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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 >> Sutton v Norwich City Council [2021] EWCA Civ 20 (13 January 2021) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2021/20.html Cite as: [2021] WLR 1691, [2021] 1 WLR 1691, [2021] EWCA Civ 20 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE UPPER TRIBUNAL (LANDS CHAMBER)
Martin Rodger QC, Deputy Chamber President, and Peter D McCrea FRICS
[2020] UKUT 90 (LC)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
(Vice-President of the Court of Appeal, Civil Division)
LORD JUSTICE MOYLAN
and
LORD JUSTICE NEWEY
____________________
NICHOLAS SUTTON |
Appellant |
|
- and - |
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NORWICH CITY COUNCIL |
Respondent |
____________________
Marcus Croskell (instructed by NP Law) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 8 December 2020
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Newey:
The legal framework
"Where an offence under this Act committed by a body corporate is proved to have been committed with the consent or connivance of, or to be attributable to any neglect on the part of–
(a) a director, manager, secretary or other similar officer of the body corporate, or
(b) a person purporting to act in such a capacity,
he as well as the body corporate commits the offence and is liable to be proceeded against and punished accordingly."
"(a) building work undertaken in connection with the conversion did not comply with the appropriate building standards and still does not comply with them; and
(b) less than two-thirds of the self-contained flats are owner-occupied".
As the UT noted in paragraph 50 of its decision, the evident object of section 257 was "to bring converted blocks of flats which do not satisfy modern building standards within the scope of regulation under the 2004 Act".
"The manager must ensure that his name, address and any telephone contact number are clearly displayed in a prominent position in the common parts of the HMO so that they may be seen by all occupiers."
So far as material, regulation 5 provides:
"(1) The manager must ensure that all means of escape from fire in the HMO are—
…(b) maintained in good order and repair.
…
(4) The manager must take all such measures as are reasonably required to protect the occupiers of the HMO from injury, having regard to—
(a) the design of the HMO;(b) the structural conditions in the HMO; and(c) the number of flats or occupiers in the HMO….."
Regulations 7(3) states:
"The manager must—
(a) ensure that every fixed electrical installation is inspected and tested at intervals not exceeding five years by a person qualified to undertake such inspection and testing;
(b) obtain a certificate from the person conducting that test, specifying the results of the test; and
(c) supply that certificate to the local housing authority within 7 days of receiving a request in writing for it from that authority."
Regulation 8 imposes a duty to maintain common parts, fixtures, fittings and appliances. By regulation 8(4):
"The manager must ensure that—
(a) outbuildings, yards and forecourts which are used in common by two or more households living within the HMO are maintained in repair, clean condition and good order…."
Regulation 10 reads:
"The manager must—
(a) ensure that sufficient bins or other suitable receptacles are provided that are adequate for the requirements of each household occupying the HMO for the storage of refuse and litter pending their disposal; and
(b) make such further arrangements for the disposal of refuse and litter from the HMO as may be necessary, having regard to any service for such disposal provided by the local authority."
"(1) The local housing authority may impose a financial penalty on a person if satisfied, beyond reasonable doubt, that the person's conduct amounts to a relevant housing offence in respect of premises in England.
(2) In this section 'relevant housing offence' means an offence under—
(a) section 30 (failure to comply with improvement notice),
… or(e) section 234 (management regulations in respect of HMOs).
(3) Only one financial penalty under this section may be imposed on a person in respect of the same conduct.
(4) The amount of a financial penalty imposed under this section is to be determined by the local housing authority, but must not be more than £30,000.
(5) The local housing authority may not impose a financial penalty in respect of any conduct amounting to a relevant housing offence if—
(a) the person has been convicted of the offence in respect of that conduct, or
(b) criminal proceedings for the offence have been instituted against the person in respect of the conduct and the proceedings have not been concluded.
(6) Schedule 13A deals with—
(a) the procedure for imposing financial penalties,
(b) appeals against financial penalties,
(c) enforcement of financial penalties, and
(d) guidance in respect of financial penalties.
…
(9) For the purposes of this section a person's conduct includes a failure to act."
"(a) is to be a re-hearing of the local housing authority's decision, but
(b) may be determined having regard to matters of which the authority was unaware".
"The court is to start from the policy, and it must give proper consideration to arguments that it should depart from it. It is the appellant who has the burden of persuading it to do so. In considering reasons for doing so, it must look at the objectives of the policy and ask itself whether those objectives will be met if the policy is not followed."
Judge Cooke further discussed the weight which a Tribunal should attach to the local housing authority's decision when hearing an appeal against a penalty. In that regard, she said this is paragraph 62:
"the court is to afford considerable weight to the local authority's decision but may vary it if it disagrees with the local authority's conclusion".
Basic facts
"15. Six of the improvement notices required remedial action to be taken to remedy excess cold hazards affecting flats 001, 003, 012, 101, 102 and 112; the remedial action required was the provision of double or secondary glazing, and the installation of central heating, storage heaters or fixed panel heating.
16. A seventh notice required remedial action in relation to fire safety hazards throughout the building, including the installation of fire breaks behind electrical socket boxes, fire stopping collars around ducting and pipe work, and the provision of an electrical test certificate for the entire installation showing it to be free of the most serious (Code 1 and 2) deficiencies.
17. The eighth notice related to electrical hazards. It recorded that some work had already been carried out in the plant room (which required to be certified) and repeated some of the requirements of the seventh notice. It also required remedial action to be taken to remedy defects in the distribution boards serving individual flats, and to rectify the inadequacy of the sub-main circuit which was described as under-sized, overloaded and insufficiently earthed."
"No representations were received from either Mr Sutton or the company in response to the notices of intent and on 17 October 2018 final notices imposing the proposed penalties (including one in respect of flat 112, given on the erroneous assumption that an appropriate notice of intent had been sent on 17 September) were served on both. In aggregate each set of five notices imposed penalties of £140,000 on Mr Sutton and [the] same sum on FLAL."
i) Max House was a section 257 HMO;
ii) The improvement notices were valid;
iii) The Council had power to impose financial penalties on Mr Sutton personally;
iv) The financial penalty notices were properly served;
v) FLAL was the person managing the premises within the meaning of section 263(3) of the 2004 Act and the 2007 Regulations;
vi) The Council had proved each of the breaches of the 2007 Regulations alleged in the final notices beyond reasonable doubt;
vii) The improvement notices in respect of excess cold in flats 101 and 102, electrical hazards and fire safety hazards had not been fully complied with;
viii) FLAL had no reasonable excuse for its failures; and
ix) The offences were all committed with the consent or connivance of Mr Sutton.
i) reduced those imposed on FLAL to £32,000 for breaches of the 2007 Regulations and £43,000 for non-compliance with the improvement notices and
ii) reduced those imposed on Mr Sutton to £50,000 for breaches of the 2007 Regulations and £49,000 for non-compliance with the improvement notices.
|
Penalty on FLAL |
Penalty on Mr Sutton |
Total of penalties |
Regulation 4 |
None |
None |
Nil |
Regulation 5 |
£8,000 |
£12,000 |
£20,000 |
Regulation 7 |
£12,000 |
£18,000 |
£30,000 |
Regulation 8 |
£6,000 |
£10,000 |
£16,000 |
Regulation 10 |
£6,000 |
£10,000 |
£16,000 |
Improvement notice re flats |
£6,000 |
£6,000 |
£12,000 |
Improvement notice re electrical installations |
£23,000 |
£25,000 |
£48,000 |
Improvement notice re fire safety |
£14,000 |
£18,000 |
£32,000 |
Total |
£75,000 |
£99,000 |
£174,000 |
"In our judgment the evidence in relation to Hardwick House is relevant to the culpability of Mr Sutton. He did not dispute that the conversion project was one of his, and indeed he was clearly very proud of what had been achieved in bringing a derelict building back into use. He sought to direct blame towards others, including leaseholders, but he did not suggest that he had been unaware of the issues concerning fire safety or the underlying dispute over the electricity bill which appears to have been the cause of the excessive delay in resolving a serious situation. We treat his dealings with Hardwick House as evidence of Mr Sutton's disregard for the safety of others, his dilatory approach to the resolution of concerns about fire precautions, and his disinclination to comply promptly with enforcement action leading to statutory authorities having to step in with emergency remedial action, all of which are features of what occurred at Max House. To the extent that similar behaviour is evident at Max House we will treat the management of Hardwick House as a relevant aggravating factor. FLAL is a separate company which had nothing to do with Hardwick House and we do not consider the events there to be relevant to the penalties to be imposed on it."
The appeal
The approach of an appellate Court/Tribunal
"The decision may be wrong, not because of some specific error of principle in that narrow sense, but because of an identifiable flaw in the judge's reasoning, such as a gap in logic, a lack of consistency, or a failure to take account of some material factor, which undermines the cogency of the conclusion. However, it is equally clear that, for the decision to be 'wrong' under CPR r 52.11(3), it is not enough that the appellate court might have arrived at a different evaluation."
"Penalties inconsistently applied"
Penalties as between companies and their directors
"We return to consider later the period in this particular case, but address at once the question of principle. … We would nonetheless be inclined to accept that with a personal defendant, with a fine hanging over him, there are arguments for keeping the period of that continuing punishment within bounds. It appears to us that those arguments are much weaker (if indeed they apply at all) when one is considering a corporate defendant. There is not the same sense of anxiety as is liable to afflict an individual, and it appears to us to be acceptable on proper facts and in appropriate circumstances for a fine to be payable by a company over a substantially longer period than might be appropriate in the case of an individual. We would, however, accept a further submission made by [counsel for the appellants] to the effect that one must avoid a risk of overlap. In a small company the directors are likely to be the shareholders and therefore the main losers if a severe sanction is imposed on the company. We accept that the court must be alert to make sure that it is not in effect imposing double punishment. On the other hand, it seems to us important in many cases that fines should be imposed which make quite clear that there is a personal responsibility on directors and that they cannot simply shuffle off their responsibilities to the corporation of which they are directors.
The proper approach to a case of this kind in principle seems to us to be to pose two questions. First: what financial penalty does the offence merit? Secondly: what financial penalty can a defendant (whether corporate or personal) reasonably be ordered to meet? That second question inevitably raises the question of time.
Addressing the first of those questions with particular reference to the instant case, we note that the total penalty imposed on the company and the directors together amounted to £50,000. We have to ask ourselves whether that sum represented an appropriate penalty to be imposed for this offending. In considering that question we have to bear in mind the glaring public need for effective sanctions in a field such as this where the health and the safety of the public are so very obviously at risk. The situation is the more important when, as here, the ill-effects of exposure to brown asbestos may take very many years to appear. In the interim of course no individual can know whether he will ultimately suffer or not.
We consider that the division of £40,000 attributed to the company and £10,000 to the directors was an appropriate split. We also consider that the total sum divided between the two was appropriate recognition of the gravity of this offending."
"18. … In my judgment there can be no guiding principle independent of the facts of a given case. In R v Rollco Screw & Rivet Co Ltd and others [1999] 2 Cr App R(S) 436, 441, the court said:
19. 'We accept that the court must be alert to make sure that it is not in effect imposing double punishment. On the other hand, it seems to us important in many cases that fines should be imposed which make quite clear that there is a personal responsibility on directors and that they cannot simply shuffle off their responsibilities to the corporation of which they are directors.'
20. That seems to me to be a proper approach to this matter. It is also in my judgment right that the corporate vehicle through which an individual carries on business with the benefit of limited liability should bear a penalty. There is no conventional ratio which governs the relationship of the fine imposed on an individual and the fine imposed on a company. It all depends on the facts."
"15. It seems to us that within the parameters of the relevant Sentencing Guidelines there are three approaches which might be taken to the imposition of fines in a case such as this, where one Defendant is a small company and the other is a director of that company. The first is, as this court appears to have done in the Rollco case, to form a view as to the appropriate total penalty before deciding how to apportion it between the defendants. The second, in a case where the direct financial benefit sought to be obtained or cost sought to be avoided is that of the company, is to take that factor into account in the way described in Duckworth in the case of the company, and then consider what penalty should be imposed on the director as having been the controlling mind of the company causing it to commit the offence and seeking thereby to achieve the financial benefit or avoid the cost for the company. The third is simply to sentence each defendant separately as if he, she or it stood alone; but this would in cases of actual financial benefit infringe the principle set out in Rollco that the court must avoid imposing double punishment; and neither Mr Andrew Smith QC for the Appellants nor Mr Joseph Millington for the Respondent suggested that it would be the right course to adopt in a case of this kind. Putting the matter another way, insofar as the purpose of a fine or fines is, in accordance with the General Guideline quoted above, to remove an actual financial benefit, that benefit should only be removed once.
16. Mr Smith accepted that the second approach is consistent with the Sentencing Guidelines as well as with the reported cases such as Duckworth. We consider that it is the one we should adopt in this case in considering whether or not the fines of £25,000 imposed on each Appellant by the judge were excessive."
"252. In this case, there is a complicating factor. FLAL is in administration, having been deprived of what we understand to be its sole source of income by the making of the prohibition order in October 2018. No evidence was available of the financial standing of FLAL and we were shown no copies of its annual accounts. In his written argument Mr Sutton informed us that the company's accounts for the year ending 29 December 2017 (before any enforcement action was taken against it by the Council) showed a profit and loss account deficit of £536,652. The only information we have about the value of the building is contained in the copy of the land certificate exhibited to the Council's evidence for which we learn that the price paid for the building by FLAL in March 2012 was £515,000. No more recent valuation was provided by Mr Sutton. We were informed that the mortgagee, which took possession of the building when the prohibition notice was served, has been carrying out further work but we do not know whether it is yet able to be occupied.
253. We are conscious of the need to avoid the imposition of double punishment for the same offending behaviour, but there is a risk in this case that the apportionment of the appropriate penalty between FLAL and Mr Sutton will result in the payment of a lesser sum than is justified by the offending behaviour. That risk arises because any penalty imposed on FLAL may go unpaid because the company's liabilities exceed its assets. In principle, however, we do not think that is a relevant consideration, and it cannot be relied on as a justification for imposing a greater penalty on Mr Sutton personally that would otherwise have been appropriate."
"[Mr Sutton] is an experienced professional person and could easily have produced information regarding his own means or the extent to which he been funding FLAL from his own resources, but he has chosen not to do so. We will approach the question of the appropriate level of penalty to be imposed on him on the assumption that he is a person of means; we will give no separate weight to the suggestion that he has already incurred significant personal losses in connection with Max House."
In that connection, the UT had said in paragraph 256:
"A corporate or individual appellant who wishes the Tribunal to have regard to their own financial standing when considering the appropriate financial penalty to impose, should provide up-to-date evidence of their assets and liabilities. The information provided by Mr Sutton in submissions about the expenses and liabilities FLAL had incurred was not supported by any documentary record, and he provided no information about his own resources. The Tribunal has no solid foundation on which to form a view of how the development project has been funded."
The individual penalties
Regulation 5
"274. We consider the risk of harm arising from fire as a result of the condition of the building to be high. In the event, no fire eventuated, but the likelihood that, once started, a fire would spread quickly through the building was very significant. The deficiencies identified in January 2018 contributed to the decision to make a prohibition order nine months later. We bear in mind the overlap between these inadequacies in fire protection and the deficiencies with regard to the testing of the electrical installations. We nevertheless consider it appropriate to deal with them separately.
275. In the case of FLAL we consider its level of culpability to be in the medium bracket, while that of Mr Sutton we consider to be high. We refrain from placing their responsibility at a higher level because both can legitimately point out that the work to the building was designed by apparently reputable architects, and its implementation was professionally supervised. There is no evidence establishing that, as at 19 December 2017, Mr Sutton or anyone involved with the affairs of FLAL was aware of the problems of inadequate fire stopping concealed behind wall and ceiling finishes, or within service cupboards. They were, however, on notice that the building still had not been passed as compliant with Building Regulations, and they cannot therefore be absolved of significant responsibility. The decision to continue letting the building without obtaining Building Control sign off is an aggravating factor. In Mr Sutton's case the disregard of fire precautions at Hardwick House justifies treating him as the more culpable of the appellants.
276. These assessments place FLAL's offending in band 4 of the Council's policy matrix, and Mr Sutton's in band 5. We consider the appropriate penalties to be £12,000 in the case of Mr Sutton and £8,000 in the case of FLAL."
Regulation 7
"The Facit report identified 528 defects: nine were classed C1 (Danger present. Risk of injury. Immediate remedial action required); 263 were classed C2 (Potentially dangerous. Urgent remedial action required); and 256 were classed as C3 (Improvement recommended)."
The UT concluded in paragraph 171:
"We are satisfied that at 19 December 2017, FLAL was in breach of regulation 7(3). No electrical certificate from Alpha Electrical or any other qualified person was produced in response to the Council's repeated requests. Mr Sutton acknowledged that there were 'issues' which were, in part at least, rectified after that date, many of the issues remained outstanding when the closure order was made."
