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Scottish Sheriff Court Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Sheriff Court Decisions >> The Highland Council v. ADewar [2007] ScotSC 25 (13 June 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotSC/2007/25.html Cite as: [2007] ScotSC 25 |
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by
SHERIFF D C W PYLE
in causa
THE
against
ALAN MICHAEL DEWAR
Introduction
This is a summary
application under the Antisocial Behavior etc (
On
Legislation
Section
4 of the 2004 Act provides, inter alia,:
"(1) On the application of a relevant authority, the
sheriff may, if satisfied that the conditions mentioned in subsection (2) are
met as respects the person to whom the application relates (the "specified
person"), make an antisocial behaviour order.
(2)
Those conditions are-
(a)
that the specified person is at least 12 years of age;
(b)
that the specified person has engaged in antisocial behaviour towards a
relevant person; and
(c)
that an antisocial behaviour order is necessary for the purpose of protecting
relevant persons from further antisocial behaviour by the specified person.
(3)
For the purpose of determining whether the condition mentioned in subsection
(2)(b) is met, the sheriff shall disregard any act or conduct of the specified
person which that person shows was reasonable in the circumstances...
(4)...
(5)
Subject to subsections (6) and (7), an antisocial behaviour order is an order
which prohibits, indefinitely or for such period as may be specified in the
order, the specified person from doing anything described in the order.
(6)
The prohibitions that may be imposed by an antisocial behaviour order are those
necessary for the purpose of protecting relevant persons from further
antisocial behaviour by the specified person.
(7)
If an antisocial behaviour order is made on the application of a local
authority the order may, in addition to imposing prohibitions that are necessary for the purpose mentioned in subsection (6), impose
such prohibitions as are necessary for the purpose of protecting other persons
("affected persons") from further antisocial behaviour by the
specified person.
(8)
- (12)...
(13)
In this section, "relevant person" means-
(a)
in relation to an application by a local authority, a person within the area of
the authority..."
The Application
The
pursuers in their crave seek an anti-social behaviour order for a period of
three years, which would prohibit the defender from,
"1.
Leaving the house and garden ground at
2. Generating excessive levels of noise at
said house at 43 Carnarc Crescent, Inverness and in the garden ground thereof
by the playing of loud music in said house or permitting others to do so and by
the revving of the engines of motor cars in said garden ground;
3. Entering that area of ground at South
Kessock, Inverness, shown delineated in red on the Plan annexed and signed as
relative hereto between the hours of 7am and 7pm, daily, but excepting
therefrom said house and garden ground at 43 Carnarc Crescent, Inverness and
the retail premises known as "The Spar", 45 Thornbush Road, Inverness and for
the purpose of taking access to and egress from said house and retail premises
by legal means only, the roads at Carnarc Crescent, Kessock Avenue, Kessock
Road and Thornbush Road, South Kessock, all as said house and garden ground and
said roads are shown delineated in yellow and coloured blue on said Plan."
The
pursuers aver in the condescendence that the defender lives with his mother in
the end terraced house forming
(1)
Excessive noise
The pursuers aver that between November 2006 and April 2007
the defender has persistently generated or has permitted others to generate an
excessive level of noise at his house at all times of day and night by playing
music loudly both inside the house and in the rear garden by congregating with
groups of associates and by drinking alcohol. He has also generated excessive
levels of noise late at night and into the early hours of the morning in the
playing fields known as West Fields (immediately behind the defender's house)
by carrying out work to motor cars parked there and by revving their engines.
Without prejudice to the foregoing generality, the pursuers go on to aver
specific incidents during that period, namely
(a)
on
(b)
on
(c)
on 19 and
(d)
on
(e)
on
(f)
on
(g)
on
(h)
on 4 and
(2)
Contraventions of the Road Traffic
Act
The pursuers aver that over the same period the defender has
persistently caused alarm and distress to his next door neighbours by driving
motor vehicles on the streets of South Kessock at excessive speeds and in a
dangerous or careless manner whereby the neighbours are prevented from
permitting their children to go outside to play, and has persistently
contravened the Road Traffic Act 1988 by driving without a licence or
insurance. Without prejudice to the foregoing generality, the pursuers go on to
aver specific incidents during that period, namely
(a)
on 5 or
(b)
between 1 and
(c)
on
(d)
on
(e)
on
(f)
on
(g)
on
(h)
on 9 or
(i)
on
(3)
Other criminal behaviour
The pursuers also aver that over the same period the defender
has caused distress and alarm to persons in South Kessock by damaging goal
posts in West Fields, by swearing at and verbally abusing a neighbour at
Carnarc Crescent, by assaulting persons on Rosehaugh Road and Grant Street, by
stealing and damaging motor vehicles in Thornbush Road and Rosehaugh Road and
by resisting police arrest at Carnarc Crescent. Without prejudice to the
foregoing generality, the pursuers go on to aver specific incidents during that
period, namely:
(a)
on a date between 17 January and
(b)
on 27 January 2007, (i) while
acting along with another, the defender broke into the house at 93 Rosehaugh
Road with intent to steal, (ii) on the same date at 97 Rosehaugh Road, the
defender punctured with a hammer the tyres of a motor vehicle, and (iii) on the
same date at 46 Rosehaugh Road, whilst acting with another, stole a motor
vehicle. He was prosecuted for these offences. The trial diet has been fixed
for
(c)
on
(d)
on
(e)
on
(f)
On
(g)
On
Discussion of the approach to be
adopted
It
is beyond dispute that the first two conditions of sub-section 4(2) of the 2004
Act have been met, namely that the defender is at least 12 years of age and has
engaged in anti-social behaviour towards relevant persons - indeed it is
difficult to envisage a more obvious example of the very behaviour about which
the Act is concerned.
The
statutory test is that the order - and the prohibitions it contains - must be
necessary for the purpose of protecting relevant persons from further anti-social
behaviour by the defender. This test was emphasised in R (McCann) v
The
Act offers no guidance about how the test of necessity should be construed.
That is a matter for the court to determine. As was said by Sheriff Principal
Bowen in
McCann also
decided that the proceedings were civil, not criminal. (This was an English
appeal, but Lord Hope of Craighead discussed the same question in connection
with the equivalent Scottish proceedings - at
p613ff.) It therefore follows that the civil rules of pleading and evidence
apply. These include a duty upon the party bringing a summary application to
make averments which pass the test of relevancy and sufficiency and give fair
notice to the defender of what facts in support of the application it is intended
to prove.
As
I have said, I am in no doubt that the pursuers have more than sufficiently set
out averments that the defender has engaged in anti-social behaviour to
relevant persons. Nor, in my view, do the pursuers need to make any other
averments of fact to satisfy the test that an order in some form is necessary
for the purpose of protecting relevant persons from further anti-social
behaviour by the defender.
In
my opinion, however, the pursuers in an application such as this one must go
further in their pleadings and in what they offer to prove. They must also
apply their mind to the tests set out in sub-sections 4(6) and 4(7), namely
what prohibitions should be contained in the order for the purposes set out in
those sub-sections. Of course, in many cases it may be that little more need be
averred or proved, on the basis that the prohibition sought is so obvious. A
prohibition, for example, not to perform any illegal act could scarcely be
described as unnecessary. This is similar to the standard molestation interdict
in matrimonial proceedings; it must be obvious to any defender that he should
not commit a crime, whether he chooses to do so or not. The purpose of a
molestation interdict, particularly where a power of arrest has been granted,
is to ensure that a breach can be dealt with promptly and effectively. The same
can be said of anti-social behaviour orders which contain such a prohibition.
The
situation is, however, different where the prohibitions sought go further than
that. It is one thing to prohibit a defender from doing something which he has
no right to do in the first place; it is quite another where the prohibition
has the effect of restricting his liberty.
In
my opinion, the pursuers require to aver and to offer to prove why such a
prohibition is necessary to protect persons from further anti-social behaviour
by a defender. Much will turn on the facts and circumstances of each case - and
it may well be that only the briefest averments will be required in a case
where as a matter of commonsense the proposed prohibition is necessary. It
might, for example, be sufficient to state that the police support the
application. But it seems to me that the more the proposed prohibition
restricts the liberty of a defender, the more the pursuers will have to aver
detailed reasons why it is considered that the prohibition will achieve the aim
of the Act.
That
there is a burden on the pursuers to prove the necessity of any proposed
prohibition is supported by Lord Hope of Craighead in McCann, when he said (at
p620 (g-h)):
"An
anti-social behaviour order may well restrict the freedom of the defendant to
do what he wants and to go where he pleases. But these restrictions are imposed
for preventive reasons, not as punishment.... The court is not being required,
nor indeed is it permitted, to consider what an appropriate sanction would be
for his conduct. Moreover, while the court may restrict the defendant's liberty
where this is shown [my italics] to
be necessary to protect persons in the area from further anti-social acts by
him, it may not deprive him of it nor may it impose a fine on him."
The
pursuers' averments in support of the prohibitions craved are limited. In
Article 6 of Condescendence, they aver:
"The
Defender's behaviour as hereinbefore condescended upon is affecting the lives
of his neighbours and other persons in the local authority area for which the
Pursuer is responsible."
In
the light of the defender's admitted behaviour, the truth of that averment is
self evident.
The
pursuers go on to aver:
"In
light of the Defender's behaviour, an Antisocial Behaviour Order is necessary
to protect such persons from further antisocial acts or conduct by him. Reference
is made to Section 4(7) of The Antisocial Behaviour etc. (
I
agree with these averments, except that the reference ought to have been to
sub-section 4(2)(c) of the Act. Furthermore, the pursuers' earlier averment
shows that they are concerned about the protection of "relevant persons", not
"affected persons", and are therefore relying upon sub-section 4(6), not 4(7).
Then
the pursuers aver:
"The
Pursuer seeks an Order having effect for three years. In the light of the
history of the Defender's behaviour, the Pursuer considers that a period of
three years is a reasonable period in which to assess whether an indefinite
order is necessary to protect persons in the authority's area from further
antisocial acts or conduct by the Defender."
In
Article 7, the pursuers aver:
"The
Pursuer has consulted with the Chief Constable of Northern Constabulary before
seeking a warrant on this summary application. The Chief Constable concurs with
and supports the presentation of this summary application to the Court."
The
pursuers' solicitor added little to these averments, except to tell me that the
pursuers' policy is to review such orders on a regular basis. She said that she
would not allow the order to remain in force for longer than was necessary and
"as an officer of court" would ensure that an application to review or revoke
the order would be presented the moment that point was reached. As I remarked,
it was not obvious to me how she could give such a personal undertaking on
behalf of her employers.
My
first and overriding problem is with the period of three years sought for the
order. The pursuers simply aver that they need three years to decide whether or
not they need an indefinite order. In my opinion, that alone does not satisfy
the necessity test. The manner in which the application is framed is almost to
suggest that it is a concession by the pursuers, with the approval of the
police, not to seek an order for an indefinite period. The Act does allow for
the possibility of such an order, but in my view the pursuers have misconstrued
the test of necessity if they think that it is enough simply to seek an order
for a fixed period as a preliminary to an order for an indefinite period. Such
a latter order in the instant case conjures up a picture of an old age
pensioner stealing cars and vandalising property. I say that not to be
flippant, but to illustrate the absurdity of the pursuers' position and their
failure properly to consider the test of necessity in framing their crave. In
any event, the pursuers have not explained why it will take them three years to
decide whether an order for an indefinite period is necessary.
In
my opinion, there are a number of relevant considerations which the pursuers
might have addressed. I give the following only as examples:
It is, in my view, significant that the first proposed prohibition,
namely a curfew for three years, is three times the maximum length of a
Restriction of Liberty Order under Section 245A of the Criminal Procedure (
It is not uncommon for the court to grant bail in criminal
proceedings with a curfew condition attached. In practice, this can last for up
to six months. It seems to me that a prohibition for that period, at least in
the absence of any other factors presented to me by the pursuers, should be sufficient
to test the willingness of the defender to mend his ways.
As regards the second proposed prohibition, there is plainly
not the same difficulty - in that it seeks to prohibit only what would be
criminal conduct anyway. Nevertheless, I consider, again in the absence of any
other factors presented to me by the pursuers, that a period of six months is
long enough to discover whether or not the defender intends to continue his
anti-social behaviour.
I turn now to the third proposed prohibition. On any view,
this is a severe restriction of the defender's liberty. Its effect would be
that the defender would be unable to go anywhere within the district of the
city where he lives other than the road in and out of it, his house and the
local convenience store. Nevertheless, it can be regarded as a type of
restriction which might in appropriate circumstances be warranted as a means of
preventing further anti-social behaviour. On the other hand, some of the
behaviour complained of occurred in streets along which he would still be
allowed to travel. Moreover, the majority of the complaints relate to behaviour
which affected residents of
In these circumstances, I have therefore decided not to grant
this part of the crave.
I should add finally that the pursuers' solicitor told me
that the defender had been acquitted of the charges arising out of the alleged
incident on
Decision
Accordingly, I have decided to grant the application quoad
parts 1 and 2 of the first crave, but for a period of only six months. I will
refuse the application quoad part 3 of that crave.
As moved by the pursuers, I will find no expenses due to or
by either party.