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England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Edwards, R (on the application of) v Environment Agency & Anor [2004] EWHC 736 (Admin) (02 April 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2004/736.html Cite as: [2004] JPL 1691, [2004] EWHC 736 (Admin), [2004] 3 All ER 21, [2004] NPC 56, [2004] ACD 82, [2004] Env LR 43, [2004] 2 P & CR 20 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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R (on the application of David Edwards) |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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(1) The Environment Agency (2) First Secretary of State - and - Rugby Limited |
Defendants Interested Party |
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Mr D Elvin QC and Ms K Smith (instructed by Environment Agency Legal Services) for the First Defendant
Mr S Tromans (instructed by Michael Collins, RMC(UK) Legal Department) for the Interested Party
Hearing date: 19 March 2004
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Keith:
The issue of the Permit
The challenge to the issue of the Permit
The facts relating to Mr Edwards' standing
"I have not only kept myself informed about the issues involved with the Rugby Cement Works, but I have attended meetings, and recently even spoke, at one 'Rugby in Plume' meeting. Although I distance myself nowadays from 'formally' joining any organisations, I would consider myself firmly aligned with the 'Rugby in Plume' camp. I have visited with members of Rugby in Plume often and been presented with more information than I could possibly fully analyse in a short time. The internet has proved useful, also. The information that I have seen, and understood, worries me greatly."
"I'm too rich [to get legal aid], because I own my own house, so someone in Rugby has to come forward who feels strongly enough to take the case forward under the legal aid scheme."
Another report quoted Mrs Pallikaropoulos as saying:
"The council has proved it is out of touch [with] the people of Rugby, so we need someone who is able to take the case forward on a legal aid basis. I can't afford it."
The report concluded by saying that Mrs Pallikaropoulos had asked anyone who may be able to help to contact her on a telephone number which was then given.
Mr Edwards' interest
Abuse of process
"…..I am satisfied that where a parent wishes to challenge a local education authority or an appeals committee in relation to the handling of a parent's expression of preference as to the school at which his or her child should attend it is the parent and not the child who should mount the challenge. I accept that the child may have a sufficient interest to mount a challenge, and in some exceptional cases it may be appropriate for the child to make the application for permission to apply for judicial review, but normally, as it seems to me, the only reason why the application is made in the name of the child is to obtain legal aid, and to enable the parents to protect themselves in relation to costs. That I regard as an abuse. Our legal system works upon the basis that those who seek a remedy should expose themselves in relation to costs. If the device is used in future, permission to apply for judicial review may well be refused on that ground."
Ward LJ said much the same thing at para. 69. Having commented that it is the parents' appeal, not the child's, he said:
"The system is open to abuse if the child applies for legal aid and that abuse must be curtailed."
"The proposition for which the SOC relies on a passage of the judgment of Kennedy LJ in R v Richmond LBC ex p. JC [2001] ELR 13 para. 31 goes not to standing but to abuse and hence discretion. It merits careful consideration, but it is obiter and in our respectful view not easy to apply. We are not persuaded that the fact that some of the parents who were objectors are ineligible for public funding and have a sufficient interest is necessarily enough to render the claim an abuse, and we think that the concept of a device needs elaboration."
When the case was heard on its merits – see [2002] EWHC Admin 1929 – Scott Baker J (as he then was) said at para. 34 that there was "no indication that [the] observations [of Kennedy and Ward LJJ] were intended for any wider application than the particular type of case with which they were concerned". His conclusion at para. 37 was as follows:
"Both parents and children have a sufficient interest to bring proceeding[s] for judicial review in school closure or reorganisation cases. Ordinarily, it is likely to be the parents who have the real and primary interest in bringing the case. It is ….. the parents and not the children who have the right to be consulted under the legislation and the parents whose objections are required to be taken into account under the DfEE guidance. It may be an abuse of process for proceeding[s] to be brought in the name of a child rather than a parent where this is done for the purposes of obtaining public funding and protection against a possible costs order. However, clear evidence would be needed to establish this and there is no such evidence in the present case."
"This must in our view raise very serious questions as to whether it is reasonable to grant funding to Mr Edwards under the Funding Code. In particular it is questionable whether the proceedings are for the benefit of Mr Edwards as an eligible individual (see para. 4.5 of the Code) or whether they are really for the benefit of other individuals who are not eligible. We would also comment that those individuals are presumably unwilling to expose themselves to the risk of an adverse order of costs, and that the provision of funding is intended to take advantage of the protection offered by section 11 of the Access to Justice Act 1999, for the benefit of campaigners who themselves would not qualify for funding and hence would not have the benefit of that section."
Since Mr Edwards still has a community legal services funding certificate, the Commission must have decided that the facts on which the Company relied did not justify the withdrawal of funding. In the light of the Commission's Funding Code guidance, it probably thought that it was appropriate for the claim to be brought in Mr Edwards' name, and that the claim was one which could produce real benefits for a large group of people, though if it thought that they could reasonably be expected to contribute to the cost of the litigation, they could be required to make an appropriate contribution as a condition of the grant of public funding. The Commission must therefore be taken to have addressed the question of whether granting a funding certificate to Mr Edwards would be an abuse of the system under which cases are selected for public funding.
Conclusion