courts had decided not who were to be parties to domestic litigation, but had decided who were to be parties only to ECJ litigation.
18 I have considered carefully whether what was said in that case and the observations in particular in paragraphs 5 and 6 of the President's order mean that I should not permit the interveners to intervene in this case.
19 The reason why it is a matter for caution is that in reality this case is wholly or very largely about the lawfulness of the Directive. The answers to the questions are very likely to solve the whole of the issues underlying this challenge to the domestic regulations. But I take the view that the differences which exist are crucial to the judgment which I have made.
20 The first, as I emphasised, is that the Reference has not been made and the parties are joined under CPR 54.17 for the purposes of litigation before the Reference is made. I emphasise as well that they are not being joined simply because of a forecast of benefit to the European Court of Justice but because, for the purposes of domestic litigation about the lawfulness of this regulation, they meet the requirements of the CPR 54.17 .
21 The second point that I make is this. Although it appears and it is very likely that, as I said, the answers to the questions given by the European Court will in essence dispose of all the litigation, were it not to do so, they would remain entitled to participate in the resolution of outstanding issues and, I have no doubt, would participate in the resolution of those outstanding issues. So although the difference may be a narrow one, it is an important one as a matter of principle. Accordingly, I give permission for those three bodies, joint bodies to be interveners in this litigation."
"Article 97 Parties to the main proceedings
1. The parties to the main proceedings are those who are determined as such by the referring court or tribunal in accordance with national rules of procedure.
2. Where the referring court or tribunal informs the Court that a new party has been admitted to the main proceedings, when the proceedings before the Court are already pending, that party must accept the case as he finds it at the time when the Court was so informed. That party shall receive a copy of every procedural document already served on the interested persons referred to in Article 23 of the Statute.42
3. As regards the representation and attendance of the parties to the main proceedings, the Court shall take account of the rules of procedure in force before the court or tribunal which made the reference. In the event of any doubt as to whether a person may under national law represent a party to the main proceedings, the Court may obtain information from the referring court or tribunal on the rules of procedure applicable."
"After a brief reminder of the scope of those proceedings and of the essential content of any request for a preliminary ruling, the draft reflects Article 23 of the Statute in listing the parties authorised to submit written or oral observations to the Court and circumscribing more clearly, by reference to national procedural rules, the concept of 'parties to the main proceedings' and the consequences for the proceedings before the Court of the admission of a new party by the referring court."
"The first two paragraphs, by contrast, are new. In the light of the applications to intervene sometimes made by third parties in the context of a reference for a preliminary ruling, these two paragraphs are intended to circumscribe, precisely, the concept of parties to the main proceedings.
Only parties recognised as such by the referring court or tribunal are thus allowed to submit observations to the Court …This rule reflects the Court's concern not to allow the progress of cases to be delayed by multiple interventions during the proceedings, as well as its desire to remain within the framework outlined by the court or tribunal which brought the matter before the Court."
i) The anxieties expressed by the President of the Court in the Football Association about any party having an interest being recognised as having a right to participate in the proceedings under Article 267 have now, at least in part, been reflected in the wording of Article 97; and
ii) The assumption made by Ouseley J. in Air Transport that participation in the reference generally extends to those who are permitted to join as interveners may not have survived the introduction of the new Rules of Procedure.
"3 …The present application appears to proceed on the erroneous view that granting the application would constitute the applicants as parties to the action. In our view, it would simply enable the lodging of a further written submission to this court – and of course that would be at a point after which the court had reached its decision.
4 In the application – and indeed also this morning- Miss Poole was entirely frank in explaining that the objective was principally to secure some locus standi to make submissions by way of written observations and oral argument before the Court of Justice of the European Union. As we understood it, it was said that the status of an intervener under Rule 58.A would achieve that locus standi. If so, having already been granted leave to intervene, and having exercised that leave, the applicants already have such standing as is conferred on an intervener in the petition process.
5 But in so far as that is the objective of this application it is, in our view, misconceived. Article 23 of the Statute of the Court of Justice of the European Union determines those entitled to participate in the proceedings before the Court of Justice in any reference under article 267 TFEU . Apart from the Member States and a number of the institutions of the European Union, the right so to participate is confined to "the parties to the main proceedings". Importantly, in that respect, article 97(1) of the current Rules of Procedure of the Court of Justice states:
"1. The parties to the main proceedings are those who are determined as such by the referring court or tribunal in accordance with national rules of procedure."
For what it may be worth, the rule that national law determines who is a party to the main proceedings is, in our view, entirely consonant with the nature of the reference procedure; proceedings before the Court of Justice in a reference under article 267 TFEU do not constitute a discrete, independent litigation but are simply a stage in the national proceedings. Since, as we have already observed, rule 58.8A does not constitute the intervener as a party to the main proceedings but limits the intervener's participation to a written submission before this court, granting the present application would not achieve its professed objective."
i) the court's powers under CPR 54.17 cover a very wide range of circumstances including those in which the participation of the intervener may be specifically restricted to the filing of very limited evidence. Such a narrow involvement, should not, in my view lead mechanistically to an absolute entitlement to participate in the reference to the CJEU.
ii) It is clear from the decision of the President in the Football Association case and the wording of and purposes behind the new Rules of Procedure of the CJEU that some level of proportionate restraint should be exercised and encouraged on the part of domestic courts in the categorisation of all those anxious to participate as "parties".
iii) It must not be forgotten that nowhere do the CPR refer to the concept of "intervener".[2] The term is really no more than a convenient shorthand to identify someone to whom the court has given permission to be heard under CPR 54.17. In contrast, to become a party involves the acquisition of a status the consequences of which are set out in detail, particularly under CPR19.
CONCLUSION
Note 1 One basis for its conclusion was that the applicants had only been joined as parties after the court had made its order for reference which had the effect of staying further proceedings before it. That point, however, does not arise in this case and, indeed, the European Rules have been recently amended so as to allow for the participation of parties joined to the domestic litigation in defined circumstances after the referral has taken place. [Back] Note 2 There is an isolated reference to “intervene” in the Practice Direction. [Back]