[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Wolverhampton City Council & Ors v Persons Unknown [2020] EWHC 759 (QB) (30 March 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2020/759.html Cite as: [2020] EWHC 759 (QB) |
[New search] [Printable PDF version] [Help]
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
BIRMINGHAM DISTRICT REGISTRY
The Priory Courts, 33 Bull Street, Birmingham B4 6DS |
||
B e f o r e :
(sitting as a Judge of the High Court)
____________________
(1) Wolverhampton City Council (2) Dudley Metropolitan Borough Council (3) Sandwell Metropolitan Borough Council (4) Walsall Metropolitan Borough Council |
Claimants |
|
- and – |
||
Persons unknown |
Defendants |
____________________
The Claimants made written representations
Hearing dates: 30 March 2020
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
HHJ WORSTER:
A review hearing will take place on open court after this extended order has been in force for a further 1 2months and no longer than 14 months. The Claimants shall file a succinct report to inform the court of their experience with the publication, operation and enforcement of the extended order, including for example, breaches, warnings or problems, if any arising out of the extended order (including the Power of Arrest).
"(1) there must be a sufficiently real and imminent risk of a tort being committed to justify quia timet relief; (2) it is impossible to name the persons who are likely to commit the tort unless restrained; (3) it is possible to give effective notice of the injunction and for the method of such notice to be set out in the order; (4) the terms of the injunction must correspond to the threatened tort and not be so wide that they prohibit lawful conduct; (5) the terms of the injunction must be sufficiently clear and precise as to enable persons potentially affected to know what they must not do; and (6) the injunction should have clear geographical and temporal limits."
"In the light of precedents which were not cited in the Ineos case but which have been drawn to our attention on the present appeal, I would enter a caveat in relation to the fourth of these requirements. While it is undoubtedly desirable that the terms of an injunction should correspond to the threatened tort and not be so wide that they prohibit lawful conduct, this cannot be regarded as an absolute rule. The decisions of the Court of Appeal in Hubbard v Pitt [1976] QB 142 and Burris v Azadani [1995] 1 WLR 1372 demonstrate that, although the court must be careful not to impose an injunction in wider terms than are necessary to do justice, the court is entitled to restrain conduct that is not in itself tortious or otherwise unlawful if it is satisfied that such a restriction is necessary in order to afford effective protection to the rights of the claimant in the particular case. In both those cases the injunction was granted against a named person or persons. What, if any, difference it makes in this regard that the injunction is sought against unknown persons is a question which does not need to be decided on the present appeal but which may, as I understand, arise on a pending appeal from the decision of Nicklin J in Canada Goose UK Retail Ltd v Persons Unknown [2019] EWHC 2459 (QB); and in these circumstances I express no opinion on the point."
The decision in the Canada Goose case is reported at [2020] EWCA Civ 303. I do not see that it has a direct bearing on the issues I have to consider on this application.
"12. … The application is made against "persons unknown". The courts have recognised that an action may be properly constituted even though the Defendant is not named, and that it may be appropriate to make an order against "persons unknown" in certain circumstances; see Bloomsbury Publishing Group Ltd and Rowling v News Group Newspapers [2003] 1 WLR 1633. What is necessary is that the description used must be sufficiently certain so as to identify those who are included and those who are not. One of the problems that local authorities have faced when attempting to use other statutory powers to control street cruising is the difficulty in identifying Defendants. That is not because there are no "Defendants" - the evidence in this and other similar applications establishes without doubt that "persons unknown" regularly engage in causing this public nuisance. It is because at this stage they cannot be identified.
13. In addition to the need for certainty referred to in Bloomsbury, care needs to be taken to ensure that the order is no wider that is necessary, and that it is proportionate. All those matters involve attention to the definition of "participating in a street cruise", for that defines the "persons" who are caught by the terms of the order. The definition adopted by NWBC in this case is the same as the definition used in the October 2016 Birmingham order. That in turn was the definition used by HHJ Owen QC when he granted the Solihull order. HHJ Owen QC was astute to ensure that the definition was as tight as it could be, and I gratefully adopt his approach to that matter.
14. As in the Solihull and Birmingham cases, the order provides for service by alternative means. These are set out in Schedule 3 to the order, and include (i) placing signs in prominent locations throughout NWBC's area, and in particular in the locations identified as problem areas in the Particulars of Claim, (ii) press releases, and (iii) posting a copy of the order on the Council's website, Facebook page and Twitter account, on selected social media sites, YouTube and on local police Facebook and Twitter accounts. My experience of hearing a number of committal applications in relation to these orders is that the roadside signs are particularly effective."
"Whilst an order such as this involves a limitation on the freedoms of those who use the roads and attend these "events", much of the conduct it covers is unlawful of itself, and is tortious. Moreover the injunction is framed so that it only bites when the effect of that conduct crosses a defined threshold. It is plainly a proper use of the statutory powers NWBC have to make the application. The aims of the order are to make the highways safer, to reduce crime and public nuisance, and to protect and promote the interests of its inhabitants. This order is a proportionate interference with the rights of those who engage the various activities which go to make up street cruising, "