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England and Wales High Court (King's Bench Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (King's Bench Division) Decisions >> Ward v The Chief Constable of Greater Manchester Police [2024] EWHC 1297 (KB) (29 May 2024) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/KB/2024/1297.html Cite as: [2024] EWHC 1297 (KB) |
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KING'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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THOMAS WARD | Claimant |
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- and - |
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THE CHIEF CONSTABLE OF GREATER MANCHESTER POLICE | Defendant |
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George Thomas (instructed by Greater Manchester Police) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 22 and 28 February 2024
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Crown Copyright ©
Master Sullivan:
The law
(1) This section applies where—
(a) a person ("the claimant") claims that another person ("the defendant") did an act amounting to trespass to the claimant's person, and
(b) the claimant has been convicted in the United Kingdom of an imprisonable offence committed on the same occasion as that on which the act is alleged to have been done.
(2) Civil proceedings relating to the claim may be brought only with the permission of the court.
(3) The court may give permission for the proceedings to be brought only if there is evidence that either—
(a) the condition in subsection (5) is not met, or
(b) in all the circumstances, the defendant's act was grossly disproportionate.
(4) …
(5) The condition referred to in subsection (3)(a) and (4)(a) is that the defendant did the act only because—
(a) he believed that the claimant—
(i) was about to commit an offence,
(ii) was in the course of committing an offence, or
(iii) had committed an offence immediately beforehand; and
(b) he believed that the act was necessary to—
(i) defend himself or another person,
(ii) protect or recover property,
(iii) prevent the commission or continuation of an offence, or
(iv) apprehend, or secure the conviction, of the claimant after he had committed an offence;
or was necessary to assist in achieving any of those things.
"6. One cannot fail to notice that this section has nothing on the face of it to do with policing. In what one can call the Tony Martin situation – a sudden encounter with a crime - it gives the individual a defence of honest, even if unreasonable, belief in the need for his or her act; and it forfeits the defence only if the act was grossly disproportionate. There is nothing on the face of the section or in its shoulder-note which manifests an intention to afford the police a novel protection from claims by offenders for objectively unreasonable or unnecessarily violent arrests."
7. The section nevertheless inexorably covers police officers as well as civilians. Indeed, so far as counsel have been able to tell us, since it was brought into force in January 2004 it is only police defendants who have invoked it. The consequences should not go unnoticed. In place of the principle painstakingly established in the course of two centuries and more, and fundamental to the civil rights enjoyed by the people of this country - that an arrest must be objectively justified and that no more force may be used in effecting it than is reasonably necessary - the section gives immunity from civil suits, not confined to those involving personal injury, to constables who make arrests on entirely unreasonable grounds, so long as they are not acting in bad faith, and accords them impunity for using all but grossly disproportionate force in so doing. Conscious of art. IX of the Bill of Rights 1689, we say only that there is no indication that Parliament was aware, much less intended, that what it was enacting would have this effect.
The grounds for permission
(i) PC Jackson used grossly disproportionate force by instructing or permitting PD Jerry to bite Mr Ward's leg whilst he was handcuffed and detained on the ground;
(ii) PC Jackson used or allowed grossly disproportionate force to be used by PD Jerry to apprehend and detain Mr Ward;
(iii) PC Jackson did not hold an honest belief that it was necessary to permit or encourage the use of force by PD Jerry.
Decision