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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Ali v Bashir & Anor [2012] EWHC 3007 (QB) (30 October 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2012/3007.html Cite as: [2012] EWHC 3007 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
IN THE MATTER OF THE REPRESENTATION OF THE PEOPLE ACT 1983
AND
IN THE MATTER OF THE LOCAL GOVERNMENT ELECTION FOR THE MAYBURY AND SHEERWATER WARD OF WOKING BOROUGH COUNCIL
HELD ON 3RD MAY 2012
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
and
MR JUSTICE NICOL
____________________
MOHAMMED ALI |
Petitioner |
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- and - |
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MOHAMMED BASHIR RAY MORGAN |
Respondents |
____________________
Gavin Millar QC (instructed by Steel and Shamash) for the Petitioner
Timothy Straker QC (instructed by Peter Bryant, head of Democratic and Legal Services, Woking Borough Council) for the 2nd Respondent
Hearing dates: 27th July 2012.
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Nicol :
This is the judgment of the Court to which both members have contributed.
a) The petition was not in the form required by the Election Petition Rules 1960 rule 4.
b) Contrary to rule 4(1)(b) the Petition did not state the result of the election.
c) Contrary to rule 4(1)(d) the Petition did not state the grounds on which relief was sought.
"An election petition may be questioned on the ground that the person whose election is questioned-a) was at the time of the election disqualified, orb) was not duly elected
or on the ground that the election was avoided by corrupt or illegal practices or on the grounds provided by section 164 or section 165 below, and shall not be questioned on any of those grounds except by an election petition."
Section 164 relates to the avoidance of an election on grounds of general corruption. Section 165 concerns the avoidance of an election because of the employment of a corrupt agent.
"(1) 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 –a) in which of the capacities mentioned in s.121(1) or section 128(1) of the Act the petitioner or each of the petitioners presents the petition;b) the date and result of the election to which the petition relates ...c) ....d) the grounds on which relief is sought, setting out with sufficient particularity the facts relied on but not the evidence by which they are to be proved......"
a. The Claim Form This was the printed form for a claim under Part 8 of the Civil Procedure Rules. It named Mr Ali as the Claimant. The Defendants were Mr Morgan, the Electoral Returning Officer and "Cllr Mohammed Bashir". Their addresses were given. Under the heading "Details of Claim" was written, "See attached report." The statement of truth was signed by Mr Ali who described his position or office as "Alleged Candidate."
b. The Application Notice The order sought was,
"To find the election result in Maybury and Sheerwater Ward in the Borough of Woking, Surrey on 3.5.12 unsafe and therefore null and void and to require a re-election for this ward."
The information on which the applicant relied was,
"The Count took place on 4.5.12 on the day after the election. The result was LibDem 1088, Labour 1072, Tory 685, UKIP 345. It is our view that the narrow win by 16 votes can be fully accounted for by the enclosed Statement of Case. My agent had increased my vote by one by demanding a third recount with a new team of counters, which the ERO initially did not want to do. I lost the seat similarly to the Conservatives last year in 2011 by 45 votes. The ward has much the highest number of postal votes in the borough with a surge up to the April 18th closing date to over 1,500 and there were 165 rejected p.v. applications as well. (last year 165 rejects which was 15% of the votes cast). 70% of postal votes nationally, turn out to vote (this year 69% in this ward). This is much higher than at the polling stations. There were also 36 rejected ballots this year – also the highest in the borough). Persistent electoral irregularities began in the ward in 2004. In 2004 the CPS said 'There is little doubt that (in Woking) a number of false votes for fictitious people have been tendered.' But with witnesses refusing to testify for fear of victimisation, no prosecutions have been brought. In 2005 all the marked registers were lost so allegations of persistent double voting could not be checked and no explanation was given by the Council."
The Claimant also named his then solicitor's firm (not the firm who represented him on the present application).
c. The Schedule Attached to the application notice was a spread sheet which had the heading "identification of votes which should be disallowed". There are 73 entries. Columns identified the ward, name of voter, address, number (presumably on the electoral roll), "reason for disallowing" and "Comment". The reasons advanced varied. They included allegations that the voter was not resident in the ward, was abroad and could not have cast a postal vote, was under pressure to cast a postal vote, possible duplication, not legally entitled to vote, not resident at the address.d. The Letter This was from Elizabeth Evans, the Labour Election Agent and enclosed a cheque for the required fee.
Failure to state the result of the election
Failure to set out the grounds on which relief is sought and the particulars of facts relied upon
Failure to adopt the form in the Schedule to the Election Rules
"An election petition must contain the following facts:
- the capacity in which the petitioner is acting;
- the date and result…
- the date from which the time for lodging the petition is calculated, if not within 21 days;
- the grounds on which relief is sought; and
- the relief claimed.
The petition must be signed by each petitioner; it cannot be signed by a solicitor on their behalf.
An example of an election petition can be found at the back of the Election Petition Rules 1960…and Atkins Court Forms, volume 18(1)."
Under the heading "How can I get further advice?" it stated,
"The staff in the Elections Petitions Office can advise you on the procedure for issuing an election petition but they cannot give you legal advice or any indication of whether you are likely to be successful. …"
e. In Hobson v Fishburn [1991] LGR 56 the Court struck out an election petition because the petitioner had relied on his right to have been elected in place of the successful parliamentary candidate, but, because he was under 21, he was (at that date) ineligible to have become an MP. The result was harsh because the petitioner could have petitioned in his capacity as a voter, but the Court would not allow him to amend the petition since the time for lodging it had expired. It is, though, an example of a case where a specific requirement in r.4(1)(a) could not be met.
f. In Ahmed v Kennedy [2003] 1WLR 1820 the Court of Appeal dismissed an appeal against a decision to strike out an election petition. The petitioner had failed to notify the respondents of the amount and nature of the security and thus had not complied with s.136(3) of the Act. As Simon Brown LJ said at [28] there had been a complete failure to give the required notice in the prescribed time. There may be other errors (for instance where the amount of the security was misstated or certain particulars were omitted) which would not necessarily amount to fatal non-compliance. The Court rejected an argument on the Appellant's behalf that the public interest in resolving allegations of electoral irregularity should mean that the petition ought to be allowed to proceed notwithstanding the failure to comply with s.136. At [40] Simon Brown LJ said,
"Flexibility and discretion are all very well but there is merit too in certainty, not least in the field of electoral challenge. It is undesirable to have someone serving in public office with doubts surrounding the legitimacy of his election."
May LJ agreed with Simon Brown LJ. Clarke LJ in a short concurring judgment emphasised at [54] that this was a case where no notice at all had been given within the prescribed period (and there was no jurisdiction to extend time). He left open whether the Court would have power through s.157(3) of the Act and CPR r.3.10 to treat a defect in a timeous notice as a failure to comply with a relevant rule. Alternatively, a court might treat a notice which substantially complied with the provision of s.136(3) as sufficient compliance. He added that he would expect the Court to exercise such a power in favour of a petitioner only rarely, "because I can see no reason in principle why petitioners and their solicitors should not read the relevant provisions of the 1983 Act and the 1960 Rules which are quite simple, and apply them in accordance with their terms."
g. In Saghir v Najib [2005] EWHC 417 (QB) the Petitioners failed to serve on the respondents a copy of the petition as lodged with the Court. What they served was a different version of the petition. In addition the Petitioners failed to lodge the necessary security in time and could not therefore give notice that they had done so. Accordingly, there was a complete failure to comply with r.6 of the Election Petition Rules. The petition was struck out.
h. In Ali v Haques (10th December 2006 DC) the Divisional Court struck out an election petition because it had not been served in accordance with the Election Petition Rules and the Act. The respondents were served at the Town Hall and not at their residential addresses. At [37] the Court commented,
"Whilst the petitioners can suggest that there was no prejudice, because it appears that all of the respondents actually received the documents, and only the third respondent may have received those documents outside the five day time limit, the fact remains that the election rules set out a hard and fast regime which must be applied to the question of service. It is plainly important, in the context of an election, that a court should not be vested with some discretion to be exercised ex post facto in relation to the requirements of the statute and the rules, because that might be seen as interference with the electoral process and discrimination as between the candidates for the election. The point militates not only against the existence of any discretion, but also against the exercise of any discretion if such was thought to exist."
i. We have already mentioned that in Scarth v Amin (above) the Divisional Court rejected an argument that the requirement in r 4(1)(b) of the Election Petition Rules to state "the result of the election" required a petitioner to specify the number of votes cast for each candidate. The Court affirmed at [15] that the requirements of rule 4 of the Election Petition Rules were mandatory so that if they were not complied with the petition would be struck out. It said at [16]
"There are competing public interests at stake. On the one hand, the rules requiring timely and proper presentation of a petition are strict, because it is in the public interest that there should be clarity as to who has been elected. But this public interest does not, in our judgment, require such a construction of rule 4.
[17] On the other hand, there is a countervailing public interest that there should be free and fair elections 'under conditions which will ensure the free expression of the people', see article 3 of the First Protocol to the European Convention of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms and Part II of Schedule 1 to the Human Rights Act 1998…It would be wrong in principle to adopt an interpretation of the 1960 Rules which placed conditions upon the presentation of valid petitions which were more restrictive than necessary to achieve the certainty that is required, and which obstructed the determination of what opinion the people had expressed."
j. In Miller v Bull [2010] 1 WLR 1861 [2009] EWHC 2640 (QB) the petition complied with the rules and had been properly served. The petitioner had also provided the requisite security. However he did not give notice of that provision within the time prescribed by r.6 of the Election Petition Rules. He did subsequently, but outside the time limit. Tugendhat J. refused to strike out the petition. On Court of Appeal authority he was obliged to hold that there was no power to extend the time limit. However, he held that Article 3 of the First Protocol to the ECHR meant that the prohibition on enlarging time had to be set aside. He noted that none of the parties had submitted that, if the court had power to enlarge time, it should refuse to do so.
Annexe
SCHEDULE
ELECTION PETITION
In the High Court of Justice,
Queen's Bench Division
In the Matter of the Representation of the People Act, 1983
And in the matter of a Parliamentary [or Local Government] Election for [state place]
Held on the day of , 19.
The Petition of A. B. of [and C.D. of ]
shows: -
1. That the Petitioner A.B. is a person who voted [or had a right to vote] at the above election [or was a candidate at the above election] [or in the case of a parliamentary election claims to have had a right to be elected or returned at the above election] and the Petitioner C.D. [state similarly the capacity in which he presents the petition].
2. 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].
3. That [state the facts on which the Petitioner[s] rely].
4. That [in the case of a petition mentioned in section 122(2) or (3) or section 129(2), (3) or (4) of the above Act state the event on which the time for the presentation of the petition depends and its date].
The Petitioner[s] therefore pray[s]: -
(1) That it may be determined that the said E.F was not duly elected [or returned] and that the election was void [or that the said J.K. was duly elected and ought to have been returned] [or as the case may be].
(2) That the Petitioner[s] may have such further or other relief as may be just.
Dated this day of , 19 .
(signed)
PETITIONER[S]
This petition is presented by whose address for service is
[and who is agent for of ],
[solicitor for the said Petitioner].
It is proposed to serve a copy of this petition on of [and of ] and on the Director of Public Prosecutions.