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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 >> Chiltern Farm Chemicals Ltd, R (on the application of) v The Health and Safety Executive [2017] EWHC 2491 (Admin) (25 October 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2017/2491.html Cite as: [2017] EWHC 2491 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Oxford Row Leeds LS1 3BG |
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B e f o r e :
sitting as a Judge of the High Court
____________________
The Queen on the application of CHILTERN FARM CHEMICALS LIMITED |
Claimant |
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- and – |
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THE HEALTH AND SAFETY EXECUTIVE |
Defendant |
____________________
Mr Adam Heppinstall and Mr Jonathan Lewis (instructed by the Treasury Solicitor) for the Defendant
Hearing date: 27 September 2017
Date draft circulated to the Parties 6 October 2017
Date handed down 25 October 2017
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
The claim
"the effect on granivorous and omnivorous birds was required for registration, since there may be risks to birds both from directly consuming slug pellets, and from consuming contaminated slugs and other vertebrates."
[Diagram or picture not reproduced in HTML version - see original .rtf file to view diagram or picture]
"to ensure a high level of protection of both human and animal health and the environment and to improve the functioning of the internal market through the harmonisation of the rules on the placing on the market of plant protection products, while improving agricultural production".
"The use of non-animal test methods and other risk assessment strategies should be promoted. Animal testing for the purposes of this Regulation should be minimised and tests on vertebrates should be undertaken as a last resort. In accordance with Council Directive 86/609/EEC (the 1986 Directive)[1]… tests on vertebrate animals must be replaced, restricted or refined. Therefore, rules should be laid down to avoid duplicative testing and duplication of tests and studies on vertebrates should be prohibited. For the purpose of developing new plant protection products, there should be an obligation to allow access to studies on vertebrates on reasonable terms and the results and the costs of tests and studies on animals should be shared. In order to allow operators to know what studies have been carried out by others, Member States should keep a list of such studies even where they are not covered by the above system of compulsory access".
The context of the claim
"Applications for authorisations of plant protection products … which are due to be amended or withdrawn following an inclusion in Annex I to Directive 91/414/EEC or following an approval in accordance with paragraph 1 of this Article on 14 June 2011 shall be decided on the basis of national law in force before that date".
The legislative framework
"the temporary right of the owner of a test or study report to prevent it being used for the benefit of another applicant" (Article 3(21)).
Studies represent a major investment. This investment should be protected in order to stimulate research. For this reason, tests and studies, other than those involving vertebrate animals, which will be subject to obligatory data sharing, lodged by one applicant with a Member State should be protected against use by another applicant …"
"Test and study reports shall benefit from data protection under the conditions laid down in this Article".
"Where a report is protected, it may not be used by the Member State which received it for the benefit of other applicants for authorisation of plant protection products…except as provided in paragraph 2 of this Article, in Article 62 or in Article 80".
"It should be borne in mind that, according to settled case law, the provisions of a directive which derogate from a general principle established by that directive must be interpreted strictly".
"correspond to objectives of general interest pursued by the Community and do not constitute a disproportionate and intolerable interference, impairing the very substance of the rights guaranteed".
"Article 62 is a precise procedure and there is no other provision within the Regulation whereby data can be shared. If studies do not fall within the Article 62 data sharing provisions, they are protected in accordance with Article 59, with the result that other applicants can only rely on them if they have been granted a letter of access by the data owner following the reaching of agreement under Article 61(3)".
Sharing of tests and studies involving vertebrate animals
1. Testing on vertebrate animals for the purposes of this Regulation shall be undertaken only where no other methods are available. Duplication of tests and studies on vertebrates undertaken for the purposes of this Regulation shall be avoided in accordance with paragraphs 2 to 6.
2. Member States shall not accept duplication of tests and studies on vertebrate animals or those initiated where conventional methods described in Annex II to Directive 1999/45/EC could reasonably have been used, in support of applications for authorisations. Any person intending to perform tests and studies involving vertebrate animals shall take the necessary measures to verify that those tests and studies have not already been performed or initiated.
3. The prospective applicant and the holder or holders of the relevant authorisations shall make every effort to ensure that they share tests and studies involving vertebrate animals. The costs of sharing the test and study reports shall be determined in a fair, transparent and non-discriminatory way. The prospective applicant is only required to share in the costs of information he is required to submit to meet the authorisation requirements.
4. Where the prospective applicant and the holder or holders of the relevant authorisations of plant protection products containing the same active substance, safener or synergist, or of adjuvants cannot reach agreement on the sharing of test and study reports involving vertebrate animals, the prospective applicant shall inform the competent authority of the Member State referred to in Article 61(1).
The failure to reach agreement, as provided in paragraph 3, shall not prevent the competent authority of that Member State from using the test and study reports involving vertebrate animals for the purpose of the application of the prospective applicant.
5. By 14 December 2016, the Commission shall report on the effects of the provisions in this Regulation concerning data protection of tests and studies involving vertebrate animals. The Commission shall submit this report to the European Parliament and the Council accompanied, if necessary, by an appropriate legislative proposal.
6. The holder or holders of the relevant authorisation shall have a claim on the prospective applicant for a fair share of the costs incurred by him. The competent authority of the Member State may direct the parties involved to resolve the matter by formal and binding arbitration administered under national law. Otherwise the parties may resolve the matter through litigation in the courts of the Member States. Awards from arbitration or litigation shall have regard to the principles determined in paragraph 3 and shall be enforceable in the courts of the Member States."
"to ensure that where animals are used for experimental or other scientific purposes the provisions laid down by law, regulation or administrative provisions in the Member States for their protection are approximated so as to avoid the establishment and functioning of the common market, in particular by distortions of competition or barriers to trade".
i. "animal" means "any live non-human vertebrate".
ii. "experiment" means "any use of an animal for experimental or other scientific purposes which may cause it pain, suffering, distress or lasting harm…but excluding the least painful methods accepted in modern practice (i.e. 'humane' methods) of killing or marking an animal; an experiment starts when an animal is first prepared for use and ends when no further observations are to be made for that experiment; the elimination of pain, suffering, distress or lasting harm by the successful use of anaesthesia or analgesia or other methods does not place the use of an animal outside the scope of this definition. Non experimental, agricultural or clinical veterinary practices are excluded". (My emphasis)
"Any living vertebrate other than man".
"Any experimental or other scientific procedure applied to a protected animal which may have the effect of causing that animal pain, suffering, distress or lasting harm". (my emphasis)
The ringing, tagging or marking of an animal, or the application of any other humane procedure for the sole purpose of enabling an animal to be identified, is not a regulated procedure if it causes only momentary pain or distress and no lasting harm".[5]
"references to any recognised veterinary, agricultural or animal husbandry practice".
"Recognised agricultural and husbandry practices (such as castration of farm animals), performed in accordance with other animal welfare legislation and regulations, and being used to manage or conserve the animals, are not regulated procedures unless they are part of a scientific study". (my emphasis)
"Recital 40 of (the Regulation) refers to (the 1986 Directive), which in turn defines the type of experiments that are covered by the vertebrate data sharing arrangements. On this basis, CRD consider that field monitoring data (e.g. such as that conducted for higher tier bird[6] and mammal assessments) are not within the scope of the vertebrate data sharing arrangements".
"The question arises which studies are considered "tests and studies involving vertebrate animals"… For example in the case of monitoring of birds and mammals in the fields, it is not very clear whether these constitute "tests and studies involving vertebrate animals"."
""tests and studies involving vertebrate animals" should be interpreted as experiments within the scope of (the 1986 Directive) regarding the protection of animals used for experimental and other scientific purposes".
"covers animals used in "experiments" defined as "any use of an animal for experimental or other scientific purposes which may cause it pain, suffering, distress or lasting harm"…"
"for monitoring studies, only the studies involving procedure(s) causing a certain level of distress, suffering or lasting harm will be covered".
"Drawing the above strands together, a study will constitute a VS [vertebrate study] if:
23.1 It is a "regulated procedure" under ASPA…
23.2 A study will constitute a regulated procedure if:
23.3 there is an experimental or other scientific procedure;
23.4 that procedure is applied to a protected animal…[which includes birds]
23.5 that procedure may have the effect of causing that animal pain, suffering distress or lasting harm, being any disturbance to normal health"
The Decision
"In addition, the overall purpose of the study was to determine if metaldehyde kills birds or results in clinical/behavioural effects. The objective has the potential to cause overall suffering and ultimate harm. The symptoms of metaldehyde poisoning in domesticated and wild mammals includes inability to stand, blindness, change in respiratory rate, excessive sweating and salivation, sudden death and seizures. HSE considers that the minimum threshold is also reached in relation to this study which we therefore deem to be in scope of the vertebrate data sharing arrangements as outlined in (the Regulation)".
The Prosser Study
"Where available fields due to be drilled directly (into stubble) or prepared with minimum – tillage methods were selected. Such fields represent a reasonable worst case for slug numbers since the trash from previous crops is not uniformly buried as in inversion ploughing, but mixed with the surface soil or left entirely on the surface, where it provides cover and food for slugs. Therefore such fields would be more likely to receive applications of slug pellets in normal agricultural practice"
"it was a single application of standard pellets using standard equipment at recommended target rates on actual fields likely to receive applications of slug pellets in normal agricultural practice".
Discussion as to unlawfulness/irrationality of the decision
Claimant's submissions
"Chiltern's products are already on the market and in widespread use. It is precisely for that reason that the monitoring of their effects is not to be considered "experimental" within the meaning of the test."
Defendant's submissions
"the effect on granivorous and omnivorous birds since there may be risks to birds both from directly consuming slug pellets, and from consuming contaminated slugs and other invertebrates".
"the Study clearly fell within the 1986 and 2010 definition of vertebrate tests. This conclusion is clearly in line with one of the overriding purposes of the (Regulation) which was to minimise the use of vertebrate testing. Further, it is not inconsistent with any of the relevant guidance issued on testing. Any guidance suggesting that field studies generally do not fall within the definition of vertebrate studies is clearly referring to studies in which animals are observed in their natural habitat without the introduction of a potentially dangerous substance which they might well consume".
Conclusions
Final Remarks
I am grateful to counsel for their very able assistance in this matter.
HHJ Saffman
Note 1 Which it is accepted applies albeit that it was later superseded by Directive 2010/63/EU (the 2010 Directive). In any event it is common ground that there would be no material difference in outcome in this case even if the 2010 Directive applied. [Back] Note 2 I emphasise the reference to "costs" of producing it. The position of the claimant is that an assessment of cost in this context takes account only of actual costs incurred but takes no account of the actual value of the research to others. There is clearly a difference between "cost" and "value". A, for example, may own a strip of land which he acquired for very little but if it provides a means of access to the land ripe for development owned by B, a property developer its value to B can considerably exceed the cost to which A was put in acquiring the land. [Back] Note 3 by Commission Implementing Directive 2011/54/EU [Back] Note 4 In fact the 1986 Directive has been superseded by Directive 2010/63/EU (the 2010 Directive) that was transposed into domestic law by amending ASPA but the parties are agreed that the court is required to apply the old regime under the original unamended ASPA and the 1986 Directive because the 2010 Directive only applies to experiments conducted after 1 January 2013. In fact, as I understand it, it is common ground that the outcome is the same under both regimes. [Back] Note 5 In its decision letter the defendant cited as one of its reasons for taking the view that this study was a vertebrate study was that "HSE considers that as the study involved wild birds that are unfamiliar with handling, trapping and radio tagging (pheasants/sparrows) this may cause pain suffering distress or lasting harm equivalent to, or higher than, that caused by the introduction of the needle in accordance with good veterinary practice" that ground is not now relied upon presumably on the basis that it is unsustainable in the light of section 2(5). Furthermore, in fact the phraseology of that particular reason appears to have had in mind the 2010 Directive rather than the 1986 Directive with which I am concerned (see footnote 3 above). [Back] Note 6 The Prosser Study is a higher tier bird assessment. [Back] Note 7 See para 56 above. [Back] Note 8 See paragraph 55 above. In addition it should be noted that it does not appear to be in dispute that sufficient concentrations of metaldehyde can have a deleterious, and even a fatal, effect on vertebrates. That is why it was initially included in Annex 1 of the Directive. The Commission Implementing Directive 2011 makes it clear that in its overall assessment of metaldehyde, Member States shall pay particular attention to the acute risk and long-term risk to birds and mammals. [Back] Note 9 SANCO 2012 paragraph 56. [Back] Note 10 Even involving the tagging of birds because that process is specifically excluded. [Back]