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England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Shanks & Ors (t/a Blue Line Taxis), R (on the application of) v The Council of the County of Northumberland [2012] EWHC 1539 (Admin) (01 June 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2012/1539.html Cite as: [2013] PTSR 154, [2012] EWHC 1539 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT IN LEEDS
1 Oxford Row, Leeds, LS1 3BG |
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B e f o r e :
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THE CROWN (on the application of IAN GORDON SHANKS, PAUL THOMAS SHANKS and JANE BELL trading as BLUE LINE TAXIS) |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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THE COUNCIL OF THE COUNTY OF NORTHUMBERLAND |
Defendant |
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John McGuinness QC (instructed by Elizabeth Sinnamon, Principal Solicitor, Legal Services, Northumberland County Council) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 22 and 23 May 2012
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Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE FOSKETT:
Introduction
The background
Hackney Carriage Proprietor | Hackney Carriage Drivers | Private Hire Vehicles | Private Hire Drivers | Private Hire Operators | |
Alnwick | 10 | 40 | 50 | 30 | 15 |
Berwick Upon Tweed | 700 | 727 | 100 | 347 | 10 |
Blyth | 42 | 53 | 112 | 53 | 9 |
Castle Morpeth | 130 | 147 | 71 | 123 | 15 |
Tynedale | 161 | 153 | 56 | 74 | 48 |
Wansbeck | 30 | 101 | 50 | 161 | 15 |
TOTALS | 1073 | 1201 | 439 | 788 | 112 |
The challenged policy
"... in circumstances where the applicant for a Hackney Carriage Proprietors licence is or is associated with a Private Hire Operator other than licensed by Northumberland County Council or declares as part of the intended use declaration, that the vehicle may or is to be used for the purposes of fulfilling pre-booked hiring's on behalf of a Private Hire Operator not licensed by Northumberland County Council that:
1) Subject to all other relevant application criteria being met that the licence is granted subject to the following condition:
- The holder of the hackney carriage proprietor's licence shall ensure that an accurate and contemporaneous record is made and maintained either by himself or the driver of the vehicle, of all uses of the vehicle arising from plying for hire as a hackney carriage and when used to fulfil pre-booked hirings other than through a contract for hire with a Private Hire Operator licensed by Northumberland County Council.
- Details of all journeys, so as to include the criteria set out below, shall be legibly and clearly recorded in a stitch or heat/glue bound book so as to provide a continuous record without breaks between rows, of all uses in horizontal rows by date and time:
- Date
- Time of first "pick up"
- First "pick up" point by location/name/address including house number and post code as appropriate
- Final "drop off" point by location/name/address including house number and post code as appropriate
- Nature of hiring – whether (i) as a hackney carriage plying for hire within the County of Northumberland, or (ii) when used to fulfil pre-booked hirings other than through a contract for hire with a Private Hire Operator licensed by Northumberland County Council
- Where applicable, the name of the Private Hire Operator not licensed by Northumberland County Council through which the pre-booked hiring has been fulfilled
- Each book shall legibly and clearly display the details of the vehicle it relates to including the make, model, vehicle registration number and hackney carriage licence number.
- The record of journeys shall be available for inspection at any time by an authorised officer of Northumberland County Council when the vehicle is being used for the purposes of plying for hire or used to fulfil pre-booked hiring's.
- The record of journeys shall be available for inspection at any time by a Northumbria Police or Community Support Officer AND an officer of any local authority who through the course of their normal duties are authorised to inspect the licensed vehicle.
- Each book, when full, shall be forwarded to the Public Protection Service, Northumberland County Council, Morpeth, Northumberland NE61AP.
In circumstances where the holder of a hackney carriage proprietor's licence wishes to maintain a record of use in any other format than set out above, prior approval must be obtained from Northumberland County Council.
2) That the Hackney Carriage and Private Hire Licensing Policy be amended so as to require that the conditions stated above are to be attached to all hackney carriage proprietor's licences upon grant or renewal, where the applicant is or is associated with a Private Hire Operator other than licensed by Northumberland County Council or the applicant declares as part of the intended use declaration, that the vehicle is to be used for the purposes of fulfilling pre-booked hirings other than through a contract for hire with a Private Hire Operator licensed by Northumberland County Council
3) That the Request for Information – "Intended usage of a hackney carriage - Local Government (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 1976, section 57" which is part of the standard application procedure be revised as follows:
- A specific question/declaration that the vehicle is or is not, as part of the intended use, to be used for the purposes of fulfilling pre-booked hirings other than through a contract for hire with a Private Hire Operator licensed by Northumberland County Council.
- To include an additional question requiring the applicant to provide details of where the vehicle is to be usually kept when not in use.
4) In circumstances where the application is made by a person who does not live, or intend to keep or maintain the vehicle for which a licence is sought, in a local authority which has a border with Northumberland County Council that the application be refused unless the applicant is able to demonstrate that there are exceptional circumstances which would make it appropriate to grant the licence."
(1) exclusively or predominantly to ply for hire within the relevant hackney carriage licensing zone, and/or
(2) exclusively or predominantly for private hire remotely from that zone, and/or
(3) in some other manner to carry fare paying passengers.
(i) a person who was a Private Hire Operator licensed by an authority other than the Council; or
(ii) a person who was associated with a Private Hire Operator licensed by an authority other than the Council; or
(iii) was someone who had declared as part of the intended use declaration on the form that the vehicle was to, or might, be used to fulfil pre-booked hirings on behalf of a Private Hire Operator not licensed by the Council
The 'hackney carriage' and the licensing regime
"Every wheeled carriage, whatever may be its form or construction, used in standing or plying for hire in any street within the prescribed distance, and every carriage standing upon any street within the pre-scribed distance, having thereon any numbered plate required by this or the special Act to be fixed upon a hackney carriage, or having thereon any plate resembling or intended to resemble any such plate as aforesaid, shall be deemed to be a hackney carriage within the meaning of this Act; and in all proceedings at law or otherwise the term "hackney carriage" shall be sufficient to describe any such carriage:
Provided always, that no stage coach used for the purpose of standing or plying for passengers to be carried for hire at separate fares, and duly licensed for that purpose, and having thereon the proper numbered plates required by law to be placed on such stage coaches, shall be deemed to be a hackney carriage within the meaning of this Act."
The licensing of 'private hire vehicles'
"Private hire vehicles were first regulated, outside London, by the Local Government (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 1976 and, within London, by the Private Hire Vehicles (London) Act 1998."
"16. Section 48 of the 1976 Act provides for the licensing by local authorities of "private hire vehicles", section 51 for the licensing of drivers of private hire vehicles and section 55 for the licensing of persons to operate private hire vehicles ("operate", for this purpose, being defined in section 80(1) as meaning "in the course of business to make provision for the invitation or acceptance of bookings for a private hire vehicle"). It is well-established that all three licences must be issued by the same local authority: section 80(2) as explained in Dittah v Birmingham City Council, Choudhry v Birmingham City Council [1993] RTR 356 and Shanks v North Tyneside Borough Council [2001] EWHC 533 (Admin), [2001] All ER (D) 344 (June).
17. A "private hire vehicle" is defined for the purposes of the 1976 Act as follows (section 80(1)):
"private hire vehicle" means a motor vehicle constructed or adapted to seat fewer than nine passengers, other than a hackney carriage or public service vehicle or a London cab or tramcar, which is provided for hire with the services of a driver for the purpose of carrying passengers".
The words "or a London Cab" were inserted by section 139(2) and Schedule 7, paragraph 17, of the Transport Act 1985. Section 80(1) provides that "hackney carriage" has the same meaning as in the 1847 Act and, by words also inserted by the 1985 Act, that "London cab" means a vehicle which is a hackney carriage within the meaning of the 1869 Act."
Section 47 of the 1976 Act
"Licensing of hackney carriages.E+W
(1) A district council may attach to the grant of a licence of a hackney carriage under the Act of 1847 such conditions as the district council may consider reasonably necessary.
(2) Without prejudice to the generality of the foregoing subsection, a district council may require any hackney carriage licensed by them under the Act of 1847 to be of such design or appearance or bear such distinguishing marks as shall clearly identify it as a hackney carriage.
(3) Any person aggrieved by any conditions attached to such a licence may appeal to a magistrates' court."
