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England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Dodson v Environment Agency [2013] EWHC 396 (QB) (28 February 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2013/396.html Cite as: [2013] EWHC 396 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
CARDIFF DISTRICT REGISTRY
2 Park Street Cardiff |
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B e f o r e :
sitting as a Judge of the High Court
____________________
BRIAN DODSON |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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ENVIRONMENT AGENCY |
Defendant |
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LOUIS BROWNE (instructed by The Solicitor to Environment Agency Wales) for
the Defendant
Hearing dates: 25, 26 and 28 February 2013
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
H. H. Judge Keyser Q.C.:
Introduction
The preliminary issues
(1) Whether the defendant owed to the claimant a duty of care at law of the scope and extent contended for at paragraphs 13, 23, 24 and 25 of the particulars of claim and/or pursuant to section 13 of the Environment Act 1995;
(2) In respect of any such duty as is found to have existed, whether the defendant was in breach of that duty.
"12. Between approximately September 2003 and the summer of 2005, the defendant was heavily involved in the clean-up of the Cegin basin with a view to the reintroduction of otters to the area. The river was cleaned and otter holts were constructed, with a view to increasing both the range of otters and the number of otters the river could support.
13. The defendant did not inform the claimant about this work or recommend to him that it would be wise to take precautions to protect the Fishery from otter predation as a result of its habitat enhancement works. The claimant was not made aware, despite his status as a riparian owner whose business could be put at risk by such measures, that the defendant intended to carry out these works or that the otter population in the Cegin basin was being encouraged by the defendant.
23. By virtue of the claimant's status as a riparian landowner, the claimant's registration of the Fishery as a CEFAS registered fish farm and the defendant's involvement in fish movements to and from the Fishery, the defendant owed the claimant a common law duty of care to inform the claimant of any activities that the defendant undertook which adversely affected, or could adversely affect, the fish stocks at the Fishery.
24. In the premises, pursuant to the aforesaid duty, the defendant should have informed the claimant that it was carrying out habitat enhancements to the River Cegin and was otherwise encouraging the otter population in the areas directly surrounding the Fishery.
25. In breach of the aforesaid duty, the defendant failed to warn the claimant of the increased risk of otter predation to the Fishery's fish stocks either to any sufficient extent or at all."
(1) In the normal course, the defendant would have been under no duty to give to the claimant such advice.
(2) Nor would the defendant have come under such a duty by reason of the general works it undertook to clean up the river in the period 2003 -2005. The claimant made clear that he had no issue with the generality of those works.
(3) However, in one specific respect the defendant acted in such a way as to come under a duty to give such advice. This respect was the construction, or supervision of the construction, of 2 otter holts on the river. The reasons why this activity gave rise to a duty to advise were as follows:
(i) The construction of otter holts amounts to the positive enhancement of the environment for colonisation of otters.
(ii) The defendant had no power to act for the purpose of enhancing the environment for that purpose.
(iii) Any such activity would have required both (a) a statutory instrument to permit the defendant to carry out such works and (b) Environmental Impact Assessment under either the Town and Country Planning (Environmental Impact Assessment) (England and Wales) Regulations 1999 or the Environmental Impact Assessment (Land Drainage Improvement Works) Regulations 1999.
(iv) The construction of the otter holts created a reasonably foreseeable risk of harm to the claimant by reason of an increase in the otter population in the vicinity.
The facts in more detail
The river and the works
"The major aims of this campaign are to visit and audit all businesses to improve environmental performance (taking requisite enforcement action where necessary) and improve awareness, ensuring better environmental performance and social engagement by all businesses on the estate. In the long term the aim is to establish a community/business partnership group which will take an ongoing responsibility for their environment taken as a whole.
This initiative driven by Environment Agency Wales is unique as a collaborative project in both location and aims, as it encompasses all areas of the environmental spectrum. These outcomes can only be achieved by a concerted and consistent effort by all stakeholders, who commit to taking responsibility for their environment in a sustainable manner."
The proposal identified a number of specific aims. As well as prevention of illegal discharges and steps to put an end to fly-tipping, these aims included the following:
"3. Set up various stakeholder groups to drive different aspects of the project forward with the aim of ensuring the local domestic and business community take ownership of their environment to ensure that the project can be self sustaining in the long term.
4. Organise a series of follow up river cleans, to ensure that the river gets progressively cleaner, leading to a sustainable solution where stakeholder groups ensure continuing progress. This ensures a slow reduction of Agency involvement as the community gradually takes the lead, so that resources can be targeted elsewhere.
10. Initiate a bio-diversity and habitat improvement programme, that will enhance the whole valley and expand the current riparian strip. Public access and pathways could also fall into this improvement programme.
11. Establish a Junior Warden Scheme, which will involve local youngsters setting up a scheme through communities first, ... to enable them to take a full part in the community ownership of this area.
12. Hold education sessions for some of the disaffected young people from the estate .... Improving education and awareness among this group can help to turn potentially the biggest problem into the biggest asset."
"As part of the whole project, some minor initiatives were undertaken to promote community engagement, which included a tree-planting programme near the Maesgeirchen Estate, seeding open bare areas with wildflower seed mix, planting hedges, placing large boulders to prevent future fly-tipping, and the construction of 2 otter holts/lie-ups.
The 2 otter holts/lie-ups were surface constructions which were a community-based initiative that involved some of the local youngsters and were a very small part of the programme and certainly never one of its major aims. The area where they were constructed contains a great deal of more suitable habitat for otters to lie up in or to establish holts, as it contains an excellent riparian habitat of tree roots and undercut river banks.
The construction of these structures was made somewhat academic as they were washed away by a severe flood in 2004."
The defendant
"It shall be the principal aim of the Agency (subject to and in accordance with the provisions of this Act or any other enactment and taking into account any likely costs) in discharging its functions so to protect or enhance the environment, taken as a whole, as to make the contribution towards attaining the objective of achieving sustainable development mentioned in subsection (3) below."
That contribution is expressed by subsection (3) to be "the contribution which, having regard to the Agency's responsibilities and resources, the Ministers consider it appropriate for the Agency to make, by the discharge of its functions, towards attaining the objective of achieving sustainable development." The concept of sustainable development is not susceptible of precise definition. In the United Kingdom, the relevant strategy was set out in A Better Quality of Life: A strategy for sustainable development in the UK (May 1999). The concept is, in governmental language, to do with achieving a better quality of life for present and future generations, having regard to certain key objectives: social progress that recognises the needs of everyone; effective protection of the environment; prudent use of natural resources; and maintenance of high and stable levels of economic growth and employment. Guidance under section 4 was given in Wales by The Environment Agency's Objectives and Contribution to Sustainable Development in Wales: Statutory Guidance from the National Assembly for Wales and in England by a corresponding document published by the Secretary of State for the Department of Environment, Food and Rural Affairs. These documents did not dictate the manner of performance of the defendant's specific duties but dealt with policy at a general level. They did however make it clear that an objective of the performance of the defendant's conservation duties would be to help in conserving and enhancing the diversity of native wildlife habitats and to contribute to the implementation of the Biodiversity Action Plans that are referred to below.
"The Agency's principal functions and duties may be categorised as follows:
- Flood Defence ...
- Water Resources ...
- Water Quality: To preserve and improve the quality of rivers, estuaries, coastal waters and groundwaters, through pollution control powers and the regulation of discharge consents, and to monitor sewage treatment works and trade discharges. Also to monitor the quality of freshwater, groundwater and tidal waters (up to three miles from the coast).
- Waste Management...
- Process Industry Regulation ...
- Fisheries: To maintain and improve salmon, trout, freshwater and eel fisheries, to regulate these and to inform DEFRA and the Assembly Government of outbreaks of notifiable fish disease.
- Radioactive Substances ...
- Land Contamination ...
- Navigation ...
- Recreation ...
- Conservation: To conserve and enhance the water environment, including areas of natural beauty or environmental sensitivity and to encourage biodiversity."
"2.8 In pursuit of its objectives the Agency will need to work closely with a wide range of partners in the public, private and voluntary sectors. An inclusive approach will be important in ensuring that the Agency is responsive to the views and policies of those with whom it deals, that it can receive and give advice, and that relative responsibilities are well understood and properly co-ordinated. In some cases a memorandum of understanding with another body may be useful."
"It shall be the duty of the Agency, to such extent as it considers desirable, generally to promote -
(a) the conservation and enhancement of the natural beauty and amenity of inland and coastal waters and of land associated with such waters;
(b) the conservation of flora and fauna which are dependent on an aquatic environment...
This subsection is without prejudice to the duties of the Agency under section 7 below."
Section 7 (1) provides:
"(1) It shall be the duty of each of the Ministers and of the Agency, in formulating or considering -
(a) any proposals relating to any functions of the Agency other than its pollution control functions, so far as may be consistent-
(i) with the purposes of any enactment relating to the functions of the Agency
(ii) in the case of each of the Ministers, with the objective of achieving sustainable development
(iii) in the case of the Agency, with any guidance under section 4 above
(iv) in the case of the Secretary of State, with his duties under section 2 of the Water Industry Act 1991,
so to exercise any power conferred to him or it with respect to the proposals as to further the conservation and enhancement of natural beauty and the conservation of flora, fauna and geological or physiographical features of special interest;
(b) any proposals relating to pollution control functions of the Agency, to have regard to the desirability of conserving and enhancing of natural beauty and of conserving flora, fauna and geological or physio graphical features of special interest;
(c) any proposal relating to any functions of the Agency -
(i) to have regard to the desirability of protecting and conserving building, sites and objects of archaeological, architectural, engineering or historic interest;
(ii) to take into account any effect which the proposals would have on the beauty or amenity of any rural or urban area or on any such flora, fauna, features, buildings, sites or objects; and
(iii) to have regard to any effect which the proposals would have on the economic and social well-being of local communities in rural areas."
Otters and the defendant
"1. The aim of this Directive shall be to contribute towards ensuring bio-diversity through the conservation of natural habitats and of wild fauna and flora in the European territory of the Member States to which the Treaty applies.
2. Measures taken pursuant to this Directive shall be designed to maintain or restore, at favourable conservation status, natural habitats and species of wild fauna and flora of Community interest.
3. Measures taken pursuant to this Directive shall take account of economic, social and cultural requirements and regional and local characteristics."
According to Article 1(a) of the Directive, "conservation means a series of measures required to maintain or restore the natural habitats and the populations of species of wild fauna and flora at a favourable status."
"4.1 Maintain and expand existing otter populations.
4.2 By 2010, restore breeding otters to all catchments and coastal areas where they have been recorded since 1960."
Among the tasks specifically given to the defendant under the Biodiversity Action Plan were:
"5.2.1 Seek to include action for otters in Catchment Management Plans for all rivers containing otter populations by 2005, including 'otter havens' in relevant areas.
5.2.3 Produce catchment based local habitat management plans identifying key areas for restoration and enhancement."
"Of the 1097 sites surveyed, 71% had signs of otter. If only the 1008 sites common to all previous surveys are compared, then 74% of sites were positive. This compares with 20% in 1977/8, 38% in 1984/5 and 53% in 1991. The overall percentage increase in positive records between 1991 and 2002 was 41%. The results exceed the UK Otter Biodiversity Action Plan target of 65% of positive sites in the Wales national survey by 2002 and also the 70% target for 2010. The results also exceed the rate of recovery predicted by Strachan & Jefferies (1996). Otter signs were found in all 16 hydrometric areas, including Anglesey, which previously had no signs in the surveys of 1984/5 and 1991. The hydrometric areas with the highest proportion of positive sites were the Cleddau, Teifi and Wye. The areas with the lowest proportion of positive sites were Mid Glamorgan, Anglesey and Taff. The greatest percentage increases in positive sites since 1977/8 were on the Conwy (3% to 90% of sites positive) and the Clwyd (from 4% to 96%). The greatest increase since 1991 was in Mid Glamorgan (from 2% to 21%). The 2002 survey confirms the continuing recovery of the otter population in Wales and demonstrates the value of the national surveys in monitoring long-term changes. It also provides an opportunity to recommend future actions to continue the expansion to other parts of Wales."
Table 2 in the Survey showed that in the Glaslyn hydrometric area, which was the relevant area for the Fishery, the data gathered in 2002 demonstrated a very marked increase in the "positive sites" (that is, sites where otters had been shown to be present) when compared with the data from the last previous survey in 1991.
"How great is the risk?
Fish farms and ponds lacking suitable protection can present otters and other predators with an easy and abundant food supply. In particular, large carp in ponds, gravel pits and lakes represent an easy source of food for otters. ...
Given the rate of recovery, it is likely that by the year 2010 there will be a risk of otter predation throughout England and Wales, except the most urban parts of river catchments. The level of risk will vary, but will be greatest where fisheries and fish farms have been established near wetland habitats, especially if breeding females are close by.
What should I do?
In situations where fish losses to otters are particularly high, or are likely to be a serious problem, steps should be taken to prevent otters gaining access to the fish, whilst still allowing otters to travel freely along watercourses. Before any steps are taken to stop predation, the identity of the culprit should be established. If losses are due to mink, for example, live cage trapping should be used, which allows other animals, including otters, to be released.
If otters are thought to be the culprit, there are several measures that could be taken, for example fencing and developing a small decoy pond close to the river or stream, stocked with low value fish and with easy access for otters. Variations in site conditions and the behaviour of individual otters mean there are no 'hard and fast' rules. Permanent fencing is an option which is known to work."
How do I get advice?
If you currently have a fishery or are considering setting up a new one, there are measures you can take to prevent fish losses to otters, but each fishery will have its own specific issues. It is is essential that you contact your local otter advisor if you:
- suspect predation by otters;
- intend to protect the site to avoid predation by otters;
- are planning to establish a new fishery."
"The return of otters after a period of 20 or 30 years absence has the potential to cause problems at fish farms and Stillwater fisheries established in the intervening period. In situations where fish losses to otters are particularly high, or are likely to be a serious problem, steps should be taken to prevent otters gaining access to the fish, whilst still allowing otters to travel freely along rivers and streams. Before any steps are taken to stop predation, identifying the culprit should be the first action. If otters are thought to be the culprit, there are several measures that could be taken, for example fencing and developing a small decoy pond close to the river or stream, stocked with low value fish and with easy access for otters. Variations in site conditions and the behaviour of individual otters mean there are no 'hard and fast' rules, although permanent fencing is an option that is known to work.
Further guidance is provided in a leaflet available from the Environment Agency (Otter Predation: is my fishery at risk?, Environment Agency, 1999) and site-specific advice is available from trained otter specialists from the local Wildlife Trusts Otters and River Project Officers and from the Otter Trust."
Discussion of the preliminary issues
"[T] hat the question of whether the existence of a statutory power gave rise to a common law duty of care required an examination of the policy of the statute; that the absence of a statutory duty would normally exclude the existence of a common law duty of care; and that, accordingly, the minimum preconditions for basing a duty of care on a statutory power were, first, that it would have been irrational not to have exercised the power so that there was in effect a public law duty to act, and, secondly, that there were exceptional grounds for holding that the policy of the statute required compensation to be paid to persons who suffered loss because the power was not exercised."
"Speaking for myself, I find it difficult to imagine a case in which a common law duty can be founded simply upon the failure (however irrational) to provide some benefit which a public authority has power (or a public law duty) to provide."
Clerk & Lindsell on Torts (20th edition, 2010) summarises the position at 14- 48:
"It is now doubtful whether an irrational failure to exercise a power can ever give rise to a common law duty of care."
"My Lords, I must make it clear that this appeal is concerned only with an attempt to impose upon a local authority a common law duty to act based solely on the existence of a broad public law duty. We are not concerned with cases in which public authorities have actually done acts or entered into relationships or undertaken responsibilities which give rise to a common law duty of care. In such cases the fact that the public authority acted pursuant to a statutory power or public duty does not necessarily negative the existence of a duty. A hospital trust provides medical treatment pursuant to the public law duty in the National Health Service Act 1977, but the existence of its common law duty is based simply upon its acceptance of a professional relationship with the patient no different from that which would be accepted by a doctor in private practice. The duty rests upon a solid, orthodox common law foundation and the question is not whether it is created by the statute but whether the terms of the statute (for example, in requiring a particular thing to be done or conferring a discretion) are sufficient to exclude it. The law in this respect has been well established since Geddis v Proprietors of the Bann Reservoir (1878) 3 App Cas 430."
"An Act to provide for the establishment of a body corporate to be known as the Environment Agency; to provide for the transfer of functions, property, rights and liability to those bodies, and for the conferring of other functions on them... to make further provision for the control of pollution, the conservation of natural resources and the conservation or enhancement of the environment...."
That is the context in which the power to advise must be seen.
"What emerges is that, in addition to the foreseeability of damage, necessary ingredients in any situation giving rise to a duty of care are that there should exist between the party owing the duty and the party to whom it is owed a relationship characterised by the law as one of 'proximity' or 'neighbourhood' and that the situation should be one in which the court considers it fair, just and reasonable that the law should impose a duty of a given scope on the one party for the benefit of the other."
At 618 Lord Oliver said:
".... it is difficult to resist the conclusion that what have been treated as three separate requirements are, at least in most cases, in fact merely facets of the same thing, for in some cases the degree of foreseeability is such that it is from that alone the requisite proximity can be deduced, whilst in others the absence of the essential relationship can most rationally be attributed simply to the Court's view that it would not be fair and reasonable to hold the Defendant responsible."
(1) The claimant's case falls at the first hurdle. I find that the defendant neither constructed the otter holts nor advised in respect of their construction nor supervised their construction. It was accordingly not responsible for their construction. The evidence on this point has been set out above. The claimant contends that the defendant was, at the least, responsible for the construction of the otter holts because it was the lead partner in the Project. I reject that contention. Many bodies, groups and organisations took part in this wide-ranging collaborative Project and all had particular interests and responsibilities. The construction of the otter holts was a community-based activity, at the fringes of the Project and arranged by other persons than the defendant.
(2) A further insurmountable obstacle to the claimant's case arises from the nature and utility of the holts; this point is not entirely unrelated to the first, though it is a distinct point. As I mentioned in paragraph 9 above, only if it were foreseeable that the activity in question might materially increase the risk of otter predation could the activity be relevant to the alleged duty to advise the claimant. The evidence before me, which I accept, is clearly to the effect that it was not foreseeable that the construction of the two otter holts might materially increase the risk of otter predation. The evidence from the defendant's witnesses of fact was to the effect that the banks of the River Cegin in the vicinity of the two artificial holts provided plenty of more suitable sites for otters to colonise. More importantly, I heard expert evidence from Dr Paul Chanin, an ecological consultant with expertise in otters. The relevant parts of his written evidence appear from the following extracts from pages 17 and 18 of his report dated 29 June 2012:
"Habitat 'enhancements' carried out on the Afon Cegin and elsewhere, whatever their intention, do not have any impact on the recolonisation by otters except where the food supply is increased or the levels of toxic pollutants is deceased which was not the case here.
The spread of otters within the Glaslyn Hydrometric area, including Afon Cegin, is the result of natural processes not re-introductions.
No actions taken by the Environment Agency Wales or by Community First are likely to have influenced recolonisation of the Afon Cegin by otters."
In oral evidence, in answer to questions by me, Dr Chanin reiterated his opinion that the construction of the otter holts in the course of the Project would have done no real harm but would have achieved no reasonably foreseeable benefit other, possibly, than for the local (human) community. The removal of toxic chemicals from the water or the increase of the productivity of the food supply might have encouraged re-colonisation by otters if it had been undertaken; but as neither of those activities was undertaken, the Project would not have been likely to make any difference to the local otter population. This conclusion, which I accept, would, in a different context, be relevant to questions of causation. However, for reasons that I have explained, it undermines the attempt to use the construction of the otter holts as the basis of a duty of care at common law.
(3) Within the terms of the test in Caparo, accordingly, I do not consider that the primary requirement of foreseeability of damage is satisfied. Of course, it may well have been foreseeable that the claimant might be affected by otter predation. But that, if so, was nothing to do with the Project or the construction of otter holts. It was to do with the foreseeable presence of otters in the vicinity of the River Cegin and the presence of attractive fish supplies in the Fishery.
(4) Further, there was no relationship of proximity between the claimant and the defendant. The claimant had neither asked for nor received personal advice from the defendant. The only "relationship" between them was such as existed by reason of the defendant's performance of its statutory functions. In my judgment, that did not suffice to ground a relationship of neighbourhood, such as would be required for the existence of a duty of care.
(5) Apart from all of the foregoing matters, it would in my judgment plainly not be "fair, just and reasonable" to impose a common law duty of care on the defendant in the circumstances of this case, in the light of the following considerations.
(6) First, considerable weight is to be attached to the fact that the 1995 Act does not impose any obligation on the defendant to exercise the power to advise in consequence of the exercise of any of its other statutory powers or duties; nor does it create any right in any individual to sue the defendant for the exercise of its powers or duties.
(7) Second, it is a significant part of the defendant's statutory function to improve the environment and thereby to further the conservation of, among other fauna, protected species such as the otter. The defendant's functions in connection with the UK Biodiversity Action Plan in particular involve the requirement to perform activities that are liable to increase the otter population. A duty of care such as the claimant contends for would be liable to conflict with, or at the least create a tension with, the performance of these duties. The importance of this point should not be obscured by focussing on the particular circumstances of this claimant. If the claimant is correct, the defendant will be faced with the possibility that its legitimate actions in respect of environmental improvement will have to be accompanied by a specific - as opposed to a general - consideration of the private proprietary and financial interests that will or might be affected by those legitimate actions. The prospective identification of the economic interests involved and assessment of the degree of risk that arises and the appropriate response to that risk would clearly be both difficult and onerous. It is one thing to acknowledge that sustainable development involves a balance between competing interests at the level of policy and strategy; see above. It is quite another to require specific examination of individual interests at the level of implementation, particularly where (a) the statutory scheme does not require this and (b) such a requirement would have significant implications regarding the deployment of the defendant's resources.
(8) Third, it would not, anyway, be fair, just or reasonable to impose a specific duty to advise, in circumstances where (a) the owner of a Fishery located near a river can reasonably be expected to take appropriate steps to inform himself as to his own interests and the risks faced by his business, and (b) the defendant had disseminated to the public at large information that was adequate for that purpose. I have mentioned the publications earlier in this judgment and I shall say a little more about them in paragraph 53 below.
Conclusion