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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Supreme Court >> Secretary of State for Environment, Food, and Rural Affairs v Meier & Ors [2009] UKSC 11 (01 December 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKSC/2009/11.html Cite as: [2009] WLR 2780, [2009] UKSC 11, [2010] 1 All ER 855, [2009] 49 EG 70, [2010] PTSR 321, [2009] 1 WLR 2780, [2010] NPC 3 |
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Michaelmas Term
[2009] UKSC 11
On appeal from: [2008] EWCA Civ 903
JUDGMENT
Secretary of State for Environment, Food, and Rural Affairs (Respondent) v Meier and another (FC) (Appellant) and others and another (FC) (Appellant) and another
before
Lord Rodger
Lord Walker
Lady Hale
Lord Neuberger
Lord Collins
JUDGMENT GIVEN ON
1 December 2009
Heard on 10 and 11 June 2009
Appellant Richard Drabble QC Marc Willers (Instructed by Community Law Partnership ) |
Respondent John Hobson QC John Clargo (Instructed by Whitehead Vizard ) |
LORD RODGER
"The respondents, and each of them, be restrained from entering upon, trespassing upon, living on, or occupying the parcels of land set out in the Schedule hereto, and, for the avoidance of doubt, the 4th respondent shall mean 'those people trespassing on, living on, or occupying the land known as Hethfelton Wood on any date between 13th February 2007 and 3rd August 2007 save for those specifically identified as 1st, 2nd, 3rd, 5th and 6th respondents.'"
In my view, for the reasons given by Lord Neuberger, the majority were right to grant the injunction. In any event, Mr Drabble QC, who appeared for the travellers, did not suggest that this injunction had been incompetent or defective for lack of service or in some other respect. Even Wilson LJ, who dissented on the injunction point in the Court of Appeal, did not go so far as to suggest that it was inherently useless: he simply took the view that it added nothing of value to the order for possession and, therefore, the recorder would have been entitled to exercise his discretion to refuse it on that basis: [2008] EWCA Civ 903, para 76.
"When granting an injunction the court does not contemplate that it will be disobeyed….Apprehension that a party may disobey an order should not deter the court from making an order otherwise appropriate: there is not one law for the law-abiding and another for the lawless and truculent."
Taking that approach, we should, in my view, be slow to assume that an injunction is a worthless remedy in a case like the present and that only the intervention of a bailiff is likely to be effective. If that is indeed the considered consensus of those with experience in the field, then consideration may have to be given to changing the procedures for enforcing injunctions of this kind.
LORD WALKER
LADY HALE
"A trespasser may in any case be turned off land before he has gained possession, and he does not gain possession until there has been something like acquiescence in the physical fact of his occupation on the part of the rightful owner."
A trespasser who merely interferes with the right to possession or occupation of the property may also be ejected with the use of reasonable force: one does not need to go to court, or even call the police, to eject a burglar or a poacher from one's property.
LORD NEUBERGER
The facts and procedural history
An order for possession of land not occupied by the defendants
"(a) 'a possession claim' means a claim for the recovery of possession of land (including buildings or parts of buildings);
(b) 'a possession claim against trespassers' means a claim for the recovery of land which the claimant alleges is occupied only by a person or persons who entered or remained on the land without the consent of a person entitled to possession of that land but does not include a claim against a tenant or sub-tenant whether his tenancy has been terminated or not; …"
The special features of a possession claim against trespassers are that the defendants to the claim may include "persons unknown", such proceedings should be served on the land as well as on the named defendants, and the minimum period between service and hearing is 2 days (or 5 days for residential property) rather than the 28 days for other possession claims - see CPR 55.3(4), 55.6, and 55.5(2) and (3).
Should an injunction be refused as it will probably not be enforced?
The effect of the 2004 Guidance on the grant of an injunction
The implications of this analysis
Disposal of this appeal
LORD COLLINS