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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 >> Hemming (/a Simply Pleasure Ltd) & Ors, R (on the application of) v Westminster City Council (Rev 1) [2013] EWCA Civ 591 (24 May 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2013/591.html Cite as: [2013] PTSR 1377, [2013] EWCA Civ 591, [2013] WLR(D) 203 |
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ON APPEAL FROM the Queen's Bench Division, Administrative Court
The Hon. Mr Justice Keith
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LADY JUSTICE BLACK
and
LORD JUSTICE BEATSON
____________________
The Queen on the application of (1) Timothy Martin Hemming (t/a Simply Pleasure Ltd) (2) James Alan Poulton (3) Harmony Ltd (4) Gatisle Ltd t/a Janus (5) Winart Publications Ltd (6) Darker Enterprises Ltd (7) Swish Publications Ltd |
Respondents |
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- and - |
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The Lord Mayor and Citizens of Westminster |
Appellant |
____________________
Nathalie Lieven QC and Jacqueline Lean (instructed by Westminster City Council) for the Appellant
Hearing date: 14 January 2013
Further submissions: 22, 23, 30 January and 8 February 2013
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Beatson :
I. Overview | 1 |
II. The legal framework | |
(1) The Local Government (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 1982 | 12 |
(2) The Services Directive | 14 |
(3) The 2009 Regulations | 23 |
III. The factual background | 28 |
IV. The judgments | 42 |
V. The grounds of appeal | 56 |
VI. Reference to the CJEC? | 62 |
VII. Analysis | |
(1) The effect of the Services Directive and the 2009 Regulations | 67 |
(a) Are the costs of enforcement the costs of authorisation procedures and formalities? | 70 |
(i) The need for a purposive construction of Article 13(2) and Regulation 18(4) | 72 |
(ii) Guidance from the ECJ and CJEU jurisprudence on fees and charges | 75 |
(iii) The "consequentialist" arguments | 89 |
(iv) Is the construction adopted by the judge inimical to the purposes of the Services Directive | 99 |
(v) The distinction between monitoring and enforcement against licensed operators and unlicensed operators | 101 |
(b) Does the fee charged to successful applicants fall outside Article 13(2) and Regulation 18(4)? | 105 |
(2) The basis upon which restitution is to be made | 110 |
(3) CPR Part 36.14(3) | 139 |
I. Overview:
(1) Notwithstanding the undoubted force of Miss Lieven's submissions, for the reasons I give at [70] [109] the judge's conclusion as to the impact of the Services Directive and the 2009 Regulations was correct.
(2) For the reasons I give at [110] [137], the Council's appeal on the restitution question should be allowed in part. The Council is entitled to calculate the sum due by way of restitution in the following way:-
(a) Between the year ending 31 January 2007 and the year ending 31 January 2010 the amount of the reasonable fee may be calculated retrospectively by calculating the fee for each year, carrying forward any surplus or deficit from previous years.
(b) From the year commencing on 1 February 2010 it is not possible for the fee to reflect the element representing the costs of enforcing the licensing regime against unlicensed operators, and such part of the sums received thereafter as reflect that element was repayable "forthwith", and should be so treated.
(c) The other two elements of the fee, the administrative cost of investigating the background and suitability of applicants, and the cost of monitoring licence-holders' compliance with their terms can continue to be determined carrying forward any surplus or deficit as in (a) until these proceedings were issued in April 2011 and the amount repayable should be determined then.
(3) For the reasons I give at (at [139] [144], I find no misdirection in the way the judge dealt with the issue of costs.
Accordingly, I would dismiss the appeal on the interpretation of the 2009 Regulations and costs, but allow it in part as to the basis on which restitution is to be made.
II. The legal framework:
(1) The Local Government (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 1982
(2) Directive 2006/123/EC, Services in the Internal Market
"The fee which may be charged by points of single contact
should be proportionate to the cost of the procedures and
formalities with which they deal. This should not prevent
Member States from entrusting the points of single contact
with the collection of other administrative fees, such
as the fee of supervisory bodies."
"Authorisation procedures and formalities shall not be dissuasive
and shall not unduly complicate or delay the provision
of the service. They shall be easily accessible and any charges
which the applicants may incur from their application shall be
reasonable and proportionate to the cost of the authorisation
procedures in question and shall not exceed the cost of the
procedures."
Article 13(3) provides that authorisation procedures should provide applicants with a guarantee that, subject to extension if the complexity of the issue justifies it, their applications will be processed as quickly as possible and, in any event, "within a reasonable period which is fixed and made public in advance". By Article 13(4) if there is no response within the period set or extended "authorisation shall be deemed to have been granted".
(3) The 2009 Services Regulations; SI 2009 No. 2999
"Any charges provided for by a competent authority which applicants may incur under an authorisation scheme must be reasonable and proportionate to the cost of the procedures and formalities under the scheme and must not exceed the cost of those procedures and formalities."
"Local authorities must set fees that are proportionate to the effective cost of the procedure dealt with. As costs vary from region to region, central advice on the level of fees will not be appropriate. Local authorities will need to bear in mind the threat of a legal challenge should a service provider feel that the levels of fee are being used as an economic deterrent or to raise funds for local authorities. Enforcement costs should not be assimilated with the application fee. This is to forestall the possibility of an unsuccessful applicant seeking legal remedy due to part of his fee having been used to subsidise his successful competitors." (Page 17, emphasis added).
A separate box stated that "all charges must be proportionate to the effective cost of the procedure dealt with". Earlier in this guidance (at page 8) it is stated that "fees set must be proportionate to the effective cost of the procedure dealt with and must not be used as an economic deterrent".
"Under Regulation 18, fees charged in relation to authorisations must be proportionate to the effective cost of the process e.g. to cover the actual cost of the application process. Fees should not be used as an economic deterrent to certain activities or to raise funds. As now, if you believe the fee to be disproportionate, you can contest it with the authority concerned."
"Under regulation 18, fees charged in relation to authorisations must be proportionate to the effective cost of the process, i.e. must cover no more than the actual cost of the authorisation process. Fees should not be used as an economic deterrent to certain activities or to raise funds. If a service provider believes the fee to be disproportionate, they can contest it with the authority concerned. Enforcement costs should not be assimilated with the application fee." (page 18, emphasis added).
A separate box also stated that the fee had to cover "no more than the actual cost of the authorisation process". The reason given for this was:
" to forestall the possibility of an unsuccessful applicant seeking legal remedy due to part of its fees having been used to subsidise successful competitors."
III. The factual background:
"because 'the level of unlicensed establishments [had] significantly diminished and it [was] hoped that they will be reduced further during 2012', and there would therefore 'be a reduction in officer time and resources in relation to compliance and enforcement for sex establishments in the next licence period'. This review was said to have been prompted by 'the anticipated decrease in compliance/enforcement costs during the next licence period', but you would not have to be unduly sceptical to suspect that the review, and the significant reduction in the level of the fees which flowed from it, was really triggered by the present claim." (first judgment [19]).
IV. The judgments:
"Whatever domestic law had permitted in the past, there had in the future to be, not only a proportionate relationship between the fee which was charged and the cost of the "authorisation procedures", but the fee could not exceed the costs of those procedures. Those procedures are the steps which an applicant for a licence has to take if he wishes to be granted a licence or to have his licence renewed. And when you talk about the cost of those procedures, you are talking about the administrative costs involved, and the costs of vetting the applicants (in the case of applications for a licence) and the costs of investigating their compliance with the terms of their licence (in the case of applications for the renewal of a licence). There is simply no room for the costs of the "authorisation procedures" to include costs which are significantly in excess of those costs. The rationale for that has to have been that if it was otherwise, and if in consequence the fee was a sizeable sum, it might have the effect of dissuading people who might be thinking of setting up business from going into the market at all: the anticipated profit margin might just be too tight. Indeed, if the purpose of the Directive was to remove barriers to entry to the internal market, that purpose might be undermined if the Directive was regarded as permitting member states to allow the fee payable for entry into the market to be many times the cost of considering and processing applications for the relevant licence."
V. The grounds of appeal:
VI. Reference to the CJEC:
VII. Analysis:
(1) The effect of the Services Directive and the 2009 Regulations
(A) Are the costs of enforcement, the costs of authorisation procedures and formalities?
(B) Does the fee charged to successful applicants fall outside Article 13(2) and Regulation 18(4)?
(2) The basis upon which restitution is to be made
"(5) pay to the Claimants for each of the years to which paragraphs (2), (3) and (4) of this Order relates the difference between (a) the sums demanded by way of licence fees and paid by the Claimants and (b) the sums which the [Council] determines to be the fee for a licence to operate a sex establishment ("the excess") within six weeks from the date of such determination."
and
"(7) pay interest to the Claimants on the excess for each year from 1 February in the year in which the excess in question arose until the date of repayment of such excess under paragraph (5) at [specified rates] "
Paragraph (7) was agreed by consent, it seems, in the light of the terms of paragraph (5). Read literally, the requirements that the Council repay the difference "for each of the years" and pay interest on the excess "for each year" appear either to undercut or to be inconsistent with the requirement in paragraphs (2), (3) and (4) of the Order that account be taken of surpluses and deficits from previous years in determining the fee for each year.
Category (a): the administrative cost of investigating the background and suitability of applicants for licences;
Category (b): the cost of monitoring the compliance of those with licences with their terms; and
Category (c): the cost of enforcing the licensing regime against unlicensed operators.
The evidence was (see [34]) that the £26,435 classified as the cost of "the management of the licensing system" which was refundable if the licence was not granted included both (b) and (c). The remaining £2,667 fell within (a).
(3) CPR Part 36.14(3)
Lady Justice Black:
The Master of the Rolls
Note 1 Statement of Home Office Minister of State during the Second Reading debate on the Bill: see HC Debs. 3 February 1982, col. 412. [Back] Note 2 Joined Cases C-71/91 and C-178/91 Ponente Carni SpA and Cispadana Costruzioni SpA v Amministrazione Delle Finanze Dello Stato [1993] ECR I-1915; Case C-188/95Fantask A/S v Industiministeriet [1997] ECR I-6783; Case C-264/00 Grunderzentrum-Betriebs-GmbH v Land Baden-Wuttenburg [2002] 2 CMLR 46. [Back] Note 3 Case C-400/08 Re Shopping Centres Licensing: European Commission v Spain [2011] 2 CMLR 50 [Back] Note 4 Case 46/76 Bauhuis v Netherlands [1977] ECR 5; Case 132/78 Denkavit Loire SARL v France [1979] ECR 1923; Case C-111/89 Netherlands v P. Bakker Hillegon BV [1990] ECR I-1735. [Back] Note 5 Joined Cases C-392/04 and C-422/04 Germany GmbH and Arcor KG and Co v Germany [2007] 1 CMLR 10,
[Back] Note 6 There is some analogy with the fierce debates before the decision in Photo Production Ltd v Securicor Transport Ltd.[1980] AC 827 as to whether a clause qualifying a contractual obligation should be approached differently from one exempting a party from liability (see e.g. Coote, Exception Clauses, 1964) when the real question was the construction of the language used in the contract . [Back] Note 7 See also Westdeutsche Landesbank Girozentrale v Islington LBC; Kleinwort Benson Ltd v. Sandwell BC [1994] 4 All ER 890 where Hobhouse J (whose decision was reversed on other grounds: [1996] AC 669) looked at payments by the banks and by the Councils made under swaps agreements together although the agreements were ultra vires and held the bank was only entitled to restitution of the net sum. [Back]