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High Court of Ireland Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> High Court of Ireland Decisions >> Burke -v- District Judge Martin & Anor [2010] IEHC 450 (23 November 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ie/cases/IEHC/2010/H450.html Cite as: [2010] IEHC 450 |
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Judgment Title: Burke -v- District Judge Martin & Anor Composition of Court: Judgment by: Irvine J. Status of Judgment: Approved |
Neutral Citation Number: [2010] IEHC 450 THE HIGH COURT JUDICIAL REVIEW 2010 379 JR BETWEEN JOHN BURKE APPLICANT AND
DISTRICT JUDGE MARY MARTIN AND DIRECTOR OF PUBLIC PROSECUTIONS RESPONDENTS JUDGMENT of Ms. Justice Irvine delivered on the 23rd day of November, 2010 1. This judgment relates to two applications which came before this Court for hearing on 19th October, 2010. The first application is one brought by the second named respondent seeking to set aside an order of the High Court made by Peart J. on 7th May, 2010, whereby he granted leave to the applicant to apply for judicial review in respect of certain orders made by the District Judge (“the District Judge”) on 24th March, 2010, when dealing with a significant number of summonses concerning the applicant which had been issued by the Minister for Agriculture, Fisheries and Food. The second application is motion brought by the applicant seeking to commit the State Solicitor for the county of Tipperary, Mr. Paul Fitzpatrick and “the defendants” for alleged contempt of court arising from the issue of the motion to set aside the order of Peart J. of 24th March, 2010. 2. In circumstances where it would be difficult to understand the order made by Peart J. on 7th May, 2010, otherwise than by reference to the background to the aforementioned summonses, I now propose to set out very briefly the historical background to these judicial review proceedings. Background 4. On 3rd June 2009, the District Judge, having heard all arguments put before her, resolved that the matters should proceed on the dates allocated. 5. On 11th September, 2009, the applicant sought leave to apply for judicial review to prohibit the summonses being heard commencing on 30th September, 2009. MacMenamin J. directed the applicant to place the respondents on notice of his intended application and the proceedings were then dealt with by Edwards J. on 24th September, 2009. He refused the application for the reasons referred to in a lengthy judgment delivered by him on 9th October, 2009. That decision is presently under appeal to the Supreme Court. It is not disputed by the applicant that he did not apply to the Supreme Court to stay the hearing of the 121 summonses pending the outcome of that appeal. As a result of the applicant’s failure to obtain leave to apply for judicial review from Edward’s J., a number of the 121 summonses were dealt with by District Judge Hamill commencing 30th September, 2009. He only managed to hear five out of the said summonses over the three days which had been allocated to the cases and a number of these decisions are presently under challenge in other judicial review proceedings. There are accordingly some 116 summonses which remain to be dealt with by the District Court. The Present Judicial Review Proceedings 7. The applicant applied ex parte for leave to maintain the present judicial review proceedings on 7th May, 2010. On that date, Peart J. granted the applicant leave to seek the following reliefs, namely:-
(b) An order of certiorari quashing the order of the District Judge made on 24th March, 2010, setting 18th, 19th and 20th May, 2010, as the hearing dates for the said summonses. (c) An order of prohibition prohibiting the further hearing of matters which were before the said District Court on 24th March, 2010, until such a time as an appeal against a refusal by Edwards J. of leave to seeking judicial review presently awaiting a hearing before the Supreme Court is determined by the Supreme Court.” 9. Several grounds for the relief sought are relied upon by the applicant including the following:-
(b) That the District Judge had seizen of all of the summonses and charges that were initially before the court on 3rd June, 2009 and which remained extant as of 24th March, 2010 and that the District Judge was not entitled to fix these summonses to be heard by any other judge of the District Court. (c) That the presiding judge by her behaviour, caused the courtroom proceedings to become a mockery such that he did not obtain a fair hearing. (d) That Mr. Fitzpatrick, the State Solicitor should have been present at the court on 3rd June, 2009, as he had sworn an affidavit producing documents which were considered by the court on that date. These documents concerned the respondent’s submission that there were judicial review proceedings in existence which would preclude the District Court from proceeding to hear the summonses. (e) That there are proceedings pending before the Supreme Court which justify the postponement of the further prosecution of the District Court summonses until their completion. 10. In his notice of motion dated 16th July, 2010, the second named respondent applies to this Court to exercise its inherent jurisdiction to set aside the order of Peart J. made on 7th May, 2010, on the basis that the proceedings as they currently stand are oppressive, vexatious or amount to an abuse of the process of the courts. Alternatively, the court is urged to set aside the relief granted by reason of the alleged failure on the part of the applicant to make a full and frank disclosure of all of the material facts at the time he moved his application for ex parte relief. The application is grounded upon the affidavit of Paul Fitzpatrick of the firm of Fitzpatrick Solicitors, Clonmel, Co. Tipperary, State Solicitor for the County of Tipperary and who in that capacity has been charged with handling the District Court prosecutions the subject matter of the leave application. In response the applicant has issued a motion seeking to hold “the defendants in contempt of court for attempting to overrule the order of Judge Michael Peart”. Submissions of the Parties 12. The second named respondent also complains that the court was not advised of the full facts in relation to two earlier sets of proceedings namely those entitled Burke v. Minister for Agriculture & Ors [2008] 966 J.R. and Burke v. Martin & Director of Public Prosecutions [2009] 933 J.R, both of which concerned the summonses the subject matter of the present proceedings. 13. In the first of the aforementioned cases, record number [2008] 966 J.R., the applicant was refused leave to apply for judicial review by Edwards J. on 24th November, 2008. That decision was appealed to the Supreme Court. The applicant then applied to the Supreme Court for a stay on the continuance of the District Court proceedings pending the outcome of that appeal but his application was refused. 14. In relation to the second set of the aforementioned proceedings, record number [2009] No. 933 J.R. the second named respondent complains that Peart J. could not have been advised of the decision of Edwards J. delivered on 9th October, 2009 nor of the fact that the applicant did not apply to the Supreme Court for any stay on the District Court proceedings pending his appeal from that refusal. 15. It is submitted on behalf of the respondents that had Peart J. been advised that the Supreme Court had refused a stay on the continuance of the District Court proceedings in the first of the aforementioned decisions and of the fact that the applicant had not applied for a stay in respect of the second set of proceedings that he would not have granted the stay which he did on 7th May, 2010. Counsel submitted that the stay granted by Peart J. when making his order on 7th May, 2010, de facto had the effect of overturning the earlier refusal by the Supreme Court to grant such a stay in proceedings bearing record number [2008] No. 966 J.R. and of granting him a stay on the prosecution of the District Court prosecutions pending the outcome of the proceedings bearing record number [2009] No. 933 J.R. when no such stay was sought from the Supreme Court following the refusal by Edwards J. to grant him leave to seek judicial review. 16. In relation to the issue of the stenographer the applicant maintains that he did not receive the letter dated 16th April, 2010, from Mr. Fitzpatrick advising him that a stenographer would be present at the hearing. Notwithstanding the undertaking given by Mr Fitzpatrick to provide a stenographer for the relevant District Court proceedings the applicant wishes to maintain his challenge to the refusal of the District Judge to direct that a stenographer be provided at the State’s expense. 17. The applicant maintains that he made a full and frank disclosure to the court regarding the two sets of judicial review proceedings relied upon by the second named respondent. Even though full details of the nature of those proceedings may not be clear from his grounding affidavit, he asserts that he advised Peart J. in great detail about these proceedings. The Law 19. The duty of an applicant when making an ex parte application seeking to apply for judicial review was described in Adams v. Director of Public Prosecutions [2000] No. 40 J.R. in the following terms:-
21. Not only has the court jurisdiction to set aside an ex parte order but it has jurisdiction to vary the order made on the ex parte application should the justice of the case require such variation. 22. Apart from the jurisdiction of the court to set aside or vary orders made on an ex parte application for leave to apply for judicial review, the court also has an inherent jurisdiction to dismiss an action which is vexatious or an abuse of process. It also enjoys jurisdiction under O. 19, r. 28 to make an order that any pleading be struck out on the ground that it discloses no reasonable cause of action. These separate and distinct powers once again should be cautiously exercised. The Availability of a Stenographer 24. I accept that the jurisdiction of the court on an application such as the present one should be cautiously exercised particularly where, as in the present case there is a conflict on the affidavits regarding whether or not the applicant received the letter allegedly sent by Mr. Fitzpatrick on 16th April, 2010. Indeed, if the decision on the present motion were to depend on any issue which is disputed in the affidavits, it would be incumbent upon the court to resolve that dispute by hearing oral evidence. Further it may be appropriate where a litigant is not legally represented to afford them the benefit of the doubt even if the court were to conclude that they had failed, at the time of the ex parte application, to disclose relevant facts once satisfied that they had acted bona fide. 25. Thankfully, I do not find it necessary to determine whether or not the nondisclosure of the undertaking of the State Solicitor to provide a stenographer was bona fide due to the non receipt by the applicant of the letter of 16th April, 2010. However, I have some reservations as to the reliability of the applicant’s assertion that he did not receive the State Solicitor’s letter of 16th April, 2010 particularly in circumstances where this claim was made for the first time in the course of the hearing before me notwithstanding the reference by Mr. Fitzpatrick to this letter in his affidavit sworn as along ago as 12th July, 2010. Leaving aside for a moment whether or not the applicant received the said letter, it seems to me that the undertaking of the State Solicitor, even if known to the court as of the date of the ex parte application, might not have dissuaded Peart J. from granting some form of relief to the applicant. The undertaking does not obliterate the legal point which the applicant formulated before me which seems to be whether someone in his position, facing summonses of the nature presently pending before the District Court, is entitled as a matter of right to have a stenographer directed by the District Court judge. 26. It is not for this Court to second guess whether the applicant would have convinced Peart J. to grant him leave to apply for an order for mandamus had he known that the Chief State Solicitor had undertaken to provide a stenographer. However, it is abundantly clear to me that if the trial judge had been told that a stenographer was to be provided by the State Solicitor that there could have been no basis for him granting a stay on the further hearing of those District Court proceedings pending the outcome of the applicant’s claim for an order of mandamus. Once a stenographer was to be provided, from whatever source, the applicant could not be prejudiced by the continuance of the District Court proceedings notwithstanding the fact that his judicial review proceedings remained outstanding. 27. The best the applicant could have hoped to achieve on the ex parte application, if the undertaking had been made known to Peart J., was an order granting him leave to seek perhaps a declaration that a person in his position, facing summonses of the nature issued against him by the Minister for Agriculture, Fisheries and Food, was entitled as a matter of right to the provision of a stenographer. 28. The applications, the subject matter of the present judgment, were heard by me in a two week period during which I also heard four other applications for judicial review brought by the applicant in relation to proceedings wherein he was involved in both the District and Circuit Courts. In the course of those proceedings, the applicant also maintained that he was not in a position to obtain a hearing which was in accordance with natural justice or fair procedures in the absence of a stenographer provided for him at the State’s expense. In particular, in the case of John Burke v. Judge Ray Fulham and Director of Public Prosecutions [2009] 791 J.R., I rejected that submission. Proceedings concerning very substantial rights are heard everyday of the week in all courts from the District Court to the Supreme Court in the absence of a stenographer. To submit that the absence of a note taker renders the proceedings themselves unfair to the point to which the decision made is open to be quashed is untenable. 29. Judicial review is a discretionary remedy and any judge entertaining an application such as the present one enjoys a wide discretion to set aside or vary an earlier order of the court made ex parte. Indeed, the order of Peart J. dated 7th May, 2010 specifically provides that his court order shall stand until determination of all of the proceedings therein mentioned were completed or further interim order made. 30. Having regard to the undertaking repeated to this Court that a stenographer will be provided by the State Solicitor for the relevant District Court proceedings and to the decision of this Court just referred to in another case concerning the applicant where effectively the same point was litigated, I am satisfied that it would be a manifest abuse of the process of the court to permit any of the relief granted by Peart J. at para. 1(a) of his order to stand. The applicant will have the benefit of a stenographer. As to his alleged legal right to have the court direct a stenographer, that right has now been rejected in other proceedings. Accordingly, I will set aside the order at paragraph 1(a). Other Judicial Review Proceedings 32. For the purposes of the present proceeding I have available to me the report prepared by Edwards J. for the Supreme Court regarding the application for leave to apply for judicial review which he refused on 24th November, 2008. Having done so, it appears to me that the focus of the attack made by the applicant in those proceedings was on certain Notices served on the applicant pursuant to the European Communities (Protection of Animals kept for Farming Purposes) Regulations 2000, which notices, if not complied with, permit the Minister for Agriculture, Fisheries and Food to prosecute for such non-compliance. The applicant appears to have maintained that he was entitled to have the relevant Notices quashed principally on the basis that the Department of Agriculture officials engaged in acts of trespass and/or assault and/or acted in breach of his constitutional rights to the inviolability of his dwelling. He also sought an order of prohibition preventing the prosecutions going ahead. 33. It is difficult to know what impact knowledge of the outcome of these judicial review proceedings would have had on Peart J. at the time of the ex parte application. Part of the difficulty arises from the fact that at para. 1(c) of his order, he prohibits the further hearing of the District Court proceedings “until such a time as an appeal against a refusal by Mr. Justice Edwards of leave to seek judicial review presently awaiting a hearing before the Supreme Court is determined by the Supreme Court”. Given that there are two appeals outstanding before the Supreme Court, it is not clear whether it is these proceedings or the proceedings later discussed that were intended to be covered by his order. 34. What is material, however, is the fact that the District Court proceedings were stayed by Peart J. until the outcome of some proceedings before the Supreme Court. Whilst the applicant maintains that he fully explained all of his proceedings to Peart J. I unreservedly reject this contention. If it was these proceedings that Peart J. was referring to in his order, he could not have been properly appraised of the history of the proceedings. Not only was the applicant unsuccessful in convincing Edwards J. that he should be granted leave to seek any relief on his application made on 24th November, 2008 but the Supreme Court was specifically asked to consider whether it would grant a stay on the prosecution of the proceedings in the District Court pending an appeal against the order of Edwards J. and they refused that application. In these circumstances, if the order of Peart J. was intended to stay the District Court proceedings pending the outcome of these proceedings in the Supreme Court his order has the effect of reversing the decision of a superior court on the same issue. 35. The second named respondent also maintains that the applicant failed to advise Peart J. of the full history of proceedings entitled Burke v. Judge Mary Martin & Director of Public Prosecutions [2009] 933 J.R. 36. Notwithstanding the protestations of the applicant that he disclosed the existence of all relevant proceedings to the trial judge, I am absolutely certain that the learned trial judge was drawn into error due to the applicant’s failure to comply with his duty of disclosure on the hearing of his ex parte application. I am satisfied that had a full disclosure been made to the court that Peart J. simply could not and would not have considered granting leave to the applicant to apply for judicial review in the terms in which he did at para. 1(c) of his order and that he would not have granted him the stay which is referred to at para. 3 thereof. 37. I have had the benefit of reading the judgment of Edwards J. who following a lengthy hearing on Thursday, 24th September, 2009, delivered an extensive written judgment on 9th October, 2009. 38. In essence, the applicant in those proceedings sought to restrain the second named respondent from prosecuting or taking any further steps in connection with the 120 charges relating to issues of animal welfare which are the subject matter of the present proceedings and also one charge of criminal damage to a motor vehicle. When the matter came before him for hearing, the prosecutions in question had been listed to commence over three days starting on 30th September, 2009. 39. The proceedings concerned what is alleged to have occurred at the Tipperary District Court on 3rd June, 2009. The summonses had been provisionally listed for hearing commencing 30th September, 2009 but the District Judge had put the summonses in for mention on 3rd June, 2009 with a view to permitting the applicant an opportunity to convince her that the existence of judicial review proceedings in the High Court justified the dates fixed being vacated. The applicant maintained, inter alia, that the District Court judge did not have proper regard to the documents pertaining to his other judicial review proceedings, that he was not given an ample opportunity to make his case for an adjournment and that another District Court judge, because he had embarked upon a hearing of the one charge in relation to criminal damage to a motor vehicle had seizen of all of the animal welfare cases such as to preclude her fixing a date for the trial of these proceedings to be heard by any other judge. 40. Edwards J. refused the relief sought. The applicant thereafter filed a notice of appeal but unlike in the earlier case bearing record number 966 J.R. he did not apply to the Supreme Court to stay the further prosecution of the proceedings before the District Court. Hence, if it was these proceedings that Peart J. was referring to in his order of the 7th May as being pending before the Supreme Court, he clearly was misled or misunderstood the nature of those proceedings. The applicant never applied for a stay in the Supreme Court on the continuance of the District Court proceedings pending his appeal. That was the appropriate procedure to adopt if he wished to obtain a stay of that duration. He had no basis to seek to obtain by the back door before Peart J., a relief which he chose not to seek in the appropriate proceedings. 41. I have no doubt that Peart J. was informed of the existence of other judicial review proceedings which were pending before the Supreme Court but regrettably the averments in the applicant’s grounding affidavit were worthless in terms of the information that was provided to the court. Whilst the applicant may have discussed the nature of the proceedings pending before the Supreme Court with the trial judge, he clearly failed in his obligation to bring the material facts and the orders made in those proceedings to the attention of the court. The orders made by the respective courts were of significant materiality to his ex parte application and I have no difficulty in concluding that had the learned trial judge been aware of the true facts surrounding the aforementioned proceedings and of the orders made by the respective courts that he would not have made the orders which he did at para. 1C and 3 of his order. 42. I find it difficult to accept the applicant’s assurances that he acted bona fide at all times. In the course of the present proceedings and indeed in the course of a number of other proceedings which arise in relation to related matters, I have found the applicant to be an unreliable historian. He is a prolific litigator whose actions seem to me to be designed to delay or potentially derail the District Court proceedings which are outstanding against him. However, I do not have to make any decision as to the applicant’s bona fides in the circumstances where it is blatantly clear to me that Peart J. would not have granted him leave to apply for the relief at para. 1C of his order had he been aware of the true nature of the two sets of judicial review proceedings just referred to. Neither would he have granted stay referred to at para. 3 of the said order. 43. It is clear that the stay granted by Peart J. at para. 1C of his order was provided in support of the applicant’s right to seek an order of prohibition in relation to matters complained of by him excluding the order refusing him a stenographer. In this regard, the applicant complained of some frivolity in the course of the proceedings before the District Judge on 24th March, 2010. Even if this is true, it is not alleged by the applicant that he was thereby denied an opportunity to be heard on what was, after all, an opportunity afforded to him to demonstrate why, because of the existence of outstanding judicial review proceedings, the dates earlier fixed on a temporary basis for the District Court proceedings should not be confirmed. 44. The last remaining complaint is one which is made in the affidavit of the applicant rather than in the statement of grounds where it is asserted that the District Judge has seizen of all of these cases due to the fact that she considered documentation in relation to them on 3rd June, 2009. He maintains therefore that on 24th March, 2010, she was not entitled to fix the proceedings to be heard by any other judge. 45. In the course of this application, I have had cause to consider the decision of Edwards J. in the proceedings involving the applicant bearing record number [2009] 933 J.R. which judgment I believe was not brought to the attention of Peart J. There are two matters of real significance arising from this judgment. The first is that in those proceedings, the applicant, contrary to what is maintained in these proceedings, asserted that Judge Kevin Anderson of the District Court, because he had embarked upon the District Court proceedings relating to criminal damage, had seizen of all of the District Court cases and in particular those proceedings brought in respect of animal welfare issues which are the subject matter of these proceedings. The failure on the part of the applicant to bring this decision to the attention of Peart J. was clearly material in circumstances where Edwards J. determined that not only did Judge Anderson not have seizen of the “cases” but also dealt with the nature of the application which was before the District Judge on 3rd June, 2009. He concluded in the course of his judgment that what the District Judge was doing on 3rd June, 2009, was dealing with a procedural aspect of the case. Had this decision been brought to the attention of Peart J. it is simply inconceivable that he could have granted leave to the applicant to argue that the District Judge, by fixing the dates for the hearing of the prosecutions or entertaining an application of the applicant to vacate those dates because of the existence of judicial review proceedings could be deemed to have seizen of these cases to the exclusion of any other District Judge. 46. Whilst the jurisdiction of this Court to interfere with an ex parte order should only occur in exceptional circumstances, I am satisfied that having regard to all of the matters referred to earlier in this judgment that had the applicant met his obligations to the court in terms of a full and frank disclosure of all material facts that those parts of the order of Peart J. referred to earlier would not have been made by him. Based upon a consideration of all of the facts and with the benefits of the arguments presented to me by both sides, I am satisfied that there is no substance to the applicant’s claim and that exceptional circumstances exist justifying this Court in setting aside the order of Peart J. in its entirety. Contempt Motion 48. The proper course of action for a respondent who objects to the grant of leave to maintain judicial review proceedings is to bring a motion to seek to have that order set aside. The existence of such jurisdiction was recognised by Carswell J. in Re Savage’s Application [1991] N.I 103. Accordingly, even if the application of the second named respondent had proved unsuccessful such a failure could not have provided a valid or lawful basis for any application to commit the unsuccessful party as being in contempt of court. 49. For the aforementioned reasons, I will set aside all of the order of Peart J. made on 7th May, 2010 and I will strike out the applicant’s motion for committal.
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