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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 >> Sharif v Birmingham City Council [2020] EWCA Civ 1488 (10 November 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2020/1488.html Cite as: [2020] WLR(D) 602, [2021] 1 WLR 685, [2020] EWCA Civ 1488, [2021] LLR 125, [2021] RTR 15, [2021] WLR 685, [2021] 3 All ER 176 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
QUEENS BENCH DIVISION
BIRMINGHAM DISTRICT REGISTRY
HIS HONOUR JUDGE McKENNA (sitting as a judge of the High Court)
C90BM249
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE BEAN
and
LORD JUSTICE HOLROYDE
____________________
HARUN MANSOOR SHARIF |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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BIRMINGHAM CITY COUNCIL |
Respondent |
____________________
Jonathan Manning and Iulia Saran (instructed by Legal & Democratic Services, Birmingham City Council) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 3 November 2020
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Bean :
"Street-Cruise"
1. "Street-Cruise" means a congregation of the drivers of 2 or more motor-vehicles (including motor-cycles) on the public highway or at any place to which the public have access within the Claimant's local government area (known as the City of Birmingham) as shown delineated in blue on the map at Schedule 1, at which any person, whether or not a driver or rider, performs any of the activities set out at para.2 below, so as, by such conduct, to cause any of the following:
(i) excessive noise;
(ii) danger to other road users (including pedestrians);
(iii) damage or the risk of damage to private property;
(iv) litter;
(v) any nuisance to another person not participating in the street-cruise.
2. The activities referred to at para.1, above, are:
(i) driving or riding at excessive speed, or otherwise dangerously;
(ii) driving or riding in convoy;
(iii) racing against other motor-vehicles;
(iv) performing stunts in or on motor-vehicles;
(v) sounding horns or playing radios;
(vi) dropping litter;
(vii) supplying or using illegal drugs;
(viii) urinating in public;
(ix) shouting or swearing at, or abusing, threatening or otherwise intimidating another person;
(x) obstruction of any other road-user.
"Participating in a Street-Cruise"
3. A person participates in a street-cruise whether or not he is the driver or rider of, or passenger in or on, a motor-vehicle, if he is present and performs or encourages any other person to perform any activity to which paras. 1-2 above apply, and the term "participating in a street-cruise" shall be interpreted accordingly."
A power of arrest, pursuant to s 27 of the Police and Justice Act 2006, was attached to the injunction in relation to anyone participating in a street cruise as the driver or rider of, or passenger in, a vehicle to which paragraphs 1 and 2 applied.
27. To my mind, the 16th Respondent [Mr Sharif]'s reliance on the decision in Shafi is entirely misplaced. PSPOs are not a specific statutory remedy designed or introduced by Parliament to tackle the specific problem of car cruising. They replace, as I have already indicated, public space orders, restricting problem drinking, gating orders and dog control orders and give local authorities a general power to tackle activities that may cause a detrimental effect to quality of life of those living in their localities. The fact that Gateshead MBC may have made use of that power to deal with similar issues to those in respect of which the injunction was sought is neither here or there.
28. Moreover, as Counsel for the Applicant submitted in respect of the argument based on the case of Shafi, here the choice is not between two different types of Court orders but between a remedy which requires a judicial decision and is, therefore, made by an independent and impartial tribunal on the one hand and on the other, the PSPO which the local authority makes for itself.
29. In those circumstances it does not seem to me that an intention should be imputed to Parliament that a public authority should be obliged to make PSPOs which are orders made without recourse to the Courts and still less that the Courts should in the exercise of their discretion decline to deal with an application on the basis that the local authority should have made an order itself without coming to Court. That would be a very surprising result – even more so when it is remembered that in the Shafi case the 'ASBO' regime provided specific safeguards which were lacking in the alternative approach and which made it more difficult for a local authority to obtain an 'ASBO'.
30. Moreover, Shafi has not been followed in other cases. It was expressly distinguished and indeed held to be irrelevant by the Court of Appeal in Swindon Borough Council v Redpath [2009] EWCA Civ 943 where the Court held that there was no reason why a local authority should not use the 'ASBI' regime instead of the 'ASBO' regime and in respect of which a civil standard of proof would be applied. Likewise, in Birmingham City Council v James [2013] EWCA Civ 552, the Court of Appeal held there was no doctrine requiring one statutory remedy to be used in preference to another.
…
32. In short, it is clear from the decisions in Redpath and James that there has never been a doctrine requiring an authority to apply for the remedy representing the closest fit to the mischief aimed at and, in any event, the alternative remedy contended for on the 16th Respondent's behalf, namely the PSPO, is not identical or even remotely similar.
33. There is no general principle that only in exceptional circumstances should a court grant an injunction where an alternative, specific statutory remedy is available or the Court should not do so where breach can carry more severe sanctions than breach of a PSPO nor is there any basis for the argument that local authorities cannot seek a remedy with more serious consequences in the event of a breach or that the Court cannot grant such a remedy if it considers it justified and proportionate so to do. In this case, the Court had ample evidence of the previous attempts made by the West Midlands Police to address car cruising and to the effect that those attempts have proved inadequate and therefore to conclude that the granting of the injunction was appropriate."
(1) "The learned judge erred in law in holding that an intention should not be imputed to Parliament that a public authority should be obliged to make public space protection orders and still less that the court should in the exercise of their discretion decline to deal with an application on the basis that the local authority should have made an order itself without coming to court [para 29]."
(2) "The learned judge erred in law in holding that this case was nearer the case of Swindon BC v Redpath [2009] EWCA Civ 943 than the case of Shafi v BCC [2009] 1 WLR 1961 [para 30] and that the PPO [sic] is not identical or even remotely similar to the remedy provided by the High Court [para 32]."
(3) "The learned judge erred in law in holding "There is no general principle that only in exceptional circumstances should a court grant an injunction where an alternative, specific, statutory remedy is available or the court should not do so where breach can carry more severe sanctions than breach of a PSPO nor is there any basis for the argument that local authorities cannot seek a remedy without more serious consequences in the event of a breach or that the court cannot grant such remedies if it considers it justified and proportionate so to do". [para 33]"
"Section 130 of the Highways Act 1980 was inapplicable. [That section] is concerned with the protection of the legal rights of the public at large to use the public highway and with legal rights of access, not with the safety of the condition of the public highway (Ali v Bradford MDC [2012] 1 WLR 161) at [39] or for that matter car cruising on the highway. The court refused to impose liability through the law of private nuisance as it would amount to the use of a blunt instrument to interfere with a carefully regulated statutory scheme and would usurp the proper role of Parliament.
"The grounds of appeal have a real prospect of success and, even if they did not, the legality of the practice of granting injunctions of this character is of sufficient general importance to amount to a compelling reason for the issue to be considered at this level."
Public spaces protection orders
a) prohibits specified things being done in the restricted area,
b) requires specified things to be done by persons carrying on specified activities in that area, or
c) does both of those things.
a) activities carried on in a public place within the authority's area have had a detrimental effect to the quality of life of those in the locality, or
b) it is likely that activities will be carried on that will have such an effect.
a) of a persistent or continuing nature; and
b) such as to make the activities unreasonable; and
c) must justify the restrictions imposed by the notice (s 59(3)).
a) to prevent the detrimental effect referred to in subsection (2) from continuing, occurring or recurring, or
b) to reduce that detrimental effect or to reduce the risk of its continuance, occurrence or recurrence."
Section 222 of the Local Government Act 1972
"It was said that the council should not have taken civil proceedings until criminal proceedings had not persuaded the appellants to obey the law. As a general rule the local authority should try the effect of criminal proceedings before seeking the assistance of the civil courts. But the council were entitled to take the view that the appellants would not be deterred by a maximum fine which was substantially less than the profits which could be made from illegal Sunday trading."
"The guiding principles must, I think, be –
(1) that the jurisdiction is to be invoked and exercised exceptionally and with great caution: see the authority already cited;
(2) that there must certainly be something more than mere infringement of the criminal law before the assistance of civil proceedings can be invoked and accorded for the protection or promotion of the interests of the inhabitants of the area: see the Stoke-on-Trent case at 767B, 776C, and Wychavon District Council v. Midland Enterprises (Special Events) Ltd. [1987] 86 L.G.R. 83 at 87;
(3) that the essential foundation for the exercise of the court's discretion to grant an injunction is not that the offender is deliberately and flagrantly flouting the law but the need to draw the inference that the defendant's unlawful operations will continue unless and until effectively restrained by the law and that nothing short of an injunction will be effective to restrain them: see the Wychavon case at page 89."
"The principles summarised by Bingham LJ have been followed and to some extent broadened in later cases. For example, in London Borough of Barking & Dagenham v Jones, unreported, 30 July 1999, Brooke LJ, with whom May and Laws LJJ agreed, said this, with regard to Bingham LJ's principles:
"The application of those principles means that if the court is satisfied that nothing short of an injunction will be effective to restrain a defendant's unlawful operations it may grant an injunction even though he has not yet been subjected to the maximum penalty available under the criminal law."
"Those cases suggest a somewhat broader approach than some of the earlier ones, although, in our judgment the essential principles remain those summarised by Bingham LJ, in so far as the injunction is sought in aid of the criminal law, if by that is meant or includes a case where the injunction is sought to prevent the defendant from committing criminal offences. As appears below, it is our view, first that these principles are subject to any legislation which is designed to deal with the very situation which an injunction is sought to control and secondly that the ASBO legislation is designed to do just that."
"The recent and detailed interventions of Parliament in this field suggest that the court should not indulge in parallel creativity by the extension of general common law principles".
"44. The significance of the principle stated by Hoffmann J in this appeal is this. The terms of the injunction sought in this action are typical of an ASBO and, as already indicated, on the facts of this case they are identical or almost identical to the terms of an ASBO. We have already referred to what is in our view a striking feature of the council's approach in this case, namely that it seeks ASBOs against those under 18 and injunctions in identical terms against those over 18. Parliament has laid down a number of specific requirements which apply to ASBOs, some of which may not apply to injunctions granted at common law. In so far as it may be said that it is easier to obtain an injunction than an ASBO, the granting of an injunction in such circumstances would in our view be to infringe Hoffmann J's principle. In any event, it appears to us that where, as here, Parliament has legislated in detail to deal with a particular problem, the courts should in general leave the matter to be dealt with as Parliament intended and, save perhaps in exceptional circumstances, refuse to grant injunctive relief of the kind which can be obtained by an ASBO.
45. We recognise that there is a general principle that, where a claimant in a civil action has two available rights or remedies, he is in general entitled to choose which to rely upon. However, the principle to which we have referred is an exception to that general principle and applies in the kind of case contemplated by Hoffmann J, of which this seems to us to be an example. We recognise that it may be said that in Chief Constable of Leicestershire v M Hoffmann J was considering what he regarded as an unprincipled extension of the common law in a field in which Parliament had already legislated and that in this case the jurisdiction to grant an injunction in aid of the criminal law (and indeed to restrain a public nuisance) is already established. However, it seems to us that the thought which underlies Hoffmann J's principle applies here. Parliament has recently legislated to restrain anti-social behaviour in a particular way and subject to particular safeguards. In our view the court should have that fact well in mind in deciding how to exercise its discretion whether or not to grant an injunction in a particular case.
"51. The questions whether an injunction should be granted in this action on the one hand or whether an ASBO should be granted in identical or near identical terms on the other are surely questions which arise in what Lord Steyn would regard as the same corner of the law. It would be bizarre, not to say irrational, if the standard of proof in answering the two questions were different.
52. Suppose two identical cases in which A is under 18 and B is over 18. In one case an ASBO is sought against defendant A in the magistrates court and in the other defendant B is over 18 and an injunction is sought against him in the High Court or a county court. The orders sought are in identical or near identical terms. It would again surely be bizarre, not to say irrational, if the standard of proof in the two cases were different. What then is the solution? In our view the natural solution is for the High Court or county court to decline to grant an injunction but to leave the council to seek an ASBO in both cases. That approach seems to us to be consistent with Hoffmann J's principle."
"… The discretion of the court whether or not to grant an injunction derives from section 37 of the Supreme Court Act 1981. In this case, as already stated, the council seeks injunctions in aid of the criminal law (in the sense discussed above) or to prevent a public nuisance. However, the principles upon which such an injunction is to be granted remain to be determined. As stated above, as we see it they have been worked out to a considerable extent in the first class of case and in the classic case of public nuisance, but they remain to be worked out in a case which has elements of both and they also remain to be worked out where what is sought is in effect an ASBO. The critical factor in the present case is in our opinion that, whether the council seeks an injunction in aid of the criminal law or on the basis of an alleged public nuisance, the essential remedy sought is an ASBO.
60. It is in this context that Hoffmann J's principle (or something closely analogous to it) falls to be respected. Thus we conclude, for the reasons we have given, that the court should not indulge in parallel creativity by the extension of general common law principles. Hoffmann J did not of course have the ASBO in mind but it seems to us that, where (as here) a council seeks an injunction in circumstances in which an ASBO would be available, the court should not, save perhaps in an exceptional case, grant an injunction but leave the council to seek an ASBO so that the detailed checks and balances developed by Parliament and in the decided cases will apply."
"Mr de Mello had an alternative submission: that if the legislation allows the Council scope to choose between a PSPO or an injunction as the means of combating anti-social behaviour, it should not be granted an injunction, thereby bypassing the statutory safeguards built into the PSPO regime. In support of that submission he cited Birmingham City Council v Shafi [2008] EWCA Civ 1186 [2009] 1 WLR 1961 [36], [45] and [59]. A similar argument was advanced by Mr de Mello in Birmingham City Council v Sharif [2019] EWHC 1268 (QB) and rejected by HHJ McKenna (sitting as a Deputy High Court Judge). I share the view expressed by Judge McKenna at [27] that the argument is entirely misplaced, for the reasons he gave at [28-33]. In short, Shafi is no authority for the proposition that an injunction under the 2014 Act cannot or should not be sought or granted if the authority could have imposed a PSPO, or other lesser remedy: see Redpath v Swindon BC [2009] EWCA Civ 943 [2010] PTSR 904, Birmingham CC v James [2013] EWCA Civ 552 [22], [28], [31]. A local authority's power to ask the Court to determine whether an injunction is a necessary and proportionate interference with Convention rights is not shackled by rigid rules of this kind. Nor can it be argued that the powers of the Court should not be invoked or exercised, on the grounds that Court procedures are inferior to the administrative procedures specified in the statute. That is manifestly not the case."
Section 130 of the Highways Act 1980
The grant of the injunction against "Persons Unknown"
Conclusion
Lord Justice Holroyde:
Sir Terence Etherton, Master of the Rolls: