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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions >> Biffa Waste Services Ltd v R. [2020] EWCA Crim 827 (03 July 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2020/827.html Cite as: [2020] EWCA Crim 827, [2021] Env LR 4 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE CROWN COURT AT WOOD GREEN
HH Judge Auerbach
T20180022
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE LAVENDER
and
HH JUDGE CHAMBERS QC
Sitting as a Judge of the Court of Appeal Criminal Division
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BIFFA WASTE SERVICES LIMITED |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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THE QUEEN |
Respondent |
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Mr S Mehta (instructed by Environment Agency) for the Respondent
Hearing dates: 23rd, 24th June 2020
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Crown Copyright ©
Covid-19 Protocol: This judgment will be handed down by the judge's clerk remotely by circulation to the parties' representatives by email and release to BAILII. The date and time for hand-down is deemed to be 10:00am Friday 03/07/2020.
Lord Justice Holroyde:
The legal framework:
"convinced that States should take necessary measures to ensure that the management of hazardous wastes and other wastes including their transboundary movement and disposal is consistent with human health and the environment whatever the place of disposal"
and
"convinced also that the transboundary movement of hazardous waste and other wastes should be permitted only when the transport and the ultimate disposal of such wastes is environmentally sound".
"taking all practicable steps to ensure that waste is managed in a manner that will protect human health and the environment against adverse effects which may result from such waste".
"Exports prohibition
1 Exports from the Community of the following wastes destined for recovery in countries to which the OECD Decision does not apply are prohibited:
(a) wastes listed as hazardous in Annex V;(b) wastes listed in Annex V Part 3;
…(g) wastes which the competent authority of dispatch has reason to believe will not be managed in an environmentally sound manner, as referred to in Article 49, in the country of destination concerned."
"Wastes listed in List B of Part 1 or which are among the non-hazardous waste listed in Part (i.e. wastes not marked with an asterisk) are covered by the export prohibition if they are contaminated by other materials to an extent which
(a) increases the risks associated with the waste sufficiently to render it appropriate for submission to the procedure of prior written notification and consent, when taking into account the hazardous characteristics listed in Annex III to Directive 91/689/EC; or
(b) prevents the recovery of the waste in an environmentally sound manner."
"The following materials, provided they are not mixed with hazardous wastes:
Waste and scrap of paper or paperboard of:
- unbleached paper or paperboard or of corrugated paper or paperboard
- other paper or paperboard, made mainly of bleached chemical pulp not coloured in the mass
- paper or paperboard made mainly of mechanical pulp (for example, newspapers, journals and similar printed matter)
- other, including but not limited to
1 laminated paperboard,2 unsorted scrap".
Part 3 includes category Y46: "Waste collected from households". For convenience, we shall refer to this as "Y46 household waste". Thus the export prohibition applies to Y46 household waste but not to B3020 paper.
"23. Prohibitions on export of certain waste for recovery to non-OECD Decision countries
A person commits an offence if, in breach of Article 36(1), he transports waste specified in that Article that is destined for recovery in a country to which the OECD Decision does not apply".
"32. Therefore, 'municipal/household waste' does not cease to be 'amber waste' and therefore does not come within the green list unless it has been collected separately or properly sorted.
33. As is clear from the introduction to the green list of waste, waste may not, regardless of whether or not it is included on that list, be moved as green waste if it is contaminated by other materials to an extent which (a) increases the risks associated with the waste sufficiently to render it appropriate for inclusion in the amber or red lists, or (b) prevents the recovery of the waste in an environmentally sound manner.
34. The answer to the first question must therefore be that the expression 'municipal/household waste' referred to under AD160 in the amber list in Annex III to the Regulation, as amended by Decision 94/721, includes both waste which for the most part consists of waste mentioned in the green list in Annex II to the regulation, mixed with other categories of waste appearing on that list, and waste mentioned on the green list mixed with a small quantity of materials not referred to on that list"
"42. We accept that a very high standard is required of operators in this field. We are mindful of the difficulties faced by commercial operators conducting what is an important and valuable business, not only for them but in the public interest. We are mindful of the extreme difficulty, to which reference has been made, in setting a helpful test of general application when considering and deciding what comes within the definition of household waste. We are not unmindful of the difficulties involved in juries deciding this issue. Juries are familiar with having to decide issues of fact, what evidence to accept. They ae accustomed to considering the state of mind of witnesses and defendants, whether they were acting dishonestly, whether there was consent. A decision as to whether household waste has been converted into waste paper is a decision of a somewhat different kind from those they are normally called upon to make.
43. There are those who take the view that juries are not the most appropriate forum for trials in environmental cases such as this. We express no view about that, but we do not understate the difficult task of a jury in making a decision and the difficult task of the judge in summing up the case to them.
44. Having said that, we are quite unpersuaded that to proceed with a trial as to whether this particular consignment is proved to be household waste is an abuse of the process of the court. The judge will have regard to the 2006 regulation and the 2007 Regulations when giving his directions to the jury. We would contemplate his raising the possibility of a breach being so small as to be minimal and not preventing waste from ceasing to be household waste and becoming waste paper under B3020. That will depend on the circumstances, including the nature and the quality of the contamination and the amount of it. We are confident that a judge will be able to give sufficient directions to a jury to enable them to make the decision as to whether a particular consignment is properly described as household waste and to perform their task by applying that test to the facts."
The facts:
The criminal proceedings:
"Accordingly, whether there was sufficient household waste contamination for these consignments properly to be styled as Y46 household waste (rather than the B3020 mixed paper designation given in the export documentation) was a matter of fact and degree for the jury. To seek further to introduce the subject-matter of the chapeau into a case of this particular kind, given the nature of the prosecution here undertaken, would in our view be to introduce an irrelevant and complicating distraction. …"
"A: Yes, it is core to what we do, we only exist because of environmental legislation so it would be nonsensical for us not to take our responsibilities seriously and our staff take it seriously because whilst it is a basic service, we understand the importance of it because we do it every day and we understand how difficult it is.
Q: To ask you that from a slightly different point of view, is it good commercial sense for you to take your responsibilities seriously?
A: Yes, but we do it for both reasons, it is commercially important, but we would always do it from the moral point of view as well."
"whether it meets Chinese standards of acceptability, whether the Chinese could successfully process what they receive into a form that is useful or acceptable to them".
"Q. So tell me what the answer is in relation to the figures that Biffa produced at divider two. How much was not being picked up in relation to these statistics, these analyses?
A. Right, in terms of that analysis at that time our bale breaks would've shown less than 1.5% contamination.
Q. Can you show me the figures for that?
A. I'm at a loss here."
"if he is responsible for the making of an express or implied assertion which is apt to give the court or jury a false or misleading impression about the defendant."
Section 105(6) provides that evidence is admissible under section 101(1)(f) –
"only if it goes no further than is necessary to correct the false impression".
The summing up:
"So, you should not convict merely because you find, if you do, that there were some contaminants in each consignment. Rather, your task will be to decide what you think the facts are about the contents of the containers and, if you find that contaminants were present, about their nature, quality and quantity, however you decide to assess it. You will then need to form your own judgment, using your common sense, members of the jury, as to whether the prosecution have made you sure, on the given count, that the nature, quality and quantity of non-paper items that were present, means that you can be sure that the given consignment amounted to waste collected from households"
The grounds of appeal:
Ground 1: the judge erred in law in excluding, as inadmissible and irrelevant, factual and expert evidence as to (1) whether the disputed waste complied with Chinese standards for recyclable paper, and was recoverable (ie, recyclable) as paper in China; and (2) whether the waste could be recovered in an environmentally sound manner in China.
Ground 2: the judge erred in acceding to the respondent's application that evidence be admitted of the appellant's bad character in order to correct an apparent false impression under s101(1)(f) of CJA 2003.
The submissions:
Discussion and conclusions: