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High Court of Ireland Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> High Court of Ireland Decisions >> Clarke -v- South Dublin County Council [2008] IEHC 84 (07 March 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ie/cases/IEHC/2008/H84.html Cite as: [2008] 4 IR 178, [2008] IEHC 84 |
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Judgment Title: Clarke -v- South Dublin County Council Composition of Court: Hanna J. Judgment by: Hanna J. Status of Judgment: Approved |
Neutral Citation Number: [2008] IEHC 84 THE HIGH COURT JUDICIAL REVIEW [2006 No. 39 J.R.] BETWEENPHILIP CLARKE APPLICANT AND SOUTH DUBLIN COUNTY COUNCIL RESPONDENT JUDGMENT delivered by Mr. Justice Hanna on the 7th day of March, 2008 This case arises from an intended prosecution of the applicant by the respondent for an alleged offence under bye-laws prohibiting the consumption of intoxicating liquor in a public place. The offence allegedly occurred on 1st May, 2005. The prosecution was brought by way of summons and the offence is said to be contrary to the Local Government Act 1994, s. 40(1) and the South Dublin County Council (Prohibition of Consumption of Intoxicating Liquor in Public Places) Bye-Laws 2001, more specifically Bye-Law 2(1), made by virtue of s. 37(1) of the aforesaid Act. The applicant faces a fine not exceeding €1,269.74 if convicted. The prosecution arises from a complaint by one Garda Michael Groarke of Tallaght Garda Station, who states that he witnessed the applicant consuming alcohol in Butler McGee Park which is within the administrative area of South Dublin County Council. The applicant denies that he was consuming alcohol at the time and in the place alleged although one of his two male companions was so engaged. It should be noted that this is the only charge facing the applicant. Other than the act of allegedly consuming alcohol in a public place, no allegation of any public order offence is advanced against the applicant. The applicant seeks but one principle relief. He wishes to obtain an injunction restraining the prosecution. He was given leave to proceed by way of judicial review by order of Peart J. on 16th January, 2006. The ground for seeking this relief is stated as follows:-
(ii) The South Dublin County Council (Prohibition of Consumption of Intoxicating Liquor in Public Places) Bye-Laws, 2001 are not within the principles and policies of the Local Government Act, 1994” The Bye-Laws The bye-laws were made by the County Council in 2001 with effect from 9th August, 2001 for the following express reason:-
“2. Subject to Paragraph 8 hereof a person shall not – (1) consume or attempt to consume intoxicating liquor in a public place within the functional area of the Council or (2) possess intoxicating liquor in a public place within the functional area of the Council with the intention to consume it in a public place or to supply it to any person for consumption in a public place within the functional area.” The contravention of the bye-laws is described as an offence punishable on a summary conviction to a fine of up to €1,269.74 (£1,000). The bye-laws confer on members of An Garda Síochána powers of seizure and destruction of the intoxicating liquor. Powers are given to gardaí and authorised persons to direct suspects to leave the vicinity where there are reasonable grounds to believe they have contravened the bye-laws and provide for offences of failure to comply and preventing or attempting to prevent such a direction. The bye-laws purport to empower gardaí to demand the name and address of a person suspected of contravening the bye-laws. Refusal to comply with such a direction is an offence. Paragraph 6 of the bye-laws purports to give gardaí power to arrest, without a warrant, a person suspected to be (or have been) in breach of the bye-laws. Paragraph 7 provides that a person suspected of having contravened the bye-laws can be sent a fixed charge notice (pursuant to s. 41 of the Local Government Act 1994 and regulations made thereunder) in lieu of prosecution. The Material Constitutional and Legal Background Article 15.2 of the Constitution states as follows:-
2° Provision may however be made by law for the creation or recognition of subordinate legislatures and for the powers and functions of these legislatures.”
‘… the Legislature may, it has always been conceded, delegate to subordinate bodies or departments not only the making of administrative rules and regulations, but the power to exercise, within the principles laid down by the Legislature, the power so delegated and the manner in which the statutory provisions shall be carried out. The functions of every Government are now so numerous and complex that of necessity a wider sphere has been recognised for subordinate agencies, such as boards and commissions. This has been specially so in this State in matters of industry and commerce. Such bodies are not law makers; they put into execution the law as made by the governing authority and strictly in pursuance therewith, so as to bring about, not their own views, but the result directed by the Government.’ The reference to ‘the Government’ in the last sentence might, I think, more appropriately have been to ‘the Oireachtas’. Subject to that qualification, that passage still clearly represents the law and has been endorsed on more than one occasion by this Court.”
2. There shall be such directly elected local authorities as may be determined by law and their powers and functions shall, subject to the provisions of this Constitution, be so determined and shall be exercised and performed in accordance with law.” The material statutory authority conferring upon the respondents the powers to make bye-laws is the Local Government Act 1994 (hereinafter referred to as “the Act”). As already noted, the bye-law is promulgated under s. 37(1) of the Act which provides as follows:-
(b) A bye-law may not be made under this subsection for a purpose as respects which provision for that particular purpose is made by or under any other enactment or may be made under such enactment. … (4)A bye-law may include such provisions as the local authority considers appropriate for its effective application, operation and enforcement and generally to achieve the purposes for which it is made, including:- (a) its application at all times or at specified times; (b) its application throughout the functional area of the local authority or in any specified part of that functional area; (c) the prohibition of any activity, matter or thing; (d) the prescription of specified standards or requirements for specified matters or things; (e) the exception of classes of persons or things from the bye-law either subject to or without compliance with specified conditions; (f) the conduct of persons at specified places or in specified circumstances; …” The central thrust of this case is whether or not the 2001 bye-laws infringe Article 15.2 of the Constitution in that they fall foul of the “principles and policies” test as applied to s. 37 of the Act. In Cityview Press v An Chomhairle Oiliúna [1980] I.R. 381 at pp.398 to 399 O’Higgins C.J. said:-
As regards the common law, Mr. Collins S.C. opened an extract from Butler, Keane on Local Government, 2nd Ed., (First Law, 2003) at p. 56 which states:-
Conclusions In my view, the extracts from s. 37 indicate a broad area of principles and policies empowering the local authority in question to make bye-laws encompassing the wide range of the scope of its governance. Part VII of the Act sets out the statutory framework governing the bye-laws, the very broad scope of the areas which those bye-laws may embrace, the powers of arrest conferred upon An Garda Síochána and the rights of the person authorised in writing by the local authority to request persons to refrain from prohibited activity and remove them, if necessary, from local authority land. Drinking alcohol in a public park is one activity the respondent seeks to prohibit. In promulgating these bye-laws and this specific interdict is the respondent moving beyond the limits of its statutory confinement? Prima facie it would appear not. I see nothing in the Act that would so curtail a local authority. It is, as I have said, seemingly broad in the ambit of the discretion it confers. Even if the foregoing is correct, the applicant argues that the respondent is entering an area of regulation already inhabited by the legislature in that the Oireachtas has already sought to legislate in respect of the matters complained of against the applicant. I am not so persuaded. The applicant says that this area has already been visited by parliament. Section 13(3) of the Intoxicating Liquor (General) Act, 1924 (which was in force at the material time) provides:-
That part of the Act of 1924 highlighted by the applicant constitutes a portion of the framework of statutory regulation of the sale of alcoholic drink in off licences. It is as much, if not more, aimed at the licensees and prevention of abuses in this particular trade. The legislature and the respondent are dealing with two very different matters. The respondent, in prohibiting the consumption of alcohol in a public place in exercise of the powers conferred by the Act is dealing with an obvious public mischief. The offences created under the principle licensing legislation, on the other hand, are entirely location specific with reference to an off licence premises. They are designed to prevent people from availing of the relatively cheap prices to be found in off licences and, further, to prevent persons so licensed from engaging in potential abuse of their more favourable cost environment vis-à-vis public houses. The legislation does not go further because it does not need to. It is a matter for the local authorities, within the scope of the powers given to them, to legislate for their own areas. The Oireachtas did not and does not seek to intrude beyond the immediate environs of off licences with regard to the consumption of alcohol in a public place. The applicant also points to s. 4 of the Criminal Justice (Public Order) Act 1994 which created an offence for any person to be present in any public place while intoxicated to such an extent as would give rise to a reasonable apprehension that he might endanger himself or any other person in his vicinity. Clearly, this section addresses the issue of intoxication. It does not govern the consumption of alcohol in a public place. It is not an offence under the general criminal law. To be guilty of an offence under s. 4 it is not necessary that one be drinking intoxicating liquor in a public place. Article 28A of the Constitution envisages the conferring of powers to local authorities subject, of course, to the Constitution and to the general law. The Local Government Acts 1925 to 1994 are designed to promote, inter alia, the interests of local communities and, to this end, to confer upon local authorities necessary power and authority to do such acts and make such provisions as are reasonably and lawfully necessary in pursuit of the interest of the common good of the local community and with a view, inter alia, to controlling various mischiefs and nuisances. Section 37(4) of the Act sets out a list of provisions which are broad and generous in scope and a bye-law prohibiting the activity in question or involving the conduct of persons at the specified place would appear to come within its scope. The discretion given to local authorities cannot be unfettered but it is wide. It must, in my view, include the power to make bye-laws of the category with which we are here concerned. It would seem absurd to suggest that the Oireachtas did not intend local authorities to have a wide area of discretion in ordering conduct, inter alia, in public parks. It seems to me that the Oireachtas intended, and was so entitled, to leave to the discretion and judgment of local authorities, the right reasonably to regulate and, where appropriate, to proscribe certain activities and conduct on land under their management and control. The regulations in question do not trespass upon an area visited by the legislature nor do they touch upon circumstances where the Oireachtas has declined to render specific conduct unlawful. Having so found, I am of the view that the bye-laws do not step outside the constitutional or legal framework under which the respondent operates. They do not amount, for example, to a gratuitous or present interference with the applicant’s rights under the Constitution or at common law (as contended for by the applicant in relying upon Limerick Corporation v Sheridan (1956) 90 I.L.T.R. 59. Accordingly, I must dismiss the applicant’s claim. |