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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 >> Gray v Bristol Magistrates Court [2008] EWHC 1153 (Admin) (07 May 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2008/1153.html Cite as: [2008] EWHC 1153 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
DIVISIONAL COURT
Strand London WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE UNDERHILL
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BENJAMIN GRAY | Claimant | |
v | ||
BRISTOL MAGISTRATES COURT | Defendant |
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WordWave International Limited
A Merrill Communications Company
190 Fleet Street London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7404 1400 Fax No: 020 7831 8838
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
The defendant did not appear and was not represented
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"(1) An order of mandamus requiring Magistrates to issue witness summons to police officers present at the incident in question.
(2) Order of mandamus requiring investigation, including vet documents re counter-allegations of attack from dog owned by prosecution witness Waetjen."
Mitting J refused permission on the papers on 2nd April 2008. A renewed application for permission was heard by Burton J on 9th April. He ordered:
"1. This application is refused on Ground 1.
2. Ground 2 be adjourned to come on inter partes.
3. The Claimant's application to stay proceedings in the Magistrates Court be refused."
The pleaded grounds are not in fact enumerated as 1 and 2 but it is accepted by the claimant (who appears before us in person) that the ground which had been allowed to proceed to an inter partes hearing was that relating to the unavailability of the evidence of the police witness, and that the ground which had been dismissed was the one relating to the failure of the police to investigate the characteristics of the dog.
(1) On at least one occasion prior to the events which gave rise to the present proceedings, the claimant had used the services of a firm of solicitors in Bristol called Allen Hoole.
(2) Immediately following his arrest on 25th October 2007, he had the services of a Mr Whitlow of Allen Hoole, who happened to be acting as the duty solicitors on that occasion.
(3) On a date which we do not have but which was at some point in the second half of 2007, the claimant made a complaint to the Legal Complaints Service about the service which he had received from Allen Hoole in relation to the earlier matter. This led to a settlement, brokered by the Legal Complaints Service, under which Allen Hoole offered to pay £600 to the claimant by way of compensation for poor service.
(4) Judge Morgan is a member of the Bar, who works from chambers in Bristol and also sits as a Deputy District Judge.
(5) The claimant ascertained from the court staff in the course of the hearing that Judge Morgan was indeed a barrister and he raised with him on the second day the possibility that there might be a conflict of interest insofar as he had been instructed by Allen Hoole and was aware of the complaint which he, that is to say the claimant, had made against that firm.
(6) The judge declined to recuse himself. He said, according to the note of the judgment to which I have referred earlier (under the heading "additional reasons)":
"During the trial Mr Gray made an application to DDJ Morgan that he should withdraw from the proceedings due to his association with Allen Hoole Solicitors.
Application refused."
There then follows what is clearly a note of what the judge said:
"Mr Gray I am not aware of their interest and do not wish to know of any complaint you may have with Allen Hoole. I am a barrister who prosecutes and defends in this area and have acted for many clients some of whom may have instructed Allen Hoole solicitors. No conflict has arisen."
(The claimant finds the form of words "some of whom may have instructed Allen Hoole" odd, since, as he observes, one would expect a barrister to know what firms of solicitors he had been instructed by. His recollection is that Judge Morgan said in terms that he had indeed sometimes been instructed by Allen Hoole. I agree that the claimant's recollection is more likely to be correct as to what the judge meant. Whether or not he used the subjunctive, and if so why, seems to be a matter of no importance. I am certainly, in any event, prepared to proceed on the basis that the claimant's recollection is correct.)
"Their conduct did not form part of any evidence in the trial. They were not mentioned at all by any witness, including the defendant, during the giving of evidence."
That is hardly surprising, since Allen Hoole had nothing to do with any of the issues. In these circumstances, a fair minded observer would not in my view perceive any risk that the judge would be biased against the claimant simply because he had in fact made a complaint against Allen Hoole.
"Self-defence - not applicable to common assault but it is applicable to section 4 offence..."
I agree that if that is to be read as a proposition of law that self-defence is not available as a defence to a charge of common assault it is plainly wrong. I think, however, that it is extremely unlikely that that is how it ought to be read. Notes of this kind are not always entirely accurate and I strongly suspect that what was intended was an observation on the availability of the defence of self-defence on the particular facts of this case. But in any case being advanced as one of bias, what matters is not precisely what the judge may have said but whether it is conceivable that he deliberately and openly gave himself a patent misdirection of law in order (consciously or subconsciously) to do the claimant down. I do not believe that that is remotely conceivable.