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The Judicial Committee of the Privy Council Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> The Judicial Committee of the Privy Council Decisions >> Alves v Attorney General of the Virgin Islands (British Virgin Islands) [2017] UKPC 42 (18 December 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKPC/2017/42.html Cite as: [2017] UKPC 42 |
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Michaelmas Term
[2017] UKPC 42
Privy Council Appeal No 0101 of 2015
JUDGMENT
Alves (Appellant) v Attorney General of the Virgin Islands (Respondent) (British Virgin Islands)
From the Court of Appeal of the Eastern Caribbean Supreme Court (British Virgin Islands)
before
Lord Neuberger
Lord Kerr
Lord Carnwath
Lord Hughes
Lord Hodge
JUDGMENT GIVEN ON
18 December 2017
Heard on 2 May 2017
Appellants Howard Stevens QC John Carrington QC Katherine Deal (Instructed by Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer LLP) |
|
Respondent James Guthrie QC (Instructed by Charles Russell Speechlys LLP) |
LORD HUGHES:
The statute
4. Section 2 of PAPA provides:
“2. Where any action, prosecution, or other proceeding is commenced against any person for any act done in pursuance or execution or intended execution of any Act or Ordinance, or of any public duty or authority or of any alleged neglect or default in the execution of any such act, duty, or authority, the following provisions shall have effect -
(a) the action, prosecution, or proceeding shall not lie or be instituted unless it is commenced within six months next after the act, neglect or default complained of, or, in case of a continuance of injury or damage, within six months next after the ceasing thereof;
…” (emphasis supplied)
“any action (etc) commenced against any person for any act done in pursuance, execution, or intended execution of any Act or Ordinance or of any public duty or authority or for/in respect of any alleged neglect or default in the execution of any such Act, duty or authority.”
The hospital
“3. The several buildings erected in Road Town in the Island of Tortola now generally known as the ‘Peebles Hospital’ together with all ways, paths, walls, drains, buildings, erections, rights, easements, and appurtenances thereto respectively belonging shall be appropriated by the Government as heretofore to the reception and care of sick persons, and shall hereafter be conducted and managed at the public expense as a hospital for the purposes aforesaid in accordance with the provisions of this Ordinance and of all regulations made under the authority of section 15.”
“4. The Governor shall appoint a Board for the proper management of the hospital consisting of not more than six and not less than four persons, of whom any three shall form a quorum …
7. The Board shall, subject to the provisions of this Ordinance and all regulations made thereunder, have the entire control of the hospital and it shall be their duty to see to the proper clothing, care and maintenance of sick persons in the hospital. The Board shall have control of all subordinate officers, employees and servants at the hospital and shall ensure that discipline and good order are maintained, and that all regulations are duly observed:
Provided that the matron, nurses, dispensers and dressers shall be, in respect of their professional duties, under the sole direction and guidance of the Superintendent of the hospital.
8. The Chief Medical Officer for the time being of the Territory shall be the Medical Superintendent of the hospital, and shall be responsible for the medical and surgical care and treatment of all persons admitted to the hospital.
…
10. The Superintendent shall have authority to admit to the hospital any person suffering from any disease, sickness or injury which in the opinion of the Superintendent cannot be properly treated elsewhere, upon such terms as to payment and other matters as the Governor in Council shall determine.
11. The Superintendent shall submit a report to the Governor on the admission of persons to the hospital and the medical and surgical cases dealt with therein.
12. The Governor may appoint a matron for the management and service of the hospital who shall receive such emoluments as may be determined by the Governor.
13. The Board may appoint such other officers and such attendants and servants as the Board may think fit for the management and service of the hospital, who shall receive such emoluments as may be determined by the Governor. Such officers, attendants and servants shall be servants of the Board and shall perform such duties as the Board shall from time to time direct. The Board, subject to approval by the Governor, may dismiss such officers, attendants and servants.
…
15. Subject to the provisions of this Ordinance, the Governor in Council may make regulations with regard to all or any of the following matters, that is to say -
(a) the powers and duties of the officers and servants of the hospital,
(b) the functions of visitors,
(c) admissions to, and discharges from the hospital,
(d) the lodging, clothing, care and maintenance of the inmates of the hospital,
(e) the fees and charges to be paid by persons able to pay for their treatment in the hospital,
(f) the general good order and government of the hospital and every part thereof, and may attach a penalty which shall not exceed twenty-four dollars to any breach of any such regulation.”
The ambit of PAPA
To whom does PAPA apply?
13. The difficulty identified above in construing the proper ambit of PAPA has been apparent from the earliest days of statutes in such terms. From the very outset of the life of PAPA 1893 in England it was limited to the acts of public authorities, as distinct from private persons or corporations acting under statutory enabling. That the English Act had to be read in that way was the opinion of Jeune P in The Ydun [1899] P 236, although on appeal it was clear that the body in that case was indeed a public one. Then, in The Attorney General v Company of Proprietors of Margate Pier and Harbour [1900] 1 Ch 749 the defendant was a private company with shareholders which had been incorporated by statute and, under that statute, had the function of building and maintaining the town’s harbour. Its functions were, as Kekewich J expressly held, clearly to maintain a public utility for the benefit of the public generally. But the company was held not entitled to the protection of the six month limitation period under the 1893 Act. It was, he held, just like a commercial railway company established or empowered by statute. The Act was limited to public bodies, discharging public duties, whether statutory or otherwise, and did not extend to commercial persons or companies even if providing public utilities. By the time of Bradford Corpn v Myers [1916] AC 242 (see below), this very important limitation on the apparently expansive words of PAPA 1893 was treated by the House of Lords as established law beyond debate: see Lord Buckmaster LC at 247.
“An Act to generalize and amend certain statutory provisions for the protections of persons acting in the execution of statutory and other public duties.”
Those words, however, scarcely resolved the question in favour of the limitation applied, since although they speak of public duties, they also speak of “persons” generally. The Virgin Islands’ PAPA does not contain this long title. But even if the words of the English long title are significant, the limitation described was plainly settled law by the time the Virgin Islands’ statute was first enacted in 1916, and its enactment must be taken to have been made in the knowledge of the law as declared in the cases on its English model. It follows that from earliest times, an entirely literal construction of statutes in this form has been rejected.
What kind of actions? Early authorities
16. Conversely, in Parker v London County Council [1904] 2 KB 501, Channell J held that the PAPA 1893 did apply its shortened limitation period to a passenger’s action brought against a local authority operating a tramway under statutory authority and based on injury attributable to a collision caused by the alleged negligence of the company’s employees. The defendants in that case were clearly a public authority and not a commercial company and so the critical question was the ambit of activities covered by PAPA 1893. The judge did not follow Palmer or Carpue, albeit with some reluctance. He held that it was enough to engage PAPA 1893 that the public body was carrying out a public duty to provide the tramway, and relied on The Ydun [1899] P 236. In the latter case the action was brought for negligently managing the navigation of the River Ribble, in other words for negligently performing precisely the public duty created by the statute. However, in neither Parker nor The Ydun was any possible difference between statutory duty and statutory authority addressed. Parker thus left a conflict between passenger cases at first instance.
17. Subsequently in Lyles v Southend-on-Sea Corpn [1905] 2 KB 1, another passenger’s action against a local authority complaining of negligence causing him injury on its tramway, the Court of Appeal held that PAPA 1893 applied. Romer LJ said no more (at 20) than that the action was brought against a public authority and based directly on an alleged neglect or default in the execution of a public duty or authority. As such, he held, it came “within the very words” of section 1 of PAPA 1893. That, like Parker, would appear to be an application of the literal reading of the section. Vaughan Williams LJ, however, giving the leading judgment, with which both Romer and Stirling LJJ agreed, addressed the decisions in Palmer and Carpue. He held (at 15-16) that there was no material difference of wording between the specific statutory provisions in those cases and PAPA 1893. He decided however (at 17) that all such provisions applied only where the public authority in question was under a duty and not where it merely exercised a power. That distinguished Palmer and Carpue, which were cases of powers, from Lyles where the local authority was under a duty to provide such tramway cars as the public interest reasonably required. As in Palmer and Carpue, that involved implicitly limiting the literal words of the statute, for they do not distinguish between actions in discharge of statutory duties and actions in exercise of statutory authority, or power. Ten years later, in Myers, the distinction which he relied upon was exploded (see below).
18. At about the same time, in Sharpington v Fulham Guardians [1904] 2 Ch 449, some Poor Law Guardians, undoubtedly a public body, were sued on a building contract which they had made, and claimed the benefit of PAPA’s abbreviated limitation period. Farwell J, after clearly very full argument, held that although the Guardians had obvious public functions (providing accommodation for poor children), what they had done was to enter into a private contract in order to fulfil them by providing a house. That private contract did not attract the protection of PAPA 1893. It was not, he said, at p 456:
“a complaint by a number of children or by a member of the public in respect of the public duty. It is a complaint by a private individual in respect of a private injury done to him. The only way in which the public duty comes in at all is … that if it were not for the public duty any such contract would be ultra vires.”
Later, in Myers, Lord Buckmaster LC declined to hold Sharpington applicable to the action there before the court, because the latter was in substance an action in tort, not in contract. But neither he nor any of the House doubted the outcome of this case and Viscount Haldane (at 252) and Lord Atkinson (at 260) emphatically approved it. This was thus a further example of a PAPA statute being limited, rather than read literally, and it was a different limitation from the one invoked by Vaughan Williams LJ in Lyles.
Myers and Griffiths
“The pinch of this case, Mr McCall has cogently urged, lies in the word ‘authority’. Granted that the respondents had not a statutory duty to sell coke, still they had ‘authority’ to do so, and what is here complained of is neglect in doing a thing which is authorised by statute.”
Moreover, at 254, Lord Atkinson expressed the opinion that there might well have been an implied duty to sell coke as part of a duty to manage the undertaking in the way most beneficial to the interests of the inhabitants; if that were so, any distinction between power and duty would not have helped resolve the case.
“…a great distinction between an incidental power to trade and a direct duty to trade;”
thus perhaps either adopting the Lyles distinction between duty and power or drawing a distinction between incidental and core activities. But he also had said, at 247:
“… the words of the section themselves limit the class of action, and show that it was not intended to cover every act which a local authority had power to perform.
In other words, it is not because the act out of which an action arises is within their power that a public authority enjoy the benefit of the statute. It is because the act is one which is either an act in the direct execution of a statute, or in the discharge of a public duty, or the exercise of a public authority. I regard these latter words as meaning a duty owed to all the public alike or an authority exercised impartially with regard to all the public. It assumes that there are duties and authorities which are not public, and that in the exercise or discharge of such duties or authorities this protection does not apply.”
At 251, Viscount Haldane said this:
“My Lords, in the case of such a restriction of ordinary rights I think that the words used must not have more read into them than they express or of necessity imply, and I do not think that they can be properly extended so as to embrace an act which is not done in direct pursuance of the provisions of the statute or in the direct execution of the duty or authority. What causes of action fall within these categories it may be very difficult to say abstractly or exhaustively.”
Lord Atkinson’s formulation was at 253:
“To give a cause of action the duty must be due from the defendant to the plaintiff. And in my view this case turns upon the nature of the duty owed by the appellants to the respondent for the breach of which the latter sues. Was it a private duty created by the specific contract entered into between the parties for the sale and delivery with reasonable care of this load of coke, or was it a public duty within the meaning of section 1 of the Public Authorities Protection Act of 1893?”
And Lord Shaw said this at 262:
“It is not enough that the neglect occurs in the doing of a thing which is authorized by statute, but the thing done is not every or anything done but must be something in the execution of a public duty or authority, and it is only neglect in the execution of any such duty or authority that is covered by the statute. This restriction appears to me to be vital. The Act seems to say: - there are many things which a public authority, clothed, say, with statutory power, may do, which the limitation will not cover; but when the act or neglect had reference to the execution of their public duty or authority - something founded truly on their statutory powers or their public position - to that, and that only, will the limitation apply.”
Lord Shaw’s opening words had helped to explain the underlying purpose of PAPA statutes (at 260):
“This statute is one of much importance to local authorities throughout the country. By the limitation which it imposes it prevents belated and in many cases unfounded actions. In this way it, pro tanto, allows a safer periodical budget, prevents one generation of ratepayers from being saddled with the obligations of another, and secures steadiness in municipal and local accounting.”
At 263-264, he went on to suggest where this analysis led. He said this:
“If there be a duty arising from statute or the exercise of a public function, there is a correlative right similarly arising. A municipal tramway car depends for its existence and conduct on, say, a private and many public Acts, and the corporation in running it is performing a public duty. When a citizen boards such a car, in one sense he makes, by paying his fare, a contract; but the boarding of the car, the payment of the fare, and the charging of the corporation with the responsibility for safe carriage are all matter of right on the part of the passenger, a public right of carriage which he shares with all his fellow citizens, correlative to the public duty which the corporation owes to all. Similarly, when a municipality, by virtue of private and public statutes, carries on a gas undertaking, the public duty of manufacture and supply finds its correlative in the right of the consumer, a public right which he has in common with all his fellow householders, to supply and to service. In both of these cases, accordingly, the Public Authorities Protection Act applies.
But where the right of the individual cannot be correlated with a statutory or public duty to the individual, the foundation of the relations of parties does not lie in anything but a private bargain which it was open for either the municipality or the individual citizen, consumer, or customer to enter into or to decline. And an action on either side founded on the performance or non-performance of that contract is one to which the Protection Act does not apply, because the appeal, which is made to a Court of law, does not rest on statutory or public duty, but merely on a private and individual bargain.”
(Emphasis supplied throughout)
Subsequent cases
28. A similarly literal approach to legislation in the same terms as PAPA was adopted in Firestone Tire and Rubber Co (SS) Ltd v Singapore Harbour Board [1952] AC 452. The defendant Board negligently lost part of a cargo of tyres destined for the plaintiffs. The abbreviated limitation period was held to apply to the plaintiff’s breach of bailment claim on the basis that the Board had been acting in the course of its public duty under the legislation which established it. The Board endorsed the views expressed in both Myers and Griffiths as to the difficulty of defining the difference between public and private duties, but treated the principal test as whether the act performed was incidental, or subsidiary, to the statutory function, rather than integral to it. By that test, the handling of the cargo of tyres was held not to be subsidiary. The decision in Myers was, however, as has been seen, not as straightforward as a test of subsidiarity. Once again, if the different question were now to be asked whether the duty sued upon was one owed generally to the public or one owed particularly to the plaintiff, the outcome would have been likely to be otherwise.
29. Vincent v Tauranga Electric-Power Board [1937] AC 196 did not concern PAPA or legislation in identical terms. The plaintiff employee sued for personal injuries suffered when working on a transformer belonging to the defendant Board. The statute applied an abbreviated limitation period, and a notice requirement, in relation to any action against the Board in the execution or intended execution or in pursuance of the statute “for any alleged irregularity, or trespass, or nuisance, or negligence, or for any act or omission whatever”. Those words were understandably described as “of the utmost amplitude”, and the action was statute-barred accordingly. Although the plaintiff had sought to rely on Myers and other decisions under PAPA 1893, the Board held them inapplicable given the (different) terms of the legislation.
30. Duffus v National Water Commission [2007] UKPC 35 was an employee’s claim for wrongful dismissal. It failed, principally because, as both the Court of Appeal and the Board held, the only relevant contractual provision was a requirement for reasonable notice of termination, and such notice had been given. There was, accordingly, no breach of contract, and that was the end of the suit. The defendant water commission had, however, also pleaded the Jamaican Public Authorities Protection Act, which was in the same terms as the present statute. The plaintiff had argued that the actions of the defendants in dismissing him “cannot be said to have been done in execution of the purpose of” the Commission. That argument was, unsurprisingly, summarily rejected. No further analysis of the PAPA point was necessary or ventured.
“This must be the swan song of that never very highly regarded statute, and the Lord Advocate, in what, I think he would permit me to describe as a somewhat half-hearted submission on it, conceded that it is not a statute that can be applied unless the grounds for doing so are very clear.”
In the Inner House and subsequently in the House of Lords reliance on PAPA was similarly rejected. Far from any qualification to Lord Kilbrandon’s words being suggested, Lord Clyde, Lord President added in the Inner House, at 1963 SC 410, 448, that
“The Act has always been narrowly construed by the Courts, since ‘otherwise, what was intended as a reasonable protection for a public authority would become an engine of oppression’ ...”
And much more recently in Durity v Attorney General of Trinidad and Tobago [2003] 1 AC 405 the Board rejected a claim that a PAPA statute applied to a claim by a suspended magistrate under the Constitution alleging lack of due process. In the course of doing so, Lord Nicholls of Birkenhead, giving the judgment of the Board, summarised the history of PAPA 1893 as follows, at para 20:
“This statutory provision, it may be noted in passing, or its equivalent in the United Kingdom legislation, had a somewhat inglorious life. The (United Kingdom) Public Authorities Protection Act 1893 (56 & 57 Vict c 61), until its eventual repeal by the Law Reform (Limitation of Actions & etc) Act 1954, attracted judicial criticism, in respect of both content and drafting. Most actions against public authorities were actions for personal injuries arising out of accidents. It was seen as unfair that plaintiffs injured by a public authority should have a far shorter time in which to commence a claim than if they had been injured by someone in the private sector: see Stubbings v Webb [1993] AC 498, 502, per Lord Griffiths. The difficulties arising in the interpretation of the Act, and deciding which types of case fell within its scope and which did not, were repeatedly the subject of critical observations by the House of Lords: see Bradford Corpn v Myers … Griffiths v Smith … and Firestone Tire and Rubber Co (SS) Ltd v Singapore Harbour Board … In the result the Act was always construed restrictively, lest ‘what was intended as a reasonable protection for a public authority would become an engine of oppression’: see Burmah Oil Co (Burma Trading) Ltd v Lord Advocate …”
Conclusions