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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Confederation of Passenger Transport UK v Humber Bridge Board & Anor [2003] EWCA Civ 842 (25 June 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2003/842.html Cite as: [2003] EWCA Civ 842, [2004] QB 310, [2004] 2 WLR 98 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL
DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF
JUSTICE QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
THE HON MR JUSTICE NEWMAN
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL | ||
B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE CLARKE
and
LORD JUSTICE
JONATHAN
PARKER
____________________
THE CONFEDERATION OF PASSENGER TRANSPORT
UK |
Appellant | |
- and - |
||
(1) THE HUMBER BRIDGE BOARD and
(2)THE SECRETARY OF STATE FOR TRANSPORT LOCAL GOVERNMENT AND THE REGIONS |
Respondent |
____________________
Smith
Bernal Wordwave Limited, 190 Fleet Street
London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7421
4040, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Ms
Frances Patterson QC (instructed by Kingston Upon Hull City Council) for the
First Respondent. The Second Respondent was not represented.
____________________
AS APPROVED BY THE COURT
CROWN
COPYRIGHT ©
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Clarke :
Introduction
The Parties
The Issues
The Legislative Framework
"(1) From and after the opening of the bridge for public traffic the Board may demand take and recover in respect of all traffic passing over or on the bridge tolls not exceeding those specified in an order (in this section referred to as 'the order') made by the Board and confirmed by the Minister in accordance with the provisions of this section and for any other services rendered by the Board in connection with the bridge such reasonable charges as they may think fit:
Provided that:
(a) the Board may by resolution if and when they think fit
(i) cease to demand take or recover tolls in respect of traffic or certain classes of traffic passing over or on the bridge; and
(ii) resume demanding taking and recovering such tolls;
(b) the Board may also (if and when they think fit) allow traffic to use the bridge without paying tolls during such hours or on such occasions as they may from time to time determine.
(2) The Order when made by the Board shall be submitted to the Minister for confirmation and shall be confirmed by the Minister with or without modification not more than twelve months before the expected opening of the bridge for public traffic.
(3) After submitting the Order to the Minister for confirmation the Board shall furnish the Minister with such information and particulars certified in such manner as the Minister may require and shall publish in the London Gazette and in such newspapers as the Minister may require a notice stating
(a) the general effect of the order; and
(b) that within a period of forty-two days from the date of the first publication of the notice any person having a substantial interest may object to the Order by giving notice to the Minister accompanied by the grounds of his objection and sending a copy thereof to the Board.
(4) Before confirming the Order the Minister shall if required by the Board or by any person who has objected to the Order and has not withdrawn his objection and in any other case if he thinks fit cause a local inquiry to be held by such person as he may appoint for the purpose.
(5) In confirming the Order with or without modification the Minister shall have regard to the financial position and future prospects of the undertaking and the order shall prescribe such maximum tolls as in the Minister's opinion shall not exceed by more than is reasonable the tolls estimated to be required to be demanded taken and recovered when the bridge is first opened for public traffic to produce an annual revenue not substantially less nor substantially more than adequate to meet such expenditure as is authorised for the several purposes mentioned in section 75 (Application of revenue) of this Act
(6) The power of the Minister to confirm the Order shall be exercisable by statutory instrument."
"5. The following particular points can be made in connection with the above sections and the power of the Board to levy a toll. The power conferred is an originating power which gives rise to a duty on the Minister to consider confirmation or modification of the Order made by the Board. The power to levy is contingent upon confirmation being given by the Minister. The power is expressed in terms which contemplate the Board recovering a toll 'in respect of all traffic passing over or on the bridge'. The Act can be taken to contemplate that, where revenue is required for the purposes set out in section 75 (application of revenue), all traffic will be charged where it is reasonable to do so or a specific power is exercised not to do so, or the traffic is exempt. The Act envisages that there will be classes of traffic specified in the Order. Thus the proviso at section 61(1)(a)(i) contemplates that where the Board has the power to demand a toll, the toll having been confirmed by the Minister, the Board may by resolution cease to demand and recover the toll which may be in respect of "traffic", or certain classes of traffic passing over or on the bridge. Section 75 of the Act imposes an obligation on the Board to apply its revenue in the manner therein specified, laying down the Order of priority for its application. Priorities 1 to 8 comprise the working and establishment expenses and costs of the undertaking, interest on borrowed money and so forth. Ninthly, the section provides:
'Ninthly, in a reduction of tolls which may be demanded taken and recovered under this Act or for such other purpose as may be approved by the Minister'
6. It follows that for the exercise of the power to levy tolls, both by the Board and the Minister, to be lawful, it must be exercised reasonably and for the purposes specified in the Act. Subject to the power by resolution to cease to demand to take a toll which can be lawfully demanded, and subject to the exemptions from tolls which are set out in Section 68, the 1959 Act contemplates that the purpose in levying tolls is to raise the revenue necessary for the purposes of the undertaking and in a manner which the Minister regards as reasonable."
"(1) If at any time
(a) it is represented in writing to the Secretary of State
(i) by any person or body representative of persons appearing to the Secretary of State to have a substantial interest in the use of the bridge; or
(ii) by the Board; or
(b) it appears to the Secretary of State after consultation with the Board to be expedient;
that in the circumstances then existing or in prospect (including the opening to public traffic of the bridge) all or any of the tolls authorised in pursuance of the Humber Bridge Acts or any classification of vehicles specified in any order for the time being in force under those Acts should be revised, the Secretary of State, may, if he thinks fit make an order revising all or any of such tolls or any classification of vehicles as aforesaid and may fix the date as from which such Order shall be observed until the same expires or is revoked or modified by a further Order of the Secretary of State made in pursuance of this section:
Provided that the Secretary of State shall not make an Order pursuant to paragraph (b) of this subsection at any time except when the Board have borrowed money from the Secretary of State under section 5 (Borrowing from Secretary of State) of this Act and have not repaid the whole of the money so borrowed.
(2) As soon as may be after the receipt by the Secretary of State of a representation pursuant to subsection (1) of this section from any person or any body other than the Board the Secretary of State shall send a copy of the representation to the Board.
(3) Before making an Order under this Section the Secretary of State shall if required by-
(a) any such person or body as is referred to in sub-paragraph (i) of paragraph (a) of subsection (1) of this section, being a person or body who either has made a representation to the Secretary of State pursuant to that subsection or has pursuant to section 11 (Further provisions as to revision of tolls) of this Act objected to the representation made to, or the proposals of, the Secretary of State and has not withdrawn the objection, or
(b) the Board;
and may in any other case, if he thinks fit, cause a local inquiry to be held by such person as he may appoint for the purpose.
(4) In the exercise of the powers conferred upon him by this section, the Secretary of State shall have regard to the financial position and future prospects of the undertaking and any Order made by him under this section shall prescribe such tolls as in the opinion of the Secretary of State are reasonably required to be demanded, taken and recovered so as to produce an annual revenue not substantially less, nor substantially more, than is adequate to meet such expenditure as is authorised for the purposes mentioned in section 75 (Application of revenue) of the Act of 1959, as amended by this Act."
"(4) The power of the Secretary of State to make an Order under the said section 10 shall be exercisable by statutory instrument and the Secretary of State may by any Order made by him under the said section 10 amend, vary or revoke any of the provisions of any Order made by him under section 61 (Tolls) of the Act of 1959 or under the said section 10."
The 1979/80 and 1989 Orders
"1. The Humber Bridge Tolls Order 1979, which is an order made by the Humber Bridge Board in exercise of their powers under the said Section 61, prescribing the tolls which the Humber Bridge Board may, from and after the opening of the Humber Bridge for public traffic, demand, take and recover in respect of traffic passing over or on the bridge is confirmed subject to modifications.
2. The said Order (so modified) is set out in the Schedule hereto."
"1. This Order may be cited as the Humber Bridge Tolls Order 1979.
2. The tolls which the Humber Bridge Board may, from and after the opening of the Humber Bridge for public traffic, demand, take and recover in respect of traffic passing over or on the bridge shall be tolls not exceeding those specified in column 2 of the Schedule to this Order in relation to the particular classes of traffic specified in column 1 of that Schedule."
Column 1 set out what it called classes of traffic and column 2 set out the maximum tolls. Column 1 included pedestrians and pedal cycles, each of which had a maximum toll of nil. There followed cars and the like, with appropriate maximum tolls, and the schedule continued:
"(1) Class of Traffic |
(2) Maximum Toll |
Heavy commercial vehicles (over 3 tons): Class A (2 axle) Class B (3 axle) Class C (4 or more axles) Mini-buses with a seating capacity of more than 8 but not more than 16 passengers Buses and coaches with a seating capacity of 17 and over |
£5.20 £6.60 £8.00 £2.90 £5.20" |
"2. From and after the coming into force of this Order
(i) for the purpose of the tolls authorised in pursuance of the Humber Bridge Acts 1959 and 1971, vehicles shall be classified in accordance with the classes specified in items 1 to 6 and 8 in column (1) of the scale of charges set out in the Schedule to this Order; and
(ii) the tolls which the Humber Bridge Board may demand, take and recover in respect of traffic passing over or on the bridge shall be tolls not exceeding those specified in column (2) of the scale of charges set out in that Schedule respectively in relation to each class of traffic specified in column (1) of that scale."
"In this Schedule:
"bus", "small bus" and "large bus" have the same meanings as in section 19 of the Transport Act 1985."
In that section "bus" was defined as meaning "a vehicle which is adapted to carry more than 8 passengers", "large bus" was defined as meaning "a vehicle which is adapted to carry more than 16 passengers" and "small bus" was defined as meaning "a vehicle which is adapted to carry more than 8 but not more than 16 passengers". Paragraph 1 of the schedule defined "goods vehicle" as meaning "a mechanically propelled vehicle constructed or adapted for use for the carriage of goods or burden of any description".
"(1) Class of Traffic |
(2) Maximum Toll |
1. Motor cycle with or without sidecar 2. Car Goods vehicle having a maximum weight exceeding 3.5 tonnes 3. Goods vehicle having a maximum weight exceeding 3.5 tonnes but not exceeding 7.5 tonnes Vehicle within class 2 above with trailer Small bus Motor caravan 4. Goods vehicle having a maximum weight exceeding 7.5 tonnes with 2 axles Large bus 5. Goods vehicle having a maximum weight exceeding 7.5 tonnes with 3 axles 6. Goods vehicle having a maximum weight exceeding 7.5 tonnes with 4 or more axles 7. Pedestrian 8. Pedal cycle |
70p £1.60 £2.90 £6.50 £8.70 £10.90 Nil Nil" |
The 1997 Order
"From and after the coming into force of this Order for the purposes of the tolls authorised in pursuance of the Humber Bridge Acts 1959 and 1971, the tolls which the Humber Bridge Board may demand, take and recover in respect of traffic passing over or on the bridge shall be tolls not exceeding those specified in column (2) of the scale of charges set out in the Schedule to this Order with respect to each class of traffic specified in column (1) of that scale."
The definitions were the same as in the 1989 Order and, as in that order, the schedule provided that "in this Schedule "bus", "small bus" and "large bus" have the same meanings as in section 19 of the Transport Act 1985". Unfortunately, although there was a reference in the operative part of the order to "small bus" there was no reference to "bus" or, more importantly for present purposes, to "large bus".
"The scale of charges referred to in article 2 of this Order shall be as follows:
(1) Class of Traffic |
(2) Maximum Toll |
1. Motor cycle with or without
sidecar 2. Car Goods Vehicle having a maximum weight not exceeding 3.5 tonnes 3. Goods Vehicle having a maximum weight exceeding 3.5 tonnes but not exceeding 7.5 tonnes Vehicle in class 2 above with Trailer Small bus (up to 16 passengers excluding driver) Motor Caravan 4. Goods Vehicle exceeding 7.5 tonnes maximum weight with 2 axles 5. Goods Vehicle exceeding 7.5 tonnes maximum weight with 3 axles 6. Goods Vehicle exceeding 7.5 tonnes maximum weight with 4 or more axles" |
£1.00 £2.30 £4.10 £9.20 £12.30 £15.40 |
"The Order proposes that buses and coaches of whatever size, other than mini-buses, should pay the same toll as goods vehicles over 3 tonnes with 2 axles. If tolls are to be charged, I see no reason why they should not be levied on all vehicles. In my view the toll on a bus is as much part of the operator's running costs as his licence fee or his fuel. Whether the toll should be passed on to the passengers using the service affected or treated as part of the operator's overall costs is a matter for him."
"To remove any doubt about the meaning of the various categories of vehicle mentioned in the Order, the Board asked that the descriptions in the Order be modified as follows:
(e) after mini-buses add "with seating capacity of 7 to 16 passengers inclusive";
(f) after buses and coaches add "with a seating capacity of 17 and over"."
"The opportunity has now been taken to seek to amend vehicle classifications in the proposed new tolls Order in order to make the terminology consistent with vehicles descriptions currently found in other legislation."
"I am not persuaded that there is any justification for creating a new class of midi-bus, between class 3 and 4. In all classes there will be vehicles on the borderline and a claim could be made for a reduced rate for them. The present classes fit national legislation and there is certainty and practicality in retaining the recognised classes. I had no breakdown of the number of vehicle journeys that would fall into the midi-bus category and I have to have regard to the over-riding need to increase income."
"The tolls charged and proposed to be charged at the Bridge are as follows:
Category of Vehicle | Present Toll | Proposed Toll | |
Class | Vehicle | £ | £ |
4 |
Goods Vehicle exceeding 7.5 tonnes maximum
weight with 2 axles Large bus (17 or more passengers including driver) " |
6.50 | 9.20 |
Discussion re 1997 Order
"My Lords, I am not reluctant to adopt a purposive construction where to apply the literal meaning of the legislative language would lead to results which would clearly defeat the purpose of the Act. In doing so the task on which a court of justice is engaged remains one of construction; even where this involves reading into the Act words which are not expressly included in it. Kammins Ballroom Co Ltd v Zenith Investments (Torquay) Ltd [1971] AC 850 provides an instance of this; but in that case the three conditions that must be fulfilled in order to justify this course were satisfied. First, it was possible to determine from a consideration of the provisions of the Act read as a whole precisely what the mischief was and it was the purpose of the Act to remedy; secondly, it was apparent that the draftsman and Parliament by inadvertence overlooked, and so omitted to deal with, an eventuality that required to be dealt with if the purpose of the Act was to be achieved; and thirdly, it was possible to state with certainty what were the additional words that would have been inserted by the draftsman and approved by Parliament had their attention been drawn to the omission before the Bill passed into law. Unless this third condition is fulfilled any attempt by a court of justice to repair the omission in the Act cannot be justified as an exercise of its jurisdiction to determine what is the meaning of a written law which Parliament has passed. Such an attempt crosses the boundary between construction and legislation. It becomes a usurpation of a function which under the constitution of this country is vested in the legislature to the exclusion of the courts."
"I freely acknowledge that this interpretation of section 18(1)(g) involves reading words into the paragraph. It has long been established that the role of the courts in construing legislation is not confined to resolving ambiguities in statutory language. The court must be able to correct obvious drafting errors. In suitable cases, in discharging its interpretative function the court will add words, or omit words or substitute words. Some notable instances are given in Professor Sir Rupert Cross's admirable opuscule, Statutory Interpretation, 3rd ed (1995), pp 93-105. He comments, at p 103:
"In omitting or inserting words the judge is not really engaged in a hypothetical reconstruction of the intention of the drafter or the legislature, but is simply making as much sense as he can of the text of the statutory provision read in its appropriate context and within the limits of the judicial role."
This power is confined to plain cases of drafting mistakes. The courts are ever mindful that their constitutional role in this field is interpretative. They must abstain from any course which might have the appearance of judicial legislation. A statute is expressed in language approved and enacted by the legislature. So the courts exercise considerable caution before adding or omitting or substituting words. Before interpreting a statute in this way the court must be abundantly sure of three matters: (1) the intended purpose of the statute or provision in question; (2) that by inadvertence the draftsman and Parliament failed to give effect to that purpose in the provision in question; and (3) the substance of the provision Parliament would have made, although not necessarily the precise words Parliament would have used, had the error in the bill been noticed. The third of these conditions is of crucial importance. Otherwise any attempt to determine the meaning of the enactment would cross the boundary between construction and legislation: see per Lord Diplock in Jones v Wrotham Park Settled Estates [1980] AC 74, 105-106. In the present case these three conditions are fulfilled."
"Sometimes, even when these conditions are met, the court may find itself inhibited from interpreting the statutory provisions in accordance with what it is satisfied was the underlying intention of Parliament. The alteration in language may be too far-reaching. In Western Bank Ltd v Schindler [1977] Ch 1, 18, Scarman LJ observed that the insertion must not be too big, or too much at variance with the language used by the legislature. Or the subject matter may call for a strict interpretation of the statutory language, as in penal legislation. None of these considerations apply in the present case. Here the court is able to give a construction of the statute which accords with the intention of the legislature."
"It was common ground that two words "large bus" have been omitted from the two Orders because the draftsman had slipped up. It is clear from the terms of the two Decision Letters that the Minister intended to confirm the Board's exercise of power and to make large buses liable to pay the toll specified in class 4. It is obvious from the inclusion of a definition of 'large bus' in the Instrument that "large bus" was envisaged as a category or class. The Explanatory Note is not a legitimate aid to the interpretation of the Instrument, but this being delegated legislation at the hand of the Minister, which is not required to be laid before Parliament, it seems to me that the court commits no impropriety in having regard to the plain intention of the maker of the Instrument, and the content of the Instrument, which confirms the intention but nevertheless by omission, fails to fully implement it. There being a general power contained in section 61(1) of the 1959 Act, reaffirmed as a continuing power for revisions to take place pursuant to section 10 of the 1971 Act, notwithstanding that the power is an inchoate power until confirmed by the Minister, there can, in my judgment, be no basis for concluding that the court would be stepping outside its constitutional role by rectifying the omissions so as to include large buses as traffic liable to a levy. Since the omission of 'large bus' from class 4 in the two Orders is to be regarded as an omission, there is no rational basis for concluding that there being a power to charge all traffic passing over the bridge, "large bus" should be treated by the court as exempt. In my judgment the Board's intention to classify 'large bus' as being liable to a toll is sufficiently plain from the general power in section 61(1), the orders drawn by the Board to include it, the respective Decision Letters of the Secretary of State to confirm them as laid before him, and the inclusion in the definition section of the Instruments of "large bus". I thus have no doubt as to the first of the three matters referred to by Lord Nicholls, namely the intended purpose of the statute or provision in question. I have no doubt as to the second, that it arose by inadvertence on the part of the draftsman, and as to the third, there is no difficulty in concluding upon the precise words which would have been used by the draftsman (in effect by the Secretary of State), because he had used them in his Decision Letters, namely 'large bus' as being included in class 4 of the classification in the scale of charges in each of those Instruments."
"The purpose for which a power is conferred, and hence its ambit, has to be inferred from the language used, read in its statutory context and having regard to any aid to interpretation which assists in the particular case. In either event, whether the purpose is stated expressly or has to be inferred, the exercise is one of statutory interpretation.
Statutory interpretation is an exercise which requires the court to identify the meaning borne by the words in the particular context. The task of the court is often said to be to ascertain the intention of Parliament expressed in the language under consideration. This is correct and may be helpful, so long as it is remembered that the "intention of Parliament" is an objective concept, not subjective. The phrase is a shorthand reference to the intention which the court reasonably imputes to Parliament in respect of the language used. It is not the subjective intention of the minister or other persons who promoted the legislation. Nor is it the subjective intention of the draftsman . As Lord Reid said in Black-Clawson International Ltd v Papierwerke Waldhof-Aschaffenburg AG [1975] AC 591, 613: "We often say that we are looking for the intention of Parliament, but that is not quite accurate. We are seeking the meaning of the words which Parliament used.""
"Or the aids may be external to the statute, such as its background setting and its legislative history. This extraneous material includes reports of Royal Commissions and advisory committees, reports of the Law Commission and a statute's legislative antecedents.
Nowadays the courts look at external aids for more than merely identifying the mischief the statute is intended to cure. In adopting a purposive approach to the interpretation of statutory language, courts seek to identify and give effect to the purpose of the legislation. To the extent that extraneous material assists in identifying the purpose of the legislation, it is a useful tool."
"The source to which Parliament must have intended the citizen to refer is the language of the Act itself. These are the words which Parliament has itself approved as accurately expressing its intentions. If the meaning of those words is clear and unambiguous and does not lead to a result which is manifestly absurd or unreasonable, it would be a confidence trick by Parliament and destructive of all legal certainty if the private citizen could not rely upon that meaning but was required to search through all that had happened before and in the course of the legislative process in order to see whether there was anything to be found from which it could be inferred that Parliament's real intention had not been accurately expressed by the actual words that Parliament had adopted to communicate it to those affected by the legislation."
The 2000 Order
"2. Although there are no formal objections outstanding the bus operators who withdrew their objections asked the Secretary of State to give careful consideration to their representations about bus tolls. The Secretary of State has therefore determined your toll application without a public enquiry held but, in doing so, has given careful consideration to the representations of the bus operators.
3. The tolls charged and proposed for the bridge are as follows:"
There then followed a box containing classes of vehicles which included in class 4 "large bus (17 or more passengers including driver)".
The 2002 Order
"From and after the coming into force of this Order for the purposes of the tolls authorised in pursuance of the Humber Bridge Acts 1959 and 1971, the tolls which the Humber Bridge Board may demand, take and recover in respect of traffic passing over or on the bridge shall be tolls not exceeding those specified in column (2) of the scale of charges set out in the Schedule to this Order with respect to each class of traffic specified in column (1) of that scale."
"In this Schedule:
"bus" and "small bus" shall have the same meanings as in section 19 of the Transport Act 1985;
"goods vehicle" means a mechanically propelled vehicle constructed or adapted for use for the carriage of goods of burden of any description;
Thus, unlike the schedules in the earlier orders, paragraph 1 of the schedule to the 2002 Order makes no reference to large bus.
"The scale of charges referred to in article 2 of this Order shall be as follows:
"(1) (2)
Class of Traffic Maximum Toll
2 | Motor Car Motor Caravan Goods vehicle having a maximum weight not exceeding 3.5 tonnes |
£2.50 |
3 | Goods vehicles having a maximum weight
exceeding 3.5 tonnes but not exceeding 7.5 tonnes Vehicle in class 2 above with trailer Small bus (up to 16 passengers excluding driver) |
£4.50 |
4 | Goods Vehicle exceeding 7.5 tonnes maximum
weight with 2 axles |
£10.00" |
"(b) The toll for goods vehicles over 3.5 and up to 7.5 tonnes maximum weight and for small buses (up to 16 passengers excluding the driver) is increased from £4.30 to £4.50.
(c) The toll for good (sic) vehicles over 7.5 tonnes maximum weight with 2 axles is increased from £9.60 to £10.00"
It contains no reference to large buses.
"It is plain from this Order that the draftsman deliberately left out "large bus" from the definition in the Schedule and there is no mention of "large bus" at all. If a large bus, namely a bus having 17 people or more is to fall within any category or classification under the Order, it must be as a goods vehicle. It will do so if it can be said to be a mechanically propelled vehicle constructed or adapted for use for the carriage of a 'burden' of some description. According to whether a bus has 2 axles, 3 axles or 4 axles, it will be charged accordingly."
He then set out his conclusions with regard to the "2002 Order in paragraph 26 of his judgment in these terms:
"The case for the power to levy a toll on large buses according to whether they have 2, 3 or more axles, depends solely upon the definition of "goods vehicle" in the 2002 Order. The definition has a long history in transport legislation and is thus not specifically devised to embrace buses. The converse appears to be the case; as a definition of goods vehicle it appears in legislation where buses are specifically categorised. A driver of goods vehicle requires a Heavy Goods Vehicle (HGV) licence. A driver of a bus requires a Public Service Vehicle (PSV) licence. Despite the ease with which the Secretary of State could have covered past error or omission by including "large bus" in each of the categories 4, 5 and 6, as the court has done in connection with the 1997 and 2000 Orders, he did not do so in 2002. The drafting must be regarded as deliberate, without error. What one can discern is that, in the light of the earlier drafting, it was intended that the classification of "bus" and "small bus" should have specific relevance to the 2002 Order. It can be discerned by reason of the amendment to exclude the words "large bus" from the definition section, that it was intended that it should not be regarded as a category on its own. The simple question which arises, therefore, is whether a bus carrying passengers falls, within the definition of a mechanically propelled vehicle carrying 'burden of any description'. Although the definition of goods vehicle which has been employed may have a long established history, it seems to me that the words "burden of any description" must be given the broad meaning which the word 'any' itself suggests. Having regard to the clear purpose behind the Board having the power to levy a toll on all traffic passing over the bridge, where words are used which are according to their ordinary meaning (as opposed to prior statutory use) wide enough to embrace a "large bus" it seems to me effect should be given to the underlying intention and purpose of this legislation. To describe passengers as "burden of any description" may have an antiquated ring about it, but passengers can be regarded as burden in this context because they create a weight which the vehicle has to carry. Further, since the class is capable of being defined by the weight of the vehicle and the number of axles, a classification by reference to the number of persons carried or particular "burden" would be otiose. There is in my judgment no strain to the language used to include "large bus" within the definition of goods vehicle. I have concluded that the Order as drawn and made includes large buses within each of the categories, class 4, 5 and 6, according to how may axles a bus has."
"3.5 The increases now proposed would take effect, if confirmed, on 1 April 2002, and apply during the period to 31 March 2004. The 2000 Order retained eight classes of Bridge user and these would remain unchanged. Of these, two classes, pedestrians and cyclists, would continue to use the Bridge free of charge. The toll chargeable to motorists would increase by 10 pence to £1.10, representing the smallest convenient increase compatible with current coinage. The tolls chargeable to the remaining five classes would increase, with some limited rounding, by 4%, representing the Board's best estimate of inflationary trends during the period 1 April 2002 to 31 March 2004. This estimate had been formulated combining experience of past inflation with Government estimates of future inflation.
3.6 Thus the toll chargeable to motor cars would increase by 10 pence or 4.16% to £2.50. Since 1989, the tolls chargeable to heavier vehicular traffic had been based on weight and number of axles, irrespective of type of vehicle. Coaches and large buses (those carrying more than 16 passengers excluding the driver) were thereby included in class 4: "Goods Vehicle exceeding 7.5 tonnes maximum weight with 2 axles". The Board's current proposal was to increase the toll currently chargeable to such vehicles, £9.60, by 40 pence to £10.-00, an increase of 4.16%."
It is thus clear that the Board was seeking an increase to £10.00 for large buses on the basis that they would be included in class 4, not on the basis that they might be included in a higher class according to the number of axles.
"4.2 The very high existing Bridge tolls imposed on PSVs, that is, on large buses and coaches, using the Bridge were unacceptable and were causing operators to reduce crossings. The proposed toll increases would accelerate this trend. Reducing the toll would encourage an increase in Bridge crossings by PSVs and increase toll revenue from that source.
4.3 The tolls charged for use of the Bridge were the highest for any estuarial crossing in Britain. Moreover, the toll charged for a coach or large bus was four times that charged to a motor car, again the highest differential imposed on any British estuarial crossing. This fourfold differential had been applied since the inception of the Bridge, but had always been onerous and unfair. If the board's toll proposal were implemented, the cash difference between the undiscounted tolls for a single crossing by a car (£2.50) and a large bus (£10.00) would rise to £7.50. The average car:large bus ratio for all other UK crossings was 1:1.87."
It is thus plain that the PSV operators concerned understood the Board's proposals. They correctly appreciated that the proposal was to charge large buses at four times the rate for cars, as had been done since the inception of the bridge, and to charge them £10, which was the rate for class 4 vehicles.
"2.4 The submission relating to the lawfulness of the levying of tolls on large buses is not a matter for me. As to the adjournment application, this was not renewed at the enquiry and, indeed, was expressly withdrawn by the representative of the objector on whose behalf the application had been made.
2.5 I nevertheless considered carefully whether failing to adjourn the enquiry might prejudice operators of large buses who had not objected to the Board's proposal. Whether lawfully or not, these vehicles have been subject to a toll for using the bridge since its inception, a period of some 20 years. In these circumstances, it was not credible, in my view, that operators of such vehicles would not have been alerted by the advertisement of the Board's proposal to the fact that their interests were in issue in the proposal and therefore at the enquiry. I was reinforced in the conclusion by the fact that 6 of the 7 objections to the proposal were made by bus and/or coach operators. I concluded accordingly that it was neither desirable nor necessary to adjourn the enquiry"
There is, so far as I am aware, no evidence that any relevant bus operator thought that the proposals did not affect him. Any such suggestion would have been, as the inspector put it, incredible.
"6.7 I deal first with the objection relating to all PSVs, including but not therefore restricted to scheduled local bus services. I have considered the claim that the fact that coaches and buses carry human cargo distinguishes them in some way from other commercial vehicles. I am unable to accept this argument. A decision whether to use the bridge in the course of a journey carrying passengers on a day trip to Scarborough or Whitby seems to me no different in character from a decision in relation to a goods vehicle of the same weight (and therefore in the same toll class) carrying vegetables across the bridge to Hull. The toll payable for the use of the bridge is an alternative to the cost, including wages, fuel and vehicle wear and tear, or the longer drive to the next available crossing of the Humber to the west "
"I do not therefore accept that any reduction in the toll proposed for all PSVs is appropriate. It follows that there is no purpose to be served by establishing a separate PSV toll class, as urged by the objectors. Charging for PSVs by weight and number of axles seems to me to be fair, having regard to my conclusion above as to the essentially commercial nature of these operations in general. "
"On the basis of the evidence before him and having regard to Section 10 of the 1971 Act, the Secretary of State is satisfied that the proposed toll revisions are justified. The Secretary of State has, therefore, decided to make the Order."
Conclusion
Lord Justice Jonathan Parker:
Lord Justice Auld: