Leading up to the above decision of the divisional court was the appeal to have the case stated ammended and referred back to the crown.
Cannock Chase District Council v Alldritt
Queen's Bench Division (Crown Office List)
HEARING-DATES: 13 November 1992
13 November 1992
COUNSEL:
M Stephens for the Applicant; the Respondent did not appear in person
PANEL: Brooke J
JUDGMENTBY-1: BROOKE J
JUDGMENT-1:
BROOKE J: This is an application by the appellant, the Cannock Chase District Council, for a direction that the case stated be remitted back to the Stafford Crown Court for amendment. Suggested amendments are included in an exhibit to the affidavit of Susan Sims-Steward, sworn on 10th September 1992.
The application relates to an appeal by Mr Alldritt, who has acted in person throughout, which came before the Stafford Crown Court as long as 23rd March 1992 when it was heard by Mr Recorder Alan Pardoe QC sitting with justices who had experience of the local area. The Crown Court allowed Mr Alldritt's appeal and directed that six hackney carriage licences ought to be issued to him by the district council.
The district council was aggrieved with this decision and applied in time for the Crown Court to state a case. A draft case was submitted to the Crown Court and, in due course, Mr Pardoe signed a case stated which does not in all respects coincide with the local authority's draft.
There are three respects in which the local authority now seek to have the case amended. The first is that reference was made in the proceedings of the Crown Court to a survey on which the local council relied as providing reasons why Mr Alldritt's application should not be granted. The case stated contains a number of findings in relation to the survey and a number of findings as to the circumstances in which the survey was carried out. The local authority are, however, anxious that the main conclusions of the survey should be included in the case as stated.
The main issue of law which arises for decision in the case is whether the local authority were entitled to consider whether, generally, in their local authority area there was an unmet demand for hackney carriages or whether, as the Crown Court held, if they were satisfied that there was an unmet demand in the town of Rugeley within which Mr Alldritt wishes to ply his trade, that was sufficient to require them to grant him appropriate licences.
The first matter that Mr Stephens, who appears for the council, wishes to have included in the case is the conclusions of the survey. It seems to me that the conclusions in themselves would not take the matter very much further so far as the Divisional Court was concerned if they were not seen in the context of the survey as a whole. The survey is a relatively short document. If the Divisional Court wishes to see the survey and if Mr Stephens, or whoever appears for the district council, wishes to draw their attention to any part of it, then it seems to me that it would be unfair in principle to deny him the opportunity, at any rate, of referring to the survey if he wishes, subject always to leave being granted by the Divisional Court.
I would not be happy about directing the Crown Court to restate their case, simply referring to the conclusions of the survey without referring to the whole of it. Accordingly my view on this part of the application is that the appropriate course for me to take would be to grant the appellant leave, subject always to the views of the Divisional Court before whom this appeal is heard, to adduce the whole of the survey before the Divisional Court so that the court may read it if it wishes.
What I would suggest as a matter of practice is that a transcript of this judgment be placed with the court papers before the Divisional Court, and the survey findings annexed to it, so that the Divisional Court can see, before the case comes on, the view that I have formed and can decide de bene esse whether they wish to read it beforehand.
Much the same applies to the second matter with which the district council is concerned. This relates to the circumstances in which Mr Alldritt, having had an application for six hackney carriages turned down, subsequently applied for two. He was required, with his application form, to submit a valid insurance certificate. Because it was expensive to insure these taxis, he could only afford to insure two and could only produce a certificate in respect of two.
The case stated sets out in convenient form the facts relating to this. The council wish the Divisional Court to see the application form. I do not, for my part, see that the application form takes the matter very much further. I would be very reluctant to deny the council the opportunity to show the application form to the Divisional Court if it wishes to do so, because it seems to me unfortunate, if the council were to feel aggrieved, that they could not show this form to the court. Accordingly my attitude to this is very much the same as my attitude to the first application, that the council should have leave to adduce the application form before the Divisional Court, subject always to the Divisional Court's own decision as to whether it wishes to take it into account.
The third matter is rather different. There was a history of earlier applications in this matter and correspondence which passed between Mr Alldritt and the council which included some misleading advice given by the council relating to a potential appeal to a magistrates' court which did not exist. Ultimately Mr Alldritt, after submitting an earlier informal application for six hackney carriage licences, submitted a formal application for two. The Crown Court, having heard what happened, decided in the exercise of its discretion to treat this is as an appeal relating to the six hackney carriage licences which Mr Alldritt wanted. The council was aggrieved with the way that the Crown Court dealt with the matter and felt that it should properly have confined itself to an appeal in respect of two hackney carriage licences only.
There is nothing in the draft case drafted by the council's own legal advisers and submitted to the Crown Court which shows any factual basis on which the council's assertions that the Crown Court exercised its discretion wrongly could fairly be tried. What the council wishes to do is simply to tack on to the end of the draft case the question: in the circumstances, was the Crown Court correct to direct that the respondent grant the appellant six hackney carriage licences? If not, should it have directed that only two licences be granted or none at all?
In my judgment, in the absence of anything in the council's draft case which could effectively lead to an answer being given to the question (while it is true that certain of the earlier history was set out) it would be inappropriate to add that question to the case. Mr Alldritt always wanted six licences and the Crown Court granted him his wish for six licences. I do not see that it would be appropriate to direct that this further question should be asked.
In any event there are doubts as to the existence of any power in the High Court to order a Crown Court to amend a case whereas there is express power to do so under the legislation relating to cases stated by magistrates' courts. I would be very loth to allow this unhappy dispute to be prolonged further in the possibility that there might be further disputes about the jurisdiction of this court to do what the council asks.
In those circumstances, having made the observations I have in relation to the first two parts of the council's application and having rejected the third, I make no order on the application.
However, I am extremely concerned that further time has elapsed in relation to this matter. Mr Alldritt first applied for his six licences as long ago as March 1990. In all the circumstances, despite the pressure on the Divisional Court list, I consider that this is an appropriate case to order that now that the case stated is in its final form, this appeal be expedited.
Mr Stephens, how long do you anticipate that the appeal would take? The judges will have read the papers before you start and will have formed preliminary views on it anyhow.
DISPOSITION:
Judgment accordingly
SOLICITORS:
M Anderson, Head of Legal and Administrative Services, Cannock Chase District Council, Staffordshire
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