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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 >> Lawson, R (on the application of) v City of Westminster Magistrates' Court [2013] EWHC 2434 (Admin) (02 August 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2013/2434.html Cite as: [2013] EWHC 2434 (Admin), 177 JP 577, [2014] WLR 2085, (2013) 177 JP 577, [2014] 1 WLR 2085 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
DIVISIONAL COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
THE QUEEN (on the application of CARLOS LAWSON) |
Claimant |
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- and – |
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CITY OF WESTMINSTER MAGISTRATES' COURT |
Defendant |
____________________
Ivan Hare (instructed by The Treasury Solicitor) for the Defendant
Hearing date: 30 July 2013
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE FOSKETT:
"…. The court concluded that the defendant was not an 'existing defaulter' (within the meaning of that term given in Paragraph 3 of Part 1 of Schedule 5 of the Courts Act 2003). On that date £76,690.96 was owed on the order and a further £17,705.29 in statutory interest; a total of £94,441.25. The court requested that monies owing be paid within seven days.
[The letter continued by saying that he could apply to a fines officer concerning payment arrangements and stated that the collection order had been referred to such an officer and continued thus:]
Failure to pay as ordered will make you liable for further enforcement. This could include:
- Deduction from your earning or benefit
- Increase the financial penalty by 50%
- Clamping, removal and sale of your vehicle.
- Registering the account in the Registrar of Judgments, Orders and Fines (affecting your ability to obtain credit)
- A distress warrant being issued to the Court bailiffs (including additional costs)
- Issue of a summons to attend a Magistrates' Court (paragraph 37(6)(a) of Part 9 Schedule 5 Courts Act 2003 and Section 83(2) Magistrates' Court Act 1980)
…"
"(1) The fines officer may refer a case to the magistrates' court at any time during the period which—
(a) begins the day after the collection order is made, and
(b) ends with the date on which—
(i) the sum due (including any increase to which he remains liable) is paid, or
(ii) the order is discharged.
(2) On a referral under this paragraph, the court may—
(a) confirm or vary the payment terms (or the reserve terms),
(b) exercise any of its standard powers in respect of persons liable to pay fines or other sums, or
(c) exercise a power it could exercise under any other paragraph."
"A fines officer may for the purpose of ensuring that P attends a magistrates' court to which he has referred P's case under paragraph 37 or 42 of Schedule 5, issue a summons requiring P to appear before the court at the time and place appointed in the summons."
"The Act creates the role of "a fines officer" to take enforcement action in certain circumstances, thus removing the need for all enforcement decisions to be taken by a court. A fines collection system (Schedule 5) has been set up which introduces financial incentives to offenders to pay their fines, as well as providing a range of new disincentives for fine default, including wider powers to make attachments of earnings orders (AOE) and deductions from benefits (DFB). The system is designed to encourage payment but will include new penalties for those who have the means and will not pay. The Act also introduces new sanctions for failing to provide information necessary to make AOE orders and DFB applications. For those who are unable to pay a fine, the Act introduces (in Schedule 6) a system for discharging fines by unpaid work."
(i) the decision of 25 September 2012 to issue a warrant of arrest;
(ii) the decision of 31 October 2012 to refuse to withdraw the warrant of arrest;
(iii) the decision of 20 November 2012 ordering the Claimant to be subjected to a means inquiry pursuant to section 84 of the Magistrates Courts Act 1980;
(iv) the decision made on the same day ordering the Claimant to pay the sum of £10 per fortnight in part satisfaction of the outstanding confiscation order.
"83 – Process for securing attendance of offender
(1) A magistrates' court may, for the purpose of enabling inquiry to be made under section 82 above or for securing the attendance of an offender at a hearing required to be held by subsection (5) of that section –
(a) issue a summons requiring the offender to appear before the court at the time and place appointed in the summons; or
(b) issue a warrant to arrest him and bring him before the court.
(2) On the failure of the offender to appear before the court in answer to a summons [issued under this section, or by virtue of Schedule 5 to the Courts Act 2003] the court may issue a warrant to arrest him and bring him before the Court.
…"
"… section 83 of the Magistrates' Courts Act 1980 was purely ancillary to section 82 and could be used to secure attendance only for section 82 purposes; that section 82 did not apply where there was no question of a warrant of commitment being issued and the court was concerned only with whether some other method of enforcement of the confiscation order should be adopted; that section 9(5) of the Drug Trafficking Act 1994, which was concerned with methods of enforcement other than a warrant of commitment, did not alter the meaning or effect of section 83 of the 1980 Act, and so the issue of a warrant of arrest under section 83 was not a method of enforcement for the purposes of section 9(5); that, since the claimant had already served a sentence in default, the hearing listed in the magistrates' court had been for the purpose of considering methods of enforcement other than a warrant of commitment and so section 82 had not been in play; and that, accordingly, there had been no power under section 83 to issue the warrant of arrest."
"In this Schedule "standard powers in respect of persons liable to pay fines or other sums" means any power that a magistrates' court would have had if P had not been subject to a collection order but had been liable to pay the sum due."
"The following provisions of this Act apply, except where otherwise stated, to attachment of earnings orders made, or to be made, by any court under this Act or under Schedule ?5 to the Courts Act 2003, or by a fines officer under that Schedule."
(1) Where in any proceedings a court has power under this Act or under Schedule ?5 to the Courts ?Act ?2003, or a fines officer has power under that Schedule, to make an attachment of earnings order, the court or the fines officer, as the case may be, may—
(a) order the debtor to give to the court or the fines officer, as the case may be, within a specified period, a statement signed by him of—
(i) the name and address of any person by whom earnings are paid to him;
(ii) specified particulars as to his earnings and anticipated earnings, and as to his resources and needs; and
(iii) specified particulars for the purpose of enabling the debtor to be identified by any employer of his …."
"(1) If the relevant court has not under Part 3 made an attachment of earnings order or an application for benefit deductions, the collection order must state the payment terms.
(2) "The payment terms" means—
(a) a term requiring P to pay the sum due within a specified period, or
(b) terms requiring P to pay the sum due by instalments of specified amounts on or before specified dates."
LORD JUSTICE TREACY: