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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Wood v Collins [2006] EWCA Civ 743 (11 May 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2006/743.html Cite as: [2006] EWCA Civ 743 |
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IN THE COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM COLCHESTER COUNTY COURT
HIS HONOUR JUDGE YELTON
Strand London, WC2 |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE GAGE
MR JUSTICE HEDLEY
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ANITA MARGARET WOOD | CLAIMANT/APPELLANT | |
- v - | ||
BRIAN ANTHONY COLLINS | DEFENDANT/RESPONDENT |
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Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited
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MR N ELCOMBE (instructed by Messrs Ellisons, Headgate Court, Head Street, Colchester, CO1 1NP) appeared on behalf of the Respondent
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Crown Copyright ©
(1) On about 4 November 2006 Mr Collins caused damage to Miss Wood's car by scratching every panel of the car with a key.
(2) On 10 November 2005 Mr Collins entered the shop where Miss Wood worked and became aggressive.
(3) On 16 November 2005, outside Miss Wood's place of work, Mr Collins called her a "slag" and threatened to kill her.
(4) On 17 November 2005 Mr Collins confronted Miss Wood in a butcher's shop and threatened her.
(5) On 9 January 2006 when Miss Wood was returning home from work, Mr Collins approached her in the vicinity of the church with, as the district judge found, the intention of deliberately encountering her and harassing and pestering her. In the course of this encounter Mr Collins threatened Miss Wood.
(6) On 10 January 2006, outside the same church, the district judge found Mr Collins engineered another meeting with Miss Wood.
The district judge accordingly found Mr Collins to be in breach of the injunction made against him and sentenced him to a total of six months' imprisonment.
"If your client breaches the injunction again he is going to get six months' minimum, is he not, from most judges. I am not tying my hands if it comes in front of me."
As I have said, in the course of his judgment reducing the sentence, he repeated that observation.
"An appellant or respondent requires permission to appeal –
(a) where the appeal is from a decision from a judge in a county court or the High Court, except where the appeal is against –
(i) a committal order;
(ii) a refusal to grant habeas corpus; or
(iii) a secure accommodation order made under section 25 of the Children Act 1989."
"32. I would only wish to reserve for the future a question which might arise, though it does not directly do so in this case, in the context of the requirement of permission to appeal with which my Lord has dealt.
33. Mr Morgan submitted that if the words 'committal order' in Part 52.3(1)(a)(i) of the Civil Procedure Rules mean, as my Lord and I agree they do, an order committing a person to prison, then having regard to section 13 of the Administration of Justice Act 1960 the claimant who sought the order as well as the respondent against whom it was made would enjoy a right of appeal without permission. Presumably the only basis upon which a claimant would file such an appeal would be in an attempt to persuade the court to vary the committal order so as to extend its length. This would be an anomalous result. That is perhaps obvious, but one reason would be that on this basis the claimant would require permission to appeal in a case where he might have the greater complaint, that is where the judge below had refused to grant a committal order at all.
34. I only say that I consider that it may be that Part 52.3(1)(a)(i) should be construed so as to contemplate an appeal without permission only on behalf of the contemnor. The reasoning would be that what the subordinate legislator had in mind was an appeal against the making of a committal order at all. That would not avail the claimant. Provisionally I consider that the better view, but it is not this case."
Mr Elcombe's submissions echo Laws LJ provisional views.
"Mr Dugdale, I am not going to ask your client for her views on sentence because the Court of Appeal said you should not do that. But it seems to me that your client would be protected if I suspended an order upon the Respondent not complying with all the other terms of the injunction, and also not going within three miles of Frinton railway station – because Kirby Cross is within three miles of Frinton railway station, is it not?
Mr Dugdale: Yes, I am told it is."
Later, Mr Dugdale said:
"Your Honour having prefaced those remarks by saying you were not asking my views on it, I am in a rather difficult position."
Very shortly after that, the judge announced his decision in the following way:
"Stand up, Mr Collins. It seems to me that this case clearly requires a custodial sentence – not only because I told you last time that it would bring such a sentence, but also because although they are only words, it is frightening for the Applicant and it seems to me to indicate, as has been said, that you will not let things go.
So, I shall sentence you to 28 days' imprisonment, because I have to make it commensurate with the breach. But I shall suspend that on terms firstly that you comply with the existing injunction; and, secondly that as from 4.00pm on Monday, 13 March you do not go within a three mile zone of Frinton railway station for the remainder of the period of the injunction. It seems to me that that will protect you and it will also protect, more importantly, Miss Wood. So, that is an additional term upon which it is suspended. If you breach it, it will in effect come into operation almost automatically once proved."
Order: Application allowed.