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England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Chief Constable of the West Midlands Police, R (on the application of) v Gonzales & Ors [2002] EWHC 1087 (Admin) (30th May, 2002) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2002/1087.html Cite as: [2002] EWHC 1087 (Admin) |
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QUEENS BENCH DIVISION
DIVISIONAL COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL | ||
B e f o r e :
and
THE HONOURABLE MR JUSTICE POOLE
____________________
The QUEEN on the APPLICATION of The CHIEF CONSTABLE of the WEST MIDLANDS POLICE | Claimant | |
- and - | ||
BIRMINGHAM JUSTICES | Defendant | |
- and - | ||
PHIDEL GONZALES NATHANIEL POOL ANTHONY DOLAN LINTON MILLARD JERMAINE REID | Interested Parties |
____________________
Mr R Howat (instructed by Glaisyers) for the Third Interested Party
Hearing dates : Wednesday, 8 MAY 2002
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Sedley:
“(1) an application for an order under this section may be made by a relevant authority if it appears to the authority that the following conditions are fulfilled with respect to any person aged 10 or over, namely –
(a) that the person has acted, since the commencement date, in an anti-social manner, that is to say, in a manner that caused or was likely to cause harassment, alarm or distress to one or more persons not of the same household as himself; and
(b) that such an order is necessary to protect persons in the local government area in which the harassment, alarm or distress was caused or was likely to be caused from further anti-social acts by him;
and in this section “relevant authority” means the council for the local government area or any chief officer of police any part of whose police area lies within that area.
(2) a relevant authority shall not make such an application without consulting each other relevant authority.
………………………………………………………………..
(4) if, on such application, it is proved that the conditions mentioned in subsection (1) are fulfilled, the magistrates’ court may make an order under this section (an “anti-social behaviour order”) which prohibits the defendant from doing anything described in the order.”
“In the administration of government in this country the functions which are given to ministers…are functions so multifarious that no minister could ever attend to them. To take the example of the present case no doubt there have been thousands of requisitions in this country by individual ministries. It cannot be supposed that this regulation meant that, in each case, the minister in person should direct his mind to the matter. The duties imposed on ministers and the powers given to ministers are normally exercised under the authority of the ministers by responsible officials of the department. Public business could not be carried on if that were not the case. Constitutionally, a decision of such an official is, of course, the decision of the minister. The minister is responsible. It is he who must answer before Parliament for anything that his officials have done under his authority, and, if for an important matter he selected an official of such junior standing that he could not be expected competently to perform the work, the minister would have to answer to Parliament.”
“In the present case Mr Farquharson urged that exactly the same principles ought to be applied to the Commissioner of Metropolitan Police as apply in the case of Ministers. It has always been a principle in this country that, a Minister being responsible to Parliament for the acts of officers of his department and having to act through others, an act done by the proper officer of his department is the act of the Minister; the proper responsible officials are the alter ago of the minister. And accordingly no question of delegation arises. That principle is very well known; the case which is always quoted in connection with that is Carltona v. Works Commissioners [1943] 2 All ER 560…
I feel grave difficulties in extending that well-known principle to a case such as this, to the Commissioner of the Metropolitan Police. It is not, I think sufficient to say that it is a principle which it applicable when ever it is difficult or impractical for a person to act for himself, in other words when ever he has to act through others the principle applies. I see grave difficulties in going that far, and, as it seems to me, superintendent Williams was, by reason of his position, not the alter ego of the Commissioner but merely had implied delegated authority, by reason of his position, from the Commissioner.”
Lord Parker went on to deal with and to reject the consequent argument, that the further delegation from superintendent to inspector was contrary to legal principle, holding that the commissioner had impliedly delegated not only the power but a power to delegate it.
“…where the power to take certain steps is given to an officer appointed pursuant to statute then it is only going to be in a very exceptional case that the courts will imply a power to delegate in the absence of any express provision.”
He cited in support, as other courts have done, this passage from De Smith, Woolf and Jowell, Judicial Review of Administrative Action (5th edition) p66:
“Where the exercise of a discretionary power is entrusted to a named officer – e.g. a chief officer of police, a medical officer of health or an inspector – another officer cannot exercise his powers in his stead unless express statutory provision has been made for the appointment of a deputy or unless in the circumstances the administrative convenience of allowing a deputy or other subordinate to act as an authorised agent very clearly outweighs the desirability of maintaining the principle that the officer designated by statute should act personally.”
The Carltona decision is not cited in this section of that work. It is separately treated (at page 369 ff) in an exposition of the alter ego principle.
“Having considered the principle of delegation and the practicalities involved I am firmly of the view that the Commander of the particular OCU where the anti-social behaviour order is sought is the proper and appropriate agent for the Chief Constable in relation to section 1 Crime and Disorder Act, or his operations and crime managers, or operational department head of at least the rank of superintendent.”
To this Mr Howat is prepared, in deference to the inclusion of “deputies” in the memorandum, to add officers acting up in the rank of superintendent, but no more.
“By reference to the principles of delegation, the practicalities involved (including the number of anti-social behaviour order applications) and the clear wording of section 1 Crime and Disorder Act, I conclude that it must be a person of the same rank who carries out the duties under section 1(2) as section 1(1) and it must be the commander of the OCU or at the very least a person no lower than the rank of superintendent.”
The last part of this holding follows from the District Judge’s previous conclusion. Its nub, however, is that the functions of consultation and application must be carried out at the same level of the police hierarchy.
“... whether there was any consultation at all is open to doubt but I deal with this issue assuming that there was consultation and that it was carried out by Sergeant Higgins on behalf of the ‘relevant authority’.”
Mr Justice Poole: