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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Crompton (t/a David Crompton Haulage) v Department of Transport North Western Area [2003] EWCA Civ 64 (31 January 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2003/64.html Cite as: [2003] EWCA Civ 64, [2003] RTR 517 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM Transport Tribunal Road Haulage Appeal
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL | ||
B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE MANTELL
and
LORD JUSTICE MANCE
____________________
Crompton t/a David Crompton Haulage | Appellant | |
- and - | ||
Department of Transport North Western Area | Respondent |
____________________
Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited, 190 Fleet Street
London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7421 4040, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
____________________
AS APPROVED BY THE COURT
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Kennedy :
Statutory Provisions
"The traffic commissioners by whom a standard licence was issued shall direct that it be revoked if at any time it appears to him that the licence-holder is no longer –
(a) of good repute,
(b) of the appropriate financial standing, or
(c) professionally competent;
and the traffic commissioner shall determine whether or not that is the case in accordance with schedule 3. "
Schedule 3 deals with qualifications for standard licence, and paragraph 1 of that schedule deals with good repute. So far as material that paragraph provides –
"(1) In determining whether an individual is of good repute, a traffic commissioner may have regard to any matter but shall, in particular, have regard to –
(a) any relevant convictions of the individual or of his servants or agents; and
(b) any other information in his possession which appears to him to relate to the individual's fitness to hold a licence.
(2) In determining whether a company is of good repute, a traffic commissioner shall have regard to all the material evidence including, in particular –
(a) any relevant convictions of the company or any of its officers, servants or agents; and
(b) any other information in his possession as to the previous conduct of –
(i) any of the company's officers, servants or agents, or
(ii) any of its directors, in whatever capacity,
if that conduct appears to him to relate to the company's fitness to hold a licence."
"Without prejudice to the generality of a traffic commissioner's power under paragraph 1 to determine that a person is not of good repute, a commissioner shall determine that an individual is not of good repute if that individual has –
(a) more than one conviction of a serious offence; or
(b) been convicted of road traffic offences."
The Issue
The Facts
After the Hearing on 27th June 2001
Application to go to a different Commissioner
Case against appellant re 27th June 2001
"(1) that after the Deputy Traffic Commissioner left the courtroom the appellant and his brother went up to the journalist, Mr Jewell, in a threatening and intimidating manner, inquiring of him if he was going to publish anything about the Deputy Traffic Commissioner disbelieving their claim that Gordon Crompton's partner had miscarried at the beginning of August 1999. Mr Jewell's response was that is was a matter for his editor, and according to him they became abusive and threatening and Gordon Crompton threatened to throw his laptop out of the window. At that stage their solicitor, Mr Chant, persuaded them to leave, but then –
(2) As they were leaving the appellant threatened Miss Farr. He stopped very close to her, waved his finger in her face and shouted 'and you, you big fat fucking trollop I will get you for this'. Mr Jewell thought that the appellant was going to grab Miss Farr by the throat. The court clerk kept telling the brothers to leave the courtroom, and they did so, but –
(3) As they left Gordon Crompton made it clear that he knew the Deputy Traffic Commissioner's car registration number, and said that from now on he had 'better sleep with one eye open'."
The appellant's case
"I am writing to you to apologise for my outburst at the hearing in Leeds on 27th June, 2001.
I realise that I was completely out of order, but I was very distressed at the decision of the Deputy Traffic Commissioner in taking away my Operators Licence without any time limit, bearing in mind that this was the first time I had been called before a Commissioner.
Further I have never had a prohibition notice and complied with all defect notices. Indeed I have never had any proceedings taken against me previously so you will appreciate that I was shocked and upset with the decision.
Once again I apologise unreservedly for my actions and trust it is accepted."
To that letter there was no reply. He did not send any apology to either Mr Clegg or Mr Jewell, but he did express his apologies again to the Traffic Commissioner at the hearing on 26th November 2001.
The Decision of the Traffic Commissioner
The Appeal to the Transport Tribunal
"(1) The decision of the Commissioner not to transfer the hearing before her to another Traffic Area.
(2) The decision to revoke the licence was unreasonable and unjustified in the circumstances, including the fact that the appellant's licence had been revoked for 2½ months pursuant to the order of the Deputy Traffic Commissioner on 27th June 2001 until 13th September 2001 when his appeal was allowed."
Grounds of Appeal to this Court
"(1) That in construing the meaning of 'good repute' in section 27(1) of the 1995 Act, and the apparently mandatory requirement that a licence be revoked if it appears to the Traffic Commissioner that the licence holder is no longer of good repute, the Transport Tribunal failed to have regard to the aims of the legislation, and the fact that an existing licence is, for the purposes of Article 1 of the First Protocol to the Convention a possession of which the appellant should not be deprived except in certain limited circumstances (see grounds 1 to 4).
(2) That the facts as found could not properly have led the Traffic Commissioner to conclude that the appellant was no longer of good repute (grounds 5 and 7). In spite of this ground of appeal assertions of fact are made in ground 7 of the Appellant's Notice for which there is no evidence.
(3) That the Tribunal erred in law in subjecting the appellant to a large number of hearings which interfered with his right of privacy and the enjoyment of a good reputation. As can be seen from the history outlined above this is a ground of appeal for which there is no foundation whatsoever."
The proper approach in law
(2) An operator's licence is a possession for the purposes of Article 1 of the First Protocol, so the appellant was not to be deprived of it –
".. except in the public interest and subject to the conditions provided for by law, and by the general principles of International law"
The Article goes on to say that those provisions shall not –
".. in any way impair the right of a state to enforce such law as it deems necessary to control the use of property in accordance with the general interest …."
(3) In Traktorer Aktiebolag v Sweden [1989] 13 EHRR 309 it was said by the European Court of Human Rights at paragraph 59 that a licence such as this (in that case a restaurant liquor licence) can be revoked lawfully in pursuit of a legitimate aim, but the action must be proportionate. That case is also authority for the proposition that when balancing the interests of the community against individual freedoms the state has a wide margin of appreciation (see paragraph 62). The observations were an echo of what had previously been said in Sporrong and Lonnroth v Sweden [1982] 5 EHRR 35 at paragraph 69.
(4) The amended wording of the domestic statute, the 1995 Act, is based on European Council Directive 96/26/EC as amended by Directive 98/76/EC. The 1996 Directive on the admission to the occupation of road haulage operator was itself a consolidating directive, and it is clear from the recitals that there was a perceived need for Member States to provide rules for road haulage operators dealing with good repute, financial standing and professional competence. The Directive envisaged certain minimum requirements, and provided for inter-state recognition. Part of Article 3, as amended, reads –
"1. Undertakings wishing to engage in the occupation of road transport operator shall:
(a) be of good repute;….
2. Member States shall determine the conditions which must be fulfilled by undertakings established within their territory in order to satisfy the good repute requirement. They shall provide that this requirement is not satisfied, or is no longer satisfied, if the natural person or persons who are deemed to satisfy this condition under paragraph 1:
(a) have been convicted of serious criminal offences, including offences of a commercial nature,
(b) have been declared unfit to pursue the occupation of road transport operator under any rules in force,
(c) have been convicted of serious offences against the rules in force concerning:
- the pay and employment conditions in the profession, or
-road haulage or road passenger transport, as appropriate, in particular the rules relating to drivers' driving and rest periods, the weights and dimensions of commercial vehicles, road safety and vehicle safety, the protection of the environment and the other rules concerning professional liability."
It is clear from the first sentence of Article 3 paragraph 2, and from the cross-border recognition provisions in Article 8 to which our attention has helpfully been drawn by the skeleton argument provided by Mr Sheldon on behalf of the Secretary of State, that provided the minimum requirements are met individual states can decide for themselves what is necessary to be of good repute. There is no definition to be found in the Directive and its provisions are not exhaustive, as Mrs Outhwaite now accepts.
(5) That brings us back to the 1995 Act, which also contains no definition of good repute, but it is noticeable that in schedule 3 the opening words of paragraph 1(2) dealing with a company are more restrictive than the opening words of paragraph 1(1) dealing with an individual. When a traffic commissioner is considering if an individual is of good repute he can have regard to "any matter", but if he is considering a company he must confine himself to "all the material evidence". The difference in wording is a little surprising, but Parliament cannot have intended a traffic commissioner ever to have regard to immaterial evidence, so the conclusion must surely be that the schedule requires the traffic commissioner when considering alleged loss of repute to focus on matters relevant to the individual's fitness to hold a licence, bearing in mind –
"(a) that an existing licence is a possession safeguarded by Article 1 of the First Protocol, and -
(b) that if loss of repute is found the inevitable sanction is revocation, possibly followed by an application for a fresh licence which may or not be granted. There must therefore be a relationship of proportionality between the finding and the sanction, and that relationship has a direct bearing on the approach to be adopted in any set of circumstances to the question of whether or not the individual has lost his repute."
All of that seems to me to be in the end non-contentious.
The approach of the Commissioner and the Tribunal
"I have asked myself the question, does the information in my possession regarding Mr David Crompton's behaviour after the Public Inquiry relate to his fitness to hold a licence? The answer to that question is yes; I think that it does."
She then referred to the nature of the inquiry conducted by the Deputy Traffic Commissioner, to the fact that operators are business men who should know how to behave, and to the function of the legislation, before saying –
"In dealing with this operator's conduct and his repute I remind myself that his conduct becomes relevant because it is how he was dealing with the enforcement of that legislation and the enforcement of those aims and purposes via a Commissioner sitting in a quasi judicial function. The conduct itself, in my view, does not simply have to relate to the aims and purposes of the legislation, but here does relate to the Tribunal sitting and exercising their functions of enforcement …… all of that means that I do feel it appropriate to take account of this operator's conduct as a licence holder with regard to what happened after the Inquiry."
She then went on to review what she described as the positive and negative features, in the course of which she said that she did not regard the operator's loss of his licence for 2½ months as a relevant feature to take into account, adding –
"Those sorts of factors are, in my judgment, relevant when looking at sanctions after a penalty has been imposed."
That is a little delphic, but for the reasons I have explained it seems to me that although the 2½ months without a licence was not directly relevant, the inevitable sanction was a critical factor when deciding whether to make a finding of loss of good repute.
"Well, this, in a way, is a case of all or nothing. Loss of repute means, of course loss of licence."
That observation, which she repeated at the end of her determination, may be said to be only a statement of the obvious, but it seems to me to betray a failure to appreciate the relevance of proportionality in the context of this case.
Conclusion.
Lord Justice Mantell:
Lord Justice Mance: