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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 >> Calderdale Metropolitan Borough Council v Windy Bank Dairy Farm Ltd & Anor [2010] EWHC 2929 (Admin) (12 November 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2010/2929.html Cite as: [2010] EWHC 2929 (Admin), [2011] JPL 754 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE LANGSTAFF
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CALDERDALE METROPOLITAN BOROUGH COUNCIL |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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(1) WINDY BANK DAIRY FARM LIMITED (2) STEVE QUINN |
Respondents |
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The Respondents were neither present nor represented
Hearing date: 23 July 2010
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Munby :
The statutory framework
An advertisement displayed on or in a vehicle normally employed as a moving vehicle | The vehicle is not used principally for the display of advertisements |
The background facts
"The most cost-effective way of focusing your advertising at your target demographic. Advertising can be a hit or miss business and mistakes can be costly. The problem is 'how to reach your target group cost-effectively and stand out from the crowd of your competitors'. At the same time you need to keep your costs real and under control.
JUNK MAIL? Just goes straight in the bin.
NEWSPAPERS/MAGAZINES? Here today, thrown tomorrow.
COMMERCIAL RADIO? Everybody tunes away from the ads.
TELEVISION? Expensive when there's an audience, pointless when there isn't
How can you reach hundreds of thousands of people without spending hundreds of thousands of pounds? Stand out from the crowd? Target specific areas?
SPONSOR AN ACTIVE VEHICLE!
We have some of the busiest motorways in the world. Literally millions of vehicles, every week, on just a few motorways. A captive audience. If you can compact your message so that it can be conveyed in an instant we can place it on the side of one of our trucks, directly in their line of view, 20' long and 8' high, in the areas of your choosing. Job done!
IT'S AS LOGICAL AS THAT!
Millions of vehicles passing an eye-catching display promoting your business. Choose your area, design your display, we'll do the rest.
Is It Legal ?
Of course it is. Primarily the farmer has full, free and unrestricted use of his chosen vehicle. He is fully entitled to use this vehicle anywhere on his farm. It may be used for transport of stock, feed, equipment, etc. or secure storage. This is its primary function, the advertising is secondary.
Our Services
We will have the chosen vehicle professionally signed to your specification. We will deliver the vehicle to the farmer. We will continue to maintain the vehicle at no extra cost. The vehicle will remain our responsibility at all times."
The proceedings
The Appeal
The Case Stated
"The prosecution was brought on the basis that
• advertisements were displayed on the sides of what may be described as vans and lorry trailers that were left in a static position for a long period of time on the First Respondent's land in such a position as to be seen from a major highway;
• those advertisements were observed by the Council's staff on seemingly random dates over a significant period of time; and
• they were in place without express consent under the 2007 Regulations and therefore the owner of the land was liable to conviction.
In respect of the Second Respondent, the prosecution was brought on the basis that:
• he had supplied the vans and lorry trailers, complete with advertising attached;
• he received payment from 'sponsors' for advertising their products, by advertisements that were attached to the side of the vehicles and trailers, that were provided to farmers for them to use on their land; and
• by so loaning these vehicles he was jointly legally responsible with the land owner for the breach of the Regulations and liable to conviction.
…
The Respondents claimed that in this case the advertisements in question were displayed on or in a vehicle normally employed as a moving vehicle, and that the vehicle in question was not used principally for the display of advertisements. This was disputed by the Applicant."
"The Court received evidence of several visits made by the Applicant's staff who had taken photographs of the number, type and position of several vans and lorry trailers on the First Respondent's land, adjacent to the M62 motorway. The dates of the taking of these photographs were stated as 20 October 2006, 9, 13 and 31 March 2009, and 13 and 22 June 2009. On cross-examination, the Applicant's main witness, Mr. Rizvi, accepted that there had been no measurements taken of the precise position of the vehicles, nor any notes made of licence plate numbers or trailer markings. The Court, whilst not being critical of Mr Rizvi, was therefore not satisfied beyond a reasonable doubt that these vehicles had not been moved between the various visits undertaken by him.
Mr. Rizvi further stated that in his view at least in respect of one vehicle the wheels were immobilised, such that it could not be considered to be a vehicle normally employed as a moving vehicle, but rather one that could not be used for any other principal purpose other than advertising, as it was in effect static. In cross-examination, he accepted that he did not have any engineering or mechanical qualifications to hold this view nor could he be certain of his view. The Court did not find this to be evidence upon which they could rely to the required standard.
The Court upon considering the photographs produced found as a fact that the vehicles and trailers were not the same ones shown in the pictures on all the dates on which they had been taken. In all the photographs there was a 40-foot trailer, but in the earlier photographs it appeared to be white whereas in later ones it was blue. In other photographs, some of the vehicles and trailers were clearly different.
The Applicant provided no evidence upon which the Court could make a finding of fact as to whether the 40-foot trailer had or had not been moved during the period of time covering the charges before the Court. Against this, the Second Respondent when giving his evidence produced documents, which were not successfully challenged, detailing a trailer being exchanged with another from its Shrewsbury base.
…
The Applicant provided details of a web-site (www.activevehiclehire.co.uk) said to be under the control of the Second Respondent which advertised 'The most effective way of focussing your advertising at your target demographic', and showed the method of advertising being to 'sponsor an active vehicle'. The applicant contended that this showed that the principal purpose of the vehicles was that of advertising and could be nothing else."
"The Second Respondent accepted that he was responsible for the web-site, and that he did receive payment in the form of 'sponsorship' from companies wishing to sponsor farmers to free usage of vehicles and trailers whilst displaying their 'business message'. The web-site indicated that this was legal on the basis that where a vehicle, with the sponsor's message displayed, was loaned to farmers, provided the farmer had satisfied him that the farmer would have the principal use for the vehicle or trailer, that was "other than for advertising".
The Court's finding on this was that there would be a breach of the Regulations unless the Respondents were able to satisfy the evidential burden on them to prove that the vehicles were being principally used for another purpose other than for advertising.
The Second Respondent gave evidence that
• he would contact farmers and offer them the use of vehicles and trailers he owned or controlled, free of charge to them;
• to receive a loan of such vehicles, the farmer had to sign an agreement that they would use the vehicles as moving vehicles, and that they had to have a principal function for them that was not advertising;
• to comply with this agreement the farmer receiving such a loaned vehicle had to keep an activity log, detailing amongst other things the odometer readings and a log of the use to which the vehicle was put.
Details of a specimen log were produced to the Court, covering February and March [the year not being specified], together with a copy of the tachograph dated 10 March.2009, which showed regular movement of the vehicle during that day. The Court was also provided with a string of emails between the First and Second Respondents dated between 9 and 24 February 2009, which purported to discuss that the farmer had a continued use for a loaned vehicle / trailer and that he was from time to time moving the vehicle / trailer he had been loaned."
"The Court accepted the evidence of the First Respondent that
• he had been contacted by the Second Respondent, and had agreed to have vehicles and trailers on his land, as he had legitimate uses for them that had nothing to do with advertising;
• he used the loaned vehicles as, in effect, a lockable mobile barn in which to store equipment and silage;
• whilst the 40-foot trailer was seen in approximately the same place on different occasions by the Applicant's staff, it had been moved on a number of occasions;
• he had a 'dolly' to take the trailer from the place seen to his farmhouse to load it, and then return it to where he needed the items kept in the trailer;
• it was seen approximately in the same place due to the wet conditions in his fields during the months in question; and
• where the trailer was repeatedly placed was on an area of hard standing."
"The Court found as a fact that the Second Respondent had no control over where on his land the First Respondent placed the vehicles loaned to him. Nor was there any evidence before the Court that he had sought to influence the First Respondent as to where any of the vehicles he had loaned were caused to be, in relation to the major highway, when not being used.
On the basis of that evidence, the Court was satisfied that it was more likely than not:
• that the vehicles shown in the photographs taken in March and June 2009 had been moved on a number of occasions,
• that the use to which they had been put was principally that of assisting a farmer tend his fields, feed his animals and maintain the perimeters of his land; and
• that their principal use as far as the First Respondent (a farmer) was concerned was not for advertising.
The Court was satisfied on the balance of probabilities that the vehicles shown in the prosecution photographs were normally used as moving vehicles, as opposed to being static vehicles.
The Court was further satisfied on the balance of probabilities that the vehicles shown in the prosecution photographs had a principal use to the farmer that was other than being to facilitate the display of advertisements.
The Court found that the First Respondent had used the vehicles and trailers in a way that excluded the need to obtain consent from the local planning authority under the Regulations. Therefore, whilst the Second Respondent was clearly making a profit from loaning the vehicles in question to the First Respondent, he was also provided with a factual situation, by the farmer's actions, which afforded him an exemption from the need to obtain consent from the authority, to display the advertisements he had clearly placed on the vehicles and trailers that were the subject of the prosecution."
"1 Were the vehicles on which the advertisements in this case were being displayed used 'principally for the display of advertisements', within the meaning of Class B of Schedule 1 to the Town and Country Planning (Control of Advertisements) (England) Regulations 2007, in circumstances where many of them had been brought onto the land by a commercial enterprise whose stated purpose (according to the homepage of its website) was to offer "the most cost-effective way of focusing your advertising" to companies wishing to promote their goods and services, and whose "clients" (as publicised on the website) were all companies of such a character?
2 Did the fact that the farmer made some use of those vehicles for agricultural purposes for as long as they remained on his land detract from the fact that their principal use was the for the display of advertisements?
3 Did the fact that the vehicles were driven or transported on to the site, possibly moved around the site, and would in due course presumably be driven or transported off it, detract from the fact that their principal use as long as they remained on the site was for the display of the advertisements?
