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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 >> Aireborough Neighbourhood Development Forum v Leeds City Council (Rev 2) [2020] EWHC 45 (Admin) (14 January 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2020/45.html Cite as: [2020] WLR(D) 34, [2020] LLR 255, [2020] WLR 2355, [2020] 1 WLR 2355, [2020] EWHC 45 (Admin), [2020] JPL 767 |
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Neutral Citation Number: [2020] EWHC 45 (Admin)
Case No: CO/3279/2019
IN THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Royal Courts of Justice
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL
Date: 14/01/2020
Before :
MRS JUSTICE LIEVEN DBE
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Between :
| AIREBOROUGH NEIGHBOURHOOD DEVELOPMENT FORUM | Claimant |
| - and – |
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| LEEDS CITY COUNCIL - and – (1) SECRETARY OF STATE FOR HOUSING, COMMUNITIES AND LOCAL GOVERNMENT (2) AVANT HOMES (ENGLAND) LIMITED (3) GALLAGHER ESTATES LIMITED | Defendant
Interested Parties |
|
|
|
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- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
Jenny Wigley (instructed by Town Legal LLP ) for the Claimant
Juan Lopez (instructed by Leeds City Council Legal Services ) for the Defendant
Matthew Fraser (instructed by Walker Morris LLP) for the Second Interested Party
James Corbet Burcher (instructed by Shoosmiths LLP) for the Third Interested Party
Hearing dates: 12th December 2019
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Approved Judgment
Mrs Justice Lieven DBE :
“(2) A relevant document must not be questioned in any legal proceedings except in so far as is provided by the following provisions of this section.
(3) A person aggrieved by a relevant document may make an application to the High Court”.
11. The three cases which deal with the specific point of whether an unincorporated association can bring a judicial review are, in order of time, R v Darlington BC ex p Association of Darlington Town Taxi Owners [1994] COD 424 (Auld J); R v Leeds City Council ex p Alwoodley Golf Course [1995] NPC 149 (Harrison J); and R v Traffic Commissioners of the North Western Traffic Area ex p Brake [1996] COD 248 (Turner J). I have been taken to full transcripts of all three judgments. There are also a number of cases which touch on, though do not decide, the point and further authorities where it has been assumed that an unincorporated association can bring a judicial review without argument. There is only one case before me which concerned a statutory challenge rather than a judicial review, Williams v Devon CC [2015] EWHC 568 and [2016] EWCA Civ 419.
“(1) The status of the applicant. In principle it did not matter that the application was an unincorporated association lacking legal personality since out of its constituent associations could be spelt the names of individuals who constituted the association.”
“The general rule, as stated in Halsbury's Laws, 4th Ed., Vol. 9, paragraph 1201, citing London Association for the Protection of Trade v. Greenlands Ltd. [1916] 2 AC, 15, HL , is that, subject to certain well recognized exceptions of which this is not one, unincorporated associations cannot sue or be sued in their own name. The researches of counsel have not identified any case in which the court has held that an unincorporated association is capable of applying for judicial review. Mr. Beloff referred me to R. v. Liverpool City Council, ex p. Liverpool Taxi Fleet Operators' Association [1972] 2 QB 299, CA , a case in which an unincorporated association was permitted to apply for a prerogative order. However, it appears to have been assumed that the applicant association was capable of applying for relief, the question being whether it was a “person aggrieved”, as was then the test. Lord Denning MR, with whom Roskill LJ and Sir Gordon Willmer agreed, said, at 308–9:
“The taxi cab owners' association come to this court for relief and I think we should give it to them. The writs of prohibition and certiorari lie on behalf of any person who is a ‘person aggrieved’, and that includes any person whose interests may be prejudicially affected by what is taking place. It does not include a mere busybody who is interfering in things which do not concern him; but it includes any person who has a genuine grievance because something has been done or may be done which affects him: see Attorney General of the Gambia v. N'Jie and Maurice v. London County Council. The taxi cab owners' association here have certainly a locus standi to apply for relief.”
See also the succeeding application for judicial review by the same association: R v. Liverpool City Council, ex p. Liverpool Taxi Fleet Operators' Association [1975] 1 WLR 701, DC .
“In my judgment, the question of capacity is one for dispositive decision at the leave or setting aside of leave stage. The court should not merely consider whether it is sufficiently arguable to grant or not to disturb the grant of leave, as the case may be. It precedes and is quite distinct from the issue of locus or sufficient interest. It is not, therefore, affected by the guidance of the House of Lords R. v. Commissioners of Inland Revenue, ex p. National Federation of Self-Employed and Small Businesses Ltd. [1982] AC 617 , namely, that, save in the simplest cases, that threshold question should be reserved to the substantive hearing where it can be considered in the legal and factual context of the issues raised by the application. Sufficiency of interest may well depend upon the factual and legal context of the case. Capacity, in the sense whether a purported applicant for leave to apply for judicial review is a person who can institute such proceedings does not. In law, subject to certain exceptions, none of which applies here, an unincorporated association is not a person capable of instituting proceedings whatever the factual context and legal issues raised.
“In my judgment also, capacity is not just a private law or contractual concept, as suggested by Mr. Bear. There is nothing to that effect in the National Federation of Self-Employed and Small Businesses Ltd case or in R. v. Hammersmith and Fulham LBC, ex p. People Before Profit Ltd. (1981) 80 LGR 322 , per Comyn J., which Mr. Bear cited in support of his argument that locus, not capacity, is the only question for consideration here. In both cases locus, not capacity, was the issue, and it is noteworthy that in both the applicant was a limited company, in the latter case formed specifically for the purpose of applying for judicial review.
“The question whether an initiator of proceedings is a person recognized by the law is likely to be of considerable importance on, for example, the matter of costs or, as here, the requirement of a cross-undertaking as to damages in the event of the case going against him. Mr. Bear suggested that any problem of costs could be overcome by recourse to Section 51 of the Supreme Court Act , which, he said, gives the court power in its discretion to order costs against person not on the record, and that the difficulty of exacting a cross-undertaking as to damages could be met by making the grant of interim relief conditional on a sum of money being brought into court. However, the possibility of the court in the proper exercise of its discretion looking to individual members of an unincorporated association to pay costs in the event of failure of the association's claim, or the possibility in some cases of seeking security in advance from those members, cannot sensibly be an argument for ignoring the association's legal incapacity to institute proceedings.”
“Before dealing with the merits of the application, however, I should first deal with the question of the applicant's legal capacity to bring these proceedings. The capacity of an unincorporated association to apply for judicial review was considered by Auld J, as he then was, in R v Darlington BC Ex p Association of Darlington Taxi Owners and Darlington Owner Drivers' association (1994) COD 424. I have been provided with a transcript of the judgment in that case.
“In a carefully reasoned judgment Auld J decided that an unincorporated association does not have capacity to apply for judicial review. Mr Barrett, who appeared on behalf of the applicant in this case, accepted that was the effect of the decision but he submitted that it was wrongly decided. He drew my attention to R v London Rent Assessment Panel, ex parte Braq Investments Ltd [1969] 2 All ER 1012, [1969] 1 WLR 970, which had not been referred to in the Darlington case, where Lord Parker CJ, rejected a submission that an application for consideration of a fair rent was invalid because it was made by an unincorporated association whose status was unknown to the law and thus was incapable of acting as agent for the tenants. It was held that the application was valid because it was possible to spell out from the association's title the names of its members which would include the tenant or the agent.
“That case, however, involved an application for certiorari and it was an application made by a limited company, not an unincorporated association. The issue about the unincorporated association related to the validity of a prescribed application form for registration of a fair rent, not for judicial proceedings.
“I was also referred to an extract from the judgment of Sedley, J, in R v London Borough of Tower Hamlets, ex parte Tower Hamelts Combined Traders' Association (Unreported 19 July, 1993) which was also not referred to in the Darlington case. That case did involve an application for judicial review by an unincorporated association and reference was made in the judgment to the Braq Investments case, although that case had not been referred to in argument.
“I do not understand Sedley J, in the Tower Hamlets case, to be deciding that an unincorporated association can apply for judicial review. In fact, he referred to the necessity for a legal person to be the applicant and, in that case, no objection was taken to the association acting as, or being represented in the proceedings by, the secretary. I therefore do not find anything in those two cases to which I have been referred to suggest that the Darlington case was wrongly decided.
“Mr Barrett made a number of further submissions in a valiant and able attempt to show that the Darlington case was wrongly decided but I have not been persuaded by those arguments. In my view the Darlington case was correctly decided. It follows that the Golf Club is not a legal person and that these proceedings are not therefore properly constituted.”
“It has to follow that, if the argument addressed to me on behalf of the respondent in the present case is correct, the decision in the Liverpool Corporation case was wrong, and the application ought not to have been entertained, because there was no jurisdiction to grant relief to an entity not known to the law. The next case was one in the Divisional Court between essentially the same parties. The case is R v Liverpool City Council ex parte Liverpool Taxi Fleet Operators Association [1975] 1 All ER 379, [1975] 1 WLR 701. It is unnecessary to cite any passage from the judgments since they are entirely silent as to the point on jurisdiction. Given the decision in the earlier case, this need cause no surprise. On the other hand it would be an occasion for considerable surprise if the court wrongly assumed that it had jurisdiction when the true position was that it had not. In the later case of R v Secretary of State for Social Services and anor ex parte Child Poverty Action Group and anor [1990] 2 QB 540, [1989] 1 All ER 1047 CA, no argument was addressed to the court on the issue of jurisdiction to entertain the application at the suit of an unincorporated body. The court itself appears to have been content to assume that it had such jurisdiction. Were these decisions all arrived at per incuriam, or did they proceed on the basis that the position in public law is different from that in private law? If so, it may be asked why this should be so?
“In the case of a private law action, it is fundamental that a private law right has been violated. Private law rights can only be enjoyed by those who possess the characteristics of a legal person. Similarly, it is necessary, in such a case, that, the defendant who is asserted to have infringed that legal right, has the characteristics of a legal person. The situation in public law cases may be different. For a case to lie in public law, it is the actions or decisions of a body amenable to public law that are called into question. The process by which that has been done, both historically and since the Act of 1981, has been the device of the Crown calling into question the legality of the decisions, as well as the processes by which such decisions have been reached both of inferior tribunals and central as well as local, governmental bodies. The dispute is, thus, procedurally and technically between the Crown and the public body. The means whereby that dispute is then subjected to the courts processes is by initiation by an "applicant (who) has a sufficient interest in the matter to which the application relates"; see Ord 53 r 3(7). Thus, it will not be in every case that an individual applicant need assert that any right of his has been infringed, rather it is that by the unlawful manner in which a body amenable to public law has reached its decision, or the unlawfulness of the decision itself, they have been directly or indirectly affected by that decision.
…..
“It follows that this view is consistent with the proper assumption of jurisdiction by the courts in the Liverpool Taxi cases which were not, therefore, decided per incuriam. It is difficult to envisage that courts of such distinction should have overlooked such a fundamental and essential point. In terms of legal analysis, it can be postulated that an applicant with sufficient interest is not "suing ... in his own name" (See London Association Case supra) but is invoking the powers of the court to exercise its supervisory jurisdiction to quash, curb or correct decisions of bodies subject to public law. The personal rights of individual applicants, as in the present case, may never be in play. I am thus persuaded that I have respectfully to differ from the decision of Auld J to the contrary effect in the Darlington Taxicab Case. For fuller reasons than those identified by Sedley J in the Tower Hamlets case I conclude that it is inappropriate to set aside the leave already given. For completeness, I should mention that a report in the case of Alwoodly Golf Club v Leeds City Council [1995] NPC 149 was placed before the court. It is of so exiguous a character as not to be of any assistance to me.”
The taxicab owners' association come to this court for relief and I think we should give it to them. The writs of prohibition and certiorari lie on behalf of any person who is a "person aggrieved," and that includes any *309 person whose interests may be prejudicially affected by what is taking place. It does not include a mere busybody who is interfering in things which do not concern him; but it includes any person who has a genuine grievance because something has been done or may be done which affects him: see Attorney-General of the Gambia v. N'Jie [1961] AC 617 and Maurice v. London County Council [1964] 2 Q.B. 362 , 378. The taxicab owners' association here have certainly a locus standi to apply for relief.
Lord Justice Roskill, and Sir Gordon Willmer agreed.
18. In R v MAFF v British Pig Industry Support Group 2001 ACD 3, [2000] Eu LR 724, Richards J cited Darlington and Brake and then said;
“For my part, I do not think that there is any overriding requirement for an applicant for judicial review to have legal personality but it is important in such a case that adequate provision should be made for the protection of the Respondent in costs.”
In English law, unincorporated associations generally lack legal capacity to sue or be sued in their own name. In some claims for judicial review brought by unincorporated associations it has been held that this is a bar to permission being granted. A different approach has been adopted in other cases, where either no issue as to the legal capacity of the claimant has been being taken, or the chairman, secretary or other member of the association was recognised as representing the association. Indeed, it is possible formally to seek an order under CPR Pt 19.6 that a claim be begun or continued with one party representing the interests of others who have the same interest in the claim.Given that the unincorporated status of a defendant has not been regarded as a bar to being subject to and defending judicial review proceedings, a flexible approach is appropriate.49
Foot note 49 Unincorporated associations have been allowed to be claimants in many cases, see e.g. R. v Ministry of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food Ex p. British Pig Industry Support Group[2000] Eu LR 724; R. (on the application of West End Street Traders Association) v Westminster City Council[2004] EWHC 1167 (Admin); [2005] BLGR 143; R. (on the application of Western International Campaign Group) v Hounslow LBC[2003] EWHC 3112 (Admin); [2004] BLGR 536; R. (on the application of Association of British Civilian Internees (Far East Region)) v Secretary of State for Defence[2003] EWCA Civ 473; [2003] QB 1397; R. (on the application of British Aggregates Associates) v Customs and Excise Commissioners[2002] EWHC 926 (Admin); [2002] 2 CMLR 51; R. v Coventry City Council Ex p. Coventry Heads of Independent Care Establishments (CHOICE)(1997–98) 1 C.C.L. Rep. 379.
20. In some of these cases the claimants included not just the unincorporated association but also named individuals, and in those circumstances, it would have been academic for anyone to argue that the association did not have capacity, because the case would have been properly constituted in any event. However, there are others where the unincorporated association was the sole claimant and therefore the court would have had no jurisdiction to hear the case if the association did not have capacity. The most notable in my view is Association of British Civilian Internees Far Eastern Region v Secretary of State for Defence (commonly known as Abcifer) [2003] EWCA Civ 473. ABCIFER was an unincorporated association, as is noted in the first line of the judgment. The case in the Court of Appeal was heard by Lord Phillips MR, and Lord Justices Schiemann and Dyson. The Appellants were represented by David Pannick QC, Michael Fordham and Ben Jaffey, and the Secretary of State by Philip Sales and Karen Steyn. If the argument before me is correct then this case proceeded despite an absence of jurisdiction, apparently unnoticed by the Court, and not raised by the Secretary of State’s counsel. Even if the Secretary of State had decided not to take a jurisdictional point, the Court itself has to be satisfied it has jurisdiction. It is inconceivable in my view that the Court of Appeal, made up of three judges highly experienced in public law, proceeded on a misapprehension about their jurisdiction. They plainly assumed, albeit without any argument to the contrary, that an unincorporated association could bring a judicial review.
21. The only case which the parties have identified where there was an issue concerning an unincorporated association in a statutory challenge rather than a judicial review was Williams v Devon CC [2015] EWHC 568 and [2016] EWCA Civ 419. In that case the claim was brought by Sustainable Totnes Action Group (STAG) pursuant to the Road Traffic Regulation Act 1984 and was made on 21 August 2014. On 9 February 2015 HHJ Cotter (sitting as a Deputy High Court Judge) made an order under CPR19.6 that a list of persons be filed to stand as representative as members of the Claimant. The Defendant argued that STAG was an insufficiently certain group of individuals to constitute an unincorporated association. In his order of 9.2.15 HHJ Cotter had set out the following reasoning;
In English law unincorporated associations generally lack the capacity to sue or be sued in their own name. However in Judicial review claims (which this is not) a flexible approach has been taken in a number of cases (see generally De Smith's Judicial Review paragraph 2-012); sometimes with a named individual, being the chairman, secretary or other member of the association recognised as representing the association. However, in my judgment it would usually be necessary even in a Judicial Review claim that the Defendant has some protection as to costs if an unincorporated association is to be a claimant (see R-v-Ministry of Agriculture Fisheries and Foods ex parte British Pig Industry Support Group [2000] EuLR 724 at 108).
Given the changing identity of the group (prior to the formation of the company) there is force in the Defendant's assertion that there appear to be no well settled unincorporated association. In such circumstances, and in the absence of further evidence the court is entitled to consider STAG a nominal Claimant and given the comments made about protection from adverse costs, one that is unlikely to be able to pay the Defendant's costs ( see CPR 25.13(2)(f)). Hence the application for security for costs.
However in my judgment there surely must be, at the very least, an identifiable core group of individuals who make up (and made up at the time of the issue of the claim) the entity known as STAG. The group has been represented throughout and (regardless of the detail of professional obligations) I would expect that legal representatives would know at any given time who retained them, such a matter being obviously relevant to a number of issues not the least of which are the obtaining of instructions, a fortiori when views may differ within a "loose" group, to whom a duty of care is owed and the person or persons to sue if fees are not paid. Indeed were litigation to be pursued with out an identifiable client or group of clients the legal representatives could even be exposed to an application pursuant to section 51 Senior Courts Act 1981 that they be responsible for the costs.
22. Then at [54] the Judge said;
26. The Defendant and IPs also rely on Eco-Energy (GB) v First Secretary of State (2005) 2 P&CR 5, [2004] EWCA Civ 1566, where in a claim under s.288 of the Town and Country Planning Act 1990 Collins J had struck out the claim on the basis that EE Ltd was not a person aggrieved for the purposes of the Act. EE appealed and argued that they were a person aggrieved, and that alternatively the individual, Mr Clarke, should be substituted. Buxton LJ rejected the appeal and on substitution at [26] pointed out that in a s.288 challenge once the time period has expired the court has no jurisdiction to question the validity of the planning application. He then said [26-28];
“26. Not only are there the considerations already deployed, but also Miss Lieven drew our attention to the well-known case of Smith v East Elloe Rural DC [1956] AC 736 There the House of Lords held as, in my judgment correctly, set out in the headnote of that report that once the s.288 period had expired, the court had no jurisdiction to question the validity of a planning application.
27.That view of course binds us. If the court has lost jurisdiction in respect of a matter, not only is this not a section that falls under s.19.5(1)(c), but also and in any event the court is deprived of any ability to give further consideration of the proceedings. That was the view taken by Hobhouse L.J. in respect of a limitation period under the Hague Rules in Payabi v Armstel Shipping Corp [1992] Q.B. 907. I respectfully agree. For that reason, as well as for the reason that s.288 does not fall under s.19.5(1)(c), the CPR , para.19.5, do not apply to this case.
28. Even if I am wrong about that, any attempt to apply para.19.5(3) to this case falls down. First of all, looking at para.19.5(3)(a) it is simply not the case that EE Ltd was “named in the appeal in mistake for Mr Clarke”. There was no mistake about the person of EE Ltd. The mistake (if any) was about the capacity of EE Ltd to bring the proceedings. There is very clear authority that that is not the type of mistake that falls under s.19.5(3)(a).”
Conclusions