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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Strickson, R (on the application of) v Preston County Court & Ors [2007] EWCA Civ 1132 (08 October 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2007/1132.html Cite as: [2007] EWCA Civ 1132 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
(MR JUSTICE GOLDRING)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE GAGE
and
LORD JUSTICE RIMER
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THE QUEEN ON THE APPLICATION OF STRICKSON |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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PRESTON COUNTY COURT & ORS |
Respondent |
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Mr C Eccles (instructed by Messrs Halliwells, Forbes, & T Sols) appeared on behalf of the Respondent.
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Laws:
"1) The time for service of the claim form is extended to 4pm on the 23 December 2003.
2) Any further application is to be made on notice to the other parties.
3) A Copy of the claim form and all applications and orders to be sent by the claimant to the Defendant by 30 September 2003."
"The time for service of the claim form is extended until the expiry of 35 days following receipt by the claimant's solicitors of the documents requested of the defendants in this order."
"If the defendant – (a) files an acknowledgement of service; and (b) does not make such an application within the period specified in paragraph (4), he is to be treated as having accepted that the court has jurisdiction to try the claim."
"…the issue of waiver is clearly resolved by CPR Pt 11."
And paragraph 35:
"[T]here can be no doubt that, on the facts of the present case, the effect of CPR r 11(5) is that the defendant is to be treated as having accepted that the court has jurisdiction to try the claim."
"While any waiver by the defendants would have been relevant to the exercise of the District Judge's discretion in that regard, it would not have prevented him doing so [I interpolate that is ordering a strike out under part 3(3)]. Had the District Judge approached the matter in that way it seems probable, given the tenor of his judgment, that he would have struck the case out on that basis: that the Circuit Judge would have agreed with that decision. If that had happened the decision might well have been unimpeachable as within the court's discretion."
"66. The words of CPR 11 are clear. There is nothing to limit them in the way he submits. [That is a reference to Mr Eccles' submissions for the respondents]. The principle in Uphill is, it seems to me, clear. Although there are factual differences between it and the present case, I find it difficult to limit its ambit in the way suggested. Albeit the claim form was definitive in Uphill the position was that valid service of that claim form did not take place. Here, a draft was sent to the right person (eventually). In principle I can see no difference between invalid service and no service. In both cases the essential challenge was to jurisdiction. Such a challenge requires that the provisions of CPR 11 are complied with. I cannot see that the factual differences between the two cases affect that principle. Uphill does not ride roughshod over the CPR. It is based upon the CPR…"
"68. In short, not only do I conclude permission to appeal should have been granted, but that on proper application of the law, the defendants' argument on jurisdiction should not have succeeded."
"53. The same cannot be said in relation to decisions of district judges in respect of which appeals lie, if permission is given, to a circuit judge. There is a right to seek permission to appeal against such decisions, and to renew the application at an oral hearing if it is refused on paper. The decision challenged will, in this way, be open to a review by a judge. That review can consider any challenge that is made to the jurisdiction of the judge below. It can also consider the merits of any attack that may be made on the conclusions of the judge below in relation to any matter, be it fact, law or the basis upon which a discretion has been exercised. If grounds for appeal are held to exist, a full appeal will follow.
54. This scheme we consider provides the litigant with fair, adequate and proportionate protection against the risk that the judge of the lower court may have acted without jurisdiction or fallen into error. The substantive issue will have been considered by a judge of a court at two levels. On what basis can it be argued that the decision of the judge of the appeal court should be open to further judicial review? The answer, as a matter of jurisprudential theory, is that the judge in question has limited statutory jurisdiction and that it must be open to the High Court to review whether that jurisdiction has been exceeded. But the possibility that a circuit judge may exceed his jurisdiction, in the narrow pre-Anisminic sense, where that jurisdiction is the statutory power to determine an application for permission to appeal from the decision of a district judge, is patently unlikely. In such circumstances an application for judicial review is likely to be founded on the assertion by the litigant that the circuit judge was wrong to conclude that the attack on the decision of the district judge was without merit. The attack is likely to be misconceived, as exemplified by the cases before us. We do not consider that judges of the Administrative Court should be required to devote time to considering applications for permission to claim judicial review on grounds such as these. They should dismiss them summarily in the exercise of their discretion. The ground for so doing is that Parliament has put in place an adequate system for reviewing the merits of decisions made by district judges and it is not appropriate that there should be further review of these by the High Court. This, we believe, reflects the intention of Parliament when enacting section 54(4) of the 1999 Act. While Parliament did not legislate to remove the jurisdiction of the High Court judicially to review decisions of county court judges to grant or refuse permission to appeal, we do not believe that Parliament can have anticipated the spate of applications for judicial review that section 54(4) appears to have spawned
55. Everything that we have said should be applied equally to an application for permission to claim judicial review of the decision of a judge of a county court granting permission to appeal. We are not aware that such an application has yet been made.
Exceptional circumstances
56. The possibility remains that there may be very rare cases where a litigant challenges the jurisdiction of a circuit judge giving or refusing permission to appeal on the ground of jurisdictional error in the narrow, pre-Anisminic sense, or procedural irregularity of such a kind as to constitute a denial of the applicant's right to a fair hearing. If such grounds are made out we consider that a proper case for judicial review will have been established."
"39. In Sivasubramaniam's case this court was at pains to emphasise the narrowness of the gap left open by its decision. A mere error of law by the circuit judge in the county court would not be sufficient. The possibility was confined to 'very rare cases', on the ground of an excess of jurisdiction in 'the narrow pre Anisminic sense', or the denial of the right to a fair hearing…"
"40. Unfortunately, as the court recognised, the cases before Anisminic do not provide clear guidance. A useful summary of the classes of jurisdictional error, recognised by public law before the Anisminic case was decided, is included in the argument of Sidney Templeman QC and Mr Gordon Slynn for the Foreign Compensation Co-mmission: [1969] 2 AC 147 161. Their fourth category is a heterogeneous group of cases which counsel characterised in this way:
'These are difficult cases in that it is sometimes hard to see what the precise point was but it may be possible to build up from them a proposition of general validity that a tribunal has no jurisdiction to make a determination if it has acted in complete disregard of its duties.'
Given that Ridge v Baldwin [1964] AC 40 was among the cases in this group, one sees why this court in Sivasubramaniam's case specifically added the denial of a fair hearing as a class of jurisdictional error; but Mr Templeman's characterisation of the group of pre-Anisminic decisions to which Ridge and Baldwin was assigned goes somewhat wider than the failure to hear which was the vice in that particular case."
"41. We agree, in any event, with the emphasis implied by the words 'complete disregard of its duties'. What is required, at least, is some fundamental departure from the correct procedures."
"[56] … I do not accept that the mere fact that a decision of the Lands Tribunal refusing permission to appeal was obviously wrong in law would be sufficient to justify its being judicially reviewed. Such a basis for judicial review would fly in the face of the conclusion and reasoning in Sivasubramaniam's case and in Gregory v Turner, which appear to me to be applicable in this case for the reasons given above. Before permission to seek judicial review could be granted it would not be enough to show that the refusal of permission to appeal was plainly wrong in law. It would also have to be established that the error was sufficiently grave to justify the case being treated as exceptional."
"[57] I think it appropriate to say, that there could, in my view, be cases, which would be wholly exceptional, where it would be right to consider an application for judicial review of such a decision on the basis of what could be said to be an error of law. A possible example would be if the Lands Tribunal, despite being aware of the position, refused, without any good reason, permission to appeal on a difficult point of law of general application, which had been before a number of different LVT's which had taken different views on it, and which cried out for a definitive answer in the public interest. In that connection, it seems to me that one could say that it was not so much the point of law itself which justified judicial review, but more the failure of a public tribunal to perform its duty to the public, as well as what one might call its duty to the parties in that particular case."
"105 … It seems to us that, however it is analysed, the position is that, where a person dies as a result of what is arguably medical negligence in an NHS hospital, the state must have a system which provides for the practical and effective investigation of the facts and for the determination of civil liability. Unlike in the cases of death in custody, the system does not have to provide for an investigation initiated by the state but may include such an investigation. Thus the question in each case is whether the system as a whole, including both any investigation initiated by the state and the possibility of civil and criminal proceedings and of a disciplinary process, satisfies the requirements of article 2 as identified by the European court in the cases to which we have referred, namely (as just stated) the practical and effective investigation of the facts and the determination of civil liability."
"106. The question is whether the system in operation in England in this case meets those requirements. In our opinion it does. The system includes both the possibility of civil process and, importantly, the inquest. We can understand the point that the possibility of civil proceedings alone might not be sufficient because they do not make financial sense and may not end in a trial at which the issues are investigated. However, in the context of the other procedures available, an inquest of the traditional kind, without any reading down of the 1988 Act by giving a wider meaning to 'how' as envisaged in the Middleton case [2004] 2 AC 182, and provided that it carries out the kind of full and fair investigation which is discussed earlier in this judgment and which (we hope) will now take place, in our opinion satisfies the requirement that there will be a public investigation of the facts which will be both practical and effective. Moreover, the family will be able to take a full part."
Lord Justice Gage:
Lord Justice Rimer:
Order: Appeal dismissed.