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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 >> Jones & Ors v Chapel-En-Le-Frith Parish Council [2022] EWHC 1909 (QB) (25 July 2022) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2022/1909.html Cite as: [2022] EWHC 1909 (QB), [2023] Env LR 8 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ON APPEAL FROM MANCHESTER MAGISTRATES' COURT
IN THE MATTER OF PROCEEDINGS UNDER
SECTION 82 OF THE ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION ACT 1990
35, Vernon Street, Liverpool L2 2BX |
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B e f o r e :
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Dr Merren Jones Dr Stephen Covey-Crump David Howe |
Appellants |
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- and - |
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Chapel-en-le-Frith Parish Council |
Respondent |
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No Attendance or Representation for the Respondent
Hearing date: 8 July 2022
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Crown Copyright ©
The Hon Mr Justice Turner :
INTRODUCTION
- ball strikes, kicks and bounces from the MUGA;
- impact noise of skateboards and other equipment on the metal ramps and installations in the skate park;
- noise from shouting from users of the MUGA and the skate park; and
- noise from music played in the MUGA and the skate park.
THE LAW
"(1) … the following matters constitute "statutory nuisances" for the purposes of this Part, that is to say—
....
(g) noise emitted from premises so as to be prejudicial to health or a nuisance…"
"If the magistrates' court..... is satisfied that the alleged nuisance exists, or that although abated it is likely to recur on the same premises.... the court.....shall make an order for either or both of the following purposes—
(a) requiring the defendant.....to abate the nuisance, within a time specified in the order, and to execute any works necessary for that purpose;
(b) prohibiting a recurrence of the nuisance, and requiring the defendant…, within a time specified in the order, to execute any works necessary to prevent the recurrence;
and, in England and Wales, may also impose on the defendant a fine not exceeding level 5 on the standard scale."
"Proceedings for an order under subsection (2) above shall be brought—
(a) … against the person responsible for the nuisance;…
(c) where the person responsible for the nuisance cannot be found, against the owner or occupier of the premises."
"In principle "nuisance" has its common law meaning, either a public or a private nuisance."
"1. Was I wrong not to deal with the issue of whether the noise was injurious to health given that I found that it was the antisocial behaviour rather than the intended use of the MUGA and skate park which led to sleeplessness?
2. Was I wrong to distinguish between noise generated by the intended use of the premises and noise emanating from antisocial behaviour associated with the premises?"
"…a nervous, or anxious, or prepossessed listener hears sounds which would otherwise have passed unnoticed, and magnifies and exaggerates into some new significance, originating within himself, sounds which at other times would have been passively heard and not regarded."
Against this background, the plaintiffs' claim in nuisance failed.
"Can antisocial behaviour which includes noise that derives from the nuisance causing premises prevent a finding of statutory nuisance on the basis that such antisocial behaviour has resulted in the complainants being found to be hypersensitive due to the antisocial behaviour?"
THE CENTRAL DISTINCTION
"There is in my view a distinction between noise amounting to anti-social behaviour which is consequential to the presence of the MUGA alone and noise which comes from the intended use of the MUGA which is playing ball games. I do not think the parish council should be held responsible for anti-social behaviour."
"Having made those findings of fact I concluded that I should distinguish between noise created by the use of the skate park and MUGA for their intended uses; i.e. skateboarding and playing football and the use of the areas for anti-social behaviour. I concluded that the parish council should not be responsible for noise which emanated from acts of antisocial behaviour including the use of the MUGA and skate park after dark. The skate park as with any public open space can be a magnet for antisocial behaviour; the removal of the skate park or MUGA would not necessarily remove the antisocial behaviour. It is important to bear in mind a finding of nuisance confers criminal liability and can give rise to a fine; the Parish council should not be responsible for acts outside its control. It was contended by the complainants that I should not draw that distinction. Effectively the complainants are contending that section 82 confers absolute liability."
PUBLIC NUISANCE AND ANTI-SOCIAL BEHAVIOUR
"(1) In this Part "anti-social behaviour" means—
(a) conduct that has caused, or is likely to cause, harassment, alarm or distress to any person,
(b) conduct capable of causing nuisance or annoyance to a person in relation to that person's occupation of residential premises, or
(c) conduct capable of causing housing-related nuisance or annoyance to any person."
"Community Protection Notices and statutory nuisance: Issuing a Community Protection Notice does not discharge the council from its duty to issue an Abatement Notice where the behaviour constitutes a statutory nuisance for the purposes of Part 3 of the Environmental Protection Act 1990. A statutory nuisance is one of the matters listed in section 79(1) of that Act which, given all the circumstances, is judged to be 'prejudicial to health or a nuisance'…
While a Community Protection Notice can be issued for behaviour that may constitute a statutory nuisance, the interaction between the two powers should be considered. It remains a principle of law that a specific power should be used in preference to a general one."
INTENDED USE
"A nuisance can be defined, albeit in general terms, as an action (or sometimes a failure to act) on the part of a defendant, which is not otherwise authorised, and which causes an interference with the claimant's reasonable enjoyment of his land, or to use a slightly different formulation, which unduly interferes with the claimant's enjoyment of his land."[1]
"If the defendant by himself or those for whom he is responsible has created what constitutes a nuisance and if it causes damage, the difficulty now being considered does not arise. But he may have taken over the nuisance, readymade as it were, when he acquired the property, or the nuisance may be due to a latent defect or to the act of a trespasser or stranger. Then he is not liable unless he continued or adopted the nuisance, or, more accurately did not without undue delay remedy it when he became aware of it, or with ordinary and reasonable care should have become aware of it."
"An occupier... will normally be responsible for a nuisance even if he did not directly cause it, because he is in control and possession of the property. The cases show that an owner may be regarded as an occupier of property for these purposes even if he has allowed others to live or undertake activities on his land. In the Sedleigh-Denfield case [1940] AC 880, 903, 905 Lord Wright made clear that the liability attaches to an occupier because he has possession and control over the property. There was a debate before us as to whether the principle to be extracted from the Sedleigh-Denfield case was either (i) that an occupier is liable if he continues or adopts the nuisance by failing to abate it without undue delay after he became aware of it or with reasonable care should have become aware of it (as Lord Wright said, at pp 904-905), or (ii) that an occupier is liable if he continues the nuisance by failing to take any reasonable means to abate it after he became aware of it or should have done so (which was how Viscount Maugham, at p 894, and Lord Romer, at p 913, put the matter). In fact, both Lord Atkin, at p 899, and Lord Porter, at p 919, formulated their propositions in a similar way to Lord Wright, so I think that Mr MacBean's submission that the obligation on an occupier was limited to taking "reasonable means" to abate the nuisance was ill-founded. Rather, Ackner LJ was right in the Page Motors case 80 LGR 337, 345-346 to cite only Lord Wright's formulation, since he was in the majority."
There was no suggestion that the defendant could have escaped liability on the basis that she had not intended that her daughter should keep a dog which barked excessively.
"…we note the inherent flexibility in the words "abate" and "nuisance". The notice does not, as the appellant fears, force shutting down of the turbines on the basis that it is the only guaranteed method of stopping the noise. Not all noise amounts to a nuisance. Abatement does not necessarily require elimination."
I note in passing that Scottish law is, in substance, identical to that in England and Wales with respect to the operation of the statutory scheme.
ANSWERS TO THE QUESTIONS RAISED BY THE DISTRICT JUDGE
1. Was I wrong not to deal with the issue of whether the noise was injurious to health given that I found that it was the antisocial behaviour rather than the intended use of the MUGA and the skate park which led to sleeplessness?
Yes. Consideration should have been given to the impact upon health of all noise emanating from the MUGA and the Skate park regardless as to whether it fell to be as a result of intended use or anti-social behaviour.
2. Was I wrong to distinguish between noise generated by the intended use of the premises and noise emanating from antisocial behaviour associated with the premises?"
Yes. This is not a distinction which falls to be made under the statutory regime.
3. Can antisocial behaviour which includes noise that derives from the nuisance causing premises prevent a finding of statutory nuisance on the basis that such antisocial behaviour has resulted in the complainants being found to be hypersensitive due to the antisocial behaviour?
Not in the circumstances of this case. Since it was impermissible to distinguish between intended and anti-social noise, it was also impermissible to treat anti-social noise, in part, as a cause of hypersensitivity such as to negate a finding of nuisance. In any event, the existence of hypersensitivity is not a defence where even a person of normal resilience would have found the noise to be unreasonable.
REMEDY
"The High Court shall hear and determine the question arising on the case (or the case as amended) and shall—
(a) reverse, affirm or amend the determination in respect of which the case has been stated; or
(b) remit the matter to the magistrates' court, or the Crown Court, with the opinion of the High Court, and may make such other order in relation to the matter (including as to costs) as it thinks fit."
Note 1 I note, in passing, that the need for any given claimant to have an interest in land is not a prerequisite to establishing a statutory nuisance as opposed to a common law. [Back]