The essential arguments
"55. Mr Rodger, for his part, submits that the Deputy District Judge was entirely correct in deciding the preliminary issue as she did. He relies in particular upon Britain, Gladen and Berwick, all of which, he submits, were correctly decided. He submits that unless what I can conveniently refer to as the 'hackney carriage exemption' – that is, the qualifying reference in the definition of a private hire vehicle in section 80(1) of the 1976 Act to "a … vehicle … other than a hackney carriage … or a London cab" – is read back into the references to "a private hire vehicle" in sections 46(1)(d) and 46(1)(e) of the 1976 Act, it will not be lawful to "operate … as a private hire vehicle" a vehicle which is licensed as a hackney carriage, even in the area in which it is so licensed, unless it is also licensed under the 1976 Act. And the latter, he says, is impossible, not least in the light of the definition of a private hire vehicle in section 80(1) of the 1976 Act and given the requirement in section 48(1)(a)(ii) of the 1976 Act that:
"a district council shall not grant … a licence [under section 48] unless they are satisfied … that the vehicle is … not of such design and appearance as to lead any person to believe that the vehicle is a hackney carriage".
On the contrary, he says, the lawfulness of the use of a hackney carriage for private hire (at least in the area in which it is licensed as a hackney carriage) is assumed in section 67(1) of the 1976 Act, which provides that:
"No hackney carriage shall be used in the district under a contract or purported contract for private hire except at a rate of fares or charges not greater than that fixed by the byelaws or tables mentioned in section 66 of this Act …"
Section 67(2) makes contravention of this provision a criminal offence.
56. Put more generally, Mr Rodger submits that a hackney carriage is always a hackney carriage, no matter what it is doing, or where, and that its use, for whatever purpose, can never make it a private hire vehicle in the statutory sense. There are, he says, entirely separate and distinct regimes for the licensing of vehicles as hackney carriages and as private hire vehicles and the regime which regulates private hire vehicles has no application to a vehicle registered as a hackney carriage. The purpose of the 1976 Act (as later, in relation to London, of the 1998 Act) was, he submits, to impose a scheme of licensing on otherwise unlicensed vehicles and their drivers; it was not to impose further regulation on already-regulated hackney carriages. To "operate" within the meaning of the 1976 Act, including for the purposes of sections 46(1)(d) and 46(1)(e), is, he says, as the definition of "operate" in section 80(1) makes clear, an activity that can be carried out only in relation to a private hire vehicle as defined by section 80(1) – and that definition explicitly excludes a hackney carriage; it is not an activity carried out, or capable of being carried out, in relation to a hackney carriage, however or wherever it is being used. The provision of a hackney carriage for hire together with the services of a driver pursuant to an advance booking is not, he submits, a licensable activity. It always has been, and continues to be, he asserts, an activity unregulated under any statute. In short, Mr Rodger prays in aid what in Button is described (page xvi) as "the inherent right of the hackney carriage proprietor to undertake pre-booked hirings anywhere in England or Wales."
57. I agree with Mr Rodger and essentially for all the reasons he has given.
58. Central to the dispute in this case, as it seems to me, are two questions of statutory construction. The first relates to the meaning of the words "hackney carriage" where they appear in the definition of "private hire vehicle" in section 80(1) of the 1976 Act. This is the issue determined by the Divisional Court in Britain v ABC Cabs (Camberley) Ltd [1981] RTR 395. In agreement with the decision in that case, I would hold that "hackney carriage" in section 80(1) means a hackney carriage wherever it may be licensed as such. So what I have referred to as the 'hackney carriage exemption' is not confined to hackney carriages licensed as such by the local authority which is seeking to enforce within its own area the provisions of the 1976 Act. I respectfully agree with the reasoning in Britain of both Webster J and, more particularly, of Ormrod LJ. Their reasoning is compelling. The decision has stood for thirty years without challenge. In my judgment it is correct and we should follow it.
59. The second question relates to whether what I have called the 'hackney carriage exemption' is to be read back into the references to a "private hire vehicle" in sections 46(1)(d) and 46(1)(e) of the 1976 Act. This is the issue determined by the Divisional Court in Brentwood Borough Council v Gladen [2004] EWHC 2500 (Admin), [2005] RTR 152. I agree with Collins J's decision and with his reasoning. In my judgment the words "private hire vehicle" in sections 46(1)(d) and 46(1)(e) have to be read as governed by the definition of "private hire vehicle" in section 80(1) and they are, accordingly, subject to the 'hackney carriage exemption'. This is a conclusion, moreover, which receives powerful support from the arguments which Mr Rodger has put forward (summarised in paragraph [55] above), in particular, the arguments based upon sections 48(1)(a)(ii) and 67(1).
