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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 >> Watkins v Secretary Of State For Home Department & Ors [2004] EWCA Civ 966 (20 July 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2004/966.html Cite as: [2005] QB 883, [2004] EWCA Civ 966, [2005] 2 WLR 1538, [2004] 4 All ER 1158 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM LEEDS COUNTY COURT
HH Judge Ibbotson
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
Vice-President of the Court of Appeal (Civil Division)
LORD JUSTICE CLARKE
and
LORD JUSTICE LAWS
____________________
JEFFREY SHANE WATKINS |
Claimant/ Appellant |
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- and – |
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SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT and others |
Defendants/ Respondents |
____________________
Wendy Outhwaite (instructed by the Treasury Solicitor) for the Respondents
Hearing date : 5th May 2004
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Brooke :
(1) A prisoner may correspond with his legal adviser and any court and such correspondence may only be opened, read or stopped by the governor in accordance with the provisions of this rule.
(2) Correspondence to which this rule applies may be opened if the governor has reasonable cause to believe that it contains an illicit enclosure and any such enclosure shall be dealt with in accordance with the other provisions of these Rules.
(3) Correspondence to which this rule applies may be opened, read or stopped if the governor has reasonable cause to believe its contents endanger prison security or the safety of others or are otherwise of a criminal nature.
(4) A prisoner shall be given the opportunity to be present when any correspondence to which this rule applies is opened and shall be informed if it or its enclosure is to be read or stopped.
"161. As a result of the various findings I have made, all 15 defendants are entitled to judgment against the claimant. The issue of damages does not arise, but I will add the following observation: even if liability had been established against any of the defendants, I would not have awarded aggravated damages. Having listened to the evidence and seen the claimant in the witness box, I would have found that he was not particularly embarrassed or humiliated. He seemed to me to be a man of some intelligence who has acquired some knowledge of the legal process and, without in any way trivialising his complaints or minimising the effect on him, I think it could be said that in many ways he appears to thrive on these conflicts.
162. As regards exemplary damages, I might well, in the event of liability having been established against any defendant, have been prepared to award exemplary damages if the appropriate level of compensatory damages was so modest as to represent less than the defendants ought to pay for unlawful conduct of this nature. I decline to indicate the level of exemplary damage because it would depend on the circumstances of the individual case. In my view, the first defendant could not as a matter of law be vicariously liable for exemplary damages awarded against one of its individual employees."
"Such conduct on the part of the defendant is actionable as such and the belief of the defendant as to the legality of what he did is irrelevant. It is no defence for the defendant to say that he believed that he had statutory or other legal authority if he did not. The legal justification must actually exist otherwise he is liable in tort: Northern Territory v Mengel, 69 ALJR 527, 547."
"There is no principle in English law that an official is the guarantor of the legality of everything he does, but he is liable if he injures another by an act which is itself tortious if not justified and he is unable to justify it however honestly he may have acted."
"It applies to the holder of public office who does not honestly believe that what he is doing is lawful … Similarly, it covers the situation where the plaintiff has suffered some financial or economic loss and therefore raises the question what relationship between the plaintiff's loss and the defendant's bad faith is required …"
"The tort is historically an action on the case. It is not generally actionable by any member of the public. The plaintiff must have suffered special damage in the sense of loss or injury which is specific to him and which is not being suffered in common with the public in general … The plaintiff has to be complaining of some loss or damage to him which completes the special connection between him and the official's act."
"the general rule that, if conduct is presumptively unlawful, a good motive will not exonerate the defendant, and that, if conduct is lawful apart from motive, a bad motive will not make him liable."
"This results in the rule that a plaintiff must establish not only that the defendant acted in the knowledge that the act was beyond his powers but also in the knowledge that his act would probably injure the plaintiff or a person of a class of which the plaintiff was a member."
"Now I take it to be perfectly clear, that if a public officer abuses his office, either by an act of omission or commission, and the consequence of that is an injury to an individual, an action may be maintained against such public officer. The instances of this are so numerous."
And in the Australian case of Farrington v Thomson [1959] VR 286, in which the plaintiff's claim related to the closure of his hotel by police officers, Smith J said:
"Proof of damage is of course necessary in addition. In my view therefore the rule should be taken to go this far at least, that if a public officer does an act which to his knowledge amounts to an abuse of office, and he thereby causes damage to another person, an action in tort for misfeasance in public office will lie against him at the suit of that person."
"If the plaintiff has a right, he must of necessity have a means to vindicate and maintain it, and a remedy if he is injured in the exercise or enjoyment of it, and, indeed it is a vain thing to imagine a right without a remedy; for want of right and want of remedy are reciprocal ..
And I am of the opinion that this action on the case is a proper action. My brother Powell indeed thinks that an action on the case is not maintainable, because there is no hurt or damage to the plaintiff, but surely every injury imports a damage, though it does not cost the party one farthing, and it is impossible to prove the contrary; for a damage is not merely pecuniary but an injury imports a damage, when a man is thereby hindered of his rights."
"In Embrey v Owen, 6 Ex 353, Parke B said (at p 368):
'It was very ably argued before us by the learned counsel for the plaintiffs that the plaintiffs had a right to the full flow of the water in its natural course and abundance, as an incident to their property in the land through which it flowed; and that any abstraction of the water, however inconsiderable, by another riparian proprietor, and though productive of no actual damage, would be actionable, because it was an injury to a right and, if continued, would be the foundation of a claim of adverse right in that proprietor. We by no means dispute the truth of this proposition, with respect to every description of right. Actual perceptible damage is not indispensable as the foundation of an action; it is sufficient to show the violation of a right, in which case the law will presume damage; injuria sine damno is actionable, as was laid down in the case of Ashby v White by Lord Holt, and in many subsequent cases, which are all referred to, and the truth of the proposition powerfully enforced in a very able judgment of the late Story J in Webb v Portland Manufacturing Co (1838) 3 Sumner Rep 189.'
In the case cited, Story J said:
'But I am not able to understand how it can correctly be said, in a legal sense, that an action will not lie, even in the case of a wrong or violation of a right, unless it is followed by some perceptible damage which can be established as a matter of fact; in other words, that injuria sine damno is not actionable. On the contrary, from my earliest reading, I have considered it laid up among the very elements of the common law that, wherever there is a wrong, there is a remedy to redress it; that every injury imports damage in the nature of it; and, if no other damage is established, the party injured is entitled to a verdict for nominal damages.'"
"In the present instance we have to consider whether a petition to wind up a company falls upon the one side of the line or the other – whether, as the Master of the Rolls has said, it is more like an action which does not necessarily involve damage, and therefore will not, however maliciously and wrongfully brought, justify an action for malicious prosecution, or whether it is more like a bankruptcy petition. I do not see how a petition to wind up a company can be presented and advertised in the newspapers without striking a blow at its credit. I suppose that most of the lawyers of the present day have seen a great increase of three kinds of abuses, all of which are indulged in for the purpose of extorting the payment of some debt, which ought to be the subject of some civil redress. There is the abuse of the police courts when their process is used to extort money; there is the abuse of the bankruptcy law; and there is the abuse of the provisions in the Companies Act 1862, for winding up companies. In all these three forms of abuse the aim is to wreck credit, and I should be sorry to think that since they all involve a blow at the credit of those against whom they are instituted, the law did not afterwards place in the hands of the injured and aggrieved persons who have been wrongfully assailed, a means of righting themselves and recouping themselves, as far as can be, for the mischief done to them. I therefore answer the two first questions – whether this action will lie, and whether it will lie without further proof of special damage – in the following manner: I think that the action will lie, for the reason that special damage is involved in the very institution of the proceedings (which ex hypothesi are unjust and without reasonable or probable cause) for the purpose of winding up a going company."
"There was another point about several fishery which we do not need to deal with, because the decision of the Queen's Bench was overruled in that respect. But the important point was whether the grantee could sue in trespass, and in the Court of Exchequer Chamber it was held that he might. The Court of Exchequer Chamber said that it was not necessary for them to decide the question whether the count might not be a count in case, but that they saw no reason to doubt that the Queen's Bench were right on that point. But that does not mean that the plaintiff can only sue in trespass. I cannot doubt, on the construction of the grant, the right of the plaintiffs by virtue of that grant to sue for a wrongful act which operates as a disturbance of the rights granted by the deed. The argument was pushed with the greatest courage to this extent – that a wrongdoer, unless he tried to do the very thing that the grantees were authorised to do, might destroy the whole subject-matter of the grant and be liable to no action. I never met with any case which gave the slightest colour to such a doctrine. I hold that the grantees of the incorporeal hereditament have a right of action against any person who disturbs them either by trespass or by nuisance, or in any other substantial manner."
"As might have been expected of civil courts, whose concern had been primarily with material rights and not with discipline as such, the new jurisdiction in claims based on slander appears to have been directed to the ascertainment of actual damage suffered and to a remedy limited to such damage. This explains the restricted character of the development of the remedy and the tendency to confine its scope by the assertion that actual damage was the gist of the action."
"My Lords, it has often been said that the right to sue for words spoken, when no damage can be proved, ought not to be extended. As Martin B observes in Allsop v Allsop (1860) 29 LJ (Ex) 315, 317, 'The law is jealous of actions for mere words, and the rules limiting these actions ought to be adhered to here'. I am sure that no one who has had even a short experience of the business of an ordinary civil assize would question the wisdom of this caution. If a change of the law is desired, it is from the Legislature, as it was in 1891, that relief must be sought."
"The action for maintenance is, in my opinion, one which can be sustained only if special damage had been occasioned to the plaintiff by the maintenance. The maintenance may be punishable as an offence, but to give a right of action the commission of the offence must have caused damage to the plaintiff. Of course, if a right has been infringed, as in Ashby v White (1 SM LC, 12 Ed, 266, 288) where a man was deprived of his right to vote, no proof of damage is necessary. As Lord Holt expressed it 'an injury imports a damage, when a man is thereby hindered of his right'. The same rule applies if an assault, even the most trifling, is committed, though it occasions no damage whatever, or if trespass is committed to the plaintiff's land or goods. But the action for maintenance at common law is not, in my opinion, an action for the invasion of a right; it is an action in respect of an offence which causes damage to the plaintiff."
"My Lords, as Lord Holt showed in Ashby v White, 2 Ld Raym 938, 955, every violation of a right imports damage in contemplation of law. This principle applied whether the right arises out of a contract, as in Marzetti v Williams, (1830) 1 B & Ad 415, or out of a tort, as in Embrey v Owen, (1851) 6 Ex 353. The damage may be substantial, but may also amount to what is merely nominal. As Maule J said in Beaumont v Greathead, (1846) 2 CB 494, 499, 'Nominal damages are a mere peg on which to hang costs. … Nominal damages, in fact, mean a sum of money that may be spoken of, but that has no existence in point of quantity.' As Parke B observed in Embrey v Owen (at p 368), 'Actual perceptible damage is not indispensable as the foundation of an action; it is sufficient to shew the violation of a right, in which case the law will presume damage'. He went on to point out that the principle did not apply to the case with which he was dealing, because the right was to the flow of a stream, a right only to the flow subject to its reasonable enjoyment and possible slight diminution by higher riparian owners. The right there was only a qualified one. But where the right is, as it often is, an absolute right the doctrine laid down by Lord Holt in Ashby v White applies, and every infringement of such an absolute right gives a claim to nominal damages, even though all actual loss or injury is disproved."
Viscount Haldane went on to say that he thought that the right to protection against maintenance was an absolute one, although on the facts of that case only nominal damages should have been awarded for the violation of that right.
"… That therefore defines the right, and it also defines the cause of action which follows from an infringement of that right. It is not, I think, material to decide whether the proper description of that cause of action is trespass, or trespass on the case or nuisance, forms of action which are now abolished. If it were described as 'nuisance' the word 'nuisance' would be used in that connection as meaning a private nuisance, one which involved an interference with a private right, so that, as I shall explain in a moment, an action would lie for that interference."
"Harrop v Hirst (1868) LR 4 Ex 43, to which Sir Frederick [Pollock] refers, is an authority again for the proposition that if you have an infringement of a legal right there is a right of action without actual damage being proved. The claim was for diverting water, and it was held that an action for diverting water is maintainable without proof of any actual personal damage, inasmuch as the act of the defendant might, if repeated often enough without interruption, furnish evidence in derogation of the plaintiff's legal rights. Although that is a reason which is emphasised in that case, and for which there is good authority and good ground, the ability to maintain such an action without proof of actual loss depends on a much wider principle, that is, the principle that where you have an interference with a legal right the law presumes damage."
Holt CJ's judgment in Ashby v White (see para 29 above) was the leading authority cited by Lord Wright in support of this principle.
"'Nominal damages' is a technical phrase which means that you have negatived anything like real damage, but that you are affirming by your nominal damages that there is an infraction of a legal right which, though it gives you no right to any real damages at all, yet gives you a right to the verdict or judgment because your legal right has been infringed."
"The common law does not generally speak in the language of constitutional rights, for the good reason that in the absence of any sovereign text, a written constitution which is logically and legally prior to the power of legislature, executive and judiciary alike, there is on the face of it no hierarchy of rights such that any one of them is more entrenched by the law than any other. And if the concept of a constitutional right is to have any meaning, it must surely sound in the protection which the law affords to it. Where a written constitution guarantees a right, there is no conceptual difficulty. The state authorities must give way to it, save to the extent that the constitution allows them to deny it. There may of course be other difficulties, such as whether on the constitution's true interpretation the right claimed exists at all. Even a superficial acquaintance with the jurisprudence of the Supreme Court of the United States shows that such problems may be acute. But they are not in the same category as the question: do we have constitutional rights at all?
In the unwritten legal order of the British state, at a time when the common law continues to accord a legislative supremacy to Parliament, the notion of a constitutional right can in my judgment inhere only in this proposition, that the right in question cannot be abrogated by the state save by specific provision in an Act of Parliament, or by regulations whose views in main legislation specifically confers the power to abrogate. General words will not suffice. And any such rights will be creatures of the common law, since their existence would not be the consequence of the democratic political process but would be logically prior to it. I shall explain in due course what I mean by a requirement of specific provision, a concept more elusive than it seems."
"It seems to me, from all the authorities to which I have referred, that the common law has clearly given special weight to the citizen's right of access to the courts. It has been described as a constitutional right, though the cases do not explain what that means. In this whole argument, nothing to my mind has been shown to displace the proposition that the executive cannot in law abrogate the right of access to justice, unless it is specifically so permitted by Parliament; and this is the meaning of the constitutional right."
Lord Justice Clarke:
Lord Justice Laws:
"If an officer deliberately does an act which he knows is unlawful and will cause economic loss to the plaintiff, I can see no reason in principle why the plaintiff should identify a legal right which is being infringed or a particular duty owed to him, beyond the right not to be damaged or injured by a deliberate abuse of power by a public officer."
I apprehend that their other Lordships agreed with this observation.