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Cite as: [1999] EWHC Admin 715

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MAYOR AND BURGESSES OF LONDON BOROUGH OF RICHMOND v. JON MORTON (T/A MORTS TRUCKING CO) [1999] EWHC Admin 715 (20th July, 1999)

IN THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE CO/4684/98

QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
(DIVISIONAL COURT )

Royal Courts of Justice
Strand
London WC2

Tuesday, 20th July 1999

B e f o r e:
LORD JUSTICE ROSE

-and-

MR JUSTICE FORBES
- - - - - - -



THE MAYOR AND BURGESSES OF THE
LONDON BOROUGH OF RICHMOND


-v-


JON MORTON (T/A MORTS TRUCKING CO)

- - - - - - -

(Computer-aided Transcript of the Stenograph Notes of
Smith Bernal Reporting Limited
180 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2HG
Telephone No: 0171-421 4040/0171-404 1400
Fax No: 0171-831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
- - - - - - -

MR G ALLIOTT (instructed by the Legal Advisor of the Transport Committee for London, Twickenham TW1 3BZ) appeared on behalf of the Appellant.

THE RESPONDENT did not appear and was unrepresented.



J U D G M E N T
(As approved by the Court)
(Crown Copyright)

Tuesday, 20th July 1999 .

LORD JUSTICE ROSE: I will ask Forbes J to give the first judgment.

1. MR JUSTICE FORBES: This is a prosecutor's appeal by way of Case Stated against an adjudication of the Justices for the Haringey Petty Sessions Area sitting at the Magistrates' Court, Lordship Lane, North London on 11th August 1998, whereby they dismissed a summons served on the Respondent which alleged an offence under the Greater London (Restriction of Goods Vehicles) Traffic Order 1985.


2. By a letter dated 6th July 1999, addressed to the Crown Office, the solicitors acting for the Respondent have indicated that the Respondent has decided not to be represented at this appeal and is content to rely upon the Case Stated by the Justices.


3. As I have already stated, the Respondent, Mr Morton, had been summoned under the Greater London (Restriction of Goods Vehicles) Traffic Order 1985. The information laid against him was that, on 10th October 1997, he did use a Scania lorry, registration number B570LK, being a goods vehicle exceeding 16.5 tonnes maximum gross weight on Bounds Green Road, London N22, a restricted street for the purposes of the said Order during the prescribed hours, namely 16.20 hours, contrary to section 8(1) of the Road Traffic Regulation Act 1984.


4. The relevant facts were not in dispute and are conveniently set out in paragraph (5) of the Case Stated as follows:


"An agreed schedule of facts was submitted to the court before the hearing pursuant S.10 Criminal Justices Act 1967. In summary it was accepted that the vehicle in question was driven by a Mr Conrad Thompson on a restricted street during hours prescribed by the Order and that the vehicle was over 16.5 tonnes maximum gross weight. The vehicle was being driven for or about the business of the Respondent. The driver Mr Thompson was not a full time employee of the Respondent under a contract of service. ..."

5. We have also been told that, although there is no reference to it in paragraph (5) of the Case Stated, it was also admitted that John Morton, trading as Morts Trucking Co, is the registered keeper of the lorry in question, namely lorry registration number B570LK.


6. The Appellant is the local authority responsible for enforcing the "LBTS night-time and weekend lorry control" on behalf of all the participating London Boroughs. It has power to prosecute pursuant to section 222 of the Local Government Act 1972.


7. The Greater London (Restriction of Goods Vehicles) Traffic Order 1985 was made pursuant to the powers conferred by section 6 of the Road Traffic Regulations Act 1984. Article 3 of the Greater London (Restriction of Goods Vehicles) Traffic Order 1985 (as amended) (hereafter, "the Order") provides as follows:


"(3)(a) Subject to Article 4 hereof, no person shall use, drive or cause or permit to be driven any goods vehicle exceeding 16.5 tonnes maximum gross weight in any restricted street during the prescribed hours.

(b) In any proceedings relating to paragraph (a) above where it is shown that either:

(i) A person was the registered keeper of a
vehicle at any date, or

(ii) A person was a hirer or hire purchaser
or lessee or conditional purchaser or
owner of a vehicle at any date

it shall be presumed that that person was the user of the vehicle at that date unless that person shows on the balance of probabilities that he was not the user of the said vehicle at the said date and for the avoidance of doubt the existence or otherwise of any such agreement as mentioned in (ii) above shall not of itself mean that the registered keeper is not also a user of such a vehicle."

8. Article 4 of the Order deals with the circumstances where a goods vehicle has been issued with a permit. In this case it was common ground that no permit had been issued to the Respondent.


"Restricted street" is defined in Article 2 of the Order as:

"... any highway maintainable at the public expense or length of such highway in Greater London not being a street or length of street specified in the Schedule to this Order."

"Prescribed hours" is defined in Article 2 as:

"... between midnight and 7.00 am, and between 9.00 pm and midnight Mondays to Fridays ..."

"Person" is defined in Article 2(iv) of the Greater London (Restriction of Goods Vehicles) Traffic Order (Amendment No. 5) Order 1997 as including:

"... a body of persons corporate or unincorporate."

9. Section 8(1) of the Road Traffic Regulations Act 1984 provides:


"8. Contravention of order under s.6.

(1) Any person who acts in contravention of, or fails to comply with, an order under section 6 of this Act shall be guilty of an offence."

10. The central issue in the case was whether, on the agreed facts, Mr Morton did use the lorry in question, that being the basis upon which the information had been laid against him. Accordingly, as the Justices point out in paragraph (5) of the case, submissions were centred on the proper construction of the word "use" for the purposes of Article 3 of the Order. On behalf of Mr Morton, it was submitted to the Justices that the term "use" in Article 3 should be given a restricted meaning and only apply to a non-driving owner of the vehicle in question if the actual driver was at the relevant time employed by the owner under a contract of service and at the material time was driving on his employer's business. In support of that submission, reference was made to, and reliance placed upon, an unreported decision of this court in West Yorkshire Trading Standards Service v Lex Vehicle Leasing Limited CO/1616/94, Transcript - 9th February 1995, where the court had to consider the meaning of the word "use" for the purposes of section 41B of the Road Traffic Act 1988 and Regulation 80(1)(b) of the Road Vehicles' (Construction and Use) Regulations 1986.


11. So far as material, those particular provisions are respectively in the following terms. Section 41B(1):


"A person who-

(a) contravenes or fails to comply with a
construction and use requirement as to
any description of weight applicable to-

(i) a goods vehicle, or

(ii) a motor vehicle or trailer adapted
to carry more than eight
passengers, or

(b) uses on a road a vehicle which does not
comply with such a requirement, or
causes or permits a vehicle to be so used,

is guilty of an offence."

Regulation 80(1)(b):

"... no person shall use, or cause or permit to be used, on a road a vehicle -

(a) ...

(b) for which a plating certificate has been
issued, if any of the weights shown in
column (2) of the plating certificate is
exceeded."

12. In the course of his judgment in the West Yorkshire Trading Standards case, Dyson LJ, who gave the first judgment (with which McCowan LJ agreed) said, at page 6D to E of the transcript, this:


"The so-called narrow approach to the meaning of the word 'use' or 'uses', where it is found in criminal statutes in conjunction with the alternatives of 'causes or permits' has a long pedigree."

13. Dyson J then carefully reviewed a number of previously decided cases and, at page 10B, continued as follows:


"... Thus the line has been clearly and consistently drawn by this court. A person is a user only if he is the driver or the owner of the vehicle, but it applies to the owner only if the driver is employed by the owner under a contract of service and at the material time he is driving on his employer's business. The line has been described variously as not wholly logical and as somewhat artificial, but it has been drawn by this court after due consideration has been given to those criticisms, to some extent, for pragmatic reasons and to avoid confusion."

14. In the present case the Justices were persuaded that there was no essential or important distinction between the wording of the statutory provisions considered in the West Yorkshire Trading Standards case when compared with those with which they were concerned in the present case.


15. For the reasons which I give later in this judgment, I have come to the conclusion that the Justices were in error in reaching that particular conclusion. The Justices came to the further following conclusion, and I quote from paragraph 11 of the case:


"We were satisfied that on the facts of the case Mr Thompson was not employed by the Respondent on a contract of service and therefore could not be the user of the said vehicle. Had the summons alleged that the Respondent had caused or permitted the vehicle to be driven and all the essential elements had been made out our decision may have been different. Accordingly we dismissed the information."

16. Accordingly, in the light of that finding, the questions for the opinion of the High Court are as follows:


"(a) Does the word 'use' contained in the Traffic Order (Amendment No.5) 1997 only have a restricted meaning as in the West Yorkshire case.

(b) if 'no' to (a) above, can 'use' be interpreted widely enough so that operators of vehicles can be liable not only for their employee drivers but also for agency drivers and others not employed under a contract of service."

17. On behalf of the Appellant, Mr Alliott accepted that the word "use" has been defined narrowly in circumstances where it is found in criminal statutes in conjunction with the alternatives of "causes or permits to be used", and he accepted that the relevant case law to that effect was reviewed by Dyson J in the West Yorkshire Trading Standards case. However, Mr Alliott drew particular attention to the wording of Article 3 of the Order which falls to be considered in this case, where the word "use" appears in conjunction with the alternatives of "drive or causes or permits to be driven", not in conjunction with the alternatives "causes or permits to be used", as provided in section 41B of the Road Traffic Act 1988 and Regulation 80(1)(b) of the 1986 Regulations.


18. Mr Alliott submitted that the rationale of the cases which construed "use" in the narrow sense was that, if it had a wider sense, then the alternatives encompassed by the words "cause or permit to be used", would be otiose. He therefore argued that the line of cases which were summarised in the West Yorkshire Trading Standards case and the restatement of the narrow definition of the word "use" in that case is confined to provisions which have an alternative expressed in words such as "causes or permits to be used" and are not applicable to the words used in Article 3 of the Order, where the word "use" is followed by an alternative expressed in wording based on a different and probably more limited activity (i.e. driving).


19. By way of example in the previously decided cases reviewed by Dyson J in the West Yorkshire Trading Standards case, I refer to the following passages:


"In Carmichael and Sons Ltd v Cottle [1971] RTR 11 at 14B Lord Parker CJ said:

'It has long been held that, when the offence
is not merely an offence of user but can be
an offence of causing or permitting the user,
a restricted meaning should be given to
"use". ...'

In Crawford v Haughton [1972] RTR 125, Lord Widgery CJ ... referred to Carmichael and Sons (Worcester) v Cottle . At page 129C [Lord Widgery] said:

'I have not found this a particularly easy
case because I find it difficult to accept
that, if a man can use a vehicle through the
hands of his servant, he cannot be said to
use it at the hands of someone who at his
specific request drives it on a journey at
the express orders and with the full
knowledge of the owner. No doubt the line
must be drawn somewhere, and the judgments of
Lord Parker CJ to which I have referred show
a tendency to restrict the capacity of
persons using in cases where the alternatives
of permitting or causing to be used are
provided. ...'"

20. Furthermore, Mr Alliott suggested that, in at least two of the cases reviewed in the West Yorkshire Trading Standards case, it is apparent that the court has had great difficulty in justifying the narrow definition of the word "use", even when it appears in the context of the clause containing an alternative of "causes or permitting to be used". He pointed out that those two cases were reviewed in the West Yorkshire Trading Standards case, namely NFC Forwarding Limited v Director of Public Prosecutions [1989] RTR 239 and Hallett Silberman Limited v Cheshire County Council [1993] RTR 32. Those cases are reviewed at pages 12 and 30 of the West Yorkshire Trading Standards case respectively.


In the NFC Forwarding case Auld J stated at page 245B:

"... Clearly, a different test from that applicable to a motor vehicle must be applied where a defective trailer is being drawn on the road by someone else's motor vehicle or left unattached in the road."

21. Although these observations were dismissed as obiter by Dyson J in the West Yorkshire Trading Standards case, Mr Alliott submitted that Auld J's judgment is a clear indication that the court, in certain circumstances, will apply a different and wider definition of the word "use" if the context so demands.


In the Hallett Silberman case, a case where the defendant's trailer was being pulled by a lorry owned by a third party and driven by the third party's employee, Beldam LJ considered that it was open to him to look beyond the narrow restricted meaning of the word "use" in the context of offences he was considering. At page 43 of the report, Beldam LJ said this:

"Thus it seems to me that in some regulations at least, the words 'person who uses as motor vehicle' are intended to cover a person whose vehicle is being used for his purposes and on his behalf, under his instruction and control, and that, from the many complex factors which a court should take into account in deciding whether a person was using the vehicle on the road, it is too restrictive to isolate the terms of the particular contract under which the driver happens to be engaged to perform the duty of driving as determining the question."

22. Mr Alliott accepted that, in the West Yorkshire Trading Standards case, Dyson J cast doubt on the reasoning of Beldam LJ, but nevertheless sought to distinguish the case as applying to its own particular subject matter, namely trailers: see pages 16E to 17A of the transcript. Accordingly, Mr Alliott submitted that, if it is open to the court to construe the word "use" in a wider sense when faced with particular statutory offences, even in a context where the clause goes on to provide an alternative such as "causing or permitting to be used", then the court must have greater power to do so where there is not such a follow on clause of "causing or permitting to be used" - particularly where the follow on clause involves a differently expressed and narrow activity.


23. Mr Alliott pointed out that Article 3 creates an offence of strict or absolute liability. No mens rea needs to be proved. In JG Williams (trading as Wiltrans International) v London Borough of Richmond-Upon-Thames , Queen's Bench Division (Divisional Court) Transcript - Tuesday, 20th February 1996, Otton LJ considered the position in the context of this legislation and came to that conclusion, citing with approval a "celebrated passage" of Devlin J (as he then was), in R v Reynolds v GH Austin & Sons Limited [1951] 2 KB 135, which was in turn approved in the Hallett Silberman case. A similar conclusion as to the absolute or strict power liability nature of the particular offence created by Article 3 of the Order was also reached in the decision of this court in London Borough of Richmond v JR Range and Sons Limited , CO/3600/98, Transcript - 12th November 1988 at page 5.


24. Furthermore, Mr Alliott submitted that the narrow definition of "use", being limited, as it is, to a non-driving owner of the vehicle only if the actual driver is employed by the owner under a contract of service and at the material time he is driving on his employer's business, does not sit happily within the framework of the articles of the Order which are the subject of consideration by this court in this case. Mr Alliott stressed that there is a rebuttable presumption that the registered keeper and/or hirer is the user: see the words of Article 3(b) of the Order. Mr Alliott suggested that such a presumption is meaningless if the definition of the "user" in this context only encompasses an owner or an employee under a contract of service who is driving on his employer's business at the material time.


25. Accordingly, Mr Alliott submitted that the word "use" within the meaning of Article 3 of the Order should be construed to include use by any person, corporate or otherwise, whose vehicle is being used by him or for his purposes and on his behalf, under his instruction and control, and that the precise nature of the driver's contract, whether it be of service or for services, is immaterial. He further submitted that the phrase "a person whose vehicle is being used" is not restricted to ownership but encompasses also lawful possession by way of hire, hire purchase, lease or conditional purchase.


26. I agree with Mr Alliott's submissions that, for the reasons he put forward, the wording of Article 3 of the Order does differ significantly from the wording of the statutory provisions which fell to be considered in the West Yorkshire Trading Standards case. I also agree with Mr Alliott that the apparent underlying rationale for the so-called narrower approach to the meaning of word "use" or "uses" when used in conjunction with alternatives of "causes or permits" does not apply in this case. The word "use" does not cover the same ground as the alternatives of "driving or causing or permitting to be driven".

27. The opening words of Article 3(a) referred to two principle activities in relation to the vehicle, namely the use and the driving of the vehicle, but the alternative of causing or permitting is limited to the activity of driving and is not expressed to extend to the activity of use. In those circumstances, as it seems to me, this court is not inhibited by earlier authority from giving a full and complete meaning to the word "use" in Article 3 of the Order. In my judgment, the construction placed upon that word by Mr Alliott is entirely in accordance with good sense and the natural meaning of the word "use" in its context, and I would construe it accordingly.


28. It follows that I would answer the questions as follows: (a) "no" and (b) "yes". I would allow this appeal accordingly.


29. LORD JUSTICE ROSE: I agree. Leaving authority aside, it would, to my mind, be a curious, indeed astonishing, result if the registered keeper of a vehicle, being used for his purposes on his business and on his instructions, is not to be regarded as using it within the 1985 and 1997 Regulations presently under consideration merely because, on a particular day, the driver hired to drive the vehicle in those circumstances did not have a contract of employment with the owner of the vehicle.


30. Accordingly, the question which arises is whether the authorities to which my Lord has referred, culminating in West Yorkshire v Lex , compel this court so to construe these Regulations. In my judgment, for the reasons given by my Lord, they do not. Those authorities deal with the construction of regulations differently framed, which refer (as the present regulations do not) to "causing or permitting use" as well as to "use", whereby a narrow construction of use has been held to be necessary. That reasoning does not apply to the present regulations where driving rather than use is the activity caused or permitted, to which the regulations refer.


31. Accordingly, this appeal is allowed.


32. MR ALLIOTT: My Lord, the appropriate Order is that the case be remitted back to the Magistrates' Court with either directions to convict or for a retrial.


33. LORD JUSTICE ROSE: Is there anything further that needs to be found before they should convict? I suspect the answer is not. No, we shall remit the matter to the Justices with the direction that they convict in accordance with the terms of our judgments.


34. MR ALLIOTT: My Lords, in terms of costs, might I apply for costs to be paid out of Central Funds?


35. LORD JUSTICE ROSE: Yes. Mr Alliott, it is implicit in our judgments that we are deeply indebted to you for your skeleton, as well, of course, as for your oral argument.



_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _


© 1999 Crown Copyright


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