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Cite as: [1998] EWHC Admin 602

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NELDER AND ORS v. CROWN PROSECUTION SERVICE [1998] EWHC Admin 602 (3rd June, 1998)


IN THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE CO/1422/98
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
CROWN OFFICE LIST
(DIVISIONAL COURT )
Royal Courts of Justice
Strand
London WC2

Wednesday 3rd June 1998

B e f o r e:

LORD JUSTICE SIMON BROWN

-and-

MR JUSTICE HOOPER

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NELDER AND ORS

-v-

CROWN PROSECUTION SERVICE
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(Computer-aided Transcript of the Stenograph Notes of
Smith Bernal Reporting Limited, 180 Fleet Street,
London EC4A 2HD
Telephone No: 0171 421 4040
Fax No: 0171 831-8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court) - - - - - - -
MISS S HOLLOWAY (instructed by Messrs Bindman and Partners, London, WC1) appeared on behalf of Lara Nelder, Simon Taylor, Daniel Thurley, Zineb Goumidi.

MISS S HOLLOWAY (instructed by Messrs Leathes Prior, Norwich) appeared on behalf of Christopher Rose, Stefan Reed, Lee Steadman, Nicholas Penn, Kate Thomas, Darren Calley.

MR M ELLIS (instructed by the CPS, Northampton) Respondent.
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J U D G M E N T
( As Approved by the Court )
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Crown Copyright


Wednesday 3rd June 1998


1. LORD JUSTICE SIMON BROWN: This is an appeal by way of case stated against the adjudication of the Stipendary Magistrate of the county of Northampton sitting at Corby and Kettering on 21st January 1998 whereby he convicted each of the ten appellants, together with one other accused of an offence of aggravated trespass contrary to section 68(1) of the Criminal Justice and Public Order Act 1994.

2. Put at its shortest, the applicants were hunt saboteurs convicted of disrupting the Woodland Pytchley hunt on 5th April 1997. Their appeal raises essentially two points. First, they contend that the information which each of them faced was defective. Second, that the hunt was itself trespassing on railway land and indeed, for good measure, committing thereby an offence under the British Transport Commission Act 1949 and so was not, at the material time, engaged in a lawful activity.

3. The case stated sets out the facts found by the magistrate in very considerable detail. However, rather than repeat the findings in full, I prefer to summarise them as follows. On the morning in question, the hunt consisted of the hunt servants, i.e. the huntsman and two whippers-in, some 40 or 50 mounted members under the master, some 36 hounds and a large number of foot followers. As it set off from its meeting point, it was accompanied by a group of hunt protesters (including these appellants), and by a number of police officers. The hunt's route was initially along a public road and thence onto a public bridleway leading beneath the railway line to fields beyond which it was intended to hunt. Although, however, the Master took the horse riders under the railway, the hunt servants took the hounds on to the railway line and the adjacent embankment and began to draw that land. The huntsman wrongly believed that he had permission to go on that land as he had done on a number of previous occasions. The hunt protesters followed the hunt servants and hounds on to the railway land and there it was that the protest activities began, the sounding of horns, shouting and hollering. Its effect was to separate the hounds from the huntsmen and to cause them to leave the line together with the protesters themselves. Paragraph 2(f) of the case stated I will read in full:


"The hounds and protesters having left the track, the protesters continued to run away from the line continuing to blow horns, shout and holler so that the hounds ran with and among the protesters and continued away for a distance of at least two fields away from the railway track, and a time of some 5 or 6 minutes before the Huntsman was able to regain control in the fields on the West side of the line away from the main body of the hunt and possibly a few more minutes to return to the Railway tunnel entrance; the group of protesters including the 11 defendants then continued to walk and run across several further fields before being ultimately intercepted and arrested."

4. The hunt had the permission of all the surrounding land owners to hunt their hand but had no permission to be upon the railway track itself. The protesters, for their part, were trespassers throughout: they had no permission either from the railway authority or from any of the surrounding land owners. Those are the central facts. I shall return shortly to the Magistrate's conclusions upon them. First, however, let me set out the material parts of section 68:


"(1) A person commits the offence of aggravated trespass if he trespasses on land in the open air and, in relation to any lawful activity which persons are engaging in or are about to engage in on that or adjoining land in the open air, does there anything which is intended by him to have the effect --

(a) of intimidating those persons or any of them so as to deter them or any of them from engaging in that activity,

(b) of obstructing that activity; or

(c) disrupting that activity.

(2) Activity on any occasion on the part of a person or persons on land is 'lawful' for the purposes of this section if he or they may they engage in the activity on the land on that occasion without committing an offence or trespassing on the land."

5. Next I must indicate the terms in which the information was laid here against each of these appellants:


"On Saturday 5th April 1997 at Gretton, Northamptonshire, did trespass on land in the open air in relation to a lawful activity namely the Woodland Pytchley Hunt which persons were engaged in on that or adjoining land in the open air did together with others blow horns, whistle, holler and shout which was intended by you to have the effect of intimidating those persons present or any of them as to deter, disrupt or obstruct that activity."

6. As stated, the first point taken on this appeal is that the information was defective. Two arguments are advanced as reflected in the two limbs of the first question posed for the opinion of this court:


"1. (i) whether the charge as worded amounted only to an allegation of intimidation contrary to section 68(1)(a).

2. If the answer to 1(i) is No, whether the charge is in any event defective by including all the elements of Section 68(1)."

7. As to the first part of that question, let me at once make clear that the case was never put as one of intimidation and certainly the magistrate found expressly that:


"There were no threats or violence towards the people participating in the hunt; nor was any damage or injury caused."

8. The Magistrate himself concluded upon that point:


"That although the charge was not felicitously worded, the reference to intimidation which was not relevant to the case was not fatal as the charge referred to the intention to deter, disrupt or obstruct. Those words convey to me, although there is no direct authority, activities which can overlap. I did not consider that the form of charge resulted in misleading the defendant ...".

9. I agree. Clearly the information was ineptly drawn and no doubt it would have been sensible to amend it at the conclusion of the prosecution case to reflect what at any rate by that stage was clear, namely that the case was being put against the defendants solely on limbs (b) and (c), those of obstructing or disrupting the hunt. That said, however, there can be no doubt that the wording was apt to encompass those limbs as well as the intimidation limb to which at first blush it might have been thought principally to relate. Anyone having read the section would recognise from the use of the words 'obstructing' and 'disrupting' that limbs (b) and (c) were also being charged. When, moreover, one comes to ask what I believe to be the key question in all these cases, namely has any injustice been done to the accused by the infelicitous wording of the charge?, the answer here, to my mind, is a clear and emphatic "no".

10. What then of the second limb of question one, the contention that the information raises allegations under more than one of the three limbs of section 68(1) and is thereby defective as duplicitous. In support of this submission, Miss Holloway draws our attention to section 7(2) of the Public Order Act 1986 which is in these terms:


"For the purposes of the rules against charging more than one offence in the same count or information, each of sections 1 to 5 creates one offence."

11. I need not burden this judgment by a recitation of those further sections. There is, Miss Holloway points out, no provision equivalent to section 7(2) in relation to section 68(1) of the 1994 Act. Similarly, she says there are no words here equivalent to those which complete section 9(2) of the Criminal Attempts Act 1981, namely, "... if it is shown that a person accused of an offence under this section intended that one of those offences should be committed, it is immaterial that it cannot be shown which it was."

12. For my part, I am wholly unpersuaded by these examples. Merely because on occasion Parliament has chosen to put any question of duplicity beyond argument does not, in my judgment, mean that a section such as that which confronts us here, criminalising as it does

a given actus reus wherever it is intended to have one or more of three possible effects, must necessarily be construed as requiring separate charges to be brought if more than one intent is to be relied upon. I can see no sense in giving section 68(1) that construction. Where,
for example, as here, the Crown suggests that the intention was either to obstruct or disrupt the activity of the hunt, clearly these are overlapping concepts and no possible advantage would be gained by charging them as two separate offences.

13. I turn to the second of the two questions posed for the opinion of this court:



"2. Whether in the light of my finding of fact that members of the hunt and hounds went intentionally on to the railway line, the activity 'disrupted' by the proposed appellants and Co-Defendants was a
'lawful' activity within the meaning of section 68(2) of the Criminal Justice and Public Order Act 1994."

14. I now set out certain of the Magistrate's conclusions reached in the light of the primary facts:


"The intention of those engaging in those activities [i.e. the protesters] was to take the hounds away from the hunt. It was merely fortuitous that the interference commenced while the hounds were on the railway line ... and the purpose was clearly to prevent or delay for the longest possible period the Hunt from pursuing its quarry. The defendants individually and collectively took part in those activities, with a common purpose. The Hunt's activity was obstructed and disrupted."

15. Having reached those conclusions, the Magistrate then expressed the following opinion upon the issues now comprised within this second question:


"... the hunt was in progress from the time the whole entourage set off from
Mr Ferguson's land; and that the Hunt comprised all the legitimate participants that is to say the riders and horses, hunt servants and hounds, quite apart from the foot followers who played no part in the events described to me. Although the actions upon which the prosecution relied were aimed at the hounds, that was simply one part of the Hunt, but it was the whole activity that was disrupted. The remainder of the Hunt comprising the riders and horses, was upon the land where they were not trespassing and where they had consent to be. In any event the actions of the protesters continued for a substantial time and for an extended distance after the hounds had left the line, so that even if when the disruption commenced the hounds were unlawfully on the line,

(i) I did not believe the whole Hunt was thereby rendered unlawful;

(ii) That once the trespass and unlawfulness had ended at the time that the protesters, hounds and Hunt servants had left the railway land, the Hunt could not be said to be unlawful;

(iii) It was still being disrupted and the offence continued in fields where the Hunt had permission to be and the protestors had not."

16. Accordingly, he found that:


"The actions disrupting or obstructing the activities of the Woodland Pytchley Hunt were actions undertaken in relation to a lawful activity engaged in on the same or adjoining land, all being in the open air."

17. In criticising that conclusion Miss Holloway makes the following essential submissions. First, those who trespassed, namely the huntsman, the two whippers-in and the hounds, were, if not the main body of the hunt, at least an integral and important part of it. Second, that they deliberately trespassed in the sense of intentionally going onto Railtrack's land to draw it, even although mistakenly they thought they had permission to do so; this was no mere accidental or momentary trespass. Third, that the protesters' activities began whilst this trespass was being committed.

18. All that I recognise to be true. To my mind, however, none of it on analysis invalidates the Magistrate's approach to the section 68(2) defence or his conclusion as a matter of fact and degree that, at any rate by the time the trespass had ended, the hunt's activity had become lawful so that, by thereafter maintaining their protest for an appreciable time over an appreciable distance, the appellants had committed the actus reus specified in the section with the intention of obstructing or disrupting that lawful activity.

19. Clearly, if the hunt's central objective had been, for example, to hunt land over which they had no permission to go or upon which hunting was banned, then the mere fact that they proposed also to engage in some lawful hunting in the vicinity would not make their activity, as a whole, lawful. That, however, was not this case. Equally, had the protesters confined their protest to the period whilst a significant part of the hunt was trespassing, then too no offence here could properly be found established. That, too, however, was not the case.

20. I would accordingly reject this ground of appeal also and in the result answer the two questions posed as follows. 1(i) "No", 1(ii) "No", (2) "Yes" (or at least the magistrate was entitled so to find). I would therefore dismiss this appeal.



MR JUSTICE HOOPER: I agree.

21. LORD JUSTICE SIMON BROWN: Legal aid taxation of most of the appellants' costs, Miss Holloway, is it?


22. MISS HOLLOWAY: Yes, my Lord. There are two appellants who have not had the benefit of legal aid. I would urge that in effect they will all be treated the same.


23. LORD JUSTICE SIMON BROWN: Well, that sounds sensible to me.

24. Mr Ellis, do you suggest to the contrary?


25. MR ELLIS: My Lord, there is an application for costs in respect of those non-legally aided.


26. LORD JUSTICE SIMON BROWN: No. We refuse to make any order for costs except for legal aid taxation of those that are legally aided.

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© 1998 Crown Copyright


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URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/1998/602.html