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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Brightcrew Ltd v The City of Glasgow Licensing Board [2011] ScotCS CSIH_46 (12 July 2011) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/2011/2011CSIH46.html Cite as: [2011] ScotCS CSIH_46, 2011 GWD 24-547, 2012 SC 67, [2011] CSIH 46, 2012 SLT 140 |
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EXTRA DIVISION, INNER HOUSE, COURT OF SESSION
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Lord EassieLord ClarkeLord Wheatley
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[2011] CSIH 46XA86/10
OPINION OF THE COURT
delivered by LORD EASSIE
in Appeal
by
BRIGHTCREW LIMITED
Pursuers and Appellants;
against
THE CITY OF GLASGOW LICENSING BOARD
Defenders and Respondents:
_______
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Alt: S. Wolff, Q.C., M. Ross; Legal and Administrative Services, City of Edinburgh Council (Defenders and Respondents)
12 July 2011
Introductory
[1] This is an appeal under section 132(6)
of the Licensing (Scotland) Act 2005 - "the 2005 Act" - against a decision of the sheriff at Glasgow on an appeal to him by
way of stated case under section 131(2) of the 2005 Act. The appeal by stated
case was brought by the appellants against a decision of the City of Glasgow Licensing Board - "the Board" - to refuse
an application made by the appellants under section 20 of the 2005 Act for a
premises licence.
[2] The application which the Board refused is
sought in respect of premises in Drury Street, Glasgow, in which the appellants trade under the style of "Spearmint
Rhino". The premises trade, and have traded for a number of years, as an adult
entertainment venue, namely a nightclub with lap dancers. Prior to the
adoption of the current trading name, the premises traded similarly under the
style of "the Truffle Club". The premises were the subject of an entertainment
licence granted under the Licensing (Scotland) Act 1976 and the application
which was refused by the Board and which is the subject of this appeal was for
"conversion" of the entertainment licence into a premises licence under the new
licensing régime set up by the 2005 Act. The application for the premises
licence was submitted to the Board in terms of paragraphs 17 and 18 of the
Licensing (Transitional and Savings Provisions) (Scotland) Order 2007. The application was
lodged with the Board on 15 January 2009 and was considered and refused by the Board at a
meeting held on 15 May 2009. Had it been granted, the premises licence sought in the
application would have superseded the entertainment licence on 1 September 2009 when the new régime
entered fully into force.
[3] The operating plan which accompanied the
application made plain that in addition to offering the sale of alcoholic
drinks, the establishment would offer "adult entertainment", a term which is
given specific meaning by the Licensing Conditions (Late Opening Premises)
(Scotland) Regulations 2007:
" 'adult entertainment' means any form of entertainment which -
(a) involves a person performing an act of an erotic or sexually explicit nature; and
(b) is provided wholly or mainly for the sexual gratification or titillation of the audience."
[4] The operation of the premises in Drury Street as a lap dancing venue
had not occasioned any complaint by the police, or anyone else, of its leading
to public disorder, the commission of crime or problems connected with criminal
activity. The appellant's application for the premises licence was thus
unopposed by those having locus to raise such issues. No representations or
objections in terms of section 22 of the 2005 Act were made.
[5] Section 23 of the 2005 Act, which is headed
"Determination of Premises Licence Application", provides inter alia:
"(1) A premises licence application received by a Licensing Board is to be determined in accordance with this section.
...
(4) The Board must, in considering and determining the application, consider whether any of the grounds for refusal applies and -
(a) if none of them applies, the Board must grant the application, or
(b) if any of them applies, the Board must refuse the application.
(5) The grounds for refusal are -
...
(c) that the Licensing Board considers that the granting of the application would be inconsistent with one or more of the licensing objectives,
(d) that, having regard to -
(i) the nature of activities proposed to be carried on in the subject premises,
(ii) the location, character and condition of the premises, and
(iii) the persons likely to frequent the premises,
the Board considers that the premises are unsuitable for use for the sale of alcohol,
..."
The licensing objectives to which section 23(5)(c) refers are set out in section 4:
"(1) For the purposes of this Act, the licensing objectives are -
(a) preventing crime and disorder,
(b) securing public safety,
(c) preventing public nuisance,
(d) protecting and improving public health, and
(e) protecting children from harm."
[6] In determining that the appellants'
application should be refused, the Board invoked two of the grounds of refusal
listed in section 23(5) of the 2005 Act. The first of those grounds was that
contained in paragraph (c) of section 23(5) and the licensing objectives to
which the Board referred in that connection were (i) protecting and improving
public health and (ii) preventing crime and disorder. The second ground of
refusal invoked by the Board was that the premises were unsuitable for the sale
of alcohol (section 23(5)(d)).
[7] The basis for the Board's holding that the
second ground of refusal applied is set out in the penultimate and
pre-penultimate sentences of the final paragraph of the case stated by the
Board:
"In the Board's view, premises providing Adult Entertainment, involving a person performing an act of an erotic or a sexually explicit nature, and which is provided wholly or mainly for the sexual gratification or titillation of the audience, could only be considered to be suitable for the sale of alcohol where the Board was satisfied that its said policy on Adult Entertainment would be complied with - particularly with regard to the health and safety of dancers. Given the occurrence of several breaches of its current Code of Practice over a very short period of time, the Board was not satisfied that the applicant would so comply which therefore rendered the premises unsuitable as aforesaid."
The sheriff was satisfied that the Board's reliance on section 23(5)(d) was irrational and, to that extent, he accordingly upheld the appeal to him. The Board has not cross appealed against that part of the sheriff's decision, the soundness of which is thus accepted. Accordingly the present appeal is concerned only with the first ground of refusal, which also proceeded on what are the same alleged breaches of the Board's "current Code of Practice".
[8] In the course of her submission to us,
counsel for the Board confirmed that notwithstanding references elsewhere, for
example in the sheriff's note, to a statement of licensing policy, the
references in the stated case were references to the Board's Code of Practice
which had been drawn up in March 2005 with the title "Code of Practice relative
to the provision of dance entertainment in licensed premises". Counsel for the
Board also confirmed that there was no statutory basis upon which this code of
practice was drawn up. Indeed, that is recognised by the preamble to the code
which states, among other things,
"Whilst the Code has no statutory basis, the Board will generally expect compliance with it's (sic) terms and any failure to do so may be taken into account in assessing the continuing suitability of any affected premises for the sale of alcoholic liquor."
The Board later incorporated, without material amendment, the text of the code of practice in the licensing policy statement which the Board issued in terms of section 6(2) of the 2005 Act.
[9] The breaches of that code of practice to
which the Board refers in the stated case are based upon a brief report by a
licensing standards officer and may be summarised as follows:
(i) Risk Assessments: On 17 May 2008 the member of staff with whom the licensing standards officer in question spoke on the occasion of that visit was unaware of the location within the premises of the documents containing the risk assessments, (which had indeed been prepared). This was said to be an infraction of the provision of the Code of Practice which states:
"A risk assessment should be undertaken and appropriate control measures should be implemented in respect of
· The precise work activities required of dancers
· The personal safety of dancers
· The use of chemicals which may come into contact with dancers' skin
This is not an exhaustive list and licensees should ensure that all hazards are assessed."
(ii) "Flyers": The report by the licensing standards officer stated that on 8 April 2009 the appellants had circulated what are described as "flyers" which breached the terms of the Board's code of practice. The relevant provision in the code of practice is:
"Dancers remaining in the public or private dance areas before, following or between performances should be suitably clothed at all times with no exposure of breasts or genitalia. Any advertising of performances outwith the licensed premises whether by way of newspaper advertisements or notices at the premises may only depict dancers suitably clothed as aforesaid."
A copy of the "flyer" is included in the appendix lodged in this appeal. The "flyer" is in fact a small card measuring 5cm x 8cm offering free entry to the establishment and gives a lateral view of the heads and upper torsos of two ladies who face each other. Superimposed on, and largely obscuring, that lateral view drawing of the heads and torsos is the text, in vertically arranged lines - "Spearmint Rhino" - "Rouge" - "VIP ENTRY" - "Admit one guest".
(iii) Drinks Promotion: On 27 April 2009 a promotion, said by the Board to conflict with the Board's policy on "happy hours" and the promotion of low cost alcohol, appeared on the appellants' website - apparently in the form of an e-mail message to patrons, or possible patrons, registered as such on the appellants' database of patrons - and was immediately withdrawn. On 7 May 2009 another promotion was sent to those on that electronic mailing list. As the Board was informed at its meeting, that message was generated by the appellants' central marketing team in England; the local manager believed that it did not conflict with any of the Board's requirements; and when the Board's licensing standards officer indicated a contrary view of the interpretation of that policy the promotion was immediately withdrawn as respects the Glasgow premises.
(iv) Two naked dancers: On 2 May 2009, when viewing the premises by means of closed circuit television, a licensing officer noticed at 23.45 hours that two of the dancers removed their lower garments to knee level thereby exposing the genital area. It was explained to the Board at its meeting that the two ladies in question were engaged only for that evening; that they were told at a "briefing" to retain their bikini bottoms; but they were accustomed to different practice in Edinburgh, whence they came. The actions of those two ladies were thus seen as infractions of the provision of the Board's code of practice which states: "Dancers' genitalia should be covered at all times."
(v) Contact: On the same occasion, and again using closed circuit television, but in a separate incident, the licensing officer in question reported having seen several dancers "making considerable contact with patrons whilst performing". No further specification was afforded in the report or in the proceedings before the Board. This inspecific allegation was said to be in conflict with the injunction in the code of practice that:
"There should be no touching between dancers and patrons at any time during a performance, the only contact allowed being the hand to hand payment of money at the conclusion of the performance."
[10] In addition to those five alleged breaches
of the Board's non statutory code of practice, the report from the licensing
standards officer also mentioned that the officer had received an
unsubstantiated allegation that employees of the appellants handing out flyers
[scilicet the flyers previously referred to] had unzipped their catsuits
and exposed their breasts. This suggestion was strongly disputed by the
appellants before the Board. Notwithstanding the recognition by the licensing
standards officer that this allegation could not be substantiated, the Board in
the stated case says:
"While the Board could not establish whether or not the alleged incident had taken place, it was nonetheless concerned regarding the nature of the allegations against a background of a number of admitted breaches of its Code of Practice which had occurred over a very short period of time despite the undertaking and assurances it had been given as recently as the meeting on 6 April 2009. For the avoidance of doubt, while the Board was of the view that there was a certain amount of credence to the allegations against the background described, they did not attach any particular weight to this matter in determining whether or not to grant the application."
As the note of argument for the appellants records, and as the Dean of Faculty observed in the course of his oral submissions, while the Board says that it did not attach particular weight to this allegation, the Board evidently gave it some weight and credence, and thus proceeded at least in part upon an allegation which was recognised as being wholly unsubstantiated.
Submissions for the appellants
[11] While thus proceeding upon an
unsubstantiated allegation might open the Board's refusal of the application
for a premises licence to successful challenge on the basis that they gave
weight to an allegation which was unsubstantiated, the principal argument for
the appellants advanced by the Dean of Faculty was of a wider and more
fundamental nature.
[12] In summary, the Dean of Faculty submitted
that the single function given to a licensing board under the 2005 Act was that
of licensing the sale of alcohol; and the powers to licence the sale of alcohol
could not be deployed to effect objectives not related to the sale of alcohol, but
which the licensing board might yet find desirable. The generality of the
objectives described in the 2005 Act as licensing objectives - such as
"protecting and improving public health" - did not give to a licensing board,
properly exercising its function under the 2005 Act, power to lay down
conditions, however desirable those conditions might be seen, which were not
linked to the selling of alcohol. By way of example, the Dean of Faculty
instanced the imposition upon public houses and restaurants of a condition, or
a policy - in the interests, and thus serving the objective, of improving
public health - requiring that no meat pies or potato chips might be sold
unless also accompanied by an organically produced vegetable or salad.
[13] In advancing the proposition that in
refusing the appellants' licence application on the basis upon which it did the
Board proceeded upon a misconception of its powers and functions, the Dean of
Faculty examined various provisions of the 2005 Act. Part 1 of the Act,
titled "Core Provisions", contained in section 1 the primary or leading
provision, namely that alcohol is not to be sold on any premises
[1] except under and in accordance
with a premises licence or an occasional licence
[2].
Sections 2 and 3 were essentially supplementary, by giving definition to
alcohol and the notion of sale. Section 4 catalogued the licensing
objectives - already set out above. The Dean of Faculty stressed that the
objectives were licensing objectives which, it was submitted, thus related back
to the core function of a licensing board, which was the licensing of the sale
of alcohol. Consistently with that approach, section 17 defined a
premises licence as meaning "a licence issued by a Licensing Board, under
section 26(1) or 47(2) authorising the sale of alcohol on the premises."
[14] Section 6 of the 2005 Act required a
licensing board to publish a statement of their policy "with respect to the
exercise of their functions under this Act". But, in the light also of inter
alia subsections (3) and (4), the requirement to publish a statement
of policy was publication of a policy as respect the licensing of the sale of
alcohol and the existence of that requirement did not empower a licensing board
to lay down policies on matters not properly related to the licensing of the sale
of alcohol. In that connexion the Dean of Faculty also pointed to the
provisions of section 27 of the 2005 Act regarding the conditions which might
legitimately be placed on the grant of a premises licence. While every
premises licence was subject to the mandatory conditions contained in Schedule
3 to the 2005 Act, the power of a licensing board under section 27(6) to impose
additional conditions was limited by the restrictions in section 27(7), of
which paragraph (c) was particularly pertinent. That paragraph provides:
"(c) relates to a matter (such as planning, building control or food hygiene) which is regulated under another enactment."
It was thus evident that the legislature expressly did not intend that a licensing board, whose function was the licensing of the sale of alcohol, should thereby use that function to intervene beyond the proper bounds of that function and trespass on matters subject to regulation by other areas of the law. The same applied as respect matters which were the subject of express regulation by the mandatory conditions. Thus, paragraph 8 of schedule 3 to the 2005 Act defined in detail the notion of an "irresponsible drinks promotion" and it was thus not for a licensing board by the imposition of a particular condition to intervene with or add to that notion.
[15] The Dean of Faculty further pointed to the
terms of the statutory guidance issued by the Scottish Ministers pursuant to
section 142 of the 2005 Act. He referred in particular to paragraphs 1-4,
15, 16, 23, 33, 52, 112, 116, 117 and 126, all of which he submitted were
consistent with and supportive of his construction of the terms of the 2005
Act. It was evident from that statutory guidance that the powers of a
licensing board were directed to the authorisation of the sale of alcohol; and
did not give authorisation for regulation of matters going beyond the proper ambit
of that power.
[16] Following that exposition of principle, the
Dean of Faculty then pointed to aspects of the Board's policy statement
[3] which demonstrated the Board's
misconception of the proper ambit and use of its powers as an authority whose
function was the licensing of the sale of alcohol. Thus the Board's attempt to
regulate the making of a risk assessment respecting the work performed by
dancers (a matter for other authorities, such as the Health and Safety
Executive) went beyond their powers. Similarly, the various other provisions
in the policy statement (or code of practice) relating to the provision of
chilled drinking water for the dancers or the provision of changing facilities
or a kettle for the use of dancers were provisions which took the Board outwith
that proper ambit - unless possibly, in very particular factual circumstances, those
matters could be demonstrated to be properly related in the individual case to
the sale of alcohol. The requirements thus made by the Board might all be very
desirable objectives, but they were not "licensing objectives".
[17] Adverting more particularly to the Board's
decision in the present case, the Dean of Faculty took, as exemplifying the
error of law into which he submitted the Board had fallen, the Board's
treatment of the flyers. As already recorded
[4],
this was seen by the Board as being in breach of the provision in the code of practice
interdicting any display of a naked breast in promotional materials. In the
stated case the Board said:
"In the Board's view this breach with regard to the content of the flyers displayed a blatant disregard for the terms of the Board's Code of Practice, and a lack of respect for the authority of the Board, gave the Board concerns that the future operation of the premises as from 1 September 2009, when the premises licence would take effect if granted, would be inconsistent with the said licensing objectives as set out in the Board's policy on Adult Entertainment in Part 10 of its Licensing Policy Statement. The Board considered that breaches of its current Code of Practice were relative to its determination as to whether the granting of the application would be inconsistent with one or more of the licensing objectives as per terms of said section 23(5)(c)."
That passage showed that the Board proceeded upon the basis that, having edicted a code of practice or policy as respects the extent of nudity which they were prepared to contemplate on promotional materials, any breach of that code of practice or policy could then be translated into inconsistency with the licensing objectives in section 4 of the 2005 Act without the introduction of any consideration of any meaningful link to the sale of alcohol. In other words, the Board took the view that any infraction of its code of practice or policy on various aspects of adult entertainment could be visited by the deprivation of a licence to sell alcohol, notwithstanding the absence of any objective relationship of the infraction to its effect, so far as the licensing objectives were concerned, of the sale of alcohol. That constituted a material error of law.
Submissions for the Board
[18] In response to the argument thus advanced
for the appellants, counsel for the Board submitted first that the appellants'
approach, which she described as a full frontal approach, constituted an attack
upon the vires of the Board's policy (at least as respects the
provisions of the policy respecting adult entertainment). If the vires
of the policy were to be challenged, that ought to have been done by a petition
for judicial review. Not having adopted that course, the policy statement
stood, and could not be questioned in an appeal under the 2005 Act against a
refusal of a premises licence on the basis of that policy.
[19] Counsel for the Board then renewed the
submission made to, and in large measure accepted by, the sheriff, the essence
of which is encapsulated in paragraphs [25] and [26] of the note to the
sheriff's interlocutor in which the sheriff says:
"[25] The preamble to the 2005 Act, in my opinion, undermines the appellants' central proposition regarding the need to focus upon the sale of alcohol and not beyond. The Act is said '... to make provision for regulating the sale of alcohol, and for regulating licensed premises and other premises on which alcohol is sold, and for connected purposes'. The preamble is, in effect, replicated at paragraph 15 of the ministerial guidance document. Therefore, the Act itself is not merely 'about regulating the sale of alcohol'. It is, additionally, designed to make provision '... for regulating licensed premises and other premises on which alcohol is sold.'
[26] The analysis of
the way in which the 2005 Act operates requires to be taken further. The Act
itself makes it obligatory for every licensing board to publish a licensing
policy statement (see section 6); section 142 of the Act provides for the issue
of ministerial guidance to licensing boards and obliges each board to have
regard to such guidance; and certain conditions can be attached to premises'
licences (see section 27). Senior counsel for the board in the present appeal
referred to all of these features as substantiating her submission to the
effect that the 2005 Act had created an interlocking, schematic arrangement
with a far broader impact than the old 1976 Act legislation. In my view, it
is, impossible to escape that conclusion."
[20] Counsel for the Board further observed that
under the former régime adult entertainment might be regulated by licensing
requirements - at the option of the local authority - under section 41 of the
Civic Government (Scotland) Act 1982 if no alcohol were sold at the entertainment; but if alcohol
were sold, an entertainment licence under the 1976 Act was required. The code
of practice to which the Board had referred in the stated case had been drawn
up, albeit with no statutory authorisation, by the Board in respect of
entertainment licences under the 1976 Act. Schedule 5 to the Premises Licences
(Scotland) Regulations 2007 (SSI
2007/452) included adult entertainment as an activity which might be included
in the necessary operating plan. So, said counsel, it was "explicit" that adult
entertainment was to be regulated under the 2005 Act. In incorporating its
non-statutory code of practice into the statement of licence policy published
under section 6 of the 2005 Act, the Board was simply securing continuity in
its regulatory approach to all aspects of activity on any licensed premises in
which adult entertainment took place.
[21] As to the particular circumstances of the
present appeal, counsel for the Board submitted that compliance by a licensee with
other regulatory regimes - such as health and safety requirements - might not
always be an irrelevant consideration in determining an application for a
premises licence. The concern of the Board in the present case was that there
had been instances in which its code of practice had not been fully observed.
The number of those instances could be seen as justifiably creating an
apprehension that their code of practice, incorporated into their policy
statement, might similarly not be fully observed in the future.
Discussion and decision
[22] In considering these competing submissions
we deal first with the contention advanced on behalf of the Board that the
appellants' argument involved an attack on the vires of the policy
statement published in terms of section 6 of the 2005 Act and that, absent any
successful proceedings by way of judicial review in the supreme court, in the
exercise of its supervisory jurisdiction, no aspect of the policy set out by
the Board could be impugned in an appeal to the sheriff principal under the
statutory provisions of the 2005 Act.
[23] We do not accept that contention. As the
Dean of Faculty pointed out, since section 123 of the 2005 Act gives a right of
appeal on, inter alia, a point of law, any petition for judicial review
would encounter the objection that resort to the supervisory jurisdiction of
the Court of Session was not appropriate where statute provided a right of
appeal on such a ground. Further, in the absence of a decision in concreto
applying the policy, the objection of lack of title and interest might also be
taken to a petition for judicial review. If the particular aspect of the
statement of policy upon which a licensing board sought to rely in refusing an
application for a licence were beyond its proper powers, that, in our view,
constitutes a point of law susceptible of decision as part of the statutory
appeal.
[24] Turning to the substance of the issues
before us, we consider that, in general terms, there is force in the submission
advanced on behalf of the appellants that, on a proper construction of the
statute, the essential function conferred on a licensing board by the 2005 Act is
that of licensing the sale of alcohol. It is, in our view, clear from what the
2005 Act terms its "core provisions" that the statute is concerned with the
regulation of the sale of alcohol by means of the grant of licences. Of
significance also, in our view, are the terms of section 27(7) of the 2005 Act
which limit the extent to which a licensing board may impose particular
conditions. In particular, a licensing board may not impose such a condition
which "relates to a matter (such as planning, building control or food hygiene)
which is regulated by another enactment." Counsel for the Board accepted, in
our view rightly, that by the means of including, and insisting in the
observance of, provisions in its published licensing policy statement, a
licensing board could not thereby indirectly impose conditions upon a licensee
which it would not be empowered to impose under section 27 in an individual case.
Accordingly, the inclusion in a published policy statement of provisions
purporting to regulate activities on, and off, licensed premises does not give
those provisions any status going beyond the proper exercise by a licensing
board of its function of licensing the sale of alcohol.
[25] The contention advanced by counsel for the
Board and accepted by the sheriff that the 2005 Act created "an interlocking,
schematic arrangement with a far broader impact than the old Act" proceeds to a
material extent upon the inclusion in the preamble to, or the long title of,
the 2005 Act of the words which we have already set out as part of the quotation
of paragraph [25] of the sheriff's note. However, in our view, it is to
the particular scheme and provisions of the legislative text to which regard
must properly be had in judging the true meaning and effect of the
legislation. In our opinion, the terms of the 2005 Act were not demonstrated
by counsel for the Board to yield a construction of the function, and proper
ambit of that function, other than that for which, in broad terms, the Dean of
Faculty contended. Counsel for the Board placed some emphasis on the fact
that, under the former régime, the Board had put in place its code of practice
for adult entertainment establishments in Glasgow and suggested that the 2005 Act
envisaged and provided for the continuity of such regulations. But, as she
accepted, there was no statutory basis for the promulgation of such a code of practice;
so it is difficult to see any legislative intent to continue in existence a code
of practice for which there was no foundation in the pre-existing legislation.
[26] With those observations, we turn to the
notion of "licensing objectives" as catalogued in section 4(1) of the 2005 Act,
in the particular context of refusal of a licence on the ground of refusal set
out in section 23(5)(c) of the statute. While the objectives so catalogued are
couched in very general terms such as "preventing crime and disorder", it is
important to note that those objectives are not, so to speak, "freestanding".
They are qualified by the introductory reference to their being "licensing"
objectives. Since the licensing with which the statute is concerned is the
licensing of the sale of alcohol, it follows in our view that, in the context
of section 23(5)(c) of the statute, inconsistency with a licensing
objective is inconsistency flowing from the permitting of the sale of alcohol
on the premises in question. The fact that the objectives listed in section 4
of the 2005 Act are all desirable in a general sense does not empower a
licensing board to insist on matters which, while perhaps unquestionably
desirable in that sense, are nevertheless not linked to the sale of alcohol.
For a licensing board so to insist would be to divert a power from its proper
purpose - to use the terminology of French administrative law - a "détournement
de pouvoir".
[27] In light of the foregoing, it appears to us
that the contention for the appellants that, in refusing the application for a
premises licence in respect of their Drury Street premises, the Board has not
appreciated or applied the proper statutory test is well founded. In essence,
the approach of the Board is that of starting with their previous code of practice,
drawn up without statutory warrant; then recording breach of certain provisions
of that edict, none of which arose from or were related to the sale of alcohol;
and from the existence of those past breaches concluding that the licence
application should be refused. We consider that in approaching matters in that
way the Board thus did not properly address the statutory test.
[28] In an endeavour to illustrate what we mean
by what we have just said, we take the first of the breaches - an employee
being unaware of the location in the nightclub of the risk assessment -scilicet
of the work activity of a lap dancer. It may possibly be advantageous
that, as the Board purports to insist, all employees have access to all risk
assessment reports prepared by or on behalf of the employer (albeit that
counsel for the Board was unable to point us to any equivalent stipulation in any
of the many provisions of the health and safety legislation). But that plainly
does not mean that, on that account, the sale of alcohol in Spearmint Rhino is
inconsistent with a licensing objective. Turning to the second breach - the
flyers - while it may be that on a close examination of the offending flyer an
observer might conclude that the artist had not plainly demonstrated the
presence of a garment covering the breasts of the two ladies whom he
depicted with the consequence that there was thus, in the view of the Board, a
breach of their code of practice, it is not evident, and is not explained by
the Board why that incident can properly be said to be make the sale of alcohol
at the premises inconsistent with a licensing objective. Further illustration of
the erroneous approach is, we think, otiose, since the erroneous approach to
either or both those aspects vitiates the decision.
[29] For these reasons we consider that this
appeal must succeed.
Disposal
[30] Counsel addressed us on the appropriate
disposal should we reach that view. Put shortly, counsel for the Board moved
that the matter be remitted to the Board for reconsideration in light of the
judgment of this court - and also the trading which has continued pending
resolution of the appeal process. For the appellants, the Dean of Faculty
contended that the matter be remitted to the sheriff with a direction that he
grant the licence. It was evident, he said, that the Board had developed an
entrenched view on matters of adult entertainment and the sanctity of their
code of practice, both of which made any remit to the Board inappropriate.
[31] On this matter, we observe that there are
cases in which, as counsel for the Board recognised, the issue for the
appellate court may be entirely a matter of law, upon the resolution of which
it is incontrovertible that the application for the licence in issue must be
granted. In those cases remit for reconsideration is pointless. The Dean of
Faculty did not submit that the present case came within that category. A further
category in which the judiciary may direct the grant of a licence is that in
which the licensing authority has behaved in such a manner that - put shortly -
it plainly cannot be seen as able to approach reconsideration fairly and
without bias. Those cases apart, it seems to us that licences should, in
principle, be granted by the licensing authority, after full and proper
consideration and with regard to such guidance as may have been given by the
Court.
[32] The intemperate language deployed by the chairman
of the Board, deprecated by the sheriff in paragraph [36] of his note, has
caused us to have some hesitation whether the application with which this
appeal is concerned should properly be remitted to the Board for
reconsideration. But in the event we have come to the view that, given that the
error of the Board in refusing the application is essentially a failure to
appreciate the proper statutory test to be applied and the limitations on the
use of its licensing powers under the 2005 Act, we should nonetheless not
direct the granting of a licence but allow the Board an opportunity for such re
-consideration as may be open in the light of the terms of this Opinion.
[33] Accordingly, we recall the interlocutor of
the sheriff of 12 May 2010 against which this appeal is directed. In its place we
answer the first question in the stated case in the positive, for the grounds
which we have already set out. It is unnecessary for us to answer the second
question in the stated case (upon which, in any event, no argument was
advanced). And we remit to the Board for re-consideration of the application.
[1] "Premises" is defined in section 147 as meaning any place and as
including a vehicle, vessel or moveable structure.
[2] Nothing turns, for the purposes of this appeal on the provisions of
the Act respecting occasional licenses.
[3] The submissions for the appellants preceded the submissions for the
Board in the course of which counsel confirmed that the references in the
stated case were to the Code of Practice, later incorporated without material
textual alteration into the policy statement.
[4] See paragraph [9] (ii) above.