4 Having found as a fact that the First Respondent and occupier of the land had used the vans and lorry trailers for a principal purpose other than for advertising, was the Court correct in assigning that principal usage to the second respondent Steve Quinn in respect of the one date he was said to have breached the Regulations on the one charge he faced, since he had no day to day control whether the vehicles and trailers were moved or not by the land owner where the vehicles were placed?"
The grounds of appeal
Discussion
"If the agreement satisfied all the requirements of a tenancy, then the agreement produced a tenancy and the parties cannot alter the effect of the agreement by insisting that they only created a licence. The manufacture of a five-pronged implement for manual digging results in a fork even if the manufacturer, unfamiliar with the English language, insists that he intended to make and has made a spade."
"Concentrating for the moment on column 1, conventionally the words "normally employed" can bear the meaning "usually employed by the user" or alternatively "being employed according to the norm". There is a difference between the two usages of language which may have a critical effect upon the operation of the exemption. If the question to be answered is "how did the user normally employ the vehicle?" the attention of the tribunal is drawn to a general state of affairs existing at the time of the alleged breach of planning control. If, on the other hand, the question is "was the vehicle being used according to the norm?" the tribunal's attention is drawn to the specific state of affairs at the point in time when it is alleged that planning control was breached.
Turning to column 2, the words "used principally" may convey either general usage to which the vehicle was put or to the use specifically being made of the vehicle at the time of the alleged breach."
"I therefore turn to the terms of class B in an attempt to examine the intention behind the provision. First, it is noticeable that the singular "advertisement" is used in column 1 but the plural "advertisements" in column 2. It can be safely assumed, in my view, since these two words are so closely juxtaposed, that the draftsman meant what he wrote. For reasons to which I shall come, it is clear that each class of exemption, by description in column 1, is aimed towards a specific advertisement which must, it seems to me, refer to the advertisement alleged by the enforcement authority to constitute the breach. On the contrary, the use of the plural in class B column 2 opens up column 2 from a consideration of the single advertisement under consideration to advertisements in general displayed on the vehicle. If this was not intentional, it is my view that the condition would read "the vehicle was not being principally used for the advertisement" or similar. In my view, it is tolerably clear that the mischief the draftsman had in mind was a vehicle whose principal purpose was advertising, such as a vehicle employed for the purpose of being a moving advertising hoarding, rather than a vehicle employed principally as a commercial vehicle conveying passengers or making deliveries and such like."
"I conclude that, as a matter of construction, … Column 2 does concern the use to which the vehicle is, as a moving vehicle, principally put. While it is possible to envisage an alternative construction, namely that the words "used principally for the display of advertisements" mean only "used principally for advertising", such a construction requires the insertion of words which, in my view, strains the meaning of column 2 unnecessarily."
"The conclusion to which I have come is that class B column 1 of schedule 1 relates to the moment that the advertisement is being displayed by the vehicle and to the use to which the vehicle is then being put …
… In my judgment, column 1 is concerned with the specific occasion on which the advertisement is being displayed and the use to which the vehicle is being put on that occasion. In the case, for example, of a commercial vehicle, if at any time it is not being normally employed as a moving vehicle it will not be exempt. Even if it is being normally employed as a moving vehicle, its advertisement will not be exempt if the vehicle is principally used for the display of advertisements. I do not accept the argument that this construction of column 1 will render liable advertisements on commercial vehicles ordinarily parked up. Parking of a vehicle is an ordinary incidence of the normal employment of a moving vehicle. It will be exempt unless it is established it is principally used as a display of advertisements, in which case, the column 1 exemption will be dis-applied by the column 2 qualification."
"As to that question we heard little or no argument. The answer to it I think is that such was the normal use of the vehicle."
The main focus of the prosecutor's argument on the appeal was on question (i), in relation to which Watkins LJ said this (Transcript page 5):
"The challenge mounted in this court against the findings of the justices … really boiled down to this … that no reasonable bench of justices could have come to the conclusion that the primary use of these two vehicles was for the purpose of, on the one hand, use as a toilet, and on the other, use as a store for rubbish when the market was in operation … In my judgment on the evidence upon which the justices were entitled to act, using no matter what test – objective or subjective – they were entitled, as a matter of fact, to reach these conclusions. I cannot possibly bring myself to say that no reasonable bench of justices, properly directing themselves, could have so concluded as to what the primary use of each of those vehicles was at the material time. That is sufficient to dispose of that part of the argument."
He added (Transcript page 6) that:
"It may be that … this respondent is rather fortunate, but … it is not the opinion of this court which matters. What matters … is the judgment of the justices which can only be flawed if this court can bring itself to say that no reasonable bench could have come to the conclusions which this bench did … I would dismiss this appeal."
Mr Justice Langstaff :