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Scottish Sheriff Court Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Sheriff Court Decisions >> Campbell v. The Chief Constable Northern Constabulary [2008] ScotSC 13 (06 May 2008)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotSC/2008/13.html
Cite as: [2008] ScotSC 13, 2009 GWD 1-7, 2009 SLT (Sh Ct) 2

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SHERIFFDOM OF GRAMPIAN HIGHLAND AND ISLANDS AT DINGWALL

 

B20/07

JUDGEMENT

 

of

 

SHERIFF PRINCIPAL SIR STEPHEN S T YOUNG Bt QC

 

in the cause

 

RUAIRAIDH MICHAEL WESTON CAMPBELL

 

Pursuer and Appellant

 

against

 

THE CHIEF CONSTABLE, NORTHERN CONSTABULARY

 

Defender and Respondent

 

 

 

 

 

Act: Mr Robert McDonald, solicitor, Stronachs, Inverness

Alt: Mrs Victoria Leslie, solicitor, Ledingham Chalmers, Inverness

 

 

Dingwall: 6th May 2008

 

The sheriff principal, having resumed consideration of the cause, refuses the appeal and adheres to the interlocutor of the sheriff dated 1 February 2008; finds the pursuer and appellant liable to the defender and respondent in the expenses of the appeal and allows an account thereof to be given in and remits the same, when lodged, to the auditor of court to tax and to report; quoad ultra remits the cause to the sheriff to proceed as accords.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Note

 

[1] In this case the pursuer and appellant is a young man who was born on 17 September 1987. He resides at Leanaig Cottage, Conon Bridge, Ross-shire. His father, Mr Michael Campbell, also resides there. On 10 July 2006 the defender and respondent issued a firearm certificate to the pursuer. This contained an additional condition in the following terms: "The rifles to which this certificate relates must be stored with a registered firearms dealer when not in use". The pursuer took issue with this condition and in January 2007 formally requested the defender to remove it. By letter dated 22 January 2007 the defender refused this request. The pursuer thereafter appealed to the sheriff against this decision in terms of section 44 of the Firearms Act 1968 as amended. The appeal proceeded by way of a summary application and in due course the sheriff heard evidence and submissions from the parties. Thereafter, by interlocutor dated 1 February 2008, he refused the appeal and confirmed the defender's refusal to vary the terms of the pursuer's firearm certificate. It is this interlocutor which is the subject of the present appeal to myself.

 

[2] Section 29 of the Act deals with the variation of firearm certificates. In particular, section 29(2) provides: "A firearm certificate may also, on the application of the holder, be varied from time to time by the chief officer of police for the area in which the holder for the time being resides; and a person aggrieved by the refusal of a chief officer of police to vary a firearm certificate may in accordance with section 44 of this Act appeal against the refusal". In the context of this case section 44 provides, in short, that the appeal should be to the sheriff, that it should be determined on the merits (and not by way of review), and that the sheriff may consider any evidence or other matter, whether or not it was available when the decision of the chief officer was taken. In terms of paragraph 4 of Part III of Schedule 5 to the Act the decision of the sheriff on an appeal may itself be appealed only on a point of law.

 

[3] The circumstances in which the condition complained of by the pursuer came to be imposed by the defender are set out in the sheriff's findings in fact 7 - 25 inclusive. These read as follows:

 

7. Also resident at Leanaig Cottage, aforesaid was, and is, the pursuer's father, Michael Campbell ('Mr Campbell').

 

8. Mr Campbell previously held shotgun and firearms certificates. Those were revoked by the defender on 25 August 2004. Those revocations followed an incident on 29 July 2004 in the Court of Session, Parliament House, Edinburgh, during which Mr. Campbell issued a threat against an advocate who had represented a party in an action between that other party and Mr Campbell. In respect of his conduct on that occasion, Mr Campbell was subsequently convicted of breach of the peace at Edinburgh Sheriff Court and was sentenced to carry out 80 hours of community service.

 

9. During the period leading up to the revocation of Mr Campbell's shotgun and firearms certificates, Mr Campbell behaved in an overbearing, bullying and harassing manner towards police officers and civilian staff of Northern Constabulary dealing with his case.

 

10. During the period leading up to the grant of the pursuer's application for a firearms certificate in 2007, Mr Campbell behaved in a similar manner towards police officers and civilian staff of Northern Constabulary dealing with the pursuer's case.

 

11. Other than by the lodging of the application, the pursuer did not have any direct dealings with Northern Constabulary.

 

12. The pursuer shares his home with an individual who has had his shotgun and firearms certificates revoked, following a conviction for breach of the peace involving the making of a threat, and who has demonstrated that he is willing to indulge in overbearing, bullying and harassing conduct in order to achieve his desired ends.

 

13. That individual, being the pursuer's father, has the natural influence as such over his son. The pursuer would be unlikely to resist or refuse any request by his father for access to firearms or ammunition.

 

14. The defender was apprehensive that if the pursuer stored firearms and ammunition at Leanaig Cottage, he would allow Mr Campbell access to them.

 

15. In those circumstances the storage, when not in use, of firearms and ammunition at Leanaig Cottage, would present danger to the public safety. If Michael Campbell obtained ready access to firearms and ammunition at his home, there would be a risk to the public safety in that he is an individual whose own firearms and shotgun certificates have been revoked.

 

16. The defender's primary objective is that so long as the pursuer and Mr Campbell reside in the same house, the pursuer should not store his firearms or ammunition there.

 

17. If firearms and ammunition are not stored at Leanaig Cottage, then the pursuer's father would not have ready access to them.

 

18. The condition referred to in finding in fact 5 achieves the objectives described in findings in fact 16 and 17.

 

19. Following the pursuer was willing to alter the condition so that it would read 'The firearms and ammunition to which this certificate relates must not be stored at the holder's home address of Leanaig Cottage, Conon Bridge.' That amended condition would have achieved the same objectives.

 

20. Otherwise, as an individual, the pursuer is fit to be entrusted with a firearm and is not a person prohibited from possessing a firearm. The pursuer has a good reason for having in his possession, or for purchasing or acquiring, the firearms in respect of which his certificate was granted.

 

21. The pursuer requires a firearms certificate in order to acquire firearms to pursue shooting and deer stalking as a pastime.

 

22. The condition referred to is not so onerous or restrictive as to prevent the pursuer altogether from pursuing those pastimes.

 

23. Storage of firearms in a secure gun room in an estate on which the pursuer was engaged in a shoot would not contravene the terms of the pursuer's firearms certificate.

 

24. There are three registered firearms dealers with premises within easy travelling distance of the pursuer's home, namely in Dingwall and Evanton, both Ross-shire.

 

25. Without the inclusion of the condition, or another condition effectively forbidding the storage of firearms and ammunition at a house shared by the pursuer and Mr Campbell, the defender would have refused the pursuer's application for a firearms certificate.

 

[4] In light of these findings in fact the sheriff found in law as follows:

 

The condition complained of being permitted by the Firearms Act 1968 as amended, being reasonable in the circumstances and proportionate and necessary to prevent danger to the public safety, the terms of the pursuer's firearms certificate do not require variation.

 

[5] Opening the appeal, the pursuer's solicitor accepted that the sheriff had applied the correct test as set out in his finding in law, that the pursuer was bound by the terms of the sheriff's findings in fact and that the sheriff's decision could be appealed only on a point of law. In light of this last consideration he acknowledged that the question was not whether an appeal court would come to a different view on the matter from that which was reached by the sheriff. For the present appeal to succeed it had to be demonstrated on the basis of his findings in fact that the decision reached by the sheriff had been plainly wrong. Reference was made to findings in fact 8, 9, 10, 12, 13, 14 and 15 and it was submitted, as I understood the pursuer's solicitor, that these findings in fact could not reasonably support the conclusion that there would be a threat to public safety if the firearms in question were kept in a house occupied by Mr Campbell senior. It was, said the pursuer's solicitor, illogical to find that there would be a threat to public safety by reason of the firearms being stored at the pursuer's home on the basis that he would be unable to resist his father's influence and at the same time to hold that he would somehow be able to resist this influence elsewhere, for example in the premises of a registered gun dealer only a few miles away. If Mr Campbell senior seriously wished to have access to his son's firearms and was able to exert an influence over him, he would clearly be able to insist upon his son collecting the weapons for him at the premises of a nearby gun dealer. In addition, the sheriff had not made any finding in fact to the effect that Mr Campbell senior had previously exerted any influence on his son and in this situation the sheriff had relied simply on the fact of their relationship in support of the assertion that the son would be unable to resist his father's influence. Reference was made to Jackson v Chief Constable of Tayside Police 1993 SCLR 160 and in summary it was submitted that the sheriff's decision had been plainly wrong in two respects in particular, namely (1) in relying solely upon the relationship of father and son to support the conclusion in finding in fact 13 that the pursuer would be unlikely to resist or refuse any request by his father for access to firearms or ammunition, and (2) in holding that the pursuer would be a fit and proper person to have possession of firearms so long as he did not keep them at home, the suggestion being that outwith the home he would be able to resist his father in a way that he could not do so at home. Finally, the pursuer's solicitor drew attention to what was said by Sheriff Principal Dunlop QC in Gordon v Bald (Perth Sheriff Court, 28 September 2004) at paragraph 36 where he stated: "In a statutory scheme which restricts the present appeal to one on a point of law only it matters not whether I would have reached a different view, provided the sheriff has not reached a conclusion which, on the basis of the findings in fact, was plainly wrong". In the present case, said the pursuer's solicitor, the sheriff's decision had been plainly wrong and the appeal should therefore be allowed.

 

[6] In response, the defender's solicitor submitted in short that the sheriff had been entitled to reach the decision which he had on the evidence that he had heard, that he had not erred in law in doing so and that his decision was not contrary to any statutory test or provision to be found in the Act. He had been entitled to attach such weight as he considered appropriate to the facts found by him and an appellate court was not entitled to interfere with the balancing exercise which had been carried out by the sheriff unless it had produced a result which was plainly wrong, which was not the case here. In light of the findings in fact made by him the sheriff had been correct to find that the additional condition imposed by the defender had been necessary to prevent danger to the public safety. Referring in particular to the sheriff's finding in fact 13, the defender's solicitor submitted that this had been based not simply on the relationship between the pursuer and his father but also upon the evidence of Mr Campbell senior's past behaviour. The defender's solicitor also drew attention to the pursuer's evidence to the effect that he held the only set of keys to the gun cupboard in the family home and how there had previously been another set of keys which had been lost, either by him or by his father, in about 2000. It was pointed out that the sheriff had not found this account of the loss of the second set of keys to be credible or reliable, and in all the circumstances it was submitted that the sheriff had not erred in law and it had not been shown that his decision was plainly wrong. The appeal should therefore be refused.

 

[7] In my opinion the submissions for the defender are to be preferred. Dealing firstly with the attack upon the second sentence in finding in fact 13, I have difficulty in understanding how the pursuer's solicitor could accept that he was bound by the sheriff's findings in fact and at the same time challenge the second sentence in finding in fact 13 on the basis essentially that it was not supported by the earlier findings in fact. In any event, it seems to me that these earlier findings, narrating as they do the circumstances of Mr Campbell senior's conviction at Edinburgh Sheriff Court and his having behaved in an overbearing, bullying and harassing manner towards police officers and civilian staff of Northern Constabulary, amply justify the sheriff's finding that the pursuer would be unlikely to resist or refuse any request by his father for access to firearms or ammunition. In this context it is important to notice that the occasions upon which Mr Campbell senior had behaved in the manner described towards police officers and civilian staff of Northern Constabulary had not been isolated incidents but had occurred frequently over a significant period of time. Thus Chief Superintendent Laurie Stewart who gave evidence before the sheriff and whom the sheriff found to be credible and reliable described, according to the sheriff (see paragraph [20] of his note), the many "dozens and dozens" of difficult calls he and his staff personally had received from Mr Campbell senior, and as the sheriff records in paragraph [23] of his note Mr Stewart "clearly considered that his patience had been severely tested over the years by the behaviour of the pursuer's father towards him and those for whom he bore responsibility at work ...... He had personal experience of the overbearing, bullying manner of Mr Campbell senior and questioned whether if that behaviour were directed at the pursuer ....... he could withstand it". The pursuer is even now aged only 20 and the sheriff's finding in the first sentence of his finding in fact 13 that Mr Campbell senior, being the pursuer's father, has the natural influence as such over his son was not challenged by the pursuer's solicitor. The sheriff of course had the advantage denied to an appeal court of having seen the pursuer as he gave his evidence and he (the sheriff) records in paragraph [11] of his note that it seemed to him that the pursuer "became quite uncomfortable in the witness box when being cross-examined about the issue of the keys and access to the gun cabinet" (in the family home). In all the circumstances I am quite unable to hold that the sheriff was plainly wrong to have found as he did in the second sentence of finding in fact 13.

 

[8] As for the supposedly illogical approach of the sheriff in adhering to the additional condition imposed by the defender, it seems to me that there is a clear distinction to be drawn between the circumstances of the pursuer and his father being at home together with firearms stored in a gun cabinet there and the circumstances of the pursuer having left the home on a shooting expedition, proceeding to the premises of a registered firearms dealer to collect his firearms and thence to an estate and finally returning his firearms to the dealer's premises before going home. Plainly there must be a risk that, even when he is engaged upon such an expedition, his father will prevail upon him to hand over a firearm and ammunition. But it does seem to me to be reasonable to conclude that the risk of Mr Campbell senior prevailing in this way upon the pursuer would be greater when the two of them were at home and firearms were stored in a gun cupboard there than when the firearms were stored elsewhere and the pursuer had at least to make a conscious decision to go and collect his firearms and take them on a shooting expedition, and had also the time and space to reflect which would not necessarily be afforded to him within the confines of the family home. The sheriff dealt with this aspect of the matter in particular at paragraphs [39] to [44] of his note where he wrote:

 

[39] Given the unsatisfactory nature of the pursuer's evidence regarding the keys, I was unable to find that Michael Campbell could only access the gun cabinet if the pursuer were present.

 

[40] It was correct that if, for example, the pursuer called at the registered firearms dealer and collected his firearm and thereafter simply handed it over to his father, that such conduct would not be prevented by the condition. However, that would still require the active participation by the pursuer. In my view such a scenario could not be described as Michael Campbell obtaining ready access to a firearm. In contrast, the fact that the pursuer shared a home, containing firearms, with his father who had been demonstrated to be an individual willing to resort to bullying and threatening behaviour might well lead to the conclusion that he could easily persuade or obtain the consent of his 19 year old son to allow him access to a firearm. In my view the easy access to a firearm by an individual capable of such conduct clearly raised a concern of public safety.

 

[41] The evidence regarding the whereabouts or loss of a second set of keys was unsatisfactory. That also raised a question about public safety.

 

[42] It also seemed to me to be logical to at least place an impediment or delay in the way of access by Michael Campbell to firearms by the forbidding of the pursuer from storing his firearms at home. The problem was the presence in the pursuer's home of Michael Campbell. The condition presented a solution to that problem, at the same time recognising the pursuer's fitness as an individual to be entrusted with a firearm and acknowledging that he had good reason to possess, purchase or acquire a firearm.

 

[43] It did not seem to me that the condition complained of was so restrictive or limiting of the pursuer's intended use of firearms as to be unreasonable.

 

[44] I therefore concluded that the condition was perfectly reasonable, its inclusion in the certificate logical and that the public safety would be endangered by its removal. The appeal therefore failed.

 

[9] Once again, I am quite unable to hold that the sheriff's decision here was plainly wrong. On the contrary, it appears to me that it was perfectly reasonable and in all the circumstances, there having been no error of law on his part, this appeal must be refused.

 

[10] For the sake of completeness I should perhaps mention that the pursuer's solicitor did not seek to support the third and fourth grounds of appeal and his submissions in support of the first, second and fifth grounds were as I have sought to summarise them above.

 

[11] It was not in dispute that the expenses of the appeal should follow success.


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