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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> McCann v Crown Prosecution Service [2015] EWHC 2461 (Admin) (21 August 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2015/2461.html Cite as: [2015] EWHC 2461 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
DIVISIONAL COURT
1 Bridge Street, West Manchester, M60 9DJ |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE EDIS
____________________
Kate McCann |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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Crown Prosecution Service |
Respondent |
____________________
Peter Ratliff (instructed by Crown Prosecution Service) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 2 July 2015
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Treacy :
Introduction
In the High Court of Justice
Queen's Bench Division
Between
Kate McCann
and
The Crown Prosecution Service
Case stated by James Clarke District Judge (Magistrates' Court) acting in and for the Local Justice Area of Greater Manchester in respect of his adjudication as a Magistrates' Court sitting at Manchester and Salford.
CASE
1. On the ….… day of …………..… 2015, an information was preferred by the respondent against the appellant that the appellant had on 6th February 2014 wilfully obstructed Inspector Chatterton a constable acting in the execution of her duty contrary to sec 89(2) Police Act 1996
2. I heard the said information on the 23rd day of September 2014 and found the following facts:
a. The charge arose from the appellant's presence on 6th February 2014 on Barton Moss Road, Greater Manchester; an access road to a site where test drilling commonly known as "fracking" was being carried out.
b. The appellant had, together with another man Tricky of the Clan Cairns (who does not appeal the conviction) and Ms Tammy Samede and Mr James Alden (both of whom initially did join this appeal but who have since withdrawn) attended with others at the road in order to protest at what they believe to be environmental damage consequential to the drilling.
c. The appellant, Ms Samede, Mr Alden and Tricky of the Clan Cairns had placed themselves in the middle of the access road, were seated and had locked themselves together by the arms, using a combination of chains, locks and drainpipes in a practise known as a "lock on". Other protesters fed them in an apparent picnic.
d. A number of lorries heading for the drilling site were unable to pass because of the obstruction to the route.
e. Inspector Chatterton of Greater Manchester Police was the officer on site in charge of public order. At a morning briefing by senior officers, she had been misinformed about the classification of the road but acted upon what she believed to be the case: that Barton Moss Road was a public highway.
f. She instructed the appellant and others to move on the basis that they were obstructing a public highway, an offence contrary to section 137 Highways Act 1980.
g. The group refused to move. The appellant's refusal was based upon a belief (as it happens correct) that the passageway was a private road with a public footpath. The appellant and others stated this to the officers at the time.
h. The Inspector did not become involved in discussions about the protestors' claims that the road was a private one. I accepted her evidence that she had been fully briefed on the location at the start of the day and told that it was a public highway. By the manner in which the protestors were disputing the classification of the road (shouting, cheering, waving placards and laughing) she did not consider it to be reasonable to accept this as a clear statement of law (her words). Further, there was a supervising Bronze Commander at the scene as a tactical adviser and who would have been aware of the statements about the road. As such, the inspector would have expected any change in her orders to come from him.
i. The appellant and others refused to move and were arrested as a consequence. Kate McCann was initially arrested for the section 137 Highways Act 1980 offence but shortly afterwards for obstruction contrary to section 89(2) Police Act 1996. Only the Police Act charge was pursued at trial.
j. The classification of the road as public or private had been the subject of significant dispute before and after the events of 6th February 2014. Due to a large number of related prosecutions in which the issue was raised, the Crown Prosecution Service had taken counsel's advice on the point. At trial, a formal admission was made by the prosecution that the access road was a private road with a public footpath and therefore not a road to which the Highways Act 1980 applied. Vehicular access required permission of the landowner.
k. In a dramatic turn of events during the trial, it became clear that Inspector Chatterton had not been told that, since 6th February 2014, the road had been confirmed to be a private road. Nevertheless, her evidence was that had she been aware it was a private road, she "would have used different powers" to require the appellant and others to move and stop obstructing the route. I accepted this as a truthful statement by the officer, made spontaneously at a point she was confronted with this new information about the status of the road.
l. Inspector Chatterton was not asked to specify what powers she would have used. She made no reference to sec 68 Criminal Justice & Public Order Act 1994 at this point in her evidence or when relating her discussions with the appellant and others. She did state that she was aware that the lorry drivers had permission from the landowner to drive along the path and pass stating that this was a lawful activity. She therefore demonstrated knowledge of at least some elements of the provision upon which the prosecution were relying namely section 68 Criminal Justice and Public Order Act 1994. She said would have done the same thing, that is instructed the protestors to move, had she been aware of the correct classification of the route as a private road.
3. It was contended by the appellant that:
Inspector Chatterton was wrong in law in her belief that the protestors were committing an offence under the Highways Act 1980.
She had no power to require the appellant to move to prevent obstruction of a public highway because it was not a public highway.
This rendered the officer's request outside her powers and she was not therefore acting in the execution of her duty.
Any actions by the appellant to frustrate the officer's aim could not therefore be obstructing the execution of her duty.
