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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 >> Walker v The Commissioner of the Police of the Metropolis (Rev 1) [2014] EWCA Civ 897 (01 July 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2014/897.html Cite as: [2014] EWCA Civ 897, [2014] WLR(D) 289, [2015] WLR 312, [2015] 1 WLR 312, [2015] 1 Cr App R 22 |
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ON APPEAL FROM CENTRAL LONDON CIVIL JUSTICE CENTRE
His Honour Judge Freeland QC
1UD11492
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE TOMLINSON
and
SIR BERNARD RIX
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Walker |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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The Commissioner of the Police of the Metropolis |
Respondent |
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Mark Ley Morgan (instructed by Metropolitan Police Services) for the Respondent
Hearing date : 21 March 2014
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Crown Copyright ©
See: Costs
Lord Justice Rix :
"115…In particular, I am sure that the claimant had not calmed down or ameliorated his behaviour by the time the police arrived, but that he remained aggressive, truculent, objectionable and threatening towards Constable Adams.
116. Of course he was a smaller man, of much slighter build, but I am sure that he reacted aggressively to PC Adams' requests to calm down and that he threatened to bang PC Adams and he pushed him. I am fully satisfied by a very wide margin that the first threat and push came from the claimant…I reject the claimant's evidence categorically and unequivocally that he had calmed down…
117…I reject categorically any suggestion that [PC Adams] was a "bull in a china shop" or that he was aggressive or that he was intimidating.
118. I hold, as indeed is accepted as an important fact, that he did not lay physical hands on the claimant at all to start with and I hold that he never in fact laid physical hands on the claimant when he went up to him…
120…I have concluded in the end without doubt that the claimant was aggressive and abusive towards Constable Adams. The claimant was told twice in a measured way to calm down, but he did not. He was and remained in an agitated state and in a state of temper. He threatened to assault and bang PC Adams. He pushed him quite violently in the chest…
121. I am fully satisfied that very shortly after PC Adams arrested the claimant for a public order offence and I am quite sure that he had section 5 in mind, but matters escalated very quickly because of the claimant's violence and his temper…
122. They fell over the large wall…I am fully satisfied, having considered this issue with great care, that he bit Constable Adams twice, as the officer alleges…to the forearm and ring finger as described by the officer.
123. I am also and equally satisfied by a wide margin that Constable Adams struck the claimant only a single blow to the face and he did not strike him two or three blows. I am fully satisfied that the blow was in all the circumstances proportionate, reasonable and not excessive. In my judgment, it was justified and not unreasonable.
124. I reject the claimant's case as a tissue of lies that he was further assaulted by Constable Cracknell and/or Constable Barton…I determine all of the disputed facts in favour of the defendant and in the end I do so by a wide margin."
(i) Was Mr Walker's initial detention in the doorway unlawful, thus amounting to false imprisonment?
(ii) If so, was Mr Walker's reaction to that detention a reasonable and proportionate exercise in self-defence?
(iii) Was the purported arrest for "public order" a valid arrest within section 28(3) of PACE?
The judge's judgment
"119…I am fully satisfied that Constable Adams thus positioned himself in such a way as to prevent the claimant escaping. He honestly and reasonably feared that the claimant would try to escape. Constable Adams used the curtilage of the building and the garden to assist. Thus he positioned himself, for a very short while, a matter of seconds, to ensure that the claimant was not free to leave.
120…He threatened to assault and bang PC Adams. He pushed him quite violently in the chest. This was, in my judgment, and having considered the matter with great care, a wholly disproportionate, unnecessary and unreasonable response and reaction to Constable Adams' request to calm down. After all, Constable Adams had not even laid a finger on the claimant. The claimant was not physically restrained. True, Constable Adams was 6 foot 4 inches and 18 and a half stone, but the claimant had placed himself in the doorway. The claimant knew what the officers were there for and he knew precisely what Constable Adams was investigating. He knew that Miss Lecky had alleged that he had assaulted her by pushing [sic, sc punching] her, yet he remained aggressive, violent and truculent and entirely failed to ameliorate his behaviour or respond to the officer's reasonable requests.