60. I accept that in Gladen the court was not concerned, as we are, with a vehicle which had been licensed as a hackney carriage by another local authority. But that, in my judgment, does not take Ms Smith where she would have us go, for the 'foreign hackney carriage' point is determined against her by Britain.
61. Put shortly, the correct analysis, in my judgment, is this: first, and for the reasons given in Gladen, one has to read into the references to "private hire vehicle" in sections 46(1)(d) and 46(1)(e) the definition of "private hire vehicle" in section 80(1), including what I have called the 'hackney carriage exemption'; second, and for the reasons given in Britain, the words "hackney carriage" where they appear in section 80(1) are not confined to a vehicle licensed as a hackney carriage by the local authority which is seeking to enforce within its own area the provisions of the 1976 Act; they extend to any vehicle registered as a hackney carriage anywhere. And the combination of these two matters leads inexorably, as a matter of both logic and law, to the conclusion for which Mr Rodger contends.
…
65. The point arises in this way. It will be recalled that following the amendment of the 1976 Act by the 1985 Act, the 'hackney carriage exemption' in the definition of "private hire vehicle" in section 80(1) of the 1976 Act was extended to include a reference to "London cab". So a private hire vehicle is now defined as "a … vehicle … other than a hackney carriage … or a London cab", the latter, as we have seen, being defined as a vehicle which is a hackney carriage within the meaning of the 1869 Act. Mr Rodger's point is very simple. He submits that a "London cab" is necessarily a vehicle licensed before 2000 by the Commissioner of the Metropolitan Police or since then by Transport for London; in other words a vehicle which is not and cannot be licensed by a local authority licensing vehicles under the 1976 Act. So in relation to such an authority, whether it be Berwick-upon-Tweed Borough Council or Stockton-on-Tees Borough Council or, indeed, any other local authority outside Greater London, a "London cab" is necessarily a hackney carriage licensed by another authority, now Transport for London. It follows therefore, he says, that the 'hackney carriage exemption' in the definition of a private hire vehicle in section 80(1) is not confined to a vehicle licensed as a hackney carriage by the local authority seeking to enforce within its own area the provisions of the 1976 Act. For if a vehicle licensed by Transport for London as a hackney carriage within the meaning of the 1869 Act (in other words what is called a London cab for the purposes of the 1976 Act) can be used in Stockton-on-Tees for private hire purposes without being registered by Stockton-on-Tees Borough Council as a private hire vehicle – and that is the effect of the definition of private hire vehicle in section 80(1) – then by parity of reasoning the same must apply in relation to a vehicle registered, for example by Berwick-upon-Tweed Borough Council, as a hackney carriage within the meaning of the 1847 Act."
"3. Newcastle upon Tyne has a population within the city of some 276,000 people. The wider conurbation of Tyne and Wear has a total population of over 1 million people. Newcastle City Council (Newcastle) licences hackney carriage proprietors and drivers and private hire vehicles, private hire operators and private hire drivers. It has licensed some 780 hackney carriage proprietors and some 1196 drivers. Those numbers are separate from its licensing of private hire drivers. It also limits the number of hackney carriage licences it issues, as it is entitled to do under section 16 of the Transport Act 1985 because it is satisfied that there is no significant unmet demand for the services of hackney carriages within the city.
4. Berwick-upon-Tweed Borough Council (Berwick) also issues hackney carriage licences to proprietors and drivers. Although the population of Berwick-upon-Tweed is only some 26,000 people the number of hackney carriage proprietors licensed by Berwick, as at August 2008, was 672. This number is to be compared with only 46 licensed in April 2006 and 148 licensed as at April 2007. Of the 616 proprietors licensed as at July 2008 some 247 have their registered home address in Newcastle upon Tyne, 196 in North Tyneside, 24 in Darlington and 21 in Gateshead. Newcastle, North Tyneside and Gateshead are approximately 55 miles distant from Berwick upon Tweed and Darlington is approximately 90 miles distant. There is now about 1 hackney carriage licensed by Berwick for every 42 residents of Berwick. Mr. Wilson of Berwick informed the Court that 74 of the 672 licensed hackney carriages were likely to be primarily used within the Borough. This evidence was based either on the fact that the proprietors lived within the borough or because they were otherwise known to Mr. Wilson. Mr. Wilson accepted that the majority of vehicles never stand or ply for hire in Berwick despite being licensed to do so.
