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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 >> Business Environment Group Ltd. v Wendy Fair (Wembley) Group Ltd & Anor [2005] EWCA Civ 1230 (08 August 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2005/1230.html Cite as: [2005] EWCA Civ 1230 |
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IN THE COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
CHANCERY DIVISION
(MR JUSTICE HART)
Strand London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE JACOB
LORD JUSTICE NEUBERGER
____________________
BUSINESS ENVIRONMENT GROUP LIMITED | Claimant/Respondent | |
-v- | ||
WENDY FAIR (WEMBLEY) GROUP LIMITED | ||
WEMBLEY (LONDON) LIMITED | Defendants/Appellants |
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Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited
190 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7404 1400 Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
MR ALAN BISHOP (instructed by Messrs Howard Kennedy, London) appeared on behalf of the Respondent
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Crown Copyright ©
"The drivers of the vehicles concerned must have required considerable skill and some courage to execute the required manoeuvres, which were in the event successfully concluded."
No problems arose in relation to the 1st May Sunday markets. But there were problems on 8 May which are described in paragraph 18 of the judgment.
"... the operation of the market has the practical effect of substantially interfering with its right to use the highway since there have been in the past, and are likely to be in the future, occasions where the stewarding system put in place either by the first defendant or the second defendant breaks down."
"(a) from authorising, causing or permitting any object, market stall, vehicle or other obstruction whatsoever to be placed in Olympic Way... within the area... identified by the heavy dotted lines on the attached plan."
It further restrains the defendants:
"(b) from authorising, permitting, setting-up, dismantling, operating or carrying on that part of the Wembley Sunday Market held... on... Olympic Way between..."
- and then it identifies a certain area by reference to the plan.
"21. ... This is, it is submitted, unreasonably disruptive to the claimant's business and in particular its need, or at any rate desire, to use the weekends to do maintenance and refurbishment work on its building. Furthermore, the process of setting up and dismantling the market involves substantial periods of time on the evidence before the court. Some three hours or more are required for the setting up and some three hours for the dismantling. During those periods, Olympic Way is completely blocked. During those periods, it is submitted, passage for emergency services would not be available if required. The claimant is not able, with one trivial exception in respect of a wasted journey by Mr Higginbotham, the plumber, in respect of which an invoice for £175 has been raised, to point to any quantifiable pecuniary loss to date, but claims that it has suffered and will continue to suffer damage from its inability to carry on its business in the manner in which it desires to operate it, in particular with regard to weekend programmes of maintenance and refurbishment and in the loss of amenities which it is able to make available or advertise to its present or prospective licensees. This damage is hard to quantify but, it is submitted, real nonetheless."
"25. I have therefore to approach the matter on the footing that the market is a lawful user of Olympic Way and that it will only be a public nuisance if, having regard to the claimant's competing rights, the user can be said to be unreasonable. It may be the case that the claimant's pleading is technically deficient in not pleading the unreasonableness of the market user. Whether or not that is strictly the case, I do not myself regard this as a ground on which the claim should be struck out. It cannot, in my judgment, be said that the claimant has no real prospect of establishing such unreasonableness at the trial. Indeed, given the extent to which the claimant's rights are being interfered with, which seem to me to be considerable, and the relatively small steps which need to be taken in order to ensure that those rights are preserved, I would myself think that the claimant has a reasonably good prospect at trial of establishing unreasonableness in relation to the market user" (emphasis added).
"... accepted by the defendants that this is the kind of case which is unlikely to come to trial and that strict application of the Cyanamid principles is not therefore appropriate. For that reason it is necessary for the court to form some view as to the relative merits of the parties' cases. It also renders it less appropriate than it otherwise might be to consider whether damages in respect of the period pre-trial will be an adequate remedy."
He then went on to consider the point that, in the absence of an injunction, there would be real damage caused to the claimant which was "inherently difficult to quantify" - see paragraph 28.
"... the relative absence of evidence of direct financial loss to the claimant from the current manner of operation of the market, has led me to doubt when it is appropriate to grant the specific form of interlocutory relief which is now sought by the claimants..."
He decided, however, it was appropriate. He concluded by saying this:
"Since the claimant is good for the damages on its cross-undertaking, I have narrowly concluded that the just solution which will hold the right balance between the parties until trial and in practice until the end of the market's operations in January next year is to accede to the claimant's application for injunctive relief."
"I have reached the conclusion that this case is one that the court has to approach on a broad principle: what can the court do in its best endeavour to avoid injustice?"
This was a point repeated, effectively, when he came to reach his decision at 233F.
"It must also be remembered that the grant or refusal of an injunction is ultimately a matter of statutory discretion, and that the powers of the courts in this regard cannot be fettered by decisions in general terms, when the facts of cases will vary infinitely."
It is fair to say that in his judgment Kerr LJ did make one point which is of assistance to the defendants. Having held that it was very unlikely that there would be a trial in that case, he said this, at 234J to 235A:
"The question whether the defendant can be adequately compensated in damages normally only arises if the case is in fact taken to trial by the plaintiff. True, if the plaintiff does not do so, the defendant could still claim damages against the plaintiff's cross-undertaking on the ground that no injunction should ever have been granted. But this is no answer, since it is for the plaintiff to make out a case for the exercise of the court's discretion in his favour; and, in any event, defendants rarely proceed to trial of issues whose investigation they had not sought, but were concerned to resist."
(Appeal dismissed; appellant to pay the respondent's costs, such costs to be subject to detailed assessment if not agreed).