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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (King's Bench Division) Decisions >> Afzal v Khan & Ors [2023] EWHC 376 (KB) (24 February 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/KB/2023/376.html Cite as: [2023] EWHC 376 (KB) |
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HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
KING'S BENCH DIVISION
IN THE MATTER OF THE REPRESENTATION OF THE PEOPLE ACT 1983
AND IN THE MATTER OF A LOCAL GOVERNMENT ELECTION FOR THE ASTON WARD OF BIRMINGHAM CITY COUNCIL HELD ON THE 5TH OF MAY 2022.
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
MUHAMMED AFZAL |
Petitioner |
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- and - |
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AYOUB KHAN MUMTAZ HUSSAIN DIRECTOR OF PUBLIC PROSECUTIONS |
Respondents |
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Mr Ragveer Chand (instructed by Caroline Street Legal) for the First Respondent
Mr Sham Uddin (instructed by Red Lion Solicitors) for the Second Respondent
Hearing dates: 8 February 2023
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Crown Copyright ©
His Honour Judge Richard Foster sitting as Election Commissioner:
"147 Withdrawal of petition.
(1) A petitioner shall not withdraw an election petition without the leave of the election court or High Court on special application, made in the prescribed manner and at the prescribed time and place.
(2) The application shall not be made until the prescribed notice of the intention to make it has been given in the constituency or local government area to which the petition relates.
(3) Where there are more petitioners than one, the application shall not be made except with the consent of all the petitioners.
(4) If a petition is withdrawn the petitioner shall be liable to pay the costs of the respondent."
The election
Ayoub Khan (Liberal Democrat) 3012 votes
Mumtaz Hussain (Liberal Democrat) 2542 votes
Muhammad Afzal (Labour) 2463 votes
Nagina Kauser (Labour) 2223 votes
So the First and Second Respondents were duly elected, the Petitioner coming third.
Procedural background
"Petitioner to serve his evidence by 5th January, 2023
Respondents to serve their evidence by 27th January, 2023
Trial of Petition in Birmingham commencing 6th February, 2023 (time estimate 10 days)"
The Parties' submissions
The law
"The withdrawing of an election petition must be by leave of the judge and if the judge saw that the withdrawal was the result of any compromise, of any giving and taking so as to prevent evidence being brought forward, which ought to be brought forward, not in the interest of either of the parties, but in the interest of the constituency, and of purity of election, the judge ought not to allow a petition to be withdrawn; he ought as far as he would have power to do so, insist upon the petition being proceeded with".
"140 Witnesses.
(1) Witnesses shall be summoned and sworn in the same manner as nearly as circumstances admit as in an action tried in the High Court
(2) On the trial a member of the election court may, by order signed by him, require any person who appears to him to have been concerned in the election to attend as a witness, and any person refusing to obey the order shall be guilty of contempt of court.
(3) The election court may examine any person so required to attend or who is in court although he is not called and examined by any party to the petition.
(4) A witness may, after his examination by the court, be cross-examined by or on behalf of the petitioner and respondent, or either of them"
"The wider questions are moreover of general public importance. Take a case where cogent evidence had been heard of corrupt practices at the point when Parliament was dissolved and the respondent wished that evidence to be taken no further (and so to escape the provisions on the consequences of a finding by the Election Court of corrupt or illegal practice). Or take a case where a respondent was close to the point of being fully vindicated in respect of allegations of corrupt practices and the petitioner wished to avoid that outcome. It is important that the question whether and how a petition could proceed is left for determination on facts such as those."
"In the present case the papers show that withdrawal is the proper course. The allegations in the Petition are not maintained. Some at least should not have been made. The application to withdraw is not opposed."
"160 Persons reported personally guilty of corrupt or illegal practices.
(1) The report of the election court under section 144 or section 145 above shall state the names of all persons (if any) who have been proved at the trial to have been guilty of any corrupt or illegal practice, but in the case of someone—
(a) who is not a party to the petition, or
(b) who is not a candidate on behalf of whom the seat or office is claimed by the petition, the election court shall first cause notice to be given to him, and if he appears in pursuance of the notice shall give him an opportunity of being heard by himself and of calling evidence in his defence to show why he should not be so reported."
"Subject to the provisions of subsection (4A) and section 174 below, a candidate or other person reported by an election court personally guilty of a corrupt or illegal practice—
(a) shall during the relevant period specified in subsection (5) below be incapable of—
(i) being registered as an elector or voting at any parliamentary election in the United Kingdom or at any local government election in Great Britain,(ii) being elected to the House of Commons, or(iii) holding any elective office; and
(b) if already elected to a seat in the House of Commons, or holding any such office, shall vacate the seat or office as from the date of the report.
(4A) The incapacity imposed by subsection (4)(a)(i) above applies only to a candidate or other person reported personally guilty of a corrupt practice under section 60, 62A or 62B above or of an illegal practice under section 61 above.
(5) For the purposes of subsection (4) above the relevant period is the period beginning with the date of the report and ending—
(a) in the case of a person reported personally guilty of a corrupt practice, five years after that date, or
(b) in the case of a person reported personally guilty of an illegal practice, three years after that date."
Discussion
Decision
Costs
Permission to appeal
Post hearing note