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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 >> Thames Water Utilities Ltd v Bromley Magistrates' Court & Anor [2013] EWHC 472 (Admin) (20 March 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2013/472.html Cite as: [2013] Env LR 25, [2013] EWHC 472 (Admin), [2013] WLR(D) 114, [2013] WLR 3641, [2013] 13 EG 75, [2013] 1 WLR 3641 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
And
MR JUSTICE SINGH
____________________
Thames Water Utilities Ltd. |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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Bromley Magistrates' Court |
Defendant |
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- and - |
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The Environment Agency |
Interested Party |
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Mr Mark Harris and Mr Mark Watson (instructed by the Environment Agency) for the Interested Party
Hearing dates: 6th November 2012
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Crown Copyright ©
LORD JUSTICE GROSS:
INTRODUCTION
" (1) ….a person shall not –
(a) deposit controlled waste, or knowingly cause or knowingly permit controlled waste to be deposited in or on any land unless a waste management licence authorising the deposit is in force and the deposit is in accordance with the licence;"
" It shall be a defence for a person charged with an offence under this section to prove –
(a) that he took all reasonable precautions and exercised all due diligence to avoid the commission of the offence;…"
" (1) ….it shall be the duty of any person who imports, produces, carries, keeps, treats or disposes of controlled waste or, as a broker, has control of such waste, to take all such measures applicable to him in that capacity as are reasonable in the circumstances –
(a) to prevent any contravention by any other person of section 33 above;
……
(b) to prevent the escape of the waste from his control or that of any other person; …."
i) Thames has also appealed to the Crown Court against the sentence imposed by DJ Lynch; as we understand it, that appeal remains in abeyance pending the outcome of the present proceedings.
ii) The Defendant ("Bromley Magistrates' Court") has indicated that any application for costs against DJ Lynch would be opposed and the District Judge would wish to be heard on any such application.
iii) Both Thames and the EA applied to have the present claim transferred to the Upper Tribunal; that application was refused by order of Ouseley J, dated 21st December, 2011, for the reasons he there set out (and which need not be repeated here).
THE JUDGMENT UNDER REVIEW
" 26. …I have no hesitation in finding that the use of the verb 'deposit' at the beginning of Section 33(1)(a) clearly covers the unintended and unwanted escapes of sewage from the defendant's system as in this case. Effectively, whenever or however sewage escapes from the defendant's system, it has been 'put, place(d) or set down' by them within the ordinary linguistic meaning of the word 'deposit'. ….
28. Effectively, whenever and however sewage/controlled waste came out of the defendant's system in Wimborne Way and St James Avenue this was an escape/leakage from the defendant's system and as such became a deposit within section 33. The issue of how and why such leakages/escapes may have occurred will be a relevant issue in establishing any defence under Section 33(7). "
DISCUSSION
" If, without lawful authority or excuse….(b) a person deposits any thing whatsoever on a highway…he shall be guilty of an offence…"
The defendants were convicted. Allowing the appeal, Donaldson LJ (giving the leading judgment of this Court) said this (at p.505):
" I think that the deposit of materials in this context almost certainly does mean 'consciously and deliberately depositing them' and, if there is any doubt about it, it must be resolved in favour of a narrower construction, this being a section which creates an offence. "
" ….The verb 'to deposit' is a term of wide connotation, apt to describe any state of affairs in which one object is placed upon another. Like all words of wide import, it is liable to attract shades of meaning which, according to the context, indicate that the placement contemplated shall have a particular connotation …..It is therefore an expression to be judged in the light of its context, and, being so common a word, the number of differing contexts in which it is liable to occur is almost limitless. But unless a particular context otherwise dictates, it should be interpreted in the broad sense in which it is used in everyday speech. One of the consequences of its flexibility is that there may be cases in which it will be difficult to determine whether a particular placement has the characteristics of a deposit or not…. "
i) I acknowledge some attraction in Mr. Tromans' submission that, inherent in the meaning of the word "deposit" is the common denominator of doing something intentionally. Further, he can properly derive a degree of assistance from the judgment of this Court in Remet (supra), albeit that a different statute was under consideration.ii) Conversely, it can fairly be said that Mr. Harris derives support from Waite LJ's observations in Scott (supra), namely, that the word is one of wide connotation, likely to attract "shades of meaning". Moreover, as will become apparent, I regard the dicta of Carnwath LJ in the 2008 decision as of significant persuasive authority.
iii) Without, with respect, in any way casting doubt upon it, I am not persuaded that the judgment of Laws LJ in Gateway (supra) advances the argument; it is one thing to conclude that escape does not extend to deliberate dumping and that deliberate dumping comes within the meaning of s.33(1)(a) of the Act; it does not at all follow that "deposit" in s.33(1)(a) does not extend to an unintended escape.
" The structure of the section is that the word 'knowingly' qualifies on its face two (out of three) of the cases identified in its first part; …..The mitigation of the strictness of section 33(1)(a) – and indeed of section 33(1) and (6) generally – is on this basis to be found in the exceptions provided by section 33(7)…. "
i) It is necessary to keep in mind that s.33(7) applies to all limbs of s.33(1)(a), including those qualified by the word "knowingly". It would therefore be too simplistic to say that the importation into the first limb of s.33(1)(a) of a requirement that the "deposit" must be "intentional", would emasculate the defence under s.33(7). Plainly, the legislature did not think so with regard to the second and third limbs of s.33(1)(a). Although it is not altogether easy to see what scope there is – realistically – for a due diligence defence in respect a prohibited activity undertaken "knowingly" or intentionally, examples can be suggested in the case of a corporate defendant: i.e., the company has conducted itself with due diligence but an employee (other than an alter ego) has knowingly or intentionally infringed the section.ii) That said, it remains the case that in respect of the first limb of s.33(1)(a), the "fit" with s.33(7) is much happier on the EA than on the Thames case. On the EA case the scheme is obvious and proportionate. It is, to my mind, exactly what Mance J had in mind (obiter) in Shanks & McEwan (supra), at p.342: namely, the strictness of s.33(1)(a), first limb is mitigated by the availability of the s.33(7) defence. Moreover, such a construction confers the efficacy of deterrence (so according with the "rational and moral justification" for strict liability), while keeping within acceptable limits: see, Tesco Ltd v Nattrass [1972] AC 153, at p.194, per Lord Diplock.
