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English and Welsh Courts - Miscellaneous |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> English and Welsh Courts - Miscellaneous >> London Borough of Sutton v Kelman [2016] EW Misc B26 (CC) (13 October 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/Misc/2016/B26.html Cite as: [2016] EW Misc B26 (CC) |
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Kingston-upon-Thames Surrey KT1 2AD |
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B e f o r e :
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LONDON BOROUGH OF SUTTON | Claimant | |
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THOMAS KELMAN | Defendant |
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THE DEFENDANT appeared in Person.
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Crown Copyright ©
THE DISTRICT JUDGE:
"1. In the event that Mr. Thomas Kelman is served with this order within the area of land outlined and hatched with red ink on the plan attached to this order ('the area of exclusion'), then he must immediately leave the area of exclusion and is thereafter forbidden from entering that area.
2. In the event that the Defendant Mr. Thomas Kelman is served with this order in some other location, then he be forbidden from entering the area of exclusion.
The order went on to say that you were forbidden, whether by yourself or by instructing, encouraging or allowing any other person, from:
"3. Shouting at, swearing at or using abusive language towards Mr. Stephen Field of the Property or from seeking to contact Mr. Field in any way or for whatever reason.
4. Using or threatening to use violence against Mr. Stephen Field at the Property.
5. Shouting at, swearing at, using abusive language towards or seeking to contact in any way or for any reason whatsoever Debbie Callaghan of 14 Rookley Close or any other resident of 14 Rookley Close.
6. Using or threatening to use violence against Debbie Callaghan of 14 Rookley Close or any other resident of 14 Rookley Close."
I should say that Debbie Callaghan had given evidence in support of the application.
"1. On 19th September 2016:
(a) The Defendant attended at 33 Grove Lane, Coulsdon, Surrey (the property) at about 1 p.m. and banged on the side windows and again demanded to be let into the property, in breach of para.1(b) of the injunction dated 19th August 2016.
(b) The Defendant was abusive to Mr. Field, calling him 'a fucking cunt' in breach of sub-paras (3) and (4) of the order dated 9th June 2016 and para.1(a) of the order dated 19th August 2016.
(c) The Defendant returned to the property at 9.30 p.m. and banged on the kitchen window, demanding again to be let in, in breach of para.1(a) and (b) of the order dated 15th August 2016 and paras. 3 and 4 of the order dated 9th June 2016.
(d) The Defendant was abusive to Mr. Field, calling him 'a cunt' and 'a wanker', in breach of paras.3 and 4 of the order dated 9th June 2016 and para.1(a) of the order dated 19th August 2016;
(e) the police were called and, although the Defendant left before they attended, he returned to the property and caused damage to it by kicking in the wooden side panel of the kitchen in breach of para.1(a) of the order of 19th August 2016 and in breach of paras.3 and 4 of the order dated 9th June 2016;
(f) The Defendant entered the property, shouted at Mr. Field, grabbed his phone and threw it against the wall in breach of paras.3 and 4 of the order dated 9th June 2016;
(g) The Defendant grabbed hold of Mr. Field and pushed him against the wall, in breach of paras.3 and 4 of the order dated 9th June 2016.
2. On 20th September 2016:
(a) The Defendant attended at the property and banged on the kitchen window in breach of para.1(b) of the order dated 19th August 2016.
(b) The Defendant was abusive to Mr. Field, calling him 'a cunt', in breach of paras.2 and 3 of the order dated 9th June 2016 and para.1(a) of the order dated 19th August 2016."
"...the terminology of the subsections (7) and (8) reflects the true principle, namely that it is the conduct which is not twice punishable. Thus in my view we should not be misled by the words in [48] of Lomas v Parle which I have placed in italics in [19] above: the second court should not so much reflect 'the prior sentence' in its judgment as decline to sentence for such of the conduct as has already been the subject of punishment in the criminal court. It follows that, even if a civil judge were to regard the punishment given by the criminal court for certain conduct as too lenient, it would be improper for him to use his power of committal in respect of that self-same conduct in order to top up the punishment to what he regards as a proper level. What he must do is to sentence only for such conduct as was not the subject of the criminal proceedings."
" No doubt the seriousness or otherwise the breach of the obligation to the civil court, whether undertaken or imposed by injunction, will in part be informed by what one might call its context, namely (for example) by whether it was the first breach or the last in a series of breaches, by the existence or otherwise of warnings of the consequences of a breach or further breaches and by the propinquity in time between the creation of the obligation and the breach. But how much further can the judge go into the circumstances or content of the breach without sentencing for the conduct for which sentence has already been passed? In the most general terms the judge must surely be entitled to assess the conduct's gravity: for the graver the conduct, the more serious the contempt of the civil court. But, so it seems to me, any more profound assessment risks trespass upon the area for which sentence has already been passed. And, even when the breach is serious, the civil court must rigorously remind itself that, however problematical, its function is to sentence only for the fact of a serious contempt and not for the content of the serious contempt."