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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> McLeod v Metropolitan Police Commissioner [1994] EWCA Civ 2 (03 February 1994) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/1994/2.html Cite as: [1994] EWCA Civ 2, [1994] 4 All ER 553 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM: QUEENS BENCH DIVISION
FROM: MR. JUSTICE TUCKEY
Strand London WC2 |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE HOFFMANN
and
LORD JUSTICE WAITE
____________________
SALLY MCLEOD | ||
MRS MARGERY MARY MEALING (deceased) | ||
v | ||
METROPOLITAN POLICE COMMISSIONER |
____________________
John Larking, Chancery House, Chancery Lane, London WC2
Telephone No: 071 404 7464
Fax No: 071 404 7443
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
MR. S. WALSH (instructed by C.S. Porteous, New Scotland Yard, Broadway, London SW1) appeared on behalf of the Respondent.
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Thursday, 3rd February 1994
J U D G M E N T
"The Plaintiff says that on the 28th September 1989, after Judge Tyrer had made his Order giving her until the 6th October 1989 to deliver the goods to Mr. McLeod, the Judge left the courtroom. Mention was then made between her and Mr. McLeod and Glenisters of Tuesday 3rd October as a possible date for collection. She said that solicitors were to be present, but that she had to speak to her solicitor to make sure he could be there, and that she would write to confirm. A time was proposed, but she never agreed to it, and she never confirmed the day or the hour or indeed had any communication with Mr. McLeod or Glenisters between the 28th September and 5.30 pm on the 3rd October 1989 when she returned home to find the McLeods and Glenisters already at the premises."
At page 7 of the judgment the judge made his finding about this. He said:
"I find on the evidence that there was no agreement made between the Plaintiff and Mr. McLeod for him to collect his goods on the 3rd October 1989. The contemporary note of Counsel, endorsed by Judge Tyrer, makes this clear. If there had been such an agreement, I have no doubt at all that the Plaintiff would have made sure that she was present for Mr. McLeod's visit, and that she would probably have been accompanied by a solicitor. She would certainly have told her mother in advance. It was quite clear from the events of the 3rd October 1989 that Mrs. Mealing knew nothing of any such proposed visit."
"Nevertheless the failure of the McLeods and the solicitor to obtain permission from Mrs. McLeod meant that their entry was unlawful and a trespass to property."
"Their books and plants had to come off the shelves which the McLeods were collecting, their clothes had to come out of the drawers in a divan bed, and in chests of drawers, which Mr. McLeod was collecting, and other property was moved around in the rooms of No. 96."
"So I turn to the law and an analysis of the way in which the Plaintiff puts her case. A police officer has a duty to prevent any breach of the peace which has occurred or which he reasonably apprehends will occur. Pursuant to this duty he is entitled to enter onto and remain on private property without the consent of the occupier or owner (see Thomas v Sawkins [1935] 2 KB 249 at pp 254 and 255 256.) This decision is doubted in a work called Civil Actions Against Police by Clayton & Tomlinson at p 242, but the statement of law in Thomas v. Sawkins is clear and I think that I am bound to follow it.It follows from what I have said that I reject the Plaintiff's claim based on trespass to land."
"Subject to (6) below, all the rules of common law under which a constable has power to enter premises without a warrant are hereby abolished."
"Nothing in (5) above affects any power of entry to deal with or prevent a breach of the peace."
Lord Hewart, who delivered the first judgment in the case, said this at page 254:
"I think that there is quite sufficient ground for the proposition that it is part of the preventive power, and, therefore, part of the preventive duty, of the police, in cases where there are such reasonable grounds of apprehension as the justices have found here, to enter and remain on private premises."
At page 255 Avory J said, in relation to entering premises in connection with an affray:
"... I cannot doubt that he has a right to break in to prevent an affray which he has reasonable cause to suspect may take place on private premises."
"If a constable in the execution of his duty to preserve the peace is entitled to commit an assault, it appears to me that he is equally entitled to commit a trespass."
"Regardless of the invitation, there was sufficient to justify the police entering the house on the basis that they genuinely suspected a danger of breach of the peace occurring."
Those were the two authorities to which we have been referred.
LORD JUSTICE HOFFMANN: I agree.
LORD JUSTICE WAITE: I also agree.
LORD JUSTICE NEILL: Can you say anything about that?
LORD JUSTICE NEILL: Well, a point of public interest, yes.
MRS. MCLEOD: For that reason, I would ask for leave.
MR. WALSH: For the period it would take to mount an appeal, yes.
MR. WALSH: My Lord, until she has launched her appeal, yes.