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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 >> RSPCA, R. (On the Paplication of) v Colchester Magistrates' Court [2015] EWHC 1418 (Admin) (11 March 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2015/1418.html Cite as: [2015] EWHC 1418 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
DIVISIONAL COURT
Royal Courts of Justice Strand London WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE BLAKE
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THE QUEEN ON THE APPLICATION OF RSPCA | Claimant | |
v | ||
COLCHESTER MAGISTRATES' COURT | Defendant |
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Mr M Fullerton (instructed by HMCTS Complaints Correspondence Team) appeared on behalf of the Defendant
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"Based on the facts as [the District Judge] found them to be and the submissions made on behalf of the parties was the decision the [the District Judge] reached legally sound and reasonable?"
and:
"If it was not should [the District Judge] instead have refused the application to exclude the evidence of the search and continued to hear the trial?"
Permission was refused on the papers on 29th September 2014 but granted following an oral hearing before McGowan J on 28th November. When granting permission the learned judge observed that, as the Magistrates' Court had already given a reasoned judgment containing all the necessary facts and explained its refusal to state the case, in the light of the authorities, there was nothing to be gained by ordering that a case be stated.
"An inspector or a constable may take a protected animal into possession if a veterinary surgeon certifies—
(a)that it is suffering, or
(b)that it is likely to suffer if its circumstances do not change."
"... is to enable us to ascertain whether there is a statutory nuisance emanating from the premises and to allow the council's animal welfare officer to assess the conditions of the dogs within the property and surrounding grounds within the assistance of a RSPCA officer and RSPCA appointed veterinary. It was stated that advising Ms Fuller and Mr Sheldrake the council's intention to enter the property and grounds would in the Council's opinion be detrimental to the case."
"Premises may be searched only to the extent necessary to achieve the purpose of the search having regard to the size and nature of whatever is sought."
I interpolate at this stage that, although this is not part of the summary of the defence case, that section 16(8) of Police and Criminal Evidence Act provides:
"A search under a warrant may only be a search to the extent required for the purpose for which the warrant was issued."
and Code B paragraph 6.9A provides that:
"A search may not continue under a warrant's authority once the object of the search has been achieved."
"Notwithstanding the refusal of the magistrate to grant a warrant under the Animal Welfare Act the council officers have proceeded to use the warrant granted under the Environmental Protection Act as if it had also been granted under the Animal Welfare Act."
He also stated that at paragraph 32, that both Council officers and Mr Taylor were "inexperienced in the obtaining of an execution of warrants" but that both council officers had stated they were "PACE trained".
"35. I am of the opinion that in operating in the manner in which she did Ms Wesley Taylor circumvented the refusal of the magistrate to grant a warrant under the AWA. While I accept this may have down to experience of misunderstanding rather than any malicious intent, in further advising Ms Fuller that the warrant permitted inspection of the dogs when it clearly did not and she should have known that it did not, she acted to the serious detriment of the householder.
36. I have weighed in the balance the adverse effect of admitting the evidence as against excluding it and acknowledging that without the evidence obtained from the search there would be no other evidence on which the prosecution could rely. But in the circumstances that I have found, I am not able to condone the breaches mentioned and I exclude the evidence obtained during the search of the premises."
(i) on the facts the District Judge erred in finding that the application for a warrant under the Animal Welfare Act was "refused" by the magistrate who issued the warrant;
(ii) the District Judge erred in law in finding that the warrant could not have been granted pursuant to section 52 of the Animal Welfare Act, or alternatively reached a perverse decision on the facts;
(iii) the judge erred in finding that those lawfully on the premises were confined by the terms of the warrant and had no authority to investigate welfare issues. The investigation of welfare issues was a subordinate purpose which in the light of the decision of the Divisional Court (Richards LJ and Openshaw J) in R Hicks v Commissioner of Metropolis [2012] EWHC 1947 (Admin) paragraphs 230 and 235, showed that even if the dominant purpose for entry was to enquire in aspects of statutory nuisance, items found outside the scope of the search could be seized. Accordingly when discovering offences contrary to the Animal Welfare Act the officers presence did not become unlawful. Neither did the examination of the dogs and their conditions. Accordingly there was no breach of the code.
Analysis
"... walked around and saw dogs in various states of appearing under fed, some were pitifully thin. She recalled a general strong smell of faeces and urine and unclean conditions in which the dogs were kept with no bedding."
"It is very difficult to see how the execution of those warrants on 28 April by carrying out the searches authorised by the warrants can have been vitiated by the existence of an ulterior dominant purpose that did not impinge on the validity of the warrants themselves."
Secondly the search for stolen goods, the authorised purpose, was continuing. The court, at paragraph 235, was satisfied that the searches did not exceed the scope of the warrants. The officers seized substantial quantities of computer equipment falling within the authorised purpose, and the fact that flyers were found did not meant that the searches were conducted for the ulterior purpose of finding such evidence.
"Clearly any constable who takes part in the execution of the warrant must know the purpose for which it was issued, and must not go further than is necessary to achieve that purpose, but he is not required to adopt tunnel vision."