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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 >> Le Vine v DPP [2010] EWHC 1128 (Admin) (06 May 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2010/1128.html Cite as: (2010) 174 JP 337, [2010] EWHC 1128 (Admin), 174 JP 337 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
DIVISIONAL COURT
Strand London WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE KEITH
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LE VINE | Claimant | |
v | ||
DPP | Defendant |
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MR BLAKE appeared on behalf of the Defendant
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(1) the appellant and Mrs Gerlach were residents in separate self-contained independent living flats, amongst others, in sheltered accommodation at 22 Pembridge Villas;(2) all residents of 22 Pembridge Villas have the use of communal entrances and if they wish a lounge, a toilet, and a small laundry room in the basement;
(3) on 26 September 2009 Mrs Gerlach wished to use the washing machine and dryer in the communal laundry room, which is restricted to residents;
(4) at that time the appellant had a visitor who was using the machine, so Mrs Gerlach spoke to her in the visitors lounge and indicated she would return to use the machine when it had finished its cycle;
(5) when Mrs Gerlach returned the cycle had finished and she took the visitor's washing from the machine and loaded her own;
(6) the appellant then entered the laundry room, shouting at Mrs Gerlach, "you fucking bitch, who do you think you are, putting your dirty hands in the laundry?", followed by, "you fucking cunt, I am going to knock your block off", words which were intended to cause Mrs Gerlach alarm and distress. He then left the premises to go to the laundrette.
Section 4A(2) is as follows:
"an offence under this section may be committed in a public or a private place except that no offence is committed where the words or behaviour are used or the writing, sign or other visible representation is distributed or displayed by a person inside a dwelling and the other person is also inside that or another dwelling."
Section 8 then defines dwelling in the following way:
"Dwelling means any structure or part of a structure occupied as a person's home or as other living accommodation (whether the occupation is separate or shared with others) but does not include any part not so occupied, and for this purpose structure includes a tent, caravan, vehicle, vessel or other structure."
"I was of the opinion that each flat within 22 Pembroke Court was a self contained, independent dwelling occupied by each resident as their home. The fact that residents could, if they wished to, go to the basement to use a communal laundry facility does not make that room part of the resident's home or other living accommodation."
Accordingly, he convicted the appellant but posed the following question for the opinion of this court:
"Was I correct in finding that the laundry room within a sheltered housing property was not a dwelling for the purposes of section 8 of the Public~Order~Act 1986?"
"The government therefore proposes to extend this rule, [that is (5)] but in order to exclude domestic disputes there will be a proviso that the offence cannot be committed inside a private dwelling house."
I confess I gain little assistance from the statement within the White Paper. It is indeed plain from the legislation that the intention is not to criminalise unacceptable criminal behaviour of this kind, under section 4 at least, where it occurs in a dwelling, but the only safe guide for determining what the concept encompasses is is, to my mind, to focus on the statutory definition itself. It does not assist to simply assert in a relatively loose way that this could properly be described as a domestic dispute.
We were referred to two authorities bearing on the proper construction of the section. In Rukwira v Director of Public Prosecutions [1993] Criminal Law Reports 1882 there was a fracas on the landing in a council block of flats. Access to the landing was gained by an entry phone system controlled by the, occupants of the individual self contained flats. The question for the Divisional Court was whether the communal landing fell within the definition of a dwelling under section 8. The Divisional Court held that it did not. The judgment of the court was given by Macpherson J and Kennedy LJ agreed with his judgment. Macpherson J said that the answer to the question had to be found by focusing carefully on the statutory definition. He held that the common parts in issue in that case were the means of access to the living accommodation, but they were not part of the dwelling itself, that they were not part of the structure occupied as a person's home, and they could not properly be described as living accommodation because the householder lived inward of the front door, and not outward onto the common landing.
In Francis [2007] 1 Weekly Law Reports 1021 the question is whether a police cell is a dwelling within the meaning of the section. The Court of Appeal held that it was not. Moses LJ, giving the judgment of the Court (Moses LJ, Goldring J, and His Honour Judge Martin Stevens QC) said this:
"The area where a person may indulge in the conduct prohibited by section 4A with impunity are accordingly narrowly confined. Such areas are confined to a structure or part of the structure which is occupied as a person's home or the living accommodation. There is no exception in relation to the areas where such an offence may be committed in relation to near accommodation. The concept of other living accommodation takes its meaning from association with the concept of a person's home."
The appellant submits that Rukwira is plainly correct, but has no direct relevance to this case, because a landing does not have a domestic function in the same way a laundry room does.