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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions >> Bogdal v R [2008] EWCA Crim 1 (16 January 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2008/1.html Cite as: [2008] EWCA Crim 1 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CRIMINAL
DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM HULL CROWN COURT
MISS RECORDER OTTON-GOULDER QC
T20060131
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL | ||
B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE UNDERHILL
and
SIR
CHRISTOPHER
HOLLAND
____________________
Michael Edward Bogdal (aka Marjan Tadeusz) |
Appellant | |
- and - |
||
Regina |
Respondent |
____________________
Mr Nicholas Worsley (instructed by The Crown
Prosecution Service) for the Respondent
Hearing dates : 30 November 2007
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE UNDERHILL:
FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
"(1) If a dog is dangerously out of control in a public place –
(a) the owner; and
(b) if different, the person for the time being in charge of the dog,
is guilty of an offence, or, if the dog while so out of control injures any person, an aggravated offence, under this sub-section."
Mr Bogdal was charged on the basis that he was the owner of the dog. Since the aggravated offence was charged, the offences were triable on indictment. He was also charged by way of alternative with three offences under sec. 3 (3) of the Act; but since these were not in the event proceeded with we need not deal further with that aspect.
THE CRIMINAL APPEALS
"In this Act—
…
'public place' means any street, road or other place (whether or not enclosed) to which the public have or are permitted to have access whether for payment or otherwise and includes the common parts of a building containing two or more separate dwellings."
We will refer to the final element of that definition, from the words "and includes", as "the common parts provision". The common parts provision is, so far as we are aware, unique to the 1991 Act, but the core of the definition is in a form employed (with insignificant variations) in a variety of statutes, dating back many years, which regulate conduct in a public place; and the definition has attracted a fair amount of judicial consideration. Not all the case-law was cited to us, but that no doubt showed a wise restraint on the part of counsel. We are satisfied that the cases to which we were referred were sufficient to allow the principles which were relevant for the resolution of the present case to be identified.
Fellowes
"'Public place' includes any highway and any other premises or place to which at the material time the public have or are permitted to have access, whether on payment or otherwise."
This is therefore one of the many statutes referred to above applying the same core definition as sec. 10 (2) of the 1991 Act. (The only differences are that the governing verb is "includes" rather than "means" and that the 1991 Act definition adds the phrase "(whether or not enclosed)" – neither of which seem to us material for present purposes.) We should however note that the 1936 Act contained a definition of the term "private premises" which does not appear in the 1991 Act. At p. 231 in Edwards Bridge LJ said:
"Approaching the matter quite independently of any authority, and looking simply at the contrasting definitions of public place and private premises in the statute, it seems to this Court that it is quite impossible to hold that the expression "public place" can be construed as extending to the front gardens of private premises simply on the footing on which the learned judge relied that members of the public have an implied licence to pass through those private gardens in order to obtain access to the front doors of private premises if they have some lawful occasion for so doing. It is not qua members of the public that they thus enjoy access, it is qua lawful visitors. Indeed it is certainly only by permission of the owner, occupier or lessee of the premises that persons obtaining access to front doors in the manner referred to are entitled to access. That would bring the front garden such as this within the definition of private premises in the statute as opposed to bringing it within the definition of a public place."
He then went on to show that that conclusion was supported by the decided cases.
"In the present case, the issue is whether those who gained access or were permitted to have access to this block of flats went there as members of the public or in some private capacity.
The appropriate starting point to the resolution of the issue in this case is to ask who had or who was permitted to have access to this block of flats and why, and to ask whether the methods by which access was to be gained shed light on the answer to that question. Approached in this way, the question was the landing in this case a public place, admits of only one answer. It was not. People are not permitted to enter this building and be on the landings as they please. The manifest purpose of the control exercised over entry from the outer door (or it may be doors) from the street is to prevent entry, save by those who visit the building for social, business or professional dealings with those who live in the flats (for example, the friend, the milkman or the doctor) or for purposes connected with the building itself, such as maintenance. This connection with the occupiers or the building takes visitors out of the general public and gives a private (as opposed to public) nature to their access."
Jowitt J noted that the justices had attached weight to the fact that a variety of members of the public other than the occupiers of the flat – such as postmen and tradesmen - would be entitled to access, but he said that that was not the point:
"To speak of tradesmen and postmen as being members of the public when they are on these premises, begs the question of whether such visitors are members of the public once they have entered the block of flats. We are all members of the public. It does not follow that all our actions and all our visits are performed as members of the public. It seems to me that here the justices were confusing numbers of visitors with purpose."
Jowitt J distinguished the earlier decision in Knox v Anderton (1983) 77 Cr. App. R. 156, in which the Divisional Court had held that justices had been entitled to find that the upper walkway of a block of flats, forming part of a large estate, was a public place for the purpose of the Prevention of Crime Act 1953. The evidence in Knox v Anderton had been that members of the public had free access to the walkways, which were – to use Mr Worsley's useful phrase - "pavements in the sky", and were not approached through any gates or doors, irrespective of whether they had business with the particular flats that they served. It can be seen that Williams adopted an essentially similar approach to Edwards, making it clear that the crucial question was the capacity in which any members of the public had access to the place in question.
"In my judgment, in the light of the meaning which has been given to "public place" in the Public Order Act 1936, and particularly in the Criminal Justice Act 1967, the path leading to the appellant's front door was not a public place within the meaning of section 10 (2) of the Dangerous Dogs Act 1991. [The complainant] visited it qua visitor and not qua member of the public. I do not think that it is possible to reach any different conclusion by a consideration of the purposes of the Dangerous Dogs Act 1991."
R v C
"… the external parts are by the words of that Section specifically excluded and not, as [counsel for the Crown] contends, by implication included."
"10. While it would not be useful or wise for this court to attempt to substitute for the statutory phrase some definition or exegesis of its own, it seems to me that the principle which runs through all of these cases is that land may be either on the face of it public or on the face of it private land: a street would be an example of the former, the front garden or front area of a private dwelling an example of the latter. In the latter case, however, it is also clear that the ostensibly private character of the land may be negated by evidence that the general public - that is to say anyone who wants to - does in fact have access to it, whether by permission or not. This was the case in Knox v Anderton. It was not the case in the 1978 case of Roberts which concerned, as this case does, the enclosed but accessible area between a house and the highway.
11. Does the nature of the offence make a difference, as [counsel for the Crown] was inclined to argue it did? In other words, may a public place have a different meaning depending on whether the charge is driving a motor vehicle there, being drunk and disorderly there, or carrying a bladed article there? The decision in the 2003 case of R v Roberts suggests not. It would, moreover, be disruptive of legal certainty if a phrase repeatedly used by Parliament, albeit for different purposes, were given differential meanings in this way."
("The 1978 case of Roberts" must, we think, be a reference to Edwards, in which the second defendant was a Mr. Roberts. The "2003 case" is R v Roberts [2004] 1 WLR 181, a case in this Court, also on sec. 139 of the 1988 Act, in which Edwards was followed.)
The Recorder's reasoning
"If the ratio of the garden path case - that is, the Fellowes case - is that it is a matter of invitation, whether explicit or implied, that cannot arise when one is dealing with a shared drive, because while a person may be implicitly or explicitly invited by let us say the owners of Wawne House, so far as Sycamore House is concerned there is no invitation whatsoever, whether explicit or implicit, and the same of course applies vice versa."
She further said that the terms of the common parts provision showed, "by analogy", that common access routes of this kind fell within the terms of sec. 10 (2).
Decision
THE JUDICIAL REVIEW APPLICATION