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England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Fitch v Stephenson & Ors [2008] EWHC 501 (QB) (01 April 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2008/501.html Cite as: [2008] EWHC 501 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MRS JUSTICE DOBBS DBE
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JOHN FITCH |
Petitioner |
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- and - |
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TOM STEPHENSON HARSHAD DAHYABHAI BHAVSAR ANNETTE DAWN BYRNE COLIN STUART MARRIOTT |
Respondents |
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Timothy Straker QC (instructed by Leicester City Council) for the First Respondent
Guy Vassall-Adams (instructed by Steel & Shamash Solicitors) for the Second, Third and Fourth Respondents
Hearing dates: 25th February 2008
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Crown Copyright ©
Mrs Justice Cox :
Introduction
a) Whether the failure to count a proportion of the votes cast was such that the election was not conducted substantially in accordance with the law as to elections, notwithstanding that the result was not affected;
b) Whether the petition is vitiated as a result of procedural failures.
The agreed facts
a) The Verification Stage;
b) The Sorting Stage; and
c) The Counting Stage.
Name of Candidate | Description | Declared Result | Votes Cast |
BHAVSAR, Harshad Dahyabhai | Labour Party Candidate | 740 | 1219 |
BYRNE, Annette Dawn | Labour Party Candidate | 748 | 1248 |
FITCH, John | Liberal Party Councillor for Re-Election | 473 | 1024 |
MARRIOTT, Colin Stuart | Labour Party Candidate | 723 | 1225 |
The Petition – summary of submissions
It is accepted that there was a failure to count a proportion of the votes cast in this election and that Rule 45 of the Local Elections (Principal Areas) (England and Wales) Rules 2006 was not fully complied with. It is also accepted that there are observations in the authorities deprecating the carrying out of informal counts in general and that section 46 of the 2006 Act now prohibits the carrying out of informal counts as a means of correcting any procedural error. It is argued however, that the deficiencies in this case, where the outcome of the election was not affected, are not sufficient to render the election invalid, applying the test clearly set out in s.48 of the RPA.
The decided cases, including those which Lord Denning considered in Morgan v Simpson, establish that the Courts will strive to preserve an election as being in accordance with the law, even where there have been significant breaches of official duties and election rules, providing the result of the election was unaffected by those breaches: see Woodward v Sarsons (1875) LR 10 CP 733; Islington 5 O'M & H 120; Marshall v Gibson, Divisional Court, Judgment of 14th December 1995; Harris v Gilmour, Divisional Court, Judgment of 11th December 2000. This is because, wherever possible, the Courts seek to give effect to the will of the electorate.
a) there was full compliance by the First Respondent with his official duties at every stage of the election right up until the count: (see the agreed facts and the witness statement of Charles Poole of 24th July 2000). The election as a whole has to be taken into account, when considering whether it was substantially in accordance with the law as to elections;
b) the 'result' of this election was not affected by any breaches of duty by the Returning Officer; the informal count shows that the same candidates would have won even if all the votes had been correctly counted. The Petitioner cannot therefore succeed under limb (b) of s.48(1) RPA;
c) the case of Gough was a libel case arising in unusual circumstances. It does not assist on the question of what happens when there has been a failure to count votes and the result is unaffected. The cases which have resulted in elections being declared void all involve breaches which affected the franchise and in which the elections could not have been said to have been free and fair. This is not at all the situation in the present case;
d) it is significant that the Petitioner, while criticising the informal count, has chosen not to demand a scrutiny and recount. It would have been open to the Court, on a scrutiny and recount, to declare the true result of the election. It is submitted that the Petitioner's failure to opt for the proportionate remedy for challenging the count and his attempt instead to undermine the whole election is a matter to which the Court may have regard when considering the merits of this petition;
e) the Petitioner's case on s.48(1)(a) rests upon the contention that, because both a large number of votes and a substantial proportion of the votes cast were not counted, the election must ipso facto be found not to have been conducted substantially in accordance with the law as to elections. This is inconsistent both with the policy behind s.48 and the decided cases;
f) the first and foremost duty of the Court in election cases is to give effect, wherever possible, to the will of the electorate. That principle would be undermined if inadvertent breaches of the election rules could invalidate a whole election even where the result had not been affected. This election represented the will of the electorate of Abbey Ward. It was substantially in accordance with the law as to elections under s.48(1)(a) RPA; and section 46 of the 2006 Act does not affect the clear statutory provisions of section 48 and the decided cases.
Discussion and decision
"48. – (1) No local government election shall be declared invalid by reason of any act or omission of the returning officer or any other person in breach of his official duty in connection with the election or otherwise of rules under section 36 or section 42 above if it appears to the tribunal having cognizance of the question that –
(a) the election was so conducted as to be substantially in accordance with the law as to elections; and
(b) the act or omission did not affect its result.
(2) A local government election, unless questioned by an election petition within the period fixed by law for those proceedings, shall be deemed to have been to all intents a good and valid election."
"1. If the election was conducted so badly that it was not substantially in accordance with the law as to elections, the election is vitiated, irrespective of whether the result was affected or not. That is shown by the Hackney case, 2 O'M. & H. 77, where two out of 19 polling stations were closed all day, and 5,000 voters were unable to vote.
2. If the election was so conducted that it was substantially in accordance with the law as to elections, it is not vitiated by a breach of the rules or a mistake at the polls – provided that it did not affect the result of the election. That is shown by the Islington case, 17 T.L.R. 210, where 14 ballot papers were issued after 8pm.
3. But, even though the election was conducted substantially in accordance with the law as to elections, nevertheless if there was a breach of the rules or a mistake at the polls – and it did affect the result- then the election is vitiated. That is shown by Gunn v. Sharpe [1974] Q.B. 808, where the mistake in not stamping 102 ballot papers did affect the result."
"The effect of section 48(1) of the 1983 Act is that an election will not be declared invalid merely because there has been a breach of official duty in connection with the election or of the Rules by the returning officer or any other person. There cannot be a declaration of invalidity unless it appears either that the election was so conducted that there was substantial non-compliance with the law as to elections or that there was a breach of official duty or of the Rules which affected the result. It is clear now that the 'result' means the question which person or persons are elected as distinct from the number of votes cast for each persons: see In re Islington West Division; Medhurst v. Lough (1901) 17 TLR 210. Thus if the consequence of a breach of the Rules is that one or more of the candidates would have polled more or less votes than were recorded at the count, but the same candidate or candidates would still have been elected, the result will not have been affected and the election can only be declared invalid if it appears to the Court that the election was not so conducted as to be substantially in accordance with the law as to elections."
At page 17 he further explained the court's reasoning:
"It is clear from the judgments of the Court of Appeal in Morgan v. Simpson [1975] 1 QB 151 that the aim of section 48 is to preserve an election unless the case falls within limb (a) or limb (b) of that section. It further appears from the decision of the Divisional Court in Levers v. Morris [1972] 1 QB 221, in relation to similar provisions in the Representation of the Peoples Act 1949, that if there has been a breach of the rules but the election court is able by means of scrutiny to ascertain the true number of valid votes cast, it can declare the result of the election ascertained by it whether or not consistent with that originally declared. If the breach of the Rules results in an erroneous conclusion at the count and therefore in an erroneous declaration, the election court can ascertain and pronounce the true result. It does not have to declare the election invalid merely because it arrives at a different result from that declared. In such a case there is indeed only one true result. If the breach of the Rules consists of an omission to count all the valid votes, that breach is inherently incapable of affecting that result. What it affects is that which is declared by the returning officer to be the result. Accordingly, the case cannot fall within limb (b) of section 48. Nor, in our judgment, can it fall within limb (a) if there has otherwise been an entirely true and fair election and the only relevant breach is the omission to count all the valid votes. That is because the availability of the judicial procedure provided by sections 128-130 of the 1983 Act enables the omission of the returning officer to count the votes to be remedied. Consequently, although it could clearly be said that the election had not been so conducted as to be precisely in accordance with the law as to elections, it could nevertheless also be said that it was so conducted as to be substantially in accordance with the election law, for the true result of a fair election can yet be ascertained by means of the judicial procedure provided by the Act."
" Returning officers: correction of procedural errors
46. – (1) A returning officer for an election to which this section applies may take such steps as he thinks appropriate to remedy any act or omission on his part, or on the part of a relevant person, which –
(a) arises in connection with any function the returning officer or relevant person has in relation to the election, and
(b) is not in accordance with the rules or any other requirements applicable to the election.
(2) But a returning officer may not under subsection (1) re-count the votes given at an election after the result has been declared.
(3) This section applied to -
(a) a parliamentary election;
(b) a local government election in England and Wales (within the meaning of the 1983 Act)."
Procedural irregularities – summary of submissions
Failure to state the result of the petition
Failure to serve the petition in accordance with Rule 6
Discussion and decision
The legal framework
"shall be in the prescribed form signed by the petitioner and shall be presented in the prescribed manner (a) in England and Wales, to the High Court"
"a petition questioning an election under the local government Act shall be presented within 21 days after the day on which the election was held."
"An election petition presented within the time limited by subsection (1) or subsection (2) above may for the purpose of complaining of the election upon an allegation of an illegal practice, be amended with the leave of the High Court within the time within which a petition complaining of the election on the ground of that illegal practice could, under this section, be presented."
"A petition shall be in the form set out in the Schedule to these Rules or a form to the like effect with such variations as the circumstances may require, and shall state-
(b) the date and the result of the election to which the petition relates, showing in the case of a parliamentary election the date on which the return was made to the Clerk of the Crown of the member declared to have been elected."
"(1) Within five days after giving the security the petitioner shall serve on the respondent within the meaning of s.121(1) or s.128(2) of the Act and on the Director of Public Prosecutions a notice of the presentation of the petition and the nature and amount of the security which he has given, together with a copy of the petition and of the affidavit accompanying any recognisance.
(2) Service shall be effected in the manner in which a claim form is served and a certificate of service shall be filed as soon as practicable after service has been effected."
"Any period of time prescribed by Rules 5, 6 and 7 shall be computed in accordance with section 119 of the Act and shall not be varied by order or otherwise, but save as aforesaid rules 2.8 to 2.11 and 3.1(2)(a) of the Civil Procedure Rules 1998 shall apply to any period of time prescribed by these Rules as if it were prescribed by the Civil Procedure Rules."
Failure to set out the result of the election
"That the election was held on the day of 19 when E.F., G.H. and J.K were candidates, and on the day of 19, the Returning Officer returned E.F and G.H. to the Clerk of the Crown as being duly elected [or in the case of a local Government election] and E.F. and G.H. were declared to be duly elected."
At the bottom of the form, there is provision for the naming of the parties on whom a copy of the petition is to be served.
Failure to serve the petition
The power of the court to amend or extend time for service.
"Because of what can be the very undesirable consequences of a procedural requirement which is made so fundamental that any departure from the requirement makes everything that happens thereafter irreversibly a nullity it is to be hoped that provisions intended to have this effect will be few and far between. In the majority of cases, whether the requirement is categorised as directory or mandatory, the tribunal before whom the defect is properly raised has the task of determining what are to be the consequences of failing to comply with the requirement in the context of all the facts and circumstances of the case in which the issue arises. In such a situation that tribunal's task will be to seek to do what is just in all the circumstances: see Brayhead (Ascot) Ltd v Berkshire County Council [1964] 2 QB 303, applied by the House of Lords in London & Clydeside Estates Ltd v Aberdeen District Council [1980] 1 WLR 182".
"The issue is of general importance and has implications for the failure to observe procedural requirements outside the field of immigration. The conventional approach when there has been non-compliance with a procedural requirement laid down by a statute or regulation is to consider whether the requirement which was not complied with should be categorised as directory or mandatory. If it is categorised as directory it is usually assumed it can be safely ignored. If it is categorised as mandatory then it is usually assumed the defect cannot be remedied and has the effect of rendering subsequent events dependent on the requirement a nullity or void or as being made without jurisdiction and of no effect. The position is more complex than this and this approach distracts attention from the important question of what the legislator should be judged to have intended should be the consequence of the non-compliance. This has to be assessed on a consideration of the language of the legislation against the factual circumstances of the non-compliance. In the majority of cases it provides limited, if any, assistance to inquire whether the requirement is mandatory or directory. The requirement is never intended to be optional if a word such as "shall" or "must" is used."