"277. We regard the breaches of regulation 7, concerning the failure to test the fixed electrical installations and the failure to produce an inspection and testing certificate, to be the most serious of all the breaches of the 2007 Regulations. The Council thought they merited the highest penalty for both appellants. We do not go so far, but we consider FLAL to have a high degree of culpability and Mr Sutton very high. We regard his involvement with Hardwick House and his attempt to divert attention from the absence of certification by claiming, despite having had ample time to check, that the relevant document had been supplied to Building Control, to be aggravating factors. We do not accept that Mr Sutton was unaware of the deficiencies of the electrical installations, which were reported to him by the caretaker and which he sought ineffectually to address by banning portable heaters.
278. The risk of harm to residents of the building was high. A large number of individuals were exposed to a continuous risk. There was ready access to the plant rooms (as was demonstrated in the video clips we were shown) and residents stored their own belongings, including bicycles, in proximity to the live fuse board. Frequent power outages resulted in either the caretaker or residents having to reset switches thereby coming into close proximity with the unsafe installations. Proper and timely testing would have revealed the deficiencies eventually identified by Facit Testing in January 2018 and would have enabled effective steps to be taken at a much earlier stage to limit the risks to occupiers.
279. Having regard to these factors, and the evidence as a whole, we impose a penalty of £18,000 on Mr Sutton and a penalty of £12,000 on FLAL. These penalties are not within the ranges specified by the Council's policy, but we consider them to be appropriate taking into account the further penalties which will be imposed for breach of the improvement notice requiring remediation of the electrical faults."
Regulation 8
"We are satisfied that the paving in the courtyard was not in repair or in good order and that there was a breach of regulation 8(4)(a). It would have been obvious to anyone passing through this area that the surface was disturbed and a potential hazard."
"281. In the case of FLAL we consider this to be an offence attracting a high level of culpability (described in the appendix to the Council's policy document as involving 'actual foresight of, or wilful blindness to, the risk of offending but risk nevertheless taken'). The company's employees were fully aware of the problem. So too must Mr Sutton have been. He was responsible for periodic inspections and asset management, and on his regular visits to the building, and in his conversation with the caretaker, he cannot have failed to become aware of the defective paving. The problem was one of long-standing. There is no evidence that any attempt was ever made to remedy it until after the Council intervened. Disregard of the safety of communal areas was a feature of the management of Hardwick House, where rubbish was allowed to accumulate on the means of escape and emergency lighting was inoperative. For that reason, we assess Mr Sutton's personal responsibility as very high.
282. In agreement with the Council, we assess the degree of harm associated with the defective paving to be medium. Because the problem was obvious it was relatively easy for anyone living in the building to avoid the risk of tripping on the flagstones either by taking care when entering the building or using an alternative route. We nevertheless accept that a vulnerable individual, such as Mr Fox, or anyone who was distracted or unobservant, could have suffered serious injury if they had tripped.
283. Having regard to their relative responsibility the penalty we impose on FLAL is £6,000 and the penalty we impose on Mr Sutton is £10,000."
Regulation 10
"There was no suggestion that the number of residents increased between December 2017 and April 2018, nor that the number of bins available for their use reduced between those dates. As the evidence shows that the provision of bins was inadequate at the later date we are satisfied beyond doubt that it was also inadequate on the date alleged in the notice of intent, despite the absence of photographs showing the problem on that date."
"284. … As the final notice recorded, the bins were unsightly, malodorous and could attract pests such as flies and rats as well as being a target for arsonists. There were in the open rather than in a bin store and putrid odours were reported to be apparent within the building in the summer of 2017.
285. Once again, we regard Mr Sutton's culpability in respect of this offence as greater than that of FLAL (very high in his case, and high in FLAL's). The problem was obvious and of long standing. It could easily have been remedied. Mr Sutton was aware of it but contented himself with the knowledge that the provision of bins was considered sufficient for a hotel. He ignored the fact that the building was no longer being used as a hotel. His culpability is aggravated by the occurrence of a similar build-up of rubbish reported by Mr Allison on the staircase at Hardwick House.
286. We consider the level of harm to individuals to be medium, and we interpret harm in this context as including not just the risk of personal injury but also the degradation of the physical environment. The refuse area was unsightly and unpleasant and contributed to the poor residential conditions for the large number of individuals and families living at Max House.
287. For this offence we impose penalties of £6,000 on FLAL and £10,000 on Mr Sutton."
"The photographic evidence does not support the suggestion that the bins were overflowing on 19 December 2017, the date on which the regulation is alleged to have been breached. The only photographs taken on Ms Spencer's first visit show two large waste bins with a few stray items of waste on the ground near the bins, but the lids appear to be almost completely closed and the evidence could simply show that one resident was inconsiderate when disposing of their own rubbish."
Electrical installations improvement notice
"The evidence establishes conclusively that the work required by the improvement notices had not been completed by 29 June 2018. The date on which PPS actually began work is uncertain but we are satisfied beyond reasonable doubt that the only significant work to have been attended to within the time permitted was the remediation of the nine C1 defects. Other work started in July but on 31 August Ms Spencer inspected again and was told by Mark of PPS that blanks had been fitted to some distribution boards in individual flats but he could not tell her which and there was no written record of which flats had been worked on. When she inspected the property on 12 October 2018, Mr Sutton told her that there had been a delay to the work but that a certificate should be issued shortly. We were shown no evidence that an electrical testing certificate has ever been issued."
"295. We regard these offences as the most serious, because the condition of the installations exposed individuals and residents generally to a high risk of harm over a prolonged period and because of the appellants' dilatory approach to complying with the notices. The only work we can be sure was undertaken within the period allowed by the notice was the remediation of the most series code 1 breaches, which we accept was done as soon as they were notified to Mr Sutton.
296. The penalty we impose on Mr Sutton is higher because of his record of disregarding the safety of electrical installations at Hardwick House. That penalty is £25,000. The penalty we impose on FLAL is £23,000. We appreciate that, if the value of FLAL's assets exceeds its liabilities so that funds are eventually available for distribution among its shareholders, the total cost to Mr Sutton will be above £36,000 which would exceed the maximum of £30,000 for a single offence. We nevertheless consider that his personal responsibility for an offence of this seriousness requires to be recognised by a substantial penalty, and ought not to be diluted by the possibility (which such limited evidence as there is suggests is remote) that he will also be punished in his capacity as a shareholder for the company's separate offence."
Fire safety improvement notice
"297. … For the reasons we have already given in relation to the separate but related offences of breaching regulation 5 (see paragraph 275 above), and because no actual harm eventuated to any of the residents of the building, we do not consider that these offences can be classified as being at the very top of the scale of seriousness. Nevertheless, significant failures to comply fully with an improvement notice requiring extensive measures to protect a large number of residents against the risk of fire are undoubtedly a very serious matter. In Mr Sutton's case his culpability is aggravated by the disregard of fire precautions at Hardwick House.
298. The evidence concerning the extent of the progress made to comply with the notice is not impressive. The notice was served in February, and in August the incorrectly fitted or broken fire doors mentioned in it were found still to be present. Mr Bray's letter of 28 September 2018 identified the same issues of inadequate compartmentation and protection of escape routes which had featured in the original notice. The overloaded electrical systems were a significant cause of the prohibition order in October. Mr Sutton told us that his contractors were working their way round the building, addressing the various defects, but the evidence suggests that PPS were not instructed until just before, or just after, the expiry of the time for compliance with the notice. The only component of the notice which appears to have been largely complied with was the directions to provide suitable fixed heating in individual flats to reduce the use of portable heaters.
299. We leave out of account the requirement in this notice to complete the remediation and testing of the electrical circuits and installations in the building. The failure to carry out that work has already been penalised and it is necessary to guard against the imposition of double punishment.
300. We therefore put these offences in band 5 of the Council's policy matrix, attracting penalties of up to £20,000. Had it not been for the overlap with the notice concerning electrical installations we would have placed it in band 6. The penalty we impose on Mr Sutton is £18,000 and on FLAL £14,000."
Conclusion
"We do not think that, in aggregate, these sums are excessive or unjust, and we have taken account of the overlap between the circumstances of certain offences, and the fact that Mr Sutton may be penalised both in his individual capacity and in his capacity as a shareholder. We believe that the imposition of a significantly greater aggregate penalty on Mr Sutton properly reflects his responsibility for the conduct of the affairs of the company, his personal knowledge of the condition of the building, his responsibility for the occurrence of similar problems at Hardwick House and his greater ability to pay."
Lord Justice Moylan:
Lord Justice Underhill: