BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?

No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!



BAILII [Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback]

Scottish Court of Session Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Barachander Farm v. The Scottish Ministers [2008] ScotCS CSIH_15 (15 February 2008)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/2008/CSIH_15.html
Cite as: 2008 SLCR 310, [2008] CSIH 15, [2008] ScotCS CSIH_15

[New search] [Help]


SECOND DIVISION, INNER HOUSE, COURT OF SESSION

 

Lord Justice Clerk

Lord Johnston

Lord Wheatley

 

[2008] CSIH 15

XA17/07

OPINION OF THE LORD JUSTICE CLERK

 

in

 

SPECIAL CASE

 

stated by

 

THE SCOTTISH LAND COURT

 

in the case of

 

BARACHANDER FARM

Appellants;

 

against

 

THE SCOTTISH MINISTERS

Respondents:

_______

 

For the appellants: Agnew of Lochnaw QC; Thorntons-Law

For the respondents: Johnston QC, O'Carroll; Solicitor to the Scottish Executive

 

15 February 2008

 

Introduction

[1] The appellants own Barachander Farm, Kilchrennan, Argyll, and trade under that name. The appeal arises from the decision of the respondents to refuse to pay to the appellants sheep annual premium (SAP) for 2003. The appellants unsuccessfully invoked the procedure open to them for review by the respondents of their decision. They then appealed to the Scottish Land Court. By Order dated 6 November 2006 the Land Court refused the appeal. The appellants now appeal against that Order under regulation 11 of the Agricultural Subsidies (Appeals) (Scotland) Regulations 2004 (SSI No. 381).

 

The Sheep Annual Premium Scheme

[2] The Sheep Annual Premium Scheme is based on the Integrated Administration and Control System (IACS) of the European Community and as such is governed by Commission Regulation (EC) 2419/2001 (the 2001 Regulation). A farmer who is eligible for SAP must undertake to keep the sheep on his holding during the "retention period" (ibid, art 2(p)). The retention period is 100 days. In 2003 it ran from 4 February to 15 May. The Scheme is administered in Scotland by the Scottish Executive Environment and Rural Affairs Department (SEERAD).

 

Commission Regulation (EEC) No 2700/93 and Commission Regulation (EC) No 279/94

 

[3] Article 1(3) of Commission Regulation (EEC) No 2700/93 (the 1993 Regulation), the predecessor of the 2001 Regulation, defined the retention period as the period "during which the producer undertakes to keep on his holding the number of ewes and/or goats in respect of which the premium is requested ... " That undertaking created a difficulty for Member States whose farming practices included the grazing of livestock off the holding during the retention period. It was incompatible, so far as Scotland was concerned, with the traditional practice of away-wintering sheep in areas of milder climate.

[4] Commission Regulation (EC) No 279/94 (the 1994 Regulation) dealt with that difficulty. It expressly amended the 1993 Regulation in relation to contracts of agistment by allowing the producer, on certain conditions, to have stock located off the holding during the retention period. Part of the preamble was in the following terms:

"Whereas Commission Regulation (EEC) No 2700/93, as amended by Regulation (EC) No 80/94, pursuant to Council Regulation (EEC) No 3508/92, as amended by Regulation (EC) No 165/94, and Commission Regulation (EEC) No 3887/92 regarding the integrated administration and control system for certain Community aid schemes, provides for the obligation whereby, as from the 1994 marketing year, producers must keep the number of ewes and/or goats in respect of which the premium is applied for on his holding during the retention period; whereas the application of this rule in the sheepmeat and goatmeat sector would led to the discontinuation of a traditional practice in some Member States; whereas, therefore, provision should be made to allow those practices to be continued under certain conditions and, in that connection, to derogate from the definition of a holding as used in the context of the integrated administration and control system; whereas, in the case of animals placed in agistment, it is necessary to ensure that animals moved are identified in order to make possible their effective control and to notify in advance the periods and places where the movement is to be carried out ... "

 

Article 1 gave effect to this purpose by adding the following words to article 1(3) of the 1993 Regulation (supra):

"Before all or some of [the] ewes ... in respect of which the premium is requested are placed in agistment during the retention period, the animals concerned must be identified. Furthermore, as from the 1995 marketing year, the place (or places) of retention must be indicated in the premium application as well as, where applicable, the period (or periods) concerned. In the event of a change of place or date relating to that period, the producer shall give prior written notification thereof to the competent authority."

 

The respondents, acting through SEERAD, are the "competent authority." I shall discuss the expression "agistment" later.

 

Commission Regulation (EC) No 2419/2001

[5] Article 10 of the 2001 Regulation, which supersedes the Regulations that I have quoted, provides inter alia as follows.

"Requirements pertaining to livestock aid applications

 

1 A livestock aid application shall contain all information necessary to establish eligibility for the aid, in particular ...

 

(c) the number of animals of each type in respect of which any aid is applied for ...

(d) where applicable, an undertaking by the farmer to keep the animals referred to in point (c) on his holding during the retention period and information on the location or locations where the animals will be held including the period or periods concerned ...

 

If the animal is moved to another location during the retention period the farmer shall inform the competent authority in writing in advance."

 

[6] Article 36 specifies the basis of calculation of livestock aid applications. It provides inter alia as follows:

"(3) Without prejudice to articles 38 and 39, if the number of animals declared in an aid application exceeds that determined as a result of administrative or on-the-spot checks, the aid shall be calculated on the basis of the animals determined."

 

[7] Article 2(s) defines an "animal determined" as "an animal for which all conditions laid down in the rules for the granting of the aid have been met." Therefore if the farmer fails to give advance notice of a movement of animals to another location, the animals that he moves will cease to be "animals determined." Consequently SAP will not be payable in respect of them. But the movement of the animals will also constitute "irregularities" (art 38(2)), that is to say "any non-compliance with the relevant rules for the granting of the aid in question" (art 2(h)) and will therefore attract a penalty under article 38.

[8] Article 38, read with article 40, provides inter alia in relation to ovine aid schemes that where the number of animals declared in the application form exceeds the number determined by administrative or on-the-spot checks, the aid to which the farmer would have been entitled shall be reduced by a percentage for the period concerned or refused altogether.

 

Exemptions from the penalty regime

Force majeure

[9] When the IACS-based schemes were introduced, the sole exemption from the penalty regime was in the case of force majeure and exceptional circumstances. This exemption is now set out in article 48 of the 2001 Regulation. The appellants no longer rely on this provision.

 

Correction of an application

[10] Commission Regulation (EC) No 1678/98 amended the original Regulation of 1992. It permitted the farmer to correct errors in the application, other than those made intentionally or by serious negligence, on certain strict conditions. The present version of this provision is in article 44(2) of the 2001 Regulation (infra).

 

Lack of fault

[11] The exception for lack of fault was introduced by article 44(1) of the 2001 Regulation (infra). The appellants rely on it. It raises the central issue.

 

Article 44

[12] Article 44 provides inter alia as follows.

"1 The reductions and exclusions provided for in this Title shall not apply where the farmer submitted factually correct information or where he can show otherwise that he is not at fault.

 

2 The reductions and exclusions provided for in this Title shall not apply with regard to those parts of the aid application as to which the farmer informs the competent authority in writing that the aid application is incorrect or has become incorrect since it was lodged, provided that the farmer has not been informed of the competent authority's intention to carry out an on-the-spot check and that the authority has not already informed the farmer of any irregularity in the application."

 

 

The decision of the Land Court

The findings

[13] The Land Court heard evidence on the facts from the appellants' farm manager and their factor; and expert evidence on the practice of agistment and the operation of the SAP scheme from Mr J M McDiarmid, MBE, JP, an eminent farmer and arbiter.

[14] The Land Court found that in most of the years from 1983 until 2003 the appellants had their hoggs wintered with John W Bowman of Carnoch, Buckie, Banffshire. All of these contracts were entered into orally. They reflected current and historical Scottish practice. They did not specify what procedures were to be followed if there should be a change in circumstances during the wintering; nor did they set out the limits of Mr Bowman's discretion.

[15] In about September 2002 the appellants' farm manager telephoned Mr Bowman to confirm the arrangements for the coming winter. That call and subsequent calls in October resulted in an agreement that the appellant would send 237 hoggs for wintering to Cullen Farm, Buckie, the location specified by Mr Bowman. Mr Bowman gave the farm manager the code number for Cullen Farm. Sometime in October the hoggs were delivered there.

[16] In early 2003 the appellants' factor completed an application to SEERAD claiming SAP for 1087 animals, including the hoggs. The application form accurately specified Cullen Farm, with its code number, as the holding on which the hoggs were then located.

[17] By about 17 February 2003, there was no longer enough forage for the hoggs at Cullen. Mr Bowman moved them to Muiryhall Farm, a separate holding with a different code number, situated three miles away. He failed to notify the appellants before he did so and thereby prevented them from giving SEERAD prior notice of the movement under article 10(1) (supra).

[18] Mr Bowman wintered sheep for other west coast farmers and had sheep of his own for which he claimed SAP. He was familiar with the requirements of the SAP scheme, and in particular with the requirement of advance notice of any intended movement of stock during the retention period.

[19] Officials of SEERAD heard that the hoggs had been moved to Muiryhall. On 7 March 2003 they confirmed this by an on-the-spot check.

[20] The respondents decided that the appellants' failure to give advance intimation of the movement of the animals to Muiryhall constituted a breach of article 10(1). Therefore the appellants were not only disqualified from being paid SAP for the hoggs (art 36(3), supra), but were also subject to a penalty (art 38, supra). The irregularities were such that, applying article 38(2) (supra), the respondents withheld the entire amount of the SAP to which the appellants would otherwise have been entitled.

[21] The Land Court found that the contract between the appellants and Mr Bowman was of a kind well known and well understood in Scottish agricultural practice that had long been in use to govern the away-wintering of stock. It was of the nature of a contract of care and custody for hire with an element of services. Under such a contract the custodian had, historically, had the duties of (i) taking reasonable care for the welfare and well-being of the stock, and in particular by providing them with sufficient food to keep them in good health, and (ii) taking reasonable care to protect the owner of the stock from loss that could reasonably be avoided. Such a contract was not one of agency or employment and involved no element of vicarious liability on the owner for the acts and omissions of the winterer.

[22] The Land Court concluded that by the winter of 2002-2003, with the possible exceptions of arable farmers not having stock for which they claimed SAP and farmers entering into wintering contracts for the first time, graziers in Scotland who accepted sheep for wintering were universally aware of the requirements of the SAP scheme, including the requirement of prior notification to SEERAD of intended movements of sheep during the retention period.

[23] The Land Court also found that, following the introduction of the IACS-based livestock aid regime in 1992, the duty of reasonable care to protect the owner of the stock from loss that could reasonably be avoided had come to include an obligation upon the custodian not to do anything that might prejudice the owner's entitlement to aid under that regime. In particular, by 2002 it had become an implied term in sheep wintering contracts that if the winterer intended to move the stock to another holding during the retention period, he would notify the owner in time for him to advise SEERAD in writing of that intention.

[24] The Land Court concluded that in moving the stock to Muiryhall without notifying the appellants, Mr Bowman exceeded his authority and acted outwith the terms of the agreement.

 

The reasoning of the Land Court

[25] The Land Court held that it should give the 2001 Regulation a purposive interpretation. The rules relating to retention periods were central to the livestock aid schemes. Since retention gave rise to eligibility, it was important for SEERAD to know where the animals were throughout the retention period. To allow a farmer to escape penalty where he entrusted his flock to an agister perilled the proper administration of the scheme on the farmer's choice of agister and on the agister's performance of his obligations to the farmer.

[26] The Land Court considered that the legislation imposed on the farmer the obligation to give notice. There was no suggestion that the farmer could delegate responsibility for compliance with that obligation to a third party. In Commission Regulation (EC) No 279/94 (supra), which expressly dealt with agistment, there was no suggestion that anyone other than the farmer was responsible for compliance. In effect, the farmer assumed responsibility for any mistake of the agister that prevented the farmer from complying with the scheme.

[27] Accordingly, the Land Court held that while the appellants were not themselves blameworthy, they were at fault on the basis that the acts and omissions of the agister were those of the appellants themselves for the purposes of the 2001 Regulation.

 

Questions of law for the Opinion of the Court

[28] The Land Court has submitted the following questions for the opinion of this Court:

(a) Did the Land Court err in holding that upon a proper construction of article

44(1) of the Commission Regulation (EC) No 2419/2001, the fault of the agister is the fault of the appellants and accordingly that the appellants were not entitled to the exception set out in article 44(1)?

(b) In the whole circumstances did the Land Court err in law in not allowing the

appellant's appeal and in not holding that the appellants were "not at fault" in terms of article 44(1)?

 

The submissions for the parties

For the appellants

[29] Counsel for the appellants submitted that the Land Court, having found that the appellants were not blameworthy, erred in law in starting with a purposive approach to the interpretation of the Regulations and, in doing so, in holding that the fault of the agister constituted the fault of the appellants. The correct approach was to construe "fault" in its prima facie meaning (Manchester, Salter and Moodie, Exploring the Law, pp 92-93). On that approach, fault referred to the fault of the farmer alone. The expressions faute and schuld in the French and German versions of article 44 confirmed the view that fault in that context implied blameworthiness. The exception for force majeure and exceptional circumstances had applied since the introduction of the IACS schemes; but the 1993, 1994 and 2001 Regulations had shown a progressive relaxation of the penalty provisions. Article 38(2) implied that the irregularities must be those committed by the farmer himself (Gisela Gerken v Amt für Agrarstruktur Verden, [2004] ECR I-6369). Article 44(1) now contemplated that, in circumstances falling short of force majeure, an absence of blameworthiness on the farmer's part would avoid penalisation.

 

For the respondents

[30] Counsel for the respondents submitted that fault implied a failure to comply with the terms of the Scheme. If the appellants entered into a contract with a third party for the custody and care of their stock, they were bound by the actings of that third party if he should cause them to be in breach of the 2001 Regulation. The objectives of the scheme necessitated strict compliance with its requirements, however minor (cf Campbell v Scottish Ministers 2004 SLCR 1; Agrargenossenschaft Pretzch eG v Amt für Landwirtschaft, [2002] ECR I-11053; Maatschap Schonewille-Prins v Minister van Landbouw, [2007] ECR I-3997, at paras 53-60; Geuting v Direktor der Landwirtchaftskammer, Case C-375/05, 4 October 2007, unrepd, at paras 38-39). If the respondents did not apply the Community legislation correctly, sums wrongly expended under IACS schemes could not be recovered from the European Agricultural Guidance and Guarantee Fund (United Kingdom v The Commission [1988] ECR 1749).

 

Conclusions

The nature and terms of the contract of agistment

[31] The verb "to agist" is derived from the Old French agister, meaning "to lodge," and ultimately from the Latin jacitare, a frequentative of jacere, "to lie." A contract of agistment is a contract under which an agister agrees, for payment, to provide grazing for, and to supervise and look after, the owner's stock on land that the agister owns or occupies (cf Richards v Davies, [1921] 1 Ch 90; Coldman v Hill, [1919] 1 KB 443; R v The Inhabitants of Croft, (1819) 3 B & Al 171, at pp 175-177).

[32] It is my impression that although the contract of agistment is commonplace in Scotland, the term itself is not much used. That, I think, is because in almost every case the contract in Scotland relates to the away-wintering of stock, and in such cases it is invariably referred to as a contract of wintering. The contract of wintering specifies the location of the winterings, the duration of the contract, the number of the stock and the winterer's fee. The contract is almost invariably concluded orally (cf Grant v Ferguson (1957) 73 Sh Ct R 264, at p 275). It is implied in a contract of this kind that the winterer will take reasonable care for the health and the safety of the stock by supervising them and ensuring that they are adequately fed (ibid).

 

Were the appellants "not at fault"?

[33] The short question in this case is whether the appellants were "not at fault" in terms of article 44(1) (supra) in failing to give advance notice to SEERAD of the movement of the stock.

[34] The 2001 Regulation governs all Community aid schemes to which IACS applies. It is essential to the proper operation of IACS-based schemes that there should be accurate record keeping and effective monitoring by the competent authority. In a livestock aid scheme, the knowledge of the competent authority of the number and the location of eligible stock is critical. For that reason, as counsel for the appellant accepts, the rigorous penalties that apply for a breach of the 2001 Regulation cannot be regarded as disproportionate (cf Land Baden-Wurttemburg v Schilling [2002] ECR I-4483, at para 40)).

[35] In enforcing the farmer's obligations of accuracy in livestock aid applications, the only person with whom the competent authority is concerned is, in my opinion, the farmer himself. The wording of article 10(1) makes that clear. If stock are to be moved from the location specified in the farmer's application for SAP, it is the farmer's direct responsibility to give prior notice and to specify the new location.

[36] I am confirmed in this view by the terms of the Commission Regulation (EC) No 279/94 (supra), which expressly recognised the practice of agistment in certain Member States. In doing so, it did not relax or transfer the direct obligations of the farmer who entered into such a contract; nor did it refer in any way to the position of the agister. In my view, it retained the principle that responsibility for compliance with the notification provisions remained with the farmer.

[37] If I am right in thinking that the obligations of compliance with the SAP scheme remain personally and directly with the farmer from first to last, it follows that while a claimant for SAP is at liberty to contract with a third party for the custody and care of his stock during the retention period, such an arrangement, from the standpoint of SEERAD, is res inter alios. In the eyes of the respondents, he and the agister are as one. In short, by delegating responsibility for the care of his livestock, the farmer cannot delegate his responsibilities under the 2001 Regulation.

[38] In my opinion, the submission of counsel for the appellants that article 44(1) penalises only irregularities committed by the farmer himself is unsound. The 2001 Regulation seeks to deter and to penalise the unauthorised movement of stock during the retention period (Gisela Gerken v Amt für Agrarstruktur Verden, supra, at paras 42-43). If the argument for the appellants were correct, the result would be that if a farmer by his own act committed a breach of article 10(1), he would incur a penalty; but if his agister caused the same breach, he would not. I cannot see how such a result would be in keeping with the objectives of articles 36 and 38. It would frustrate the purposes of the scheme and undermine its effective operation. It cannot, in my view, have been the intention underlying the 2001 Regulation.

[39] In any event, I do not accept the suggestion that the appellants were the wholly unwitting victims of a misfortune that they were helpless to prevent. On the Land Court's findings, I consider that an applicant for SAP must be held to know that any movement of his stock during the retention period without prior notice to SEERAD will expose him to the drastic consequences provided for by articles 36 and 38. He must also be held to know that an agister has it in his power to move the stock from the holding, particularly if his duty of care should necessitate it; and that if he does so without telling the farmer, he will cause the farmer to be in breach of the Regulation. That is a risk inherent in the agistment of stock within the SAP scheme. Since the appellants took that risk, they cannot, in my view, be said not to have been at fault.

[40] The view that I have taken in this case does not deprive article 44(1) of content. Although the case was decided under different legislation, the facts in R v MAFF, ex p W H Strawson (Farmers) Ltd ([2002] ECR I-10737) give us some help. In that case, applicants under an area aid scheme calculated the application areas by reference to Ordnance Survey maps, a method said to be acceptable in the ministerial guidance notes. The areas were found to be overstated by reason of errors in the maps. That case seems to me to illustrate circumstances in which it could rightly be said that the farmer was not at fault.

[41] Counsel for the appellant raised with us the spectre that the Land Court's decision might bring the practice of wintering to an end. I am not impressed. The risk in agistment that this case has shown up is a commercial risk that the farmer takes. Farming involves countless commercial risks. To my mind this is just one more. Both parties support the Land Court's finding as to the term now to be implied in such contracts in consequence of the 2001 Regulation. If, as I think, that finding is sound, a farmer in the position of the appellants may have recourse against the agister for the loss that he has sustained. It may be that other means of protection against the risk are available to the farmer, but that is not a matter for us to consider on this occasion.

 

Reference to the European Court

[42] The issue in this case is such that we are bound to consider whether we should refer it to the European Court of Justice. The appellants' position was that if we were minded to make a reference, they would not seek to dissuade us from that course. The respondents' position was that a reference was unnecessary since the matter was clear-cut.

[43] I agree with the respondents' submission. The decision of the Land Court is plainly correct. The appellants' interpretation of article 44(1) leads to an unreasonable and unlikely result. In my view, there is no need for us to refer the point (cf Royal Bank of Scotland Group PLC v HM Revenue and Customs, 2007 SC 401).

 

Disposal

[44] I propose to your Lordships that we should answer both questions in the negative and remit the case to the Land Court to proceed as accords.


SECOND DIVISION, INNER HOUSE, COURT OF SESSION

 

Lord Justice Clerk

Lord Johnston

Lord Wheatley

 

[2008] CSIH 15

XA17/07.

 

OPINION OF LORD JOHNSTON

 

in

 

SPECIAL CASE

 

stated by

 

THE SCOTTISH LAND COURT

 

in the case of

 

BARACHANDER FARM

Appellants;

 

against

 

THE SCOTTISH MINISTERS

Respondents:

_______

 

 

 

For the appellants: Agnew of Lochnaw QC; Thorntons-Law

For the respondents: Johnston QC, O'Carroll; Solicitor to the Scottish Executive

 

15 February 2008

 

[45] I have had the opportunity of reading the Opinion of your Lordship in the chair with which I am in complete agreement. I would simply endorse the view that in my opinion the responsibility for maintaining proper records in respect of the claim for subsidy in relation to "animals determined" under the Regulations cannot be delegated by the farmer to any other person and thus the question of "fault" does not in this context feature. Again in this respect I would agree with your Lordship's conclusions in paragraphs [37] and [38] of the Opinion.

[46] In these circumstances I agree with the course your Lordship proposes in paragraph [44] of the Opinion.

 


SECOND DIVISION, INNER HOUSE, COURT OF SESSION

 

Lord Justice Clerk

Lord Johnston

Lord Wheatley

 

[2008] CSIH 15

XA17/07

 

OPINION OF LORD WHEATLEY

 

in

 

SPECIAL CASE

 

stated by

 

THE SCOTTISH LAND COURT

 

in the case of

 

BARACHANDER FARM

Appellants;

 

against

 

THE SCOTTISH MINISTERS

Respondents:

_______

 

 

 

For the appellants: Agnew of Lochnaw QC; Thorntons-Law

For the respondents: Johnston QC, O'Carroll; Solicitor to the Scottish Executive

 

15 February 2008

 

[47] I entirely agree with the Opinion of your Lordship in the chair and have nothing to add.

 

 


BAILII:
Copyright Policy | Disclaimers | Privacy Policy | Feedback | Donate to BAILII
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/2008/CSIH_15.html