" Article 1
1. For the purposes of this Directive:
(a) 'waste' shall mean any substance or object in the categories set out in Annex 1 which the holder discards or intends or is required to discard;
(d) 'management' shall mean the collection, transport, recovery and disposal of waste…..
Article 2
1. The following shall be excluded from the scope of this Directive:
(b) where they are already covered by other legislation:
(iv) waste waters…."
" 33. …the rules in question must not merely relate to a particular substance, but must contain precise provisions organising its management as waste within the meaning of article 1(d) of the Directive. Otherwise, the management of that waste would be organised neither on the basis of Directive 75/442 nor on that of another Directive nor on that of national legislation, which would be contrary both to the wording of article 2(1)(b) of Directive 75/442 and to the very objective of the Community legislation on waste….
34. It follows that, for Community or national legislation to be regarded as 'other legislation', it must contain precise provisions organising the management of waste and ensure a level or protection which is at least equivalent to that resulting from Directive 75/442…."
" 27. ….the verb 'to discard' must be interpreted in the light not only of the aims of Directive 75/442, that is, the protection of human health and the environment against harmful effects caused by the collection, transport, treatment, storage and tipping of waste, but also of article 174(2) EC…..
The verb 'to discard' therefore cannot be interpreted restrictively….
28. The fact that waste water escapes from a sewerage network does not affect its character as 'waste' within the meaning of Directive 75/442. The escape of waste water from a sewerage network constitutes an event by which the sewerage undertaker, the holder of that waste water, 'discards it'. The fact that the waste water is spilled accidentally does not alter the outcome…."
We were not addressed more generally on the relationship between the waste directive and the Act nor on the distinction between the words "discard" and "deposit", so caution is called for before applying these observations of the ECJ to s.33(1)(a) of the Act. Nonetheless, these observations are instructive as to the policy underlying the directive in question, relating to the same field as the Act.
" 20. The fact of the matter is that there are no 'precise provisions' governing the management of waste which escapes unintentionally from the sewerage system. Accordingly they are not 'covered by other legislation' in the sense explained by the ECJ. That may not be surprising, since the escapes are by definition unplanned, and therefore outside the scope of the ordinary management regime. However, that is no reason for them not being subject to the criminal sanctions otherwise thought appropriate for deposit of controlled waste. There is nothing unfair in this. If ….[Thames]…can show that it took all reasonable precautions and exercised all due diligence, it will have a defence.
21. Accordingly, I conclude that the alleged escapes of untreated sewage were within the scope of s.33, and that the cases should be remitted to the magistrates' court to determine on the merits……
23. ….. I would therefore answer the preliminary question by holding that sewage escaping from pipes maintained by a statutory undertaker is 'controlled waste' within the meaning of s.33 of the EPA and remit the matter to the magistrates' court."
i) I can see nothing in either the 2007 or 2008 decisions which lends support to the Thames argument. There is a plain requirement of certainty of coverage, based on underlying policy objectives. The urban waste water directive applies to that which is within the system. The waste directive constitutes, in effect, the default option in respect of waste which has escaped from a sewerage network unless the escape is covered by "other legislation" as explained in the 2007 or 2008 decisions. The difficulty for Thames is that, on facts such as those here, this clear framework leaves no room for the s.34 duty "to prevent the escape" to bite until the waste has already escaped and is no longer in the control of Thames.ii) The notion, advanced by Mr. Tromans, that the urban waste water directive ceased to apply and s.34 of the Act comes into play at the earlier point in time when there is a breakdown of a non-compliant system, strikes me, with respect, as a recipe for uncertainty. It thus runs counter to the tenor of both the 2007 and 2008 decisions. It is not clear to me whether (on the Thames case) every such breakdown would result in one regime (the urban waste water directive) ceasing to apply and another (the waste directive) coming into play. If substantial non-compliance of the network is required, further questions would inevitably arise as to what constituted substantial non-compliance. The difficulties are obvious and unwarranted.
iii) Against this background, while in no way decisive, it is perhaps unsurprising that the Thames case before this Court in 2008 was "not clearly articulated" (at [19]) and that Thames, on that occasion, did not contend for the application of s.34 until well after the sewage had escaped from the pipes.
" ….. (1) there is a presumption of law that mens rea is required before a person can be held guilty of a criminal offence; (2) the presumption is particularly strong where the offence is 'truly criminal' in character; (3) the presumption applies to statutory offences, and can be displaced only if this is clearly or by necessary implication the effect of the statute; (4) the only situation in which the presumption can be displaced is where the statute is concerned with an issue of social concern, and public safety is such an issue; (5) even where a statute is concerned with such an issue, the presumption of mens rea stands unless it can also be shown that the creation of strict liability will be effective to promote the objects of the statute by encouraging greater vigilance to prevent the commission of the prohibited act. "
MR JUSTICE SINGH: