BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £5, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Essence Bars (London) Ltd (t/a Essence) v Wimbledon Magistrates Court & Anor [2014] EWHC 4334 (Admin) (19 December 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2014/4334.html Cite as: [2014] EWHC 4334 (Admin) |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
____________________
Essence Bars (London) Limited T/as Essence | Claimant | |
- and - | ||
Wimbledon Magistrates Court | ||
-and- | Defendant | |
Royal Borough of Kingston upon Thames | Interested Party |
____________________
Gary Grant (instructed by Royal Borough of Kingston upon Thames) for the Interested Party
Wimbledon Magistrates Court, the Defendant, was unrepresented
Hearing date: 16th December 2014
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Wilkie :
The facts
"Complainant - FL Trading Limited C/-Lana Tricker, LT Law, 18 Soho Square, London, W1D 3QL."
"Take notice that the complainant, the premises licence holder of the premises licence for the premises "Essence," … intends to appeal to the Lavender Hill Magistrates' Court … against the decision of [Kingston] … (received on 13th January 2013) revoking the premises licence following an application for summary review under the Licensing Act 2003 in respect of the premises."
The law
(1) "This paragraph applies where a review of a premises licence is decided under Section 53A(2)(b) (review of premises licence following review notice)
(2) An appeal may be made against that decision by –
…
(b) the holder of the premises licence …"
(1) "An appeal under this part must be made to a Magistrates' court.(2) An appeal under this part must be commenced by notice of appeal given by the Appellant to the [designated officer] for the Magistrates' court within the period of 21 days beginning with the day on which the Appellant was notified by the licensing authority of the decision appealed against."
"Where a complaint relating to a person is made to a Justice of the Peace, the Justice of the Peace may issue a summons to the person requiring him to appear before a Magistrates' Court to answer to the complaint."
"34. Appeal to be by way of complaint
Where under any enactment an appeal lies to a Magistrates' Court against the decision or order of a local authority or other body or person the appeal shall be by way of complaint for an order."
"123. Defect in process
(1) No objection shall be allowed to any information or complaint … for any defect in it in substance or in form, or for any variance between it and the evidence adduced on behalf of the … complainant at the hearing of the … complaint
(2) If it appears to a Magistrates' Court that any variance between a summons or warrant and the evidence adduced on behalf of the … complainant is such that the Defendant has been misled by the variance, the court shall, on the application of the Defendant, adjourn the hearing."
i) An error so fundamental, that it cannot be rescued by any appropriate and reasonable amendment, will cause the prosecution to fail without more.ii) Where the defect is substantial enough to require amendment, then Magistrates have power to allow amendment provided that an adjournment should be granted if the defence are placed at any disadvantage by the adjournment. If the prosecution fail to detect such an error, any conviction obtained upon the defective information is a risk of being quashed by the Divisional Court.
iii) If the error is so trivial that no amendment is required then the conviction may be upheld even on an unamended information.
"We were of the opinion that where the wrong person has been summoned amendments should not be allowed but where the prosecutor has correctly identified the Defendant but merely misstated the name, amendments should be allowed. Applying these principles to the present case we were of the opinion that the prosecutor clearly intended to summon the corporation which supplied the skip and whose name was wrongly copied from the delivery note. We therefore allowed amendment."
"Accordingly, with very considerable reluctance, as I regard this as a point of pure technicality which has no merit, I take the view that the Justices were wrong to allow the amendment. The prosecution – no doubt misled by the name on the skip – issued the information and the summons in the name of the wrong company that is to say the wrong person. Therefore, initially the wrong person was before the court."
" … throughout the time the trading standards officers believed the company to be the wholesaler and not the retailer and did not appreciate the distinction but they are separate companies with separate functions. It is not just a cloak since they are different corporate personae. Consequently, the Defendant company, before the Justices, had a complete defence to the summonses that were taken out against it. The company who would have to meet those allegations contained in the summonses was not before the court. It was not just a question of mis-description of the same person they were separate companies with separate functions. Therefore, in relying on section 123 the Defendant company was not before the court, it could not ask for an adjournment because it had not been brought to court … It is an entirely technical point but nonetheless the answer to the Magistrates' question was that they were not correct in allowing an amendment of the information."
"I agree in particular with her analysis of Section 123 … which is the only power which was available to the Magistrates' … for amendment of the information. What is quite plain from Section 123 is that it is a restricted power. It is the only statutory power available to the Magistrates by which form of process can be amended and applies where a Defendant makes objection to the form of an information or complaint or summons … the consequence was to have an amended information charging out of time an offence against a different Defendant. There is no power to do that. Section 123 gives no such power. It is only directed to dealing with problems relating to the Defendant before the court. It follows that there could be no question of the power under Section 123 being used in the way suggested unless it could be said that the Defendant before the court was, in truth, one and the same person as the retailer but everybody accepted that that was not the case … "
"In my opinion the simple question here is whether the effect of the amendment allowed was to permit a charge to be brought out of time against a new Defendant, namely SSL … Regrettably … [the Magistrate fell] into the same error as was made in Marco … namely to hold that it was sufficient that the prosecutor clearly intended in that case to summon the corporation which supplied the skip … as in the two earlier cases … the proper Defendant was not before the court, the effect of the District Judge's decision was, in my view, to prefer a charge against a new Defendant outside the statutory time limit."
"It is, in my judgment, highly undesirable that summary proceedings should be complicated and frustrated by the taking of technical points such as this … Section 123 of the 1980 Act makes plain the intention of Parliament that technical points should not be taken in summary proceedings. Only in cases in where the information is substantively defective in that it either discloses no offence known to law, or is duplex, or is so unclear that the allegation cannot be understood should it be dismissed in limine."
(3) the addition or substitution of a party is necessary only if the court is satisfied that a) the new party is to be substituted for a party who was named in the claim form in mistake for the new party …"
"These authorities have led us to the following conclusions about the principles applicable to Order 20 Rule 5 [which empowers the court to give leave to amend after any relevant period of limitation has expired to correct the name of the party if the court is satisfied the mistake sought to be corrected was genuine]…i) the mistake must be as to the name of the party in question and not as to the identity of the party. Such a mistake can be demonstrated where the pleading gives a description of the party that identifies the party but gives the party the wrong name. In such circumstances a mistake as to name is given a generous interpretation."
The Claimant's contentions
The IP's contentions
My Conclusion