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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Planton, R (on the application of) v Director of Public Prosecutions [2001] EWHC 450 (Admin) (6 June 2001) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2001/450.html Cite as: [2001] EWHC 450 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
DIVISIONAL COURT
Strand London WC2 |
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B e f o r e :
and
MR JUSTICE SILBER
____________________
THE QUEEN ON THE APPLICATION OF PLANTON | ||
-v- | ||
DIRECTOR OF PUBLIC PROSECUTIONS |
____________________
Smith Bernal Reporting Limited,
180 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2HG
Telephone No: 020 7421 4040 Fax No: 020 7404 1424
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
MR NOEL CASEY (instructed by CPS Essex, County House, 100 New London Road, Chelmsford, Essex CM2 ORG) appeared on behalf of the Respondent
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Crown Copyright ©
"On 15th April 2000 at Maldon in the County of Essex did drive a motor vehicle, namely a Volvo 760 index C552 OTW, on a public place namely the 'Causeway' between Osea Island and Decoy Point, Heybridge, after consuming so much alcohol that the proportion of it in his breath, namely 68 microgrammes of alcohol in 100 millilitres of breath, exceeded the prescribed limit, Contrary to Section 5(1)(a) Road Traffic Act 1988 and Schedule 2 of the Road Traffic Offenders Act 1988."
"If a person drives or attempts to drive a motor vehicle on a road or other public place after consuming so much alcohol that the proportion of it in the breath, blood or urine exceeds the prescribed limit he is guilty of an offence."
"a) Osea Island is an island in the estuary of the Blackwater River in Essex. There is a man-made Causeway linking the island to the mainland. This Causeway is sometimes passable and sometimes submerged by tidal water.
b) There is a Royal Mail collection box on the island, and mail is delivered to twelve addresses. Mail is collected and delivered by van crossing the Causeway at low tide. From time to time people have to be rescued from the Causeway, such as a resident of the island, a taxi driver and an oil tanker driver. P.Sgt Robinson had visited the island as a boy to visit a relative and on another occasion to pick samphire.
c) Access to the Causeway from the mainland is not prevented by any physical obstruction. There is a barrier present at the entrance to the approach road some distance from the Causeway but this if used would only extend across part of the approach. Signs by the entrance to the approach road indicate that it is a private road."
"d) Mr Planton owned the car in question. At the material time he was facing in the direction of his home on Osea Island. The car was seen by the police officers halfway across the Causeway. They first noticed its rear lights. The Causeway was passable as the tide was going out. Mr Planton was in the driver's seat of the car. His head was against the window. The engine was running.
e) Any other finding of fact is not relevant for the purpose of this appeal."
a) Having heard all the evidence we reminded ourselves that in order to convict, the prosecution had to prove beyond reasonable doubt that the appellant was driving the vehicle and that the location in question was a public place.
b) The only evidence before us was given by prosecution witnesses. This evidence was not discredited by cross examination on any material point.
c) In respect of the question of Mr Planton driving the vehicle, he was in the driver's seat, the engine was running and he was facing in the direction of his home, halfway across the Causeway on Osea Island. We considered the evidence that the vehicle was not moving. We found movement to be only one factor to be considered. There was no explanation from the defendant other than that he was waiting for the tide. At that time the Causeway was passable as the tide was going out. We found the purpose of the stop to be connected to the driving. Mr Planton remained in the vehicle. We were satisfied that the evidence was sufficient to justify a finding that Mr Planton was driving.
d) In respect of whether the Causeway was a public place, we were not helped by Mr Planton referring to a public road. The information referred to driving on a public place. We had to find that the public have access to the Causeway, that the use was expressly or implicitly allowed and not achieved by overcoming any physical obstruction or in defiance of any express or implied prohibition. The evidence before us, which was not contradicted by Mr Planton, was that the Causeway was open to all and was not restricted to access by a particular class of person. There was no physical obstruction to entry to the Causeway. The barrier at the entrance to the access road leading to the Causeway did not restrict access in any way. Notices at this entrance were not conclusive evidence that the Causeway was not a public place. We were therefore satisfied that the evidence was sufficient to justify a finding that the Causeway was a public place.
e) In respect of the claim that the site in question was a foreshore, we did not consider that this was relevant to our deliberations on the question of whether it was a public place. The evidence of the prosecution witnesses was not discredited in any way, and Mr Planton did not give evidence or call witnesses.
f) Our findings as detailed above, together with findings that are not relevant for the purpose of this appeal, were such that we were sure beyond reasonable doubt that the offence was made out and we accordingly found Jeremy Planton guilty."
"Were we entitled to be satisfied beyond a reasonable doubt having regard to the evidence before us that:
a) Mr Planton was driving, and
b) That the Causeway is a public place."
"I think that, when the statute speaks of 'the public' in this connexion, what is meant is the public generally, and not the special class of members of the public who have occasion for business or social purposes to go to the farmhouse or to any part of the farm itself; were it otherwise, the definition might just as well have included all private roads as well as all public highways...
There must be, as a matter of fact, walking or driving by the public on the road, and such walking or driving must be lawfully performed - that is to say, must be permitted or allowed, either expressly or implicitly, by the person or persons to whom the road belongs."
"The signs must, as I say, be considered only as part of the whole picture."
"...the church, the football spectators, the parkers, those who park at other times for other reasons, the shoppers, the persons going to the Underground, the children going to school, taking all these uses, and without having any regard to questions of the hotel, the library or anything else, and without even embarking on considerations of the legal right to get to the church by parishioners who live outside Aberdeen park, the evidence presented to this court, in this particular case, is in my judgment overwhelmingly in favour of the plaintiffs' and the third party's contention that this is a road to which the public have access within the meaning of section 196(1) of the Road Traffic Act 1972 [the then current statute.]"
"The invitees and licensees who use such carriageways are, it is true, members of the public. But permission to enter is not given to them as such, but because there is some reason personal to them for their admittance. They may come as guests or to deliver the mail or to read the meters: whatever their particular purpose, they form a class which is distinct from that composed of those who are invited or permitted to enter as members of the public."
"...those who are allowed to enter private property, not as members of the public, but for reasons in some way personal to the individuals admitted, will not be regarded as the general public or a substantial section thereof, and their admission will not constitute the giving of access to the public for the purposes of the definition. Pass holders entering a dock area, or employees going to work along a factory road, for example, do not bring the definition into play because they obtain access, not as members of the public, but on the strength of a relationship between the individual and the owner or occupier concerned. So, too, with those who visited the farm in Harrison v Hill ... for social or business purposes. Apart from any question as to whether, as a class, they could be reckoned a significant section of the public, the invitation or permission under which they entered was in no sense addressed or given to the public."
"Our approach would be as follows. By the same token that one asks in the earlier type of case whether permission is being granted for a reason personal to the user, in these screening cases one must ask: do those admitted pass through the screening process for a reason, or on account of some characteristic, personal to themselves? Or are they in truth merely members of the public who are being admitted as such and processed simply so as to make them subject to payment and whatever other conditions the landowner chooses to impose."
"...it is quite unreal to suggest that at the gate some transformation occurs whereby they [that is the road users] alter their legal character, shed their identity as members of the general public and take on instead a different status as caravanners and campers."
"The essence of driving is the use of the driver's controls in order to direct the movement, however that movement is produced...
Although the word 'drive' must be given a wide meaning, the courts must be alert to see that the net is not thrown so widely that it includes activities which cannot be said to be driving a motor vehicle in any ordinary use of that word in the English language."