5. The reason for this substantial number of licensed proprietors in Berwick-upon-Tweed is because Berwick take the view that it is not open to them to refuse to issue licences to hackney carriage proprietors unless either the vehicle or the proprietor are unfit. Thus the fact that a proprietor may live remotely from Berwick and has no intention of plying for hire in Berwick is not considered to be a valid reason for rejecting the application.
6. This case comes before this Court on the application of Newcastle which is troubled by the influx of hackney carriages licensed in Berwick which are being used by private hire operators in Newcastle upon Tyne to fulfil their pre-booked hire contracts. Newcastle, not being the licensing authority, has no enforcement powers over these vehicles and in addition these vehicles are not subject to the same conditions as those licensed by Newcastle. Whether the conditions imposed by Berwick are better or worse they are different.
7. One of the reasons why Berwick have received numerous applications for licences from outside their area is undoubtedly the fact that the cost of the licence in Berwick- upon-Tweed is less than in many other areas including Newcastle upon Tyne. There may be other reasons as well relating to the conditions and bye laws imposed relating to the vehicles themselves. There is a danger, as was mooted in front of me, of Berwick becoming a national issuer of hackney carriage licences. Newcastle, by their application to this Court, sought a declaration that it was unlawful for Berwick to grant a hackney carriage licence to a proprietor where it was not satisfied that the vehicle, if licensed, would ply for hire in the area of Berwick together with certain other relief. However it seems to me that the issue before the Court is whether or not Berwick are right in their submission that they have no discretion, save as to fitness, but instead are obliged to keep granting licences for hackney carriages regardless of the intentions of, and geographic location of, the proprietors of those vehicles. The answer to this issue depends on the proper interpretation of section 37 of the Town Police Clauses Act 1847."
"22. In my judgment the major purpose behind the 1847 Act, and indeed the 1976 Act, is the safety of the public by which I include both the travelling public as passengers and other road users. Thus the scheme of the legislation is directed towards having safe vehicles, fit and proper drivers and appropriate conditions of hire. To ensure this safety a form of enforcement is provided for with a system of penalties for non-compliance. Registers of proprietors and drivers are kept together with offences committed which are available for public inspection. Byelaws and conditions apply locally to the licensed hackney carriages and it was apparent from the evidence before me that different councils will impose different conditions and have different byelaws no doubt prompted by legitimate differences of opinion but also dependent on the area concerned. It may be, for example, that an authority covering a large conurbation will have different concerns, and require different conditions, to one covering a more rural area.
23. If hackney carriages are working remote from their licensing authority a number of, at the least potentially, undesirable consequences follow. The licensing authority will not easily keep their licensed fleet under observation. It will be carrying out its enforcement powers from a distance. The licensing authority where the hackney carriage has chosen to operate will have no enforcement powers over the vehicle although it is being used in its area. Further, unlike its own licensed vehicles, the hackney carriage from remote areas will not be subject to the same conditions and byelaws as the local vehicles. It is no surprise that the legislation provides for testing and testing centres to be within the licensing authority's area.
24. The fact that Berwick now has a large, but remote, fleet of hackney carriages has had the effect of persuading Berwick that they need to have testing stations over a wide area well removed from Berwick-on-Tweed. Mr. Holland, who appeared before me for Berwick, told me that due to the large number of licences being issued Berwick has a financial surplus which they use in part to pay to have a vehicle on the road in the Tyneside area to keep an eye on their hackney carriages.
25. It seems to me that it must be desirable for an authority issuing licences to hackney carriage to be able to restrict the issuing of those licences to proprietors and drivers which are intending to ply for hire in that authority's area. Similarly it must be desirable to be able to refuse to issue licences to proprietors and drivers who do not intend to ply for hire, to a material extent, in the area of the licence grantor."
"The local authority can issue it its own conditions and make its own byelaws. It can make provision for its own inspections of the hackney carriages. Thus the licensing regime is local in character. In addition it can be seen that most of the provisions have public safety much in mind. The local imposition of conditions and byelaws, local testing and enforcement, together with the other statutory provisions I have referred to all seem to me to point clearly to the conclusion that it was the intention behind the licensing system that it should operate in such a way that the authority licensing hackney carriages is the authority for the area in which those vehicles are generally used."
"It seems to me that the question to be asked is … whether in exercising their discretion a licensing authority can use its discretion to ensure that it maintains control over those vehicles it has licensed. In my judgment a local authority, properly directing itself, is entitled, and indeed obliged, to have regard to whether the applicant intends to use the licence to operate a hackney carriage in that authority's area and also to have regard to whether in fact the applicant intends to use that hackney carriage predominantly, or entirely, remotely from the authority's area. This should result in each local authority licensing those hackney carriages that will be operating in their own area and should reduce the number of hackney carriages which operate remotely from the area where they are licensed.
Approaching the matter in that way there is in fact no need to have regard to the private hire regime in the exercise of the discretion. But in my judgment the two regimes relating to hackney carriages and private hire vehicles are to be considered as closely related and complementary and it would not be unlawful to have regard to both regimes when issuing licences in either one. The fact that hackney carriages are expressly excluded from the private hire scheme does not seem to me to alter the position."
(1) In the proper exercise of its statutory discretion under section 37 of the Town Police Clauses Act 1847 a licensing authority is obliged to have regard (a) to whether the applicant intends that the hackney carriage if licensed will be used to ply for hire within the area of that authority, and (b) whether the applicant intends that the hackney carriage will be used (either entirely or predominantly) for private hire remotely from the area of that authority.
(2) A licensing authority may in the proper exercise of its discretion under the said section 37 refuse to grant a licence in respect of a hackney carriage that is not intended to be used to ply for hire within its area and/or is intended to be used (either entirely or predominantly) for private hire remotely from the area of that authority.
(3) In determining whether to grant a licence under the said section 37 a licensing authority may require an applicant to submit information pursuant to section 57 Local Government (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 1976 in order to ascertain the intended usage of the vehicle.
"In light of this decision, it was my opinion following discussions with Legal and Licensing Officers that the council, in exercising its discretion to grant licences, were obliged to take steps to ensure it did so in a manner which afforded local control and protected the safety of the travelling public. It was therefore both reasonable and necessary to try and establish the actual nature and use of hackney carriages once licensed by the council. In doing so, the council would be able to verify whether hackney carriages were being used predominantly or entirely within their zone, which would allow routine inspection by the council to take place. Where the use was not predominantly or entirely within the relevant hackney carriage licensing zone, the council would not be able to exercise routine control and enforcement and thereby put the safety of the travelling public at risk."
"45. From the information that has been supplied to the council to date, it is evident that the safety of the public has been put at risk due to the presence of vehicle defects and the lack of appropriate insurance.
46. Furthermore, it is clear that without the ability to verify the actual nature and use of the vehicle following the grant of a hackney carriage proprietors licence, the local authority that granted the licence are unable to exercise effective local control if licensed hackney carriages are being operated predominantly or entirely in a different local authority area to that which granted the licence."
Discussion
Ultra vires
Irrationality/unworkability
"The policy which Northumberland has adopted will result in the insertion of conditions into certain hackney carriage proprietor's licences the observance of which most often will be outwith the direct control of the licensee. Thus the record-keeping condition imposes an absolute obligation upon a hackney carriage's proprietor which in practice can be fulfilled only by its driver. Breach of the condition may render the licensee liable to criminal prosecution without a defence of due diligence."
"The record-keeping condition cannot reasonably be complied with by the licensee (or his driver agent) for the following reasons:
(1) a hackney carriage driver, who on the one hand must be in control of his vehicle at all times and may and often does pick up and drop o? his fare in moving and busy tra?c, cannot on the other hand contemporaneously make the detailed and extensive manuscript record required in order to comply with the condition,
(2) a hackney carriage driver on any given occasion may neither know nor have any reasonable means of ascertaining the location or name or address of his pick up and/or drop o? points,
(3) a hackney carriage driver on any given occasion may neither know nor have any reasonable means of knowing the house number and postcode of his pick up and/or drop off points, which information the record-keeping condition requires to be recorded on all occasions,
(4) any given pick up or drop off point may not have a house number or postcode."
Conclusion
Appeal against refusal to grant a hackney carriage vehicle licence under section 37 of the 1847 Act
Appeal against the attaching of conditions to a hackney carriage vehicle licence
Appeal against suspension of or revocation of or refusal to renew a hackney carriage vehicle licence