121. I am fully satisfied that very shortly after PC Adams arrested the claimant for a public order offence and I am quite sure that he had section 5 in mind, but matters escalated very quickly because of the claimant's violence and his temper. The claimant, as I find, heard that he was under arrest and was given full and adequate reasons for his arrest so as to convey to him in ordinary language the reason for his arrest (see Taylor supra)."
"125. It is apparent, for the reasons given, that the claimant was given full and adequate reasons for his arrest and the section 28(3) challenge fails (see Taylor supra)…
127. Third, the claimant has failed to prove that he was subjected to unnecessary and excessive force. The defendant has fully justified the full extent of the force used. The claim in assault must therefore fail…
129. But all this notwithstanding, there remains the claimant's freestanding assertion that, notwithstanding any findings of fact that I might make, his initial and admitted detention in the doorway was unlawful and a false imprisonment. This submission of law merits of course very serious consideration…I have set out above the relevant legal framework and the principles of law which must be followed. I have fully in mind the judgment of Robert Goff LJ in Collins v. Wilcock (supra) and I regard that decision as the seminal case on the point…
130. Sixth, I do not accept the defendant's submission that R v. Fiak (supra) is indistinguishable on the facts from this case or creates a new and exceptional departure from Collins, or is in any way determinative of the result in this case. In my judgment it is but a working example of the principles of law applicable in this area on the challenge that was raised before the court.
131. Seventh, but it seems to me that the crucial and important findings of fact that I have made above are of real importance in the determination of this issue of law. (a) I am fully satisfied that not every trivial interference with a citizen's liberty amounts to a course of conduct sufficient to take an officer outside the course of his duties. (b) Likewise, depending of courses on the circumstances, an officer can lawfully detain a person (even by force if necessary and appropriate) prior to arresting him or her. (c) The officer's actions must not go beyond generally accepted standards of conduct, of touching a person to engage his attention (see Collins supra, Robert Goff LJ, 1180 D to E, 1178 G). (d) Each case will turn uniquely on its own facts (see Collins supra and the line of authorities thereafter).
132. Here I conclude that (a) the claimant moved of his own volition and initiative and free will to the entrance to number 21 Rita Road…(b)…He knew that Cadice Lecky had made quite a serious allegation of assault, namely by punching,…against him…(c) PC Adams did not at any stage use any actual or threatened physical restraint. I so hold. He never laid hands on the claimant before the arrest or the events leading up to the arrest for the lawful Public Order Act offence. (d) The claimant was not in the true sense deprived of his liberty. His freedom of movement was restricted, in my judgment, fleetingly and for a very short time, measured only in a matter of seconds. (e) This was accordingly, in my judgment, a trivial and fully justified interference with the claimant's freedom of movement. It did not, in my judgment, take Constable Adams outside the scope of his duties…
133. At all times, however, I hold that PC Adams honestly and reasonably suspected that the claimant had assaulted Miss Lecky and he could indeed have arrested the claimant for assault. Wisely, in my judgment, he preferred not to do so immediately. He wanted, in his own words, which I accept, that little bit more. That was a pragmatic judgment for him to have made. (g) Thus PC Adams' actions did not in all the circumstances and on the facts as I have found them to be, fall outside the acceptable standards of conduct of, for example, touching a person to engage his attention (see Collins supra). He did not even touch the claimant to engage his attention. The claimant was immediately aggressive, volatile and objectionable. He was twice told to calm down, as I have found, before he was arrested. (i) PC Adams was, in my judgment, fully entitled to detain the claimant, in the circumstances and on the facts as I have found proved, to establish whether an offence had been committed (see Collins supra and illustratively only Fiak supra).
134. (k) This detention was brief. It amounted to a passage of only seconds. It did no more than fleetingly restrict the claimant's freedom of movement and it did not amount to a deprivation of liberty and it was, in my judgment, fully justified…If I am wrong about that, I would have held unequivocally and by a wide margin that the claimant's reaction to this technical and brief detention was on the facts a gross and disproportionate overreaction. It is true that a person cannot weigh to any nicety the force that may be used to defend oneself, or free oneself from the snare of a wrongful detention. But, in my judgment the overriding consideration is one of reasonableness and proportionality on the unique facts of each individual case.
135. I would hold that the claimant's reaction to Constable Adams' request to calm down twice was a gross overreaction and a total overreaction in all the circumstances. It was disproportionate and it was unreasonable…He was and remained hyped up…The threat to PC Adams to bang him, punch him or hit him was in the circumstances, as I have found, an aggressive, unnecessary and disproportionate overreaction…The claimant's reaction to [threaten to] bang PC Adams and then to push him violently in the chest was in all the circumstances and on the facts as I have found them a violent, unnecessary and unlawful overreaction."
The jurisprudence
"The law draws a distinction, in terms more easily understood by philologists than by ordinary citizens, between an assault and a battery. An assault is an act which causes another person to apprehend the infliction of immediate, unlawful, force on his person; a battery is the actual infliction of unlawful force on another person. Both assault and battery are forms of trespass to the person. Another form of trespass to the person is false imprisonment, which is the unlawful imposition of restraint on another's freedom of movement from a particular place. The requisite mental element is of no relevance in the present case.
We are here concerned primarily with battery. The fundamental principle, plain and incontestable, is that every person's body is inviolate. It has long been established that any touching of another person, however slight, may amount to a battery…as Blackstone wrote in his Commentaries, 17th ed. (1830), vol. 3, p. 120:
"the law cannot draw the line between different degrees of violence, and therefore totally prohibits the first and lowest stage of it; every person's body being sacred, and no other having the right to meddle with it, in any the slightest manner."
The effect is that everybody is protected not only against physical injury but against any form of physical molestation."
"a distinction is drawn between a touch to draw a man's attention, which is generally acceptable, and a physical restraint, which is not. So we find Parke B observing in Rawlings v Till (1837) 3 M. & W. 28, 29, with reference to Wiffin v Kincard, that "There the touch was merely to engage [a man's] attention, not to put a restraint on his person." Furthermore, persistent touching to gain attention in the face of obvious disregard may transcend the norms of acceptable behaviour, and so be outside the exception…" (at 1178B).
"The distinction drawn by Parke B. in Rawlings v Till is of importance in the case of police officers. Of course, a police officer may subject another to restraint when he lawfully exercises his power of arrest: and he has other statutory powers, for example, his power to stop, search and detain persons under section 66 of the Metropolitan Police Act 1839 (2 & 3 Vict. C. 47), with which we are not concerned. But, putting such cases aside, police officers have for present purposes no greater rights than ordinary citizens. It follows that, subject to such cases, physical contact by a police officer with another person may be unlawful as a battery, just as it might be if he was an ordinary member of the public. But a police officer has his rights as a citizen, as well as his duties as a policeman. A police officer may wish to engage a man's attention, for example if he wishes to question him. If he lays his hand on the man's sleeve or taps his shoulder for that purpose, he commits no wrong. He may even do so more than once; for he is under a duty to prevent and investigate crime, and so his seeking further, in the exercise of that duty, to engage a man's attention in order to speak to him may in the circumstances be regarded as acceptable (see Donnelly v Jackman [1970] 1 W.L.R. 562). But if, taking into account the nature of his duty, his use of physical contact in the face of non-co-operation persists beyond generally acceptable standards of conduct, his action will become unlawful; and if a police officer restrains a man, for example by gripping his arm or his shoulder, then his action will also be unlawful, unless he is lawfully exercising his power of arrest. A police officer has no power to require a man to answer him, though he has the advantage of authority, enhanced as it is by the uniform which the state provides and requires him to wear, in seeking a response to his inquiry. What is not permitted, however, is the unlawful use of force or the unlawful threat (actual or implicit) to use force; and, excepting the lawful exercise of his power of arrest, the lawfulness of a police officer's conduct is judged by the same criteria as are applied to the conduct of any ordinary citizen of this country" (at 1178D-H).
"In Kenlin v Gardner [1967] 2 Q.B. 510 it was held that the action by police officers in catching hold of two schoolboys was performed not in the course of arresting them but for the purpose of detaining them for questioning and so was unlawful (see per Winn LJ at p. 519). Similarly, in Ludlow v Burgess (Note) (1971) 75 Cr.App.R. 227, 228 it was held that "this was not a mere case of putting a hand on [the defendant's] shoulder, but it resulted in the detention of [the defendant] against his will", so that the police officer's act was "unlawful and a serious interference with the citizen's liberty" and could not be an act performed by him in the execution of his duty.
In Donnelly v. Jackman [1970] 1 W.L.R. 562, the police officer wished to question the defendant about an offence which he had cause to believe that the defendant had committed. Repeated requests by the police officer to the defendant to stop and speak to him were ignored. The officer tapped him on the shoulder; he made it plain that he had no intention of stopping to speak to him. The officer persisted and again tapped the defendant on the shoulder, whereupon the defendant turned and struck him with some force. The justices convicted the defendant of assaulting the officer in the execution of his duty, and this court dismissed an appeal from that conviction by case stated. The court was satisfied that the officer had not detained the defendant, distinguishing, at p. 565, Kenlin v Gardiner [1967] 2 Q.B. 510 as a case where the officers had in fact "detained" the boys. It appears that they must have considered that the justices were entitled to conclude that the action of the officer, in persistently tapping the defendant on the shoulder, did not in the circumstances of the case exceed the bounds of acceptable conduct, despite the fact that the defendant had made it clear that he did not intend to respond to the officer's request to stop and speak to him; we cannot help feeling that this is an extreme case."
"Furthermore, the word "detaining" can be used in more than one sense. For example, it is a commonplace of ordinary life that one person may request another to stop and speak to him; if the latter complies with the request, he may be said to do so willingly or unwillingly, and in either event the first person may be said to be "stopping and detaining" the latter. There is nothing unlawful in such an act. If a police officer so "stops and detains" another person, he in our opinion commits no unlawful act, despite the fact that his uniform may give his request a certain authority and so render it more likely to be complied with. But if a police officer, not exercising his power of arrest, nevertheless reinforces his request with the actual use of force, or with the threat (actual or implied) to use force if the other person does not comply, then his act in thereby detaining the other person will be unlawful. In the former event his action will constitute a battery; in the latter event, detention of the other person will amount to false imprisonment. Whether the action of a police officer in any particular case is to be regarded as lawful or unlawful must be a question to be decided on the facts of the case."
"Any total restraint of the liberty of the person, for however short a time, by the use or threat of force or by confinement, is an imprisonment. It is not necessary that the person detained is aware of the detention at the time. To compel a person to remain in a given place is an imprisonment, but merely to obstruct a person attempting to pass in a given direction or to prevent him moving in any direction but one is not."
"I have no doubt that, in general, if one man compels another to stay in any given place against his will, he imprisons that other just as much as if he locked him up in a room: and I agree that it is not necessary, in order to constitute an imprisonment, that a man's person should be touched. I agree, also, that the compelling a man to go in a given direction against his will may amount to imprisonment. But I cannot bring my mind to the conclusion that, if one man merely obstructs the passage of another in a particular direction, whether by threat of personal violence or otherwise, leaving him at liberty to stay where he is or to go in any other direction if he pleases, he can be said thereby to imprison him. He does him wrong, undoubtedly, if there was a right to pass in that direction, and would be liable to an action on the case for obstructing the passage, or of assault, if, on the person persisting in going in that direction, he touched his person, or so threatened him as to amount to an assault. But imprisonment is, as I apprehend, a total restraint of the liberty of the person, for however short a time, and not a partial obstruction of his will, whatever inconvenience it may bring on him."
"Turning to the facts of this matter, it is not very clear what precisely the justices meant or found when they said that the officer touched the appellant on the shoulder, but whatever it was that they really did mean, it seems clear to me that they must have felt that it was a minimal matter by the way in which they treated this matter and the result of the case. When one considers the problem: was this officer acting in the course of his duty, in my view one ought to bear in mind that it is not every trivial interference with a citizen's liberty that amounts to a course of conduct sufficient to take the officer out of the course of his duties."
However, the authority of Donnelly v. Jackman has, in my judgment, been much weakened by what was said about it by Robert Goff LJ in Collins v. Wilcock, and by the development of principle to be found there. In any event, the facts found here are different.
Was Mr Walker's reaction a reasonable and proportionate exercise in self-defence?
Was the purported arrest for "public order" a valid arrest within section 28(3) of PACE?
"[26] In the light of all the authorities I would hold that the modern approach to the application of section 28(3) is that set out in the judgment in Fox v UK (1991) 13 EHRR 157 at 170 (para 40). The question is thus whether, having regard to all the circumstances of the particular case, the person arrested was told in simple, non-technical language that he could understand, the essential legal and factual grounds for his arrest. In the light of the case law as it has developed I doubt whether it will in future be necessary or desirable to consider the cases in any detail, or perhaps at all. It seems to me that in the vast majority of cases it will be sufficient to ask the question posed by the European Court of Human Rights."
"[58] The practical reasons historically given by our courts for the requirement which is reflected in art 5(2) have a good deal to do with giving the suspect an immediate opportunity of explanation or self-exculpation. With PACE procedures which for good reason discourage dialogue before interview, this is less important than perhaps it was. The real underpinning of the convention right is the simple one of respect for the dignity of the individual: if the state is taking away your liberty, you are entitled to know why…
[60] Approaching the first question in this light, I agree with Clarke LJ that the words 'violent disorder' are both legally and factually an adequate description of the material offence. This will not always be so: the legal names of some crimes are not self-explanatory. And, although not without some hesitation, I agree that they are words which would convey to a ten-year-old enough of what the offence involved to meet the purpose of PACE and the convention."
"Each case depends upon its own facts. It has never been the law that the arrested person must be given detailed particulars of the case against him. He must be told why he is being arrested."
In the particular circumstances of this case Mr Walker must have been fully aware that he was being arrested for his conduct in the face of PC Adams and that this was regarded as being a public order offence. It seems to me that that is here a legally and factually adequate explanation of the reason for his arrest. Although in some situations legal labels may matter more than in others, I do not think that the particular legal label of a particular offence matters so much if the arrested person knows that he is being arrested for the conduct he has immediately carried out, a fortiori in the face of the arresting officer, and after warnings that such conduct may lead to his arrest.
Conclusion
Lord Justice Tomlinson :
"It is part of the obligations and duties of a police constable to take all steps which appear to him necessary for keeping the peace, for preventing crime, or from protecting property from criminal injury. There is no exhaustive definition of the powers and obligations of the police, but they are at least these, and would further include the duty to detect crime and bring an offender to justice . . ."
Furthermore, as stated in Archbold 2014 at paragraph 19-429:-
"Every citizen (whether policeman or not) in whose presence a breach of the peace is being, or reasonably appears to be about to be, committed, has the right to take reasonable steps to make the person who is breaking or threatening to break the peace refrain from doing so; and those reasonable steps in appropriate cases will include detaining him against his will short of arresting him: Albert v Lavin [1982] AC 546, HL."
"When we arrived at the incident I heard Ms Lecky allege that the claimant had punched her. I therefore had reasonable grounds to suspect that the claimant may have committed an arrestable offence. However, I have dealt with numerous 'domestic' cases and know that 'in the heat of the moment' people frequently make allegations about their partner which they subsequently withdraw or refuse to substantiate. I therefore felt it sensible to make some very brief enquiries before telling the claimant he was under arrest for assaulting Ms Lecky. By doing this I would, potentially, avoid arresting him and taking him to the police station with all the inconvenience that would have caused him. My enquiries would have taken a matter of seconds."
That might be thought to represent sensible policing, and it is unfortunate that it in fact gave rise to a trivial but nonetheless unlawful detention.
Lord Justice Rimer :
Lord Justice Tomlinson :
1. This is the ruling of the court.
2. We have received full and helpful submission on costs from both parties. In a case like the present it is no surprise that the parties' positions are diametrically opposed. The Appellant contends that he should be awarded 67% of the costs of the action, including the trial, and 100% of the costs of the appeal. The Respondent seeks to uphold the award of costs in his favour by the judge below, or contends for only a 5% reduction. As for the appeal, the Respondent again contends for an award of costs in his favour, whilst recognising that the Appellant's limited success might tell in favour of some modest reduction in his entitlement of not more than 25%. However, the Respondent also recognises that the court may be minded to make no order for costs in respect of the appeal.
3. We deal first with the costs of the action, including the trial. Had the judge correctly applied the law as we have held it to be, the Appellant would at trial have established that he had been unlawfully detained and thus entitled to damages for false imprisonment. We have described his victory as the establishment of a fundamental constitutional principle. The damages awarded were however nominal and the Appellant did not on appeal suggest that there should have been a greater award. The Appellant points to his Notice to Admit Facts dated 30 April 2013 and is able to say that the Respondent could have conceded the principle and offered a suitable sum by way of compensation in advance of the trial, but chose not to do so. We doubt however that an offer of £5 for false imprisonment would have been accepted, not least because it is plain that the Appellant would have pressed his other two causes of action, assault and malicious prosecution, in respect of which he sought exemplary damages to reflect the distress, humiliation and anxiety which he had allegedly been occasioned. There can be no doubt that, looked at in the round, the Appellant's action was a resounding failure, mitigated only by his establishing a trivial detention which might properly be characterised as "technical". The judge made serious criticisms of the Appellant's aggressive and violent behaviour during the course of the incident and disbelieved his evidence at trial.
4. As the Appellant had to take the matter to trial in order to establish that he had been unlawfully detained by a police officer, even for a trifling period of time, we do not think it appropriate that he should be directed to pay any part of the Respondent's costs of the action. But equally we do not consider that the Appellant, who received £5 by way of damages following a four day trial in which he sought exemplary damages of the order of £25,000 – see the Claim Form – can properly be described in unqualified terms as the successful party. To bring an action of this nature to recover £5 was unjustified and disproportionate. The appropriate order as to the costs of the action is in our judgment that there should be no order.
5. We turn next to the costs of the appeal. Here the Appellant has succeeded on the constitutional principle, but his compensatory award is nominal. We can understand the reluctance of the Respondent to concede the point, on which he had succeeded below, but on the basis of the judge's findings of fact we have concluded that the Appellant was right on this point and the Respondent wrong. The Respondent could have secured a measure of costs protection by a Parr 36 offer of £5 and we are surprised that that course was not taken. The Appellant would then have been at real risk as to costs had he proceeded with the appeal. The unlawful detention point took up the greater part of the hearing and must have accounted for a great deal of the time spent in preparing skeleton arguments and so forth. We regard the Appellant's unreasonable conduct as being of less relevance in our consideration of the costs of the appeal, although he did of course unsuccessfully invite us to revisit the judge's findings as to his unreasonable response to the unlawful detention.
6. We have concluded that the Appellant's success on the constitutional principle, albeit it profited him little, ought to be reflected in our costs order as to the appeal. In the circumstances, the appropriate order is, we think, that the Appellant should recover 25% of his costs of the appeal.
7. We invite counsel to agree a form of Order which reflects our decision.
Note 1 The court of appeal judgment was appealed to the House of Lords, but only on the separate point under article 5 of the European Convention of Human Rights: [2009] UKHL 5, [2009] 1 AC 564. The appeal was dismissed. [Back]