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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 >> Bickford-Smith, R (On the Application Of) v Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs [2022] EWHC 2622 (Admin) (20 October 2022) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2022/2622.html Cite as: [2022] EWHC 2622 (Admin) |
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KING'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
2 Park Street, Cardiff, CF10 1ET |
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B e f o r e :
SITTING AS A JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
____________________
THE KING on the application of IMOGEN BICKFORD-SMITH |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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THE SECRETARY OF STATE FOR ENVIRONMENT, FOOD AND RURAL AFFAIRS |
Defendant |
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Tim Johnston (instructed by The Government Legal Department) for the Defendant
Hearing date: 10 October 2022
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Crown Copyright ©
This judgment was handed down remotely by circulation to the parties or their representatives by email and release to The National Archives. The date and time for hand-down is deemed to be 10.30 a.m. on 20 October 2022.
His Honour Judge Keyser K.C. :
Introduction and Summary
"The 2020 BPS (as a system based on use of the common) was unlawful, as it applied to the New Forest, because it failed to make provision for the payment of subsidies to commoners in relation to their participation in non-productive activities that maintained the common in a state that make [sic] it suitable for grazing or cultivation and therefore coupled the payment of subsidies to agricultural production."
By paragraph 3 Judge Lambert made a costs order in favour of the claimant. He then set out the reasons for making the Order, which were in part as follows:
"An order quashing the 2020 BPS is not appropriate. Prerogative orders, declaratory orders and injunctions are discretionary remedies. The court has a wide discretion whether to grant relief at all and in what form to grant it. The court may refuse to exercise its discretion where the grant of the remedy is unnecessary or where there is no injustice. It would be unjust and unnecessary to set aside an executed scheme where there is no significant or substantial injustice to the claimant. The declaration that the defendant agrees should be made is sufficient remedy in your case. As explained, the Secretary of State could not shut down and rerun the 2020 BPS. If there should be some degree of injustice this is so slight that it must be tolerated. …
The application for a mandatory order requiring the Secretary of State to operate a lawful scheme represents a mandatory order for the future which cannot be drafted with sufficient precision. In any event such an order is not required because as the defendant states correctly 'It can be presumed that a public authority will conscientiously act in accordance with the law, to the best of its abilities'."
Judge Lambert recorded that, as the Order had been made without a hearing, a party affected by it might apply to have it set aside, varied or stayed. That is what the claimant has done.
The Basic Payment Scheme
"4. Subsidy payments under the SPS are based on entitlements denominated in relation to the hectares of land on which agricultural activity is carried on by a farmer. In relation to rights to use common land in the New Forest, at the commencement of the SPS in 2005 the Secretary of State made an allocation of entitlements to claim subsidy denominated in hectares (as for ordinary farmland owned by a farmer) by reference to a formula designating so many notional hectares of land per relevant animal (or livestock unit) the farmer was entitled to put out to graze in the New Forest at that time. The arrangements put in place for allocation of entitlements in relation to rights of common in the New Forest were specific to that region, reflecting its own particular circumstances.
5. In order to receive a subsidy payment in any year, a farmer has to have an entitlement to payment (denominated in so many hectares) in that year and has to activate that entitlement. The farmer can activate a hectare's worth of entitlement by declaring to the RPA that they are carrying on 'agricultural activity' on a hectare of farmland or by relevant exercise of rights in relation to a notional hectare in relation to New Forest common land. I will refer to entitlement rights as 'entitlement hectares' and to the extent of activation of those rights as 'usage hectares'.
6. Entitlement hectares were allocated to farmers in a once-and-for-all distribution of entitlement rights at the commencement of the SPS in 2005. Once distributed, entitlements became a form of property which is distinct from the underlying farmland or farming rights from which they originally derived. A farmer may sell entitlement hectares to another farmer, without selling the land or rights from which they originally derived. The purchasing farmer may activate the entitlement hectares so purchased, so as to claim subsidy payments, by declaring land on which he is carrying on agricultural activity elsewhere; i.e. the usage hectares used to activate entitlement hectares do not have to relate to the same land. Thus it is possible for a farmer who farms, say, three hectares of land in Devon to purchase three entitlement hectares allocated in relation to New Forest farmland or rights of common and to activate those New Forest entitlement hectares by declaring to the RPA the usage hectares on which she carries on her activity in the current year in Devon. There is an active market in entitlement hectares.
7. As explained below, the notion of 'agricultural activity' used for the purposes of the EU's SPS regime is a wide one. It covers both active use of farmland for production of crops or animals and also the maintenance of land in 'good agricultural and environmental condition' without putting it to productive use. Thus usage hectares which are declared in order to activate entitlement hectares may be land which is employed for production of food or which is simply being maintained to appropriate 'good agricultural and environmental condition' standards."
"Where an area is used in common, the competent authorities shall allocate it between the individual beneficiaries in proportion to their use or right of use of it."
This form of wording ("in proportion to their use or right of use of it") was the same as had been used for the corresponding provision for the SPS: see Article 8.2 of Part II of Commission Regulation (EC) No. 795/2004; also the judgment of Sales J at [72].
"'agricultural activity' means:
(i) production, rearing or growing of agricultural products, including harvesting, milking, breeding animals, and keeping animals for farming purposes,
(ii) maintaining an agricultural area in a state which makes it suitable for grazing or cultivation without preparatory action going beyond usual agricultural methods and machineries, based on criteria established by Member States on the basis of a framework established by the Commission, or
(iii) carrying out a minimum activity, defined by Member States, on agricultural areas naturally kept in a state suitable for grazing or cultivation".
"'agricultural activity' means the production, rearing or growing of agricultural products including harvesting, milking breeding animals and keeping animals for farming purposes, or maintaining land in good agricultural and environmental condition as established under Article 5."
In the First JR Claim, Sales J held that the mere non-exercise of rights of common was capable of being activity that "maintain[ed] land in good agricultural and environmental condition" for the purposes of Article 2(c):
"18. In my view, the RPA is entitled to treat the non-exercise of rights of common as contributing to the maintenance of common land in 'good agricultural and environmental condition' and hence as 'agricultural activity' for the purposes of activating the notional hectare entitlements in respect of such rights and giving rise to payments of subsidy. If excessive use were made by farmers of grazing rights of common, that could jeopardise the 'good agricultural and environmental condition' of the common land to which they relate. Accordingly, I consider that the decision of a farmer not to exercise his rights of common by putting animals out to graze on common land operates as a contribution to avoidance of over-grazing of that land and has a sufficient link to the maintenance of that land in 'good agricultural and environmental condition' as to justify the characterisation of that decision as 'agricultural activity' for the purposes of the SPS."
For the defendant, Mr Johnston submits that Sales J's reasoning does not apply to the new definition in Article 4(1)(c) of the Direct Payments Regulation and that the mere non-exercise of grazing rights is not sufficient to fall within the definition; rather, commoners who are not engaged in what has been referred to as "productive agricultural activity" (that is, under Article 4(1)(c)(i)) are now required to engage in certain activities—the precise nature of which was left to the Member States to specify—to maintain the agricultural area in a state suitable for grazing or cultivation. In my opinion, that submission is correct. The new wording seems naturally designed to require more than mere inactivity, and this is confirmed by recitals (7) and (10) to the Direct Payments Regulation, which show an intention that payments should only be made to farmers who "carry out a certain minimum activity."
This Application
"The 2020 BPS was unlawful, as it applied to the New Forest, because it coupled the payment of all subsidies to marking fees paid per animal. The direct correlation between the subsidy paid and the number of animals produced/identified on marking receipts was contrary to a primary objective of the BPS, that entitlement to the payment of aid should be de-coupled from production."
The claimant submitted that, although use could lawfully be used as a threshold condition for the payment of subsidies (that is, there must be some usage to qualify for subsidy), it was unlawful to correlate the amount of the payment to the amount of the usage, because it was contrary to a principal objective of the reform of the Common Agricultural Policy that led to both the SPS and the BPS, namely the decoupling of income support from production. She said that such a correlation, in the case of the New Forest where the rights of the commoners are unlimited in respect of the number of animals, created a huge incentive for farmers to increase the number of their animals, leading to overproduction and consequent damage to the environment, the long-term future of sustainable farming in the area, and the health and welfare of stock and wildlife.
"The 2020 BPS (as a system based on use of the common) was unlawful, as it applied to the New Forest, because it directly coupled payments of subsidies to marking fees paid per animal and so failed to make provision for the payment of subsidies to commoners in relation to their participation in non-productive activities that maintained the common in a state that makes it suitable for grazing or cultivation."
I agree that this proposal improves slightly on the existing terms of the declaration, because it makes clearer the logical connection indicated at present by the word "therefore". It seems to me that clarity might further be improved by substituting in the parenthesis "which was" for "as", because, where the parenthesis immediately precedes the words "was unlawful", the presence of "as" is capable of giving the initial impression that the unlawfulness was related to the basis of the system in use. I invite those acting for the defendant to consider this minor modification before the order is drawn.
1) The claimant does not seek the quashing of the 2020 BPS and the implementation of a new scheme, and Judge Lambert expressly refused such a remedy, as would I. Therefore the relief now sought is not by way of implementation of a new and lawful scheme but by way of compensation for the previous implementation of an unlawful scheme.
2) No claim for compensation has been pleaded. Indeed, the detailed statement of grounds and facts does not identify any loss or damage on the part of the claimant.
3) The defendant does not admit that the claimant has suffered any loss and damage by reason of the operation of the 2020 BPS and the claimant has not sought to particularise or prove such loss, though she did assert at the hearing that she has suffered some identifiable loss.
4) If the claimant wishes to pursue a claim for compensation, she is in principle able to do so by a Part 7 claim. As it seems to me (though the point has not been argued), any such claim would have to be one for so-called Francovich damages for a failure of the UK to give effect to EU law and would require the claimant to establish that the following three conditions were satisfied, namely (i) that the rule of law infringed was intended to confer rights on individuals, (ii) that the breach was sufficiently serious, and (iii) that there was a direct causal link between the breach of the obligation resting on the UK and the damage sustained by the claimant: see the decision of the CJEU in Joined Cases C-46/93 and C-48/93, Brasserie du Pêcheur SA and Factortame Ltd [1996] ECR I-1029, at para 51.
Conclusion
Note 1 The text of paragraph 2 of this judgment is “lifted”, with gratitude, from paragraph 3 of Sales J’s judgment in the First JR Claim. [Back]