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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 >> Lovett v Wigan Borough Council (Re Breaches of ASBIs) [2022] EWCA Civ 1631 (16 December 2022) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2022/1631.html Cite as: [2023] 1 WLR 1443, [2023] HLR 19, [2022] WLR(D) 507, [2023] WLR 1443, [2022] EWCA Civ 1631 |
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ON APPEAL FROM
His Honour Judge Sephton sitting in the County Court in Manchester, Case: B00WN680
Deputy District Judge Althaus sitting in the County Court in Willesden, Case: H00W1728
District Judge Coonan sitting in the County Court in Croydon, Case: F70CR138
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE BIRSS
and
LORD JUSTICE EDIS
____________________
Christopher Lovett |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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Wigan Borough Council |
Respondent |
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And Between: |
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Isaac Smith |
Appellant |
|
- and - |
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Network Homes Limited |
Respondent |
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And Between: |
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Gemma Hopkins |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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Optivo |
Respondent |
____________________
Michael Paget instructed directly by the Respondent
.............................
Arfan Khan (instructed by DCK Solicitors) for the Appellant
Tristan Salter (instructed by Devonshires) for the Respondent
.............................
Yinka Adedeji (instructed by Citizens Advice Sutton) for the Appellant
Sam Phillips instructed directly by the Respondent
.............................
Hearing date: 10 November 2022
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Judgment of the court (given by Birss LJ):
"379. Very early into its work, The Working Party discovered widespread and serious concern about the inconsistency of penalties imposed (which is the correct term as opposed to "sentencing" which occurs only in criminal courts) for breach of orders made under the 2014 Act. Concerns raised by practitioners ranged from judges not considering breaches to be sufficiently serious to warrant action (and thereby undermining the effectiveness of the injunction), through to excessive penalties out of line with what the approach would have been in a criminal court to the substantive conduct behaviour."
The three cases in summary
Optivo v Hopkins
"and Upon the Defendant admitting that on the 10th November 2020 there was shouting outside her property so as to be heard by her neighbours causing them alarm and distress and that was a breach of the injunction order dated 16th March 2020"
"and Upon the Court being satisfied that if it had imposed a sentence today it would have imposed a sentence of 28 days imprisonment suspended on the condition of compliance with the injunction order imposed at today's hearing"
[The reference to "the injunction order imposed at today's hearing" arises because on the same day the injunction was re-issued in an amended form.]
Network Homes v Smith
"Swearing, shouting, banging, playing amplified sound, or causing any other noise nuisance at the Property, so that it can be heard outside the Property."
Wigan Council v Lovett
The law
1 Power to grant injunctions
(1) A court may grant an injunction under this section against a person aged 10 or over ("the respondent") if two conditions are met.
(2) The first condition is that the court is satisfied, on the balance of probabilities, that the respondent has engaged or threatens to engage in anti-social behaviour.
(3) The second condition is that the court considers it just and convenient to grant the injunction for the purpose of preventing the respondent from engaging in anti-social behaviour.
(4) An injunction under this section may for the purpose of preventing the respondent from engaging in anti-social behaviour—
(a) prohibit the respondent from doing anything described in the injunction;
(b) require the respondent to do anything described in the injunction.
[…]
CPR Part 81
Hearings and judgments in contempt proceedings
81.8
(1) In accordance with rule 39.2, all hearings of contempt proceedings shall, irrespective of the parties' consent, be listed and heard in public unless the court otherwise directs.
(2) Advocates and the judge shall appear robed in all hearings of contempt proceedings, whether or not the court sits in public.
(3) Before deciding to sit in private for all or part of the hearing, the court shall notify the national print and broadcast media, via the Press Association.
(4) The court shall consider any submissions from the parties or media organisations before deciding whether and if so to what extent the hearing should be in private.
(5) If the court decides to sit in private it shall, before doing so, sit in public to give a reasoned public judgment setting out why it is doing so.
(6) At the conclusion of the hearing, whether or not held in private, the court shall sit in public to give a reasoned public judgment stating its findings and any punishment.
(7) The court shall inform the defendant of the right to appeal without permission, the time limit for appealing and the court before which any appeal must be brought.
(8) The court shall be responsible for ensuring that where a sentence of imprisonment (immediate or suspended) is passed in contempt proceedings under this Part, that judgment is transcribed and published on the website of the judiciary of England and Wales.
Guidance on sentencing for contempt of court
i) Ensuring future compliance with the order;
ii) Punishment; and
iii) Rehabilitation.
i) An immediate order for committal to prison.
ii) A suspended order for committal to prison, with conditions.
iii) Adjourning the consideration of a penalty.
iv) A fine.
v) No order.
Suspension
Harm and culpability
A High culpability; very serious breach or persistent serious breaches
B Deliberate breach falling between A and C
C Lower culpability; Minor breach or breaches
Category 1 Breach causes very serious harm or distress
Category 2 Cases falling between categories 1 and 3
Category 3 Breach causes little or no harm or distress
Harm | Culpability | Culpability | Culpability |
A | B | C | |
Category 1 | Starting point: 6 months Category range: 8 weeks to 18 months |
Starting point: 3 months Category range: Adjourned consideration to 6 months |
Starting point: 1 month Category range: Adjourned consideration to 3 months |
Category 2 | Starting point: 3 months Category range: Adjourned consideration to 6 months |
Starting point: 1 month Category range: Adjourned consideration to 3 months |
Starting point: Adjourned consideration Category range: Adjourned consideration to 1 month |
Category 3 | Starting point: 1 month Category range: Adjourned consideration to 3 months |
Starting point: Adjourned consideration Category range: Adjourned consideration to 1 month |
Starting point: Adjourned consideration Category range: No order/fine to two weeks |
The particular cases
Assessment – Optivo v Hopkins
"it is the Defendant's first offence; the time lag between the offence and today; there was no targeting involved; the Defendant admitted the breach; the Defendant is a victim of domestic violence; the Defendant has serious mental health issues"
Assessment – Network Homes v Smith
The sentence imposed on Mr Smith
"I bear in mind and satisfied that since the last hearing, D has taken steps to reduce the risk of committing further breaches of injunction order and the fact that D has misfortune to be disabled and confined to his home where the risk of committing a further offence is somewhat higher than if he were able to get out of his property more often. Those are factors which might be said to decrease seriousness, if it were not for the fact that I am sentencing for all 10 breaches, I might reflect that in a reduction of the period of custody, but have to balance that with fact of 6 separate dates of breach, so the starting points appears to me to also be the right end point, which is how I reach the finding of 12 weeks custody"
Lovett v Wigan – appeal and set aside
3. That the judge relied on an unlawful clause (No. 5) in the injunction for breaches of the injunction. See judgment paras 19 and 20 underlined. Skeleton Argument Para 3 refers.
5. That the judge failed to consider or ignored whether nay perverting the course of justice element was attempted by or proven against the claimant for the trial. See judgment paras 11 and 14 underlined plus grounds 1, 2 and 3 above. Skeleton argument para. 5 refers.
"10. I heard from Mr William Gregory who lives next door to Mr Lovett. Mr Gregory produced 34 video recordings to support his evidence. 2 of those recordings were made from his mobile phone from outside Mr Lovatt's home. As to the other 32 recordings, Mr Gregory explained to me that he had installed a CCTV outside his house in June 2021; it overlooks part of No 4. The camera functions continuously. Mr Gregory told me that he had produced to the court all of the recordings in his possession that support the current application to commit. In fact, Mr Gregory did not produce the recordings made by the CCTV; instead, he produced recordings made on his mobile phone of part of the screen on which the CCTV recordings were being displayed. Some of the recordings contained a caption displaying an address different from Mr Gregory's own. Mr Gregory could not explain this; he said that this was technology that was beyond him. He assured me that he had not edited or falsified the recordings. Mr Gregory told me that the CCTV does not record sound, which I find surprising. "
11. Mr Gregory told me that he had heard various occasions on which he said that Mr Lovett had made annoying noise. I am sceptical that Mr Gregory actually heard all of the noise he claims: I suspect that he saw what had been recorded on the video and concluded that a noise had been made. For example, Mr Gregory claims to have heard Mr Lovett making a noise on 13 February 2022 at about 1 am and on 27 February 2022 at about 4 am; he does not explain his Affidavit that he had been woken from sleep (which I would have expected at those hours) or why he was awake at those times. Absent such an explanation, I cannot be sure that his account about hearing these noises is accurate.
12. I heard from Mrs Denise Young who lives at 1, Wycombe Drive which is immediately behind the rear boundary of Mr Lovett's property. Mrs Young told me, and I accept, that she had made no recording of the noise about which she complained.
13. I formed the impression that both Mr Gregory and Mrs Young have developed an antipathy towards Mr Lovett. I have not considered the previous history of this case in any detail, and it may well be that their antipathy is entirely justified. Having regard to the resentment that both these witnesses feel towards Mr Lovatt, I feel sure that if(sic) they have produced all the evidence available relating to Mr Lovett's behaviour in the relevant period. I reject the submission that Mr Gregory and Mrs Young have conspired to tell lies about Mr Lovett. I reject the suggestion that Mr Gregory has edited the CCTV recordings in order to paint an unfair picture of events. Although I consider that it is unsatisfactory that Mr Gregory has made recordings of the recordings rather than present the court with extracts from the original medium on which the CCTV recordings are stored, I accept that they are an accurate illustration of what happened.