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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Anglorom Trans (UK) Ltd, Re [2004] EWCA Civ 998 (30 July 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2004/998.html Cite as: [2004] EWCA Civ 998 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE TRANPORT TRIBUNAL
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE JONATHAN PARKER
and
MR. JUSTICE LADDIE
____________________
IN THE MATTER OF ANGLOROM TRANS (UK) LIMITED | ||
AND IN THE MATTER OF PARAMOUNT KITCHENS LIMITED | ||
AND IN THE MATTER OF THE GOODS VEHICLES (LICENSING OPERATORS) ACT 1995 |
____________________
Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited, 190 Fleet Street
London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7421 4040, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Mr. Alan Maclean (instructed by the Treasury Solicitor) for the Secretary of State for Transport (intervening)
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Laddie:
BACKGROUND FACTS
"8. Team Kitchens obtained a standard international operator's licence, authorising ten vehicles and fifteen 'trailers, in February 1999.
9. Anglorom was formed in 1999 in association with two Romanian nationals, father and son both named Constantin Mihai. These two gentlemen operate the Romanian sector of the business for which they utilise the services of drivers supplied and paid by another Romanian company, Grills, owned by Mihais. Grills and an Italian company carry out maintenance and safety inspections. Typical journeys, covering 10,000 kilometres, involving multiple collection points, can take up to a month. Double manning features as well as relieving drivers who have been away from base for extended periods. This means there is well in excess of the simple ratio of one driver per vehicle."
"30. s. 28 - Although I am entitled to disqualify a company and its directors upon the revocation of the licence, I do not feel this is an appropriate occasion on which to invoke those powers, with the exception of Anglorom Trans (UK) Ltd. The two remaining companies, their directors and the transport manager will very quickly be able to regain their good repute on the cessation of the current practices. I will not place a barrier to an application for a new licence, which will enable either company to continue with its legitimate distribution work in association with its kitchens business."
THE LEGISLATIVE FRAMEWORK
"(2) A standard licence is an operator's licence under which a goods vehicle may be used on a road for the carriage of goods
(a) for hire or reward, or
(b) for or in connection with any trade or business carried on by the holder of the licence."
"(3) In this Act "operating centre", in relation to any vehicle, means the base or centre at which the vehicle is normally kept, and references to an operating centre of the holder of an operator's licence are references to any place which is an operating centre for vehicles used under that licence."
"13.-(1) Subject to sections 11 and 45(2), on an application for a standard licence a Traffic Commissioner shall consider
(a) whether the requirements of subsections (3) and (5) are satisfied, ....
(3) For the requirements of this subsection to be satisfied the traffic commissioner must be satisfied that the applicant fulfils the following requirements, namely
(a) that he is of good repute,
(b) that he is of the appropriate financial standing, and
(c) that he is professionally competent;
and the traffic commissioner shall determine whether or not that is the case in accordance with Schedule 3."
"If the traffic commissioner determines that any of the requirements that he has taken into consideration in accordance with subsection (1) or (2) are not satisfied he shall refuse the application, but in any other case he shall, subject to sections 14 and 45(2), grant the application."
"1.--(1) In determining whether an individual is of good repute, a traffic commissioner may have regard to any matter but shall, in particular, have regard to
(a) any relevant convictions of the individual or of his servants or agents; and
(b) any other information in his possession which appears to him to relate to the individual's fitness to hold a licence.
(2) In determining whether a company is of good repute, a traffic commissioner shall have regard to all the material evidence including, in particular
(a) any relevant convictions of the company or of any of its officers, servants or agents; and
(b) any other information in his possession as to the previous conduct of
(i) any of the company's officers, servants or agents, or
(ii) any of its directors, in whatever capacity,
if that conduct appears to him to relate to the company's fitness to hold a licence."
"27.-(1) The traffic commissioner by whom a standard licence was issued shall direct that it be revoked if at any time it appears to him that the licence-holder is no longer
(a) of good repute,
(b) of the appropriate financial standing, or
(c) professionally competent;
and the traffic commissioner shall determine whether or not that is the case in accordance with Schedule 3."
"28.-(1) Where, under section 26(l) or 27(1), a traffic commissioner directs that an operator's licence be revoked, the commissioner may order the person who was the holder of the licence to be disqualified (either indefinitely or for such period as the commissioner thinks fit) from holding or obtaining an operator's licence; and so long as the disqualification is in force
(a) any operator's licence held by him at the date of the making of the order (other than the licence revoked) shall be suspended, and
(b) notwithstanding anything in section 13 or 24, no operator's licence may be issued to him."
"(4) Where the traffic commissioner makes an order under subsection (1) in respect of any person, the commissioner may direct that if that person, at any time or during such period as the commissioner may specify
(a) is a director of, or holds a controlling interest in
(i) a company which holds a licence of the kind to which the order in question applies, or
(ii) a company of which such a company is a subsidiary, or
(b) operates any goods vehicles in partnership with a person who holds such a licence,
that licence of that company or, as the case may be, of that person, shall be liable to revocation, suspension or curtailment under section 26."
""transport manager", in relation to a business, means an individual who is in, or who is engaged to enter into, the employment of the holder of a standard licence and who, either alone or jointly with one or more other persons, has continuous and effective responsibility for the management of the transport operations of the business in so far as they relate to the carriage of goods."
"(4) For the purposes of this Act, a person who is an applicant for, or a holder of, a standard licence, or who is a transport manager, shall be regarded as being engaged in a road transport undertaking if
(a) in a case where that person is an individual; he is either
(i) the holder, or one of the joint holders, of an operator's licence, or
(ii) in the employment of a person who carries on a road transport undertaking and that undertaking gives him responsibility for the operation of goods vehicles used under an operator's licence; or ..."
THE TRAFFIC COMMISSIONER'S DECISION
"24. I find [the activities of Paramount and Anglorom] are controlled form within Romania. For the purposes of the transport operations, the companies are established in Romania. Had I been aware of these intentions, at the time the licence applications were made, I would have refused to grant the licences.
25. Section 58 defines a transport manager who: "has continuous and effective responsibility for the management of the transport operations of the business insofar as they relate to the carriage of goods." Mr Briggs plays no part in instructing or controlling the drivers. He gives no advice in the planning of the journeys, a duty of care imposed on all operators under EC Regulation 3821/85. He remains largely unaware of the precise location of the vehicles. Any control over vehicle movements exercised from within Great Britain falls to Mr Ballestrieri, not Mr Briggs. The transport manager's contribution is entirely retrospective, which is quite unsatisfactory and fatal to his good repute and the operators' ability to satisfy the requirement of professional competence.
26. In conducting an exercise of determining good repute, I am required, as a consequence of the Transport Tribunal decision in Bryan Haulage, to consider whether the licenceholders' conducts is such that they should be put out of business. In the present cases I have found the operator's activities to be incompatible with the legislation; they are fundamentally flawed. For those reasons it is inevitable, that they cannot continue. No evidence has been adduced which might suggest there was contingency, the employment of British licensed drivers for example, to provide for any adverse findings I might make against the current practices. Each of the three companies has failed to satisfy me that it remains of good repute."
"31, Anglorom Trans (UK) Ltd is disqualified indefinitely from holding or obtaining an operator's licence in any Traffic Area. I make no orders under s.28(4)."
THE TRANSPORT TRIBUNAL'S DECISION
"(e) Mr Briggs played no part in instructing or controlling the drivers; he had no input into planning journeys; he remained unaware of the precise location of the vehicles; any control exercised from with (sic) the UK was undertaken by Mr Ballestrieri, not Mr Briggs whose contribution to the transport operation was entirely retrospective and fatal to his good repute and the operators' ability to satisfy the requirement of professional competence."
"8. ... However, the real issue is the location of the control base of the transport operations of those two companies and in relation to that, we are satisfied that the Traffic Commissioner's conclusions were correct. There was no evidence of control or direction from within the UK by Mr Briggs and there was no evidence of any transport planning being undertaken at Basildon. Neither company produced evidence of disciplinary procedures being instituted or enforced by Mr Briggs, neither was there evidence of drivers hours infringements being identified and acted upon. It is difficult to envisage any situation where a Transport Manager could be considered to be in effective control of day to day operations when: all of the drivers lived abroad; they are not permitted to enter the UK; they are employed by a drivers agency based in Romania; the Transport Manager cannot communicate with them because of language barriers; discipline and enforcement must necessarily be left to others who are also based in Romania. We are satisfied that there was no evidence to show that Mr Briggs either on his own or with others, satisfied the requirements of s. 58 of the Act and that as a result, neither the companies or Mr Briggs by virtue of his involvement in this operation, were of good repute. Having correctly found that the transport operations undertaken by Paramount and Anglorom were based somewhere other than the UK (most likely Romania) the Traffic Commissioner rightly concluded that this was fatal to good repute; revocation of the licences of Paramount and Anglorom inevitably followed. Further, having also found that the nature of the operations of Anglorom had all the features of a third party hire and reward haulage operation without any connection with the kitchen business (which is not a finding that can be criticised) the Traffic Commissioner's decision to disqualify that company was not plainly wrong or disproportionate."
"9. It is of note that the Traffic Commissioner indicated that Paramount, Team Kitchens and Mr Briggs would quickly regain their repute once the current practices had ceased. As a result, we intend to allow the appeal in relation to Team Kitchens and to dismiss the appeals of Paramount and Anglorom, allowing sufficient time for Paramount to revise its operational practices and to apply for a new licence and for Anglorom to make appropriate arrangements to wind down its business. The order in relation to Paramount and Anglorom will not therefore take effect until 23.59 on 16 June 2004."
THE PRESENT APPEAL
MR BRIGGS
THE ARGUMENTS CONCERNING SECTION 58 OF THE ACT
"2. Wrongly, and/or in error of Law, the Traffic Commissioner/Transport Tribunal failed properly to Address whether the requirements of good repute/professional competence of a company required by the [Act], could be satisfied by transport management activities being shared by more than one individual.
3. Wrongly and/or in error of Law, in circumstances in which the transport management activities were shared between an official Transport Manager and a Director, finding that management did not amount to continuous and effective responsibility and/or satisfied the requirements of good repute/professional competence.
4. Wrongly and/or in error of Law, treating the definition of the Transport Manager in Section 58 of the [Act] as imposing an obligation in relation to the nature of the company's management structure and duties.
5. Wrongly and/or in error of Law, treating the definition of the Transport Manager in Section 58 of the [Act] as imposing obligations which the failure to discharge would inevitably amount to a loss of good repute/professional competence."
"1. Undertakings wishing to engage in the occupation of road transport operator shall:
(a) be of good repute;
(b) be of appropriate financial standing;
(c) satisfy the condition as to professional competence.
Where the applicant is a natural person and does not satisfy requirement (c), the competent authorities may nevertheless permit him to engage in the occupation of road transport operator provided that he designates to the said authorities another person, satisfying requirements (a) and (c), who shall continuously and effectively manage the transport operations of the undertaking.
Where the applicant is not a natural person:
- requirement (a) must be satisfied by the person or persons who will continuously and effectively manage the transport operations of the undertaking. Member States may require that other persons in the undertaking also satisfy this requirement.
- requirement (c) must be satisfied by the person or persons referred to in the first indent."
PROPORTIONALITY OF RELIEF
"That brings us back to the 1995 Act, which also contains no definition of good repute, but it is noticeable that in Sch 3 the opening words of para 1(2) dealing with a company are more restrictive than the opening words of para 1(1) dealing with an individual. When a traffic commissioner is considering if an individual is of good repute he can have regard to "any matter", but if he is considering a company he must confine himself to "all the material evidence". The difference in wording is a little surprising, but Parliament cannot have intended a traffic commissioner ever to have regard to immaterial evidence, so the conclusion must surely be that the schedule requires the traffic commissioner when considering alleged loss of repute to focus on matters relevant to the individual's fitness to hold a licence, bearing in mind -
"(a) that an existing licence is a possession safeguarded by Article 1 of the First Protocol, and
(b) that if loss of repute is found the inevitable sanction is revocation, possibly followed by an application for a fresh licence which may or not be granted. There must therefore be a relationship of proportionality between the finding and the sanction, and that relationship has a direct bearing on the approach to be adopted in any set of circumstances to the question of whether or not the individual has lost his repute.""
"6. ... The Traffic Commissioner was clearly entitled to consider allegations of breach of regulations by drivers as the starting point for considering whether the Appellant had failed to comply with its undertakings in relation to drivers hours and the keeping of records. However, in order to take action under s. 26 or to make a finding of loss of good repute under s. 27 or make an order of disqualification of directors under s. 28 of the Act, the Traffic Commissioner was obliged to make an assessment of the nature, number and gravity of the breaches of regulations revealed by Mr Prime's investigations and whether there was any evidence of instruction, encouragement or acquiescence on the part of the Appellant. That assessment and the Traffic Commissioner's findings of fact based upon that assessment should be clearly set out in his decision. They are not. In relation to the Appellant's systems and the steps taken by the Appellant to prevent breaches of the regulations, the Traffic Commissioner was further obliged to make an assessment of the evidence and make appropriate findings of fact, indicating the weight, if any, to be given to that evidence. It is not apparent from the Traffic Commissioner's decision that such an assessment was made or that he made the appropriate findings of fact. It is a further requirement that the Traffic Commissioner consider the weight, if any, to be attached to the Appellant's general record, performance, reputation and enforcement history. Again, such an assessment is not evident from the substance of the decision. In the absence of adequate reasoning, it is impossible to assess what matters were taken into account by the Traffic Commissioner, the weight he placed upon those matters and whether he made the appropriate balancing exercise when considering the extent to which he should exercise his enforcement powers. In the circumstances we are satisfied that the appeal must succeed."
Lord Justice Jonathan Parker:
Lord Justice Pill:
"(a) it has in respect of its road transport undertaking a transport manager….. and
(b) that transport manager….. is
(i) of good repute, and
(ii) professionally competent"
The expression "transport manager" is defined in Section 58(1) of the 1995 Act, paragraph 25 of the judgment.