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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Badger Trust, R (on the application of) v SSEFRA [2012] EWCA Civ 1286 (11 September 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2012/1286.html Cite as: [2012] EWCA Civ 1286, [2012] WLR(D) 287 |
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ON APPEAL FROM QUEEN'S BENCH
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
(MR JUSTICE OUSELEY)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE RIMER
and
LORD JUSTICE SULLIVAN
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THE QUEEN ON THE APPLICATION OF BADGER TRUST |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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SSEFRA |
Respondent |
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Mr Nigel Pleming QC and Ms Kate Grange (instructed by Treasury Solicitor) appeared on behalf of the Respondent.
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Laws:
"The culling would be piloted in two areas; the first year of the pilot would test the Defendant's assumption about the effectiveness, humaneness and safety of controlled shooting, also called free shooting, to contrast with cage-trapping followed by shooting. After that first year test within the two pilot areas, the Defendant would review the cost and benefit analysis in those areas to see if the scheme could be 'rolled out more widely'.'"
"Maps within the Defendant's July 2011 Eradication Programme show that the trend of cattle TB incidence in England has been rising for 25 years. The areas affected spread from isolated pockets in south west England and Wales in 1986-1990, to large parts of west and south west England and Wales. This case is not concerned with the position in Wales, where the Welsh Ministers have their own programme and powers since this is a devolved issue. By 2010 10.8% of herds in England were under bTB restriction, whereas the figure was 22.8% in the south west. The chief veterinary officer, Mr Gibbens, put the public cost of bTB in England in 2010/11 at over £91m; 25000 cattle were slaughtered for bTB control. Control also leads to financial costs to farmers from animal losses, testing costs and disruption to cattle movement, and stress and ill-health, which is not quantifiable financially. Although not as high as in 2008, new bTB incidents have been rising steadily since."
"A person is guilty of an offence if, except as permitted by or under this Act, he
wilfully kills, injures or takes, or attempts to kill, injure or take, a badger."
"(1) A licence may be granted to any person by the appropriate Conservancy Council authorising him, notwithstanding anything in the foregoing provisions of this Act, but subject to compliance with any conditions specified in the licence—
(a) for scientific or educational purposes or for the conservation of badgers—
(i) to kill or take, within an area specified in the licence by any means so specified, or to sell, or to have in his possession, any number of badgers so specified; or
(ii) to interfere with any badger sett within an area specified in the licence by any means so specified;
(b) for the purpose of any zoological gardens or collection specified in the licence, to take within an area specified in the licence by any means so specified, or to sell, or to have in his possession, any number of badgers so specified;"
"The Ministers may make such orders as they think fit—
(a) generally for the better execution of this Act, or for the purpose of in any manner preventing the spreading of disease"
That provision replicates Section 1(1) of the Act of 1950.
"The Minister, if satisfied in the case of any area—
(a) that there exists among the wild members of one or more species in the area a disease to which this section applies which has been or is being transmitted from members of that or those species to animals of any kind in the area, and
(b) that destruction of wild members of that or those species in that area is necessary in order to eliminate, or substantially reduce the incidence of, that disease in animals of any kind in the area,
may, subject to the following provisions of this section, by order provide for the destruction of wild members of that or those species in that area."
"The appropriate authority, if satisfied in the case of any area –
(a) that there exists among the wild members of one or more species in the area a disease to which this section applies which has been or is being transmitted from members of that or those species to animals or poultry of any kind in the area, and
(b) that destruction of wild members of that or those species in that area is necessary in order to eliminate, or substantially reduce the incidence of, that disease in animals or poultry of any kind in the area,
may, subject to the following provisions of this section, by order provide for the destruction of wild members of that or those species in that area."
As regards the House of Lords debate on the Bill which became the Badgers Act 1973, I should set out paragraph 38 of Ouseley J's judgment:
"Mr Pleming referred me to Hansard in relation to the provisions of the Badgers Act 1973, the predecessor to the 1992 Act, to show the mischief behind what is now s10 of the 1992 Act, and to refute Mr Wolfe's contention as to the purpose which Parliament had in mind. I did not hear elaborate arguments on its admissibility, but Mr Pleming preferred to put his argument on the mischief basis after consideration rather than on Pepper v Hart [1993] AC 593, the conditions for which, though often ignored, do not really apply here. The Badgers Bill was a private member's Bill introduced in the House of Lords. Baroness Young, the Junior Environment Minister speaking for the Government, referred to the evidence that bTB was transmitted from badgers to cattle and that it was necessary to consider destroying some badgers for the health of cattle and of badgers themselves. In HL vol 338 15 February 1972 col 1692 and on, she said that the Bill was unacceptable in its then form since it contained no provision for any control measures to prevent the spread of disease. But by the time of the debate on 2 April 1973, the Bill had been amended to include what is now s10 of the 1992 Act. In HL vol col 341 col 22 and on, Baroness Young said that the new provision covered all purposes for which it might be necessary to issue licences to kill badgers. It is clear, were it not clear before, that the distinction drawn by Mr Wolfe was not what Parliament contemplated at all, and it used the words it did to create a broad power to grant licences to permit the killing of badgers because of the risk bTB infected badgers posed for cattle."
I agree with Ouseley J's reasoning at paragraph 35:
"Whatever may be the way in which some scientists may choose to express themselves, where a badger transmits the disease so that it infects cattle in a herd which is not infected, the incidence of the disease is increased, and the disease has been spread in ordinary English. In ordinary English, the disease would also have been spread, and its incidence increased, where a badger infects uninfected cattle, whether part of a herd which is already infected or not, and whether or not the newly infected beast is part of a herd at all. In ordinary English, preventing those events occurring is preventing the spread of the disease. The natural meaning of the words of s10(2)(a) does not involve the distinction necessary for Mr Wolfe's argument. Nor is the phrase one which obviously has a technical or specialist scientific meaning, let alone one on the meaning of which there is a general scientific consensus."
In short it seems to me that in the end it makes very little sense to contemplate a provision concerned with preventing the spread of disease outside but not at all inside the area where action is being taken.
Lord Justice Rimer:
Lord Justice Sullivan:
Order: Appeal dismissed