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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> BES Commercial Electricity Ltd & Ors v Cheshire West And Chester Borough Council [2019] EWHC 748 (QB) (02 April 2019) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2019/748.html Cite as: [2019] EWHC 748 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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(1) BES Commercial Electricity Limited (2) Business Energy Solutions Limited (3) BES Water Limited (4) Commercial Power Limited |
Appellants |
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- and - |
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Cheshire West and Chester Borough Council |
Respondent |
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(instructed by Weightmans LLP) for the Appellants
Miss Fiona Barton QC (instructed by Clyde & Co LLP) for the Respondent
Hearing dates: 12 and 13 March 2019
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Crown Copyright ©
The Hon Mr Justice Turner :
INTRODUCTION
BACKGROUND
THE SEARCH WARRANTS
THE CLAIMANTS' CASE
i) It was a prerequisite to the making of the claim in respect of the actions taken to enforce the warrants that the warrants themselves should be quashed in judicial review proceedings. It was not open to the claimants to circumvent the procedural requirements of CPR Part 54 by seeking a private law remedy;
ii) In any event, the defendant enjoyed immunity from suit to the extent that its alleged misconduct fell within the scope of the protection afforded by the common law to those such as advocates, parties and witnesses and others against civil claims.
JUDICIAL REVIEW
"It would…as a general rule be contrary to public policy, and as such an abuse of the process of the court, to permit a person seeking to establish that a decision of a public authority infringed rights to which he was entitled to protection under public law to proceed by way of an ordinary action and by this means to evade the provisions of Order 53."
"…where the invalidity of the decision arises as a collateral issue in a claim for infringement of a right of the plaintiff arising under private law"
And went on to comment that:
"...other exceptions should, in my view, at this stage in the development of procedural public law, be left to be decided on a case to case basis."
"The exclusivity principle should be kept in its proper box. It should not become a general barrier to citizens bringing private law claims, in which the breach of a public law duty is one ingredient."
"Judicial review is not a fact finding exercise and it is an extremely unsatisfactory tool by which to determine, in any but the clearest of cases, whether there has been a seizure of material not permitted by a search warrant. In my judgment a person who complains of excessive seizure…should not, save in such cases, seek his remedy by way of judicial review but should rely on his private law remedy when he will have a tribunal which will be able to hear evidence and make findings of fact unfettered by Wednesbury principles."
IMMUNITY
"…when a police officer comes to court to give evidence he has the benefit of an absolute immunity. This immunity, which is regarded as necessary in the interests of the administration of justice and is granted to him as a matter of public policy, is shared by all witnesses in regard to the evidence which they give when they are in the witness box. It extends to anything said or done by them in the ordinary course of any proceeding in a court of justice. The same immunity is given to the parties, their advocates, jurors and the judge. They are all immune from any action that may be brought against them on the ground that things said or done by them in the ordinary course of the proceedings were said or done falsely and maliciously and without reasonable and probable cause… The immunity extends also to claims made against witnesses for things said or done by them in the ordinary course of such proceedings on the ground of negligence."
i) The defendant's conduct does not, in fact, fall within any of the categories to which immunity may apply;
ii) The HRA claims are properly categorised being akin to the tortious family of abuse of process claims in respect of which the immunity affords no protection; and
iii) The immunity does not cover ex parte applications.
I propose to deal with each contention in turn.
"It is clear that, if that objective is to be achieved, it would not be satisfactory to confine the immunity to evidence given by witnesses while they are actually in the witness box. Witnesses seldom enter the witness box without having been interviewed beforehand by a solicitor or an investigating police officer… In Taylor v Director of the Serious Fraud Office [1999] 2 AC 177 it was held that the immunity extended also to statements made out of court which could fairly be said to be part of the process of investigating a crime or a possible crime with a view to prosecution."
Then at p. 448 C-F:
"But there is a crucial difference between statements made by police officers prior to giving evidence and things said or done in the ordinary course of preparing reports for use in evidence, where the functions that they are performing can be said to be those of witnesses or potential witnesses as they are related directly to what requires to be done to enable them to give evidence, and their conduct at earlier stages in the case when they are performing their functions as enforcers of the law or as investigators. The actions which the police take as law enforcers or as investigators may, of course, become the subject of evidence. It may then be necessary for the police officers concerned to assume the functions of witnesses at the trial to describe what they did or what they heard or what they saw. But there is no good reason on grounds of public policy to extend the immunity which attaches to things said or done by them when they are describing these matters to things done by them which cannot fairly be said to form part of their participation in the judicial process as witnesses. The purpose of the immunity is to protect witnesses against claims made against them for something said or done in the course of giving or preparing to give evidence. It is not to be used to shield the police from action for things done while they are acting as law enforcers or investigators. The rule of law requires that the police must act within the law when they are enforcing the law or are investigating allegations of criminal conduct. It also requires that those who complain that the police have acted outside the law in the performance of those functions, as in cases alleging unlawful arrest or trespass, should have access to a court for a remedy."
"It must often happen that a defendant who is sued for damages for malicious prosecution will have given evidence in the criminal prosecution of which the plaintiff complains. The essence of the complaint in such a case is that criminal proceedings have been instituted not only without reasonable and probable cause but also maliciously. So also in actions based upon alleged abuses of the process of the court it will often have happened that the court will have been induced to act by reason of some false evidence given by someone. In such cases the actions are not brought on or in respect of any evidence given but in respect of malicious abuse of process…"
"34. The fact that the police did not act maliciously is not decisive under the Convention which aims to protect against abuse of power, however motivated or caused… The Court cannot agree that a limitation of actions for damages to cases of malice is necessary to protect the police in their vital functions of investigating crime. The exercise of powers to interfere with home and private life must be confined within reasonable bounds to minimise the impact of such measures on the personal sphere of the individual guaranteed under Article 8 which is pertinent to security and well-being. In a case where basic steps to verify the connection between the address and the offence under investigation were not effectively carried out, the resulting police action, which caused the applicants considerable fear and alarm, cannot be regarded as proportionate.
35. As argued by the applicants, this finding does not imply that any search, which turns out to be unsuccessful, would fail the proportionality test, only that a failure to take reasonable and available precautions may do so."
"I disagree with Mr Cameron's contention that the implications of the decision in Keegan are limited to situations of unjust interference with article 8 rights. It is true that the statements of principle contained in paragraphs 34 and 35 – that the exercise of powers "must be confined within reasonable bounds to minimise the impact of such measures" and that it is only "a failure to take reasonable and available precautions" which "would fail the proportionality test" – are expressed in the context of an article 8 violation were an ex facie lawful search proceeded upon a warrant which had been obtained through police negligence. Be that as it may, I can see no reason in logic why those principles should not apply equally to the exercise of powers by any organ of the state. That the court intended to state a general objection to "a limitation of actions for damages to cases of malice" is clearly indicated by its preceding observation that the ECHR "is geared to protecting against abuse of power"; power generally."
"In respect of a claim for compensation against a prosecutor under article 5 (5) by a victim of detention in contravention of article 5 is it necessary to show that the detention was unlawful?
51. Again following Keegan the answer to this question must be no. The search warrant obtained by Merseyside Police in that case was lawful but that did not prevent the court from holding that the police action in terms of that warrant was not proportionate. The police were liable because they had failed to take basic steps to verify the connection between the address and the offence under investigation; they had been negligent and therefore had acted unreasonably."
"But none of this applies as regards such evidence as was given in support of the application for a bench warrant. It was given ex parte: Dr. Roy had no means, and no other party any interest, in challenging it: so far from the public interest requiring that it be given absolute protection, that interest requires that it should have been given carefully, responsibly and impartially. To deny a person whose liberty has been interfered with any opportunity of showing that it was ill founded and malicious, does not in the least correspond with, and is a far more serious denial than, the traditional denial of the right to attack a witness to an issue which has been tested and passed upon after a trial. Immunities conferred by the law in respect of legal proceedings need always to be checked against a broad view of the public interest. So checked, the present case provides no justification for protecting absolutely what the solicitor said in the court. I need not add that I am not prejudging in any way whether what he said was well founded or lacking in malice. That is for the action to decide."
DISCUSSION