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England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Barrett v Director of Public Prosecutions [2009] EWHC 423 (Admin) (10 February 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2009/423.html Cite as: [2009] EWHC 423 (Admin), [2010] RTR 2 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
DIVISIONAL COURT
Strand London WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE DAVID CLARKE
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BARRETT | Claimant | |
v | ||
DIRECTOR OF PUBLIC PROSECUTIONS | Defendant |
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Mr N Sefhon (instructed by the CPS) appeared on behalf of the Defendant
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Crown Copyright ©
"There is in existence a public footpath within Kiln Park to which members of the public have unrestricted access. The public footpath falls within the definition of 'highway'. 'Road' means any highway and any other road to which the public has access. But the tarmacadam road within Kiln Park has the physical character of a defined or definable route or way with ascertained or ascertainable edges leading from one point to another with the function of serving as a means of access enabling travellers to move conveniently from one point to another along a definable route to the beach and golf course. By driving within Kiln Park on the tarmacadam routes, the appellant was driving while disqualified on a road within the meaning of section 192 of the Road Traffic Act 1988."
"Whether the Justices, having heard the evidence, were entitled to conclude that as 'road' means any highway and other road to which the public has access, that the tarmacadam roads within Kiln Park constitute roads for the purpose of the Road Traffic Act."
14. Dunmill v Director of Public Prosecution [2004] EWHC Admin 1700 also was an excess alcohol prosecution, the appellant there having driven his car within the Oven Camp Site at Hayling Island. Although he could have been charged with driving on a road or other public place, he was only charged with driving on a road and it was too late in this court to widen that wording. The site contained some 350 plots, on 180 of which caravans were sited, with a tarmac perimeter road and what were described as "grass roadways" between the caravan and tent pitch sites. The Justices there were advised by their clerk in the following terms:
"'Road' means any highway and any other road to which the public has access . . . In determining whether a place is a 'road' for the purposes of the 1988 Act, the question to be asked, if the place is not a highway, is whether it is a road to which the general public have actual and legal access. A road has the physical character of a defined or definable route or way, with ascertained or ascertainable edges, leading from one point to another with the function of serving as a means of access enabling travellers to move conveniently from one point to another along a definable route."
Having received that advice, the Justices convicted the appellant on the basis that the place where he was driving was one to which the public had access. McCombe J allowed the appeal on the ground that the Justices had concentrated on that question without first considering what he described as the logically anterior question whether this was a road at all. He went on in this way at paragraph 16:
"Looking at the evidence which the justices recite in their case, the only material that we find is that the collision, to which admittedly Mr Dunmill was a party, occurred on a grass area, and there was the evidence of Mr MacCullum who had seen skid marks, not necessarily near the collision site, but apparently near the tent where the appellant had been staying, which strayed onto a roadway. It does not seem to me, therefore, that that slender evidence was sufficient to take the site in this case out of what one might generically have thought a caravan site to be, namely not 'a road' as such. Moreover, it seems to me that those two features of evidence were not sufficient in any event to establish this as being a road within the meaning of the charge."