It was wrong for the respondent to contend that the inspector had that power to prevent an offence contrary to section 68 Criminal Justice and Public Order Act 1994 because it had not been proven that such an offence had been committed
A submission was made on behalf of a co-defendant that the fact that the officer was acting in good faith or that her error was reasonable did not mean she made a lawful request. The appellant, though his advocate Miss Andrews, adopted that submission in full but made no further comment on the question of reasonableness.
4. It was contended by the respondent that:
Inspector Chatterton had a lawful right to ask the defendants in this case to stop causing an obstruction.
She acted at all times in good faith.
The fact that she thought the power was under the Highways Act 1980 as opposed to the Criminal Justice and Public Order Act 1994 was a mistake of fact not law.
The error did not place the officer outside the execution of her duty because there was a corresponding power under the 1994 Act.
The appellant had by his behaviour wilfully obstructed the officer by refusing to move and frustrating her efforts to prevent a continuation of the aggravated trespass offence.
5. I was referred to the following cases
Tynan v Balmer (1967) 1QBD 91
Rice v Connolly (1966) 2 QB 414
Cumberbatch v Crown Prosecution Service: Ali v Department of Public Prosecutions [2009] EWHC 3353 (Admin)
Fitzpatrick v Metropolitan Police Commissioner
Christie v Leachinsky [1947] AC 573
Elkington v Director of Public Prosecutions [2012] EWHC 3398 (Admin)
6. I was of the opinion that:
a. The actions of the appellants were wilful and intentional. Their presence at the scene may have been to raise awareness about and protest about the drilling, but their actions in locking themselves together and refusing to move had been intended to obstruct the police officers by making it more difficult to remove them.
b. Inspector Chatterton made a mistake of fact about the status of the road and therefore the offence she believed was being committed.
c. The issue over the road being public or private had in fact itself been the subject of considered advice. This was referred to within the prosecution skeleton argument. It had not, apparently, been a simple question to resolve.
d. Section 68 Criminal Justice and Public Order Act 1994 could well have applied to the situation but I did not have to be satisfied that an offence under that section had in fact been committed, merely that the officer had reasonable grounds to suspect an offence was being committed.
e. The mischief that the officer was addressing was the obstruction of the route to lorries. She was aware that other powers could be available to her and her attempts to prevent a continuing offence meant she was acting in the execution of her duty.
f. The Appellant's actions did obstruct the police duties as it caused a backlog of traffic on the route, potentially amounting to an offence under the 1994 Act and which the officers were seeking to prevent.
g. The Officer's belief, albeit mistaken, was reasonable in the circumstances prevailing at the time and whilst I did not specifically address the reasonableness of the mistake, I did address my mind and my judgement to the reasonableness of the officer's suspicion that an offence was being committed. I reasoned that it mattered not that the officer had the wrong offence in mind because her action was in response to the same activity by the defendants and same mischief that she was seeking to prevent.
h. In relation to the case law provided, the appellant's case fell somewhere between Tynan (in which it was proven that an offence other than the one the officer had in mind had in fact been committed) and Cumberbatch (wherein it was conceded that no offence had been committed and the subsequent arrest was unlawful) because an offence under section 68 had neither been proven nor disproven on the evidence I had heard. There was no question of Inspector Chatterton deliberately acting on a false premise as in Christie v Leachinsky.
i. The officer had reasonable grounds to suspect an offence was being committed and even though she had the wrong one in mind (section 137 Highways Act 1980), the facts could have lent themselves to another offence (section 68 aggravated trespass) and so she was therefore acting in the execution of her duty.
and accordingly I convicted Kate McCann of wilfully obstructing Inspector Chatterton a constable acting in the execution of her duty on 6th February 2014 contrary to section 89(2) Police Act 1996
The appellant had no previous criminal convictions, no means and did not claim state benefits. I accepted that there was a genuine belief in the cause for which the group including the appellant was demonstrating. Whilst not condoning the cause, I nevertheless acknowledged that there had been an honest motive for the protest. More to the point, I accepted that there had a genuine belief by all of the defendants mentioned that they were not required to move away from the road because they believed they were not committing the offence of obstructing a public highway that the officer had warned about. The appellant had been correct in this assertion about the classification of the road. I made an absolute discharge.
QUESTIONS
7. The questions for the opinion of the High Court are:
a. Was the officer's mistake about the classification of the road an error of law or fact?
b. Was the officer's mistake about the power she was exercising an error of law or fact?
c. Did either mistake, reasonable or not, place her outside the execution of her duty?
d. Can an officer still have reasonable grounds to suspect an offence even if acting upon a mistaken belief? Specifically, in the circumstances of this case, was Inspector Chatterton's mistake reasonable? Did she have reasonable grounds to suspect an offence under Highways Act 1980 had been committed?
e. Is it necessary for the offence the officer suspects (be that obstruction under the Highways Act 1980 or aggravated trespass under section 68 Criminal Justice & Public Order Act 1994) to be proven to the criminal standard for the officer to be acting in the execution of her duty (and therefore capable of being obstructed in its execution), or are reasonable grounds to suspect sufficient?
f. Does it matter that the officer had the wrong offence in mind?
g. Was I entitled, as the prosecution submitted, to look at the others powers available to the officer that could have applied to the correct facts?
h. Does the answer to question g depend upon whether the officer herself was aware of those powers?
Dated this 4th day of February 2015
James Clarke
District Judge (Magistrates' Court)
The Appellant's Case
i) whether the mistake of fact regarding the classification of Barton Moss Road made by the officer was unreasonable so as to place her outside the execution of her duty; and
ii) whether in the circumstances the officer could not be within the execution of her duty on the basis that another offence, namely aggravated trespass, may have been committed.
"The "reasonableness" of the suspicion on which an arrest must be based forms an essential part of the safeguard again arbitrary arrest and detention which is laid down in Article 5(1)(c). The Court agrees with the Commission and the Government that having a "reasonable suspicion" presupposes the existence of facts or information which would satisfy an objective observer that the person concerned may have committed the offence. What may be regarded as "reasonable" will however depend on all the circumstances."
"Facts and information relevant to a person's suspected involvement in an offence should not be confined to those which tend to indicate the person has committed or attempted to commit the offence. Before making a decision to arrest a constable should take account of any facts and information that are available, including claims of innocence made by the person which might dispel the suspicion."
"If a person, without lawful authority or excuse, in any way wilfully obstructs the free passage along a highway he is guilty of an offence and liable to a fine not exceeding level 3."
"(1) A person commits the offence of aggravated trespass if he trespasses on land and, in relation to any lawful activity which persons are engaging in or are about to engage in on that or adjoining land, does anything there which is intended by him to have the effect –
(a) of intimidating those persons or any of them so as to deter them or any of them from engaging in that activity;
(b) of obstructing that activity; or
(c) of disrupting that activity."
The Respondent's Case
i) Was the direction to the appellant that she should move from the road lawful in that it was done in the discharge of the officer's duties?
ii) Was there an obligation to explain to the appellant why she was being told to move from the road?
iii) If there was no such obligation did the fact that the police gave the appellant an erroneous reason mean that the officer ceased to be acting in the discharge of her duty?
"What the prosecution have to prove is that there was an obstructing of a constable; that the constable was at the time acting in the execution of his duty and that the person obstructing did so wilfully. To carry the matter a little further, it is in my view clear that "obstruct" under section 51(3) of the Police Act 1964, [a precursor of section 89(2) of the Police Act 1996], is the doing of any act which makes it more difficult for the police to carry out their duty. That description of obstructing I take from Hinchcliffe v Sheldon [1955] 1 WLR 1207. It is also in my judgment clear that it is part of the obligations and duties of a police constable to take all steps which appear to him necessary for keeping the peace, for preventing crime or for protecting property from criminal injury. There is no exhaustive definition of the powers and obligations of the police, but they are at least those and they would further include the duty to detect crime and bring an offender to justice."
"It is part of the obligations and duties of a police constable to take all steps which reasonably appear to him to be necessary…for preventing crime…"
Discussion
"In the judgment of this court it would be difficult…to reduce within specific limits the general terms in which the duties of police constables have been expressed. In most cases it is probably more convenient to consider what the police constable was actually doing and in particular whether such conduct was prima facie an unlawful interference with a person's liberty or property."
"13 The task upon which P.C. Upshon was engaged, both before and after the push, was in securing one of the arrested men by placing and keeping him in the police car with a view to transporting him to a police station. The officer and his colleague were also engaged in a more general sense in seeking to keep the peace. These aspects encompass the "duty" P.C. Upshon was in the process of executing.
14 In my judgment it matters not whether the push was lawful or unlawful in determining the answer to the question whether the appellant was wilfully obstructing P.C. Upshon in the execution of his duty. The push clearly had no bearing on the question whether the appellant's conduct before that time amounted to wilful obstruction. On the findings of the magistrates it did. I am unable to see how an unlawful push could retrospectively render conduct lawful, which was otherwise criminal. But equally, if the push were unlawful it does not follow that P.C. Upshon was any the less acting in the course of the execution of his duty thereafter in dealing with the arrested man in the car. Even on that hypothesis, a person who has been assaulted by a police officer is not liberated from the application of the criminal law prohibiting wilful obstruction of a constable (including that constable) in the execution of his duty. The assault itself could not be characterised as being part of the execution of the officer's duty. That is why Fraser Wood was entitled to resist when he was restrained. But he would not, for example, have been entitled to block the officers with a view to preventing them making a lawful arrest, dealing with an incident of disorder or executing a search warrant. That would have amounted to wilful obstruction of the officers in the execution of their duty. So too here, even if the appellant was the victim of an assault it provides him with no defence to a charge of obstructing the officer in the execution of his duty regarding the arrested man in the car."
"This is I think, the fundamental principle, viz., that a man is entitled to know what, in the apt words of Lawrence LJ, are "the facts which are said to constitute a crime on his part"."
"It is not of course to be expected that a police constable in the heat of an emergency, or while in hot pursuit of a suspected criminal, should always have in mind specific statutory provisions, or that he should mentally identify specific offences with technicality or precision. He must, in my judgment, reasonably suspect the existence of facts amounting to an arrestable offence of a kind which he has in mind."
Mr Justice Edis :