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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Liverpool City Council, R (on Application of) v Local Commissioner For Local Government For North And North East England [2000] EWCA Civ 54 (24 February 2000) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2000/54.html Cite as: [2001] 1 All ER 462, [2000] BLGR 571, [2000] EWCA Civ 54, (2000) 2 LGLR 603 |
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Case No: QBCOF 99/0446/A2
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF JUDICATURE
COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
CROWN OFFICE LIST (MR JUSTICE HOOPER)
Royal Courts of Justice
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL
Thursday 24th February 2000
REGINA |
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- and - |
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LOCAL
COMMISSIONER FOR LOCAL GOVERNMENT FOR NORTH AND NORTH EAST
ENGLAND |
Respondent |
"The use of the system of agreed voting in relation to a planning application operated by both the main political parties [Labour, in power, and the Liberal Democrats] before the matter was considered in committee was maladministration in this case."
"In 1995 Liverpool City Football Club sought planning permission to erect an extension to an existing stand at the Anfield Road end of the football stadium. The extension would have raised the height of the roof to some 15.8 metres and permitted the football club to provide additional seated accommodation. In 1964 and in 1994 somewhat similar applications had been refused.
Following positive reports from the Development Control Sub-Committee (19/9/95) and the Planning and Transportation Committee (22/9/95), on 11th October 1995 the full Council resolved to grant planning permission subject to a section 106 agreement. That planning permission was finally granted on 25th February 1997.
On 24th October 1995 the Anfield Road Residents Group wrote to the Commissioner asking her to investigate the grant of planning permission. In the letter the Group wrote:
`The most obvious aspect of this affair is of course that if any other large company in the entertainment industry wanted to erect a 52 foot wall in front of people's homes their plans would have been summarily dismissed; why should it be any different for Liverpool Football Club plc.'
The letter went on to say:
`We hope that when you have looked into the matter you will agree with us that the councillors' and planning officers' actions have been both improper and suspect.'
The Commissioner found maladministration in two respects. She found that six councillors were Liverpool City Football Club season ticket holders and one was a regular match attender. She found that none of the seven had declared an interest, which, in her view, ought to have been done. She also concluded that support for a football club of the kind demonstrated by these seven councillors was such that:
`... a reasonable member of the public would have felt that it might have been a substantial influence on the way in which councillors voted.'
Secondly, she found that some of the councillors voted as they had done:
`... out of a misplaced loyalty to their political party.'
Three councillors of the ruling Labour group had said during the investigation that:
`... they voted for the application at the Council meeting but would have voted against if there had been a free vote.'
Another Labour councillor:
`... who had spoken against the proposal said that she absented herself during the voting at the Council meeting but would have voted in accordance with the requirements of the whip if she had voted at all.'
A Labour councillor who had voted for the application said that he did so partly because that was the view of the Labour Group:
`He says that he would never now vote against the view of the Group (having done so once before) even though he understands that a councillor who did so on a planning issue would not be subject to any Party discipline.'
A Liberal Democrat councillor who had felt that the proposed stand was acceptable had nevertheless voted against it `with a heavy heart' because he was unwilling to take sides against his group.
Labour councillors had voted for the application and none against. 30 Liberal Democrat councillors had voted against the application with only three in favour. Both main political parties discussed the application prior to the meetings of the Sub-Committee, the Committee and the Council. According to the Commissioner:
`There is a general expectation amongst both parties that each councillor will vote in accordance with the view expressed by the majority at the group meeting.'
The Commissioner concluded:
`The patterns of voting show that the decision on whether to grant planning permission was heavily, and perhaps decisively, influenced by a sense of party loyalty whether or not councillors had a well founded fear of disciplinary actions which might follow a decision to vote against party preference. Such considerations cannot be material to the consideration of a planning application and serve to make subsequent debate in the Council chamber or Committee room meaningless. I consider that the use of the system of agreed voting in relation to a planning application operated by both the main political parties before the matter was considered in committee was maladministration in this case'."
"It will cover `bias, neglect, inattention, delay, incompetence, ineptitude, perversity, turpitude, arbitrariness and so on'. It `would be a long and interesting list', clearly open-ended, covering the manner in which a decision is reached or discretion is exercised; but excluding the merits of the decision itself or of the discretion itself. It follows that `discretionary decision, properly exercised which the complainant dislikes but cannot fault the manner in which it was taken, is excluded': see Hansard, 734 HC Deb, col. 51.
In other words, if there is no maladministration, the ombudsman may not question any decision taken by the authorities. He must not go into the merits of it or intimate any view as to whether it was right or wrong. This is explicitly declared in section 34(3) of the Act of 1974. He can inquire whether there was maladministration or not. If he finds none, he must go no further. If he finds it, he can go on and inquire whether any person has suffered injustice thereby."
"Matters subject to investigation
Subject to the provisions of this Part of this Act where a written complaint is made by or on behalf of a member of the public who claims to have sustained injustice in consequence of maladministration in connection with action taken by or on behalf of an authority to which this Part of this Act applies, being action taken in the exercise of administrative functions of that authority, a Local Commissioner may investigate that complaint.
...
A Local Commissioner shall not conduct an investigation under this Part of this Act in respect of any of the following matters, that is to say:
any action in respect of which the person aggrieved has or had a right of appeal, reference or review to or before a tribunal constituted by or under any enactment;
any action in respect of which the person aggrieved has or had a right of appeal to a Minister of the Crown; or
any action in respect of which the person aggrieved has or had a remedy by way of proceedings in any court of law.
Provided that a Local Commissioner may conduct an investigation notwithstanding the existence of such a right or remedy if satisfied that in the particular circumstances it is not reasonable to expect the person aggrieved to resort or have resorted to it.
...
In determining whether to initiate, continue or discontinue an investigation, a Local Commissioner shall, subject to the preceding provisions of this section, act at discretion; and any question whether a complaint is duly made under this Part of this Act shall be determined by the Local Commissioner."
Maladministration: the seven councillors' failure to declare a private interest
"The Code represents the standard against which the conduct of members will be judged, both by the public, and by their fellow councillors. The local ombudsman may also regard a breach of the code as incompatible with good administration, and may make a finding of maladministration by the council in these circumstances."
"If you have a private or personal interest in a question which councillors have to decide, you should never take any part in the decision, except in the exceptional circumstances described below. Where such exceptional circumstances do permit you to participate, you should never let your interest influence the decision.The crucial words are those underlined in paragraph 11.
...
It is not enough to avoid actual impropriety. You should at all times avoid any occasion for suspicion and any appearance of improper conduct.
Disclosure of pecuniary and other interests
The law makes specific provision requiring you to disclose both direct and indirect pecuniary interests (including those of a spouse with whom you are living) which you may have in any matter coming before the council, a committee or a sub-committee. It prohibits you from speaking or voting on that matter. Your council's standing orders may also require you to withdraw from the meeting while the matter is discussed. You must also by law declare certain pecuniary interests in the statutory register kept for this purpose. These requirements must be scrupulously observed at all times.
Interests which are not pecuniary can be just as important. You should not allow the impression to be created that you are, or may be, using your position to promote a private or personal interest, rather than forwarding the general public interest. Private and personal interests include those of your family and friends, as well as those arising through membership of, or association with clubs, societies and other organisations such as the Freemasons, trade unions and voluntary bodies.
If you have private or personal non-pecuniary interests in a matter arising at a local authority meeting, you should always disclose it, unless it is insignificant, or one which you share with other members of the public generally as a ratepayer, a community charge payer or an inhabitant of an area.
Where you have declared such a private or personal interest, you should decide whether it is clear and substantial. If it is not, then you may continue to take part in the discussion and vote on it. If, however, it is a clear and substantial interest, then (except in the special circumstances described below) you should never take any further part in the proceedings, and should always withdraw from the meeting whilst the matter is being considered. In deciding whether such an interest is clear and substantial, you should ask yourself whether members of the public, knowing the facts of the situation, would reasonably think that you might be influenced by it. If you think so, you should regard the interest as clear and substantial."
"Support for a football club engenders a particularly intense type of loyalty which goes some way beyond a preference for one supermarket over another. I am in no doubt that a reasonable member of the public would have felt that it might have been a substantial influence on the way in which the councillors voted. The reasonable person would have had that view confirmed on seeing that the only members of the main opposition party who voted in favour of the application were holders of season tickets. Thus I conclude that the seven councillors identified in this report did have a clear and substantial interest. None of them declared an interest and therefore never went on to ask themselves the relevant question. Season ticket holders or regular match attenders should in my view not only have declared an interest, but also left the meeting. I consider that there was maladministration here ...."and then she went on to name the councillors in question. In her reference to the "main opposition party", she was referring to the Liberal Democrats. The Liberal Democrats had taken a caucus decision to oppose the grant of planning permission to Liverpool Football Club. The three councillors who defied the caucus decision and voted in support the club's application were all undeclared season ticket holders.
"Although the tests are described differently, their application by the appellate courts in each country is likely in practice to reach results which are so similar as to be indistinguishable."
"Although in the nature of things it will ordinarily be for members ... to make up their minds in the first instance, whether they have got it right will always be a question of law."
"(c) ... any action [taken] in respect of which a person aggrieved has or had a remedy by way of proceedings in a court of law."
"Provided that a Local Commissioner may conduct an investigation notwithstanding the existence of such a right or remedy if satisfied that in the particular circumstances it is not reasonable to expect the person aggrieved to resort or to have resorted to it."
"However, the availability of judicial review is less certain. I am aware that from time to time the Courts have widened or narrowed the availability of that remedy, and I bear in mind that the requirement to obtain leave to move for judicial review necessarily restricts the availability of that remedy. On the other hand I am aware of an argument that nearly all actions which could amount to maladministration ... could also be the subject of an application for leave to move for judicial review: for example an allegation about the wrongful allocation of a council house. My understanding, however, is that maladministration and illegality are different concepts, although there is an overlap, and it is only where there is that overlap that Section 26(6)(c) comes into play.
...
The complainants were complaining about a planning decision in favour of the Liverpool Football Club in circumstances where certain councillors who had been involved in that decision were strong supporters of that club. Prima facie therefore, the complaint presented itself as a possible breach of the Local Government Code of Conduct, a matter placed by Parliament under Section 30(3A) of the Act within the purview of the Local Commissioners rather than the courts."
"Where the Local Commissioner is of the opinion-
that action constituting maladministration was taken which involved a member of the authority concerned, and
that the member's conduct constituted a breach of the National Code of Local Government Conduct,
then, unless the Commissioner is satisfied that it would be unjust to do so, the report shall name the member and give particulars of the breach."
"In relation to the complaint, the subject of this application, I was simply looking at an alleged breach of the Code of Conduct, and not considering whether the approval complained of had been obtained through bias, using that word in the sense it has been considered over the years by the courts."Indeed, on those grounds she did not consider that sub-section (c) was a bar to her proceedings. I am not sure that she was right in that conclusion. If wrong, she would have had to consider the proviso. And this she addressed in her affidavit:
"Had I been advised that judicial review was potentially available to the complainants her, I would have gone on to consider whether I should exercise my discretion under the proviso to Section 26(6) to investigate the complaint. It is my belief that in that event I would have exercised discretion in favour of the complainants because I believe in the particular circumstances of this case it would have been unreasonable to expect the complainants to have been required to resort to the remedy of judicial review. This is because I understood the complainants to be a group in modest housing, who would have been unlikely to have had the means to pursue that remedy from their own resources, particularly having regard to the uncertainty of the remedy; it seems to me that it is by no means certain that judicial would be appropriate for maladministration where it related to a breach of the Code of Conduct. Further I would have particularly had in mind that it would have been very difficult, if not impossible, for the complainants to obtain the necessary evidence to support such an application. Much of the evidence upon which I relied in my report was not available in documentary form, but emerged during interviews with the members concerned. The complainants however do not have the investigatory powers given to the Commissioner by the Act and thus that evidence would have been unobtainable by them."
"Whilst you may be strongly influenced by the views of others, and of your party in particular, it is your responsibility alone to decide what view to take on any question which the councillors have to decide."
"The patterns of voting show that the decision on whether to grant planning permission was heavily, and perhaps decisively, influenced by a sense of party political loyalty whether or not councillors had a well-founded fear of disciplinary action which might follow a decision to vote against party preference. Such considerations cannot be material to the consideration of the planning application and serve to make subsequent debate in the Council Chamber or Committee Room meaningless. I consider that the use of the system of agreed voting in relation to a planning application operated by both the main political parties before the matter was considered in committee was maladministration in this case."
- the Code permits a councillor to be "strongly influenced" by the views of others, and his party in particular;
LORD JUSTICE CHADWICK:
"1) A declaration that the respondent, in investigating a complaint notwithstanding the availability of a remedy by way of proceedings in any court of law, in the exercise of her discretion under section 26(6) of the Local Government Act 1974, failed to have regard to [and follow] a relevant consideration, namely the legal principles relevant to that remedy.
2) A declaration that the respondent, in investigating a complaint notwithstanding the availability of a remedy by way of proceedings in any court of law, in the exercise of the discretion under section 26(6) of the Local Government Act 1974, failed to have regard to [and follow] a relevant consideration, namely the legal principles relevant to influence of considerations of party political loyalty.
3) A declaration that the respondent, in investigating a complaint notwithstanding the availability of a remedy by way of proceedings in any court of law, in the exercise of the discretion under section 26(6) of the Local Government Act 1974, failed to have regard to [and follow] a relevant consideration, namely the legal principles relevant to allegations of bias."
"Provided that a Local Commissioner may conduct an investigation not withstanding the existence of such a . . . remedy if satisfied that in the particular circumstances it is not reasonable to expect the person aggrieved to resort or have resorted to it."
"Issue 3. The learned judge erred in holding, contrary to the authority of R v Commissioner for Local Administration, ex p Croydon L.B.C. [1989] 1 All ER 1033, that the Respondent could have regard to the likely success of an application for judicial review in determining whether to exercise her discretion to investigate or continue to investigate a complaint and/or in determining whether there was an alternative remedy available to the local residents making the complaint to the Respondent."
"Issue 1. The learned judge erred in concluding that, in investigating complaints of maladministration, when the subject matter of the complaint overlapped a complaint of unlawfulness, the Respondent did not have to take into account and/or follow and/or set out her reasons for not following the legal principles relevant to a complaint of unlawfulness."
Where the Local Commissioner is of the opinion -
"The Code represents the standard against which the conduct of members will be judged, both by the public and by their fellow councillors. The local ombudsmen may also regard a breach of the Code as incompatible with good administration, and may make a finding of maladministration by the council in these circumstances."
"Issue 2. The learned judge erred in finding that the Ombudsman was bound to apply the National Code of Local Government Conduct without giving any or any proper consideration as to whether the Respondent had a discretion as to whether to apply the Code where:
the Code no longer reflected the correct legal test of bias (and hence when local authority members had to declare their personal interests); and
the application of the Code acted as an unlawful fetter on the discretion on the part of the Respondent."
... In deciding whether such an interest is clear and substantial, you should ask yourself whether members of the public, knowing the facts of the situation, would reasonably think that you might be influenced by it. If you think so, you should regard the interest as clear and substantial.
"Issue 4. The learned judge erred in finding that the legitimate influence of party politics in regard to planning applications is different from other areas of local authority administration.
Issue 5. The learned judge erred in finding that decisions on planning applications cannot be heavily influenced as opposed to determined by considerations of party political loyalty."
"Whilst you may be strongly influenced by the views of others, and your party in particular, it is your responsibility alone to decide what view to take on any question which councillors have to decide."
"Party loyalty, party unanimity, party policy, were all relevant considerations for the individual councillor. The vote becomes unlawful only when the councillor allows those considerations or any other outside influences so to dominate as to exclude other considerations which are required for balanced judgment. If, by blindly toeing the party line, the councillor deprives himself of any real choice or the exercise of any real discretion, then his vote can be impugned and any resolution supported by his vote potentially flawed."
LORD JUSTICE MAY: