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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> London Borough of Lambeth v Grant & Ors (trespass - statutory common land - possession - judicial independence) [2021] EWHC 1857 (QB) (05 July 2021) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2021/1857.html Cite as: [2021] EWHC 1857 (QB) |
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QUEENS BENCH DIVISION
B e f o r e :
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THE LONDON BOROUGH OF LAMBETH |
Claimant |
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-and- |
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(1) CAUL GRANT (2) KAYLEE (3) PERSONS UNKNOWN |
Defendants |
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Counsel for the Claimants instructed by the solicitors for the London Borough of Lambeth, Mr Mark Tempest
For the Defendants in person:
Mr Caul Grant (First Defendant)
Ms Paige Dennis (One of the occupants of the land in issue)
Namaste[1] (One of the occupants of the land in issue)
Hearing: the 29th June 2021
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Crown Copyright ©
Keywords: trespass statutory common land possession Article 6, 7, 10, 11 ECHR fair hearing judicial independence effect of media reports of ongoing case effect of public profile of a party
This summary has a Flesch score of above 50 and was written to ensure accessibility of the judgment to readers with average reading ability.
Lambeth Council own and control Clapham Common. The Defendants are staying on part of the Common and say that they are allowed to be there because they are protesting and that they have legal rights to do so because of Human Rights law which protects the right to protest and to assemble, lawfully. The Council are asking for a court order to evict the protesters. They agree that the protesters have the right to protest but they say that it is proportionate to evict them and it is legal to do so. The Judge heard both sides and adjourned the case with an order that the parties produce written evidence so that the hearing can resume fairly soon with that evidence in a more formal state. After the case there were comments by one side in Social Media and a more senior judge was appointed to take over the case from the Judge.
"59. Determination of the proportionality of an interference with ECHR rights is a fact-specific enquiry which requires the evaluation of the circumstances in the individual case."
"It is vitally important in a democracy that individual judges and the judiciary as a whole are impartial and independent of all external pressures and of each other so that those who appear before them and the wider public can have confidence that their cases will be decided fairly and in accordance with the law. When carrying out their judicial function they must be free of any improper influence. Such influence could come from any number of sources. It could arise from improper pressure by the executive or the legislature, by individual litigants, particular pressure groups, the media, self-interest or other judges, in particular more senior judges."
"It is vital that each judge is able to decide cases solely on the evidence presented in court by the parties and in accordance with the law. Only relevant facts and law should form the basis of a judge's decision. Only in this way can judges discharge their constitutional responsibility to provide fair and impartial justice; to do justice as Lord Brougham, a 19th Century Lord Chancellor, put it 'between man and man' or as Lord Clarke, former Master of the Rolls put it more recently in 2005, 'between citizen and citizen or between citizen and the state'."
After the hearing
Postscript
This judgment is issued with Creative Commons licence type CC BY-SA and may be processed inter alia for the computational analysis of judgments.
MASTER VICTORIA MCCLOUD
Royal Courts of Justice, Strand.
Hearing: the 29th June 2021.
Reasons: 5th July 2021.
Note 1 Namaste did not specify a personal pronoun and I am therefore referring to that party as they wished to be named, and I have not accordingly presumed to select a pronoun for them. [Back] Note 2 I am not of course suggesting that these Defendants views are offensive, that is not for the court to judge. [Back]