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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Jones v Director of Public Prosecutions [2011] EWHC 50 (Admin) (27 January 2011) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2011/50.html Cite as: [2011] EWHC 50 (Admin) |
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QUEENS BENCH DIVISION
DIVISIONAL COURT
ON APPEAL FROM THE CROWN COURT AT CAERNARFON
B e f o r e :
____________________
CRAIG NICHOLAS JONES |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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DIRECTOR OF PUBLIC PROSECUTIONS |
Respondent |
____________________
Dafydd Owen Roberts (instructed by the DPP) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 17 December 2010
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Charles J :
Introduction
a) The "A55" is a "special road" and a "trunk road" running along the length of the Northern coast of Wales. The "local traffic authority" (as defined by section 121A of the RTRA 1984) responsible for the maintenance of the road is the Welsh Assembly which delegates its functions to the North Wales Trunk Road Agency;
b) Different parts of the A55 are subject to different speed limits, some imposed as national speed restrictions and others, specifically for the sections of the A55 designated as special roads, are imposed by statutory instruments pertaining to a specific locality. The Westbound carriageway at Old Colwyn, with which this appeal was concerned, is ordinarily subject to a speed limit of 50 mph. That speed limit begins at the point on the road where there are to be found two "terminal" traffic signs indicating the commencement of the 50 mph zone. Those signs are, ordinarily, electro illuminated, i.e. illuminated internally;
c) On 27 March 2009, William Roberts, an engineer for the local authority, Conwy County Borough Council, noted that the two terminal signs on the Westbound carriageway were not illuminated as expected. That engineer sent an e-mail to Sergeant Hughes, Western Community Policing Sergeant with the North Wales Police, and the North Wales Trunk Road Agency stating that "the lanterns on the terminal 50 mph signs on the A55 east of Colwyn Bay have disappeared". He went on to say that "not having them illuminated may cause embarrassment to the Police if a speeding ticket is challenged";
d) On 1 April 2009, at 13:59, Sergeant Hughes forwarded that e-mail to Mr Lloyd-Jones, the Route Manager for the A55 (this e-mail was copied to Inspector Nicholson and the engineer, William Roberts). Sergeant Hughes asked Mr Lloyd-Jones for his views about the e-mail sent by the engineer. He asked for those views "before we consider stopping enforcement at this location". He asked explicitly, "should the 50 mph signs be illuminated?";
e) Later that day, at 22:40 hours, Police Constable Collis was on duty in a marked police vehicle on the A55 Westbound carriageway at Old Colwyn. Constable Collis is an advanced driver and has been a Roads Policing Officer for over five years. He regularly patrols the A55 including the stretch of road central to this case. Constable Collis saw a Volkswagen Golf motor car being driven towards Conwy at a speed he believed to be in excess of the speed limit. He deployed a laser device and found that the vehicle was travelling at a speed of 98 mph;
f) Constable Collis pursued the offending vehicle and caused it to stop. The vehicle was being driven by the Appellant. The Appellant got out of the car and approached the marked police vehicle. Constable Collis then recognise the Appellant as a Police Sergeant in the North Wales Police but dressed in civilian clothing. Before Constable Collis had said anything the Appellant said, "I'm on a job and I've got a prisoner in the back of the car. We will be leaving Black Cat and re-joining, it's complicated to explain now";
g) At that time Constable Collis was satisfied that the Appellant was on police duties and engaged in an operation which he thought would be compromised if he further delayed the Appellant. Constable Collis then contacted his supervisor. Later it was confirmed that the vehicle involved was an unmarked police vehicle and that the Appellant was a North Wales Police Officer who was on duty at the time and engaged in police business;
h) Neither of the traffic signs erected to indicate the commencement of the 50 mph limit were illuminated at the time of the alleged offence on 1 April 2009;
i) On 7 April 2009 at 17:01 hours, Mr Lloyd-Jones, the A55 Route Manager responded to the e-mail sent by Sergeant Hughes six days earlier regarding the illumination of the signs. Mr Lloyd-Jones said "the 50 signs on the Westbound at Rainbow Bridge should be illuminated. The current signs that were installed last June were electro illuminated, i.e. illuminated internally. It appears that the internal lighting has failed. We are arranging for them to be illuminated externally and once complete we will advise you. In the meantime the 50 is not enforceable";
j) And later, at 18:20 hours, Sergeant Hughes sent an e-mail to the members of the Road Policing Unit stating, "enforcement to be stopped at this location until further notice". The location referred to was the 50 mph restricted area on the A55 Westbound at Colwyn Bay. This e-mail was copied to Chief Inspector Gary Ashton: a senior officer in the Roads Policing Unit;
k) Constable Collis received the e-mail on 7 April 2009. Police Constable Collis was intrigued as to what the problem was as he worked the area on a daily basis. During one nightshift he turned off his vehicle lights to see what could be seen of the signs showing the speed limit of 50 mph. He said that without any lights on his vehicle he could not read the sign but says that with the illumination provided by his vehicle there was no difficulty whatsoever in clearly seeing the sign concerned;
l) He also noticed that there are 17 "repeater signs" after the first 50 mph sign and that there were 7 such signs between the initial un-illuminated terminal sign and the point at which the Appellant was detected to be speeding;
m) There is no doubting that the Appellant knew this stretch of road well and knew what the speed limit was;
n) It was not until 16 July 2009 that the terminal signs indicating the commencement of the 50 mph limit were repaired. On 17 July 2009 Sergeant Hughes sent a further e-mail to the Roads Policing Units indicating that enforcement could recommence in the "50s" at Colwyn Bay.
i) must be assigned to it and thus imposed by appropriate regulations,
ii) in the absence of any such lawfully prescribed speed limit no default maximum speed limit applies, and it follows that
iii) if there is no speed limit imposed by appropriate regulations, which can be effectively enforced, then there is no speed limit at all.
This is explained in the Explanatory Note relating to Regulation 13 of the Special Road (Llanddulas to Colwyn Bay) Regulations 1984 – "the Special Road Regulations" (which imposes the relevant 50 mph limit). It also explains why the information was laid in the terms that it was and thus why the Appellant was not charged with exceeding a default maximum speed limit.
i) the prosecution of the Appellant was an abuse of process, and in any event that
ii) on the true construction of the relevant statutory provisions of the primary and secondary legislation (and in particular s. 85(4) of the RTRA 1984) he cannot be lawfully convicted of the offence with which he was charged.
Abuse of process
"enforcement to be stopped at this location until further notice"
was in place. From that base it is asserted that:
i) the decision to prosecute was contrary to a clear and settled policy relating to the circumstances that existed at the time of the alleged offence, and
ii) the fact that this policy was not decided upon until after the alleged offence took place does not mean that it should not have been applied to this case.
i) be a clear and settled policy, or in any event that it could or should not
ii) in any way fetter the duty of the North Wales Police to enforce the speed limit or their decision to prosecute.
Bar to Conviction
i) section 17, which defines the offence (referred to in Schedule 2 of the RTOA 1988) with which the Appellant was charged, namely breaking the 50 mph speed limit set by the Special Road Regulations made under s. 17(2) and (3) RTRA 1984, and
ii) the definition of traffic signs in s. 64 RTRA 1984 has to be read in which, like s. 85, refers to regulations.
The relevant regulations in respect of traffic signs are the Traffic Signs Regulations and General Directions 2002 (SI No 2002/3113) ("the 2002 Regulations" which has two parts namely Part I – The Traffic Signs Regulations 2002 and Part II - The Traffic Signs General Directions 2002) and were made pursuant to the powers conferred by ss. 64 and 85 RTRA 1984 (and other sections thereof).
"General provisions as to traffic signs
(1) In this Act "traffic sign" means any object or device (whether fixed or portable) for conveying, to traffic on roads or any specified class of traffic, warnings, information, requirements, restrictions or prohibitions of any description specified by regulations made by (a) the Ministers acting jointly, or (b) authorised by the Secretary of State ---------------
(2) Traffic signs shall be of the size, colour and type prescribed by regulations made as mentioned in subsection (1)(a) above except where the Secretary of State authorises the erection or retention of a sign of another character; and for the purposes of this subsection illumination, whether by lighting or by the use of reflectors or reflecting material, or the absence of such illumination, shall be part of the type or character of a sign"
"Traffic signs for indicating speed restrictions
(1) For the purpose of securing that adequate guidance is given to drivers of motor vehicles as to whether any, and if so what, limit of speed is to be observed on any road, it shall be the duty of the Secretary of State, in the case of a road for which he is the traffic authority, to direct and maintain traffic signs in such positions as may be requisite for that purpose.
(2) In the case of any other road, it is the duty of the local traffic authority:
(a) to erect and maintain traffic signs in such positions as may be requisite in order to give effect to general or other directions given by the Secretary of State for the purpose mentioned in subsection (1) above, and
(b) to alter or remove traffic signs as may be requisite in order to give effect to such directions, either in consequence of the making of an order by the Secretary of State or otherwise.
(3) If a local traffic authority makes default in executing any works required for the performance of the duty imposed on them by subsection (2) above, the Secretary of State may himself execute the works; and the expense incurred by him in doing so shall be recoverable by him from the local traffic authority and, in England and Wales, shall be so recoverable as a civil debt.
(4) Where no such system of street or carriageway lighting as is mentioned in section 82(1) is provided on a road, but a limit of speed is to be observed on the road, a person shall not be convicted of driving a motor vehicle on the road at a speed exceeding the limit unless the limit is indicated by means of such traffic signs as are mentioned in subsection (1) or subsection (2) above.
(5) ------------------
(6) ------------------
(7) The power to give general directions under subsection (2) about shall be exercisable by statutory instrument."
"-------- a person shall not be convicted of driving a motor vehicle on the road at a speed exceeding the limit unless the limit is indicated by means of [such traffic signs as are mentioned in subsection (1) or subsection (2) above] traffic signs in such positions as may be requisite in order to give effect to general or other directions given by the Secretary of State [the 2002 Regulations] for the purpose of securing that adequate guidance is given to drivers of motor vehicles as to whether any, and if so what, limit of speed is to be observed on any road"
i) subject to the de minimis principle, there can be no conviction unless there is compliance with the mandatory provisions of 2002 Regulations, and
ii) the motorist has an additional protection from conviction in a case where the signs so comply but for some reason they do not give adequate guidance as to the speed limit and thus fulfil the overriding purpose of s. 85, set out in s. 85(1).
This approach seeks to confine (save in the context of the application of the de minimis principle) the relevance of the statutory purpose of speed limit signs, and thus a purposive approach, to the additional protection from prosecution given by the second limb or test.
i) would mean that a conviction could be founded on less extensive or clear signage to that required by the 2002 Regulations, which
ii) could encourage local traffic authorities to take a less rigorous approach to compliance with their statutory duty to erect and maintain signage as required by the 2002 Regulations (and future regulations), and so would
iii) frustrate the intention of Parliament when it imposed the duty on local traffic authorities to erect and maintain traffic signs and approved the 2002 Regulations in mandatory terms, and
iv) could ultimately have a detrimental effect on the safety of roads because it would lead to non uniformity of signage and some signage that was less adequate than others.
i) the local traffic authority had failed to comply with the statutory duty imposed on it by s. 85(2) to maintain traffic signs in compliance with the 2002 Regulations, with the results that
ii) no such traffic signs (terminal signs) were present as required by s. 85(2), and so the 50 mph limit was not indicated by such signs as are mentioned in s. 85(2), and
iii) he cannot be convicted.
"34 The effect of sub-section (4) is that there can be no conviction unless there are signs complying with the directions indicating the speed limit. The question is: Where must the limit to be indicated? The Act is silent on this point. Plainly it cannot simply be at the place where the alleged speeding occurs, which I shall call the "point of enforcement". If, for example, repeaters signs indicate a speed limit at the point of enforcement but there were no signs placed in positions indicating the speed limit leading up to that point, then there would be no signs requisite to the purpose of providing adequate guidance as to the speed limit. It follows that there must be compliant signs on the road or roads leading up to the point of enforcement. But how far back need they go? That is essentially the issue raised in this case.
36. Second, if the limit is not indicated by the appropriate signs complying with the relevant directions then there can be no conviction even though there are some signs in place and even if the court takes the view that these did give adequate guidance to the driver. It is for the Secretary of State to determine what signs should be imposed for the purpose of securing adequate guidance, and if those signs are not provided then it must be inferred that the guidance is inadequate. Sub-section (4) is not satisfied and the conviction cannot stand"
When read in isolation those passages provide support for the Appellant's argument on the true construction and effect of s. 85(4).
"38. It is not disputed that the local traffic authority had not complied with their duty under subsection (2) to provide compliant signs throughout the area subject to the 40 mph limit. Hence if the appellant is right, the conviction cannot stand.
39. The respondent submits that there is no warrant for reading this section in this way. It gives insufficient weight to the purpose for which the traffic signs are erected. This is to provide adequate guidance to drivers as to the speed limit. All that need be asked is whether there is compliant signing so that anyone who is caught speeding at the point of enforcement will have been given adequate guidance by compliant signs of the appropriate limit and will therefore be culpable of transgressing it. If there are such signs and if they will have provided adequate guidance whichever route may have been adopted by a driver up to that point of enforcement, then section 85(4) is satisfied. In other words the reference in subsection (4) to the limit being indicated by means of traffic signs is merely a reference to the limit at the point of enforcement on the particular road. Section 85(4) refers to the ---- road; it makes no reference to zones or envelopes or such similar terms.
40. I prefer the respondent's argument. In my judgment it leads to a just result and I think it is a more natural meaning of the statutory language. The appellant's argument gives no substance at all to the purpose of providing signs, and it seems to me that the purpose ought to dictate the construction of the legislation, particularly since it is identified in the section itself. If at the point of enforcement there are signs complying with the directions of the Secretary of State which in fact provide adequate guidance of the speed limit at that point, this satisfies the requirements of section 85(4). If the prosecution can establish the route taken by the defendant, it will only have to show that compliant signs provide adequate guidance at the point of enforcement for someone taking that route. If they cannot establish the route, they will have to show that there were compliant signs on all routes which the driver may have taken.
43. The appellant also relies heavily upon Coombes v DPP ----------------- It is submitted that the twofold test identified by Mr Justice Walker in that case, which Mr Justice Calvert–Smith has set out in paragraph 19 above, supports the appellant's argument.
44. I do not agree. It simply stipulates that there must be signs as mentioned in section 85(1) or (2). It does not assist in determining where those signs must be located in order to make a conviction lawful and in accordance with subsection (4). Indeed the test adumbrated by Mr Justice Walker emphasises that the crucial question is whether a motorist could reasonably be expected to know the speed limit so that he would be able to reduce his speed from a previous lawful speed to a speed within that new limit. In my judgment, that is entirely consistent with the formulation principle which the respondent relies upon in this case."
Whether by the point on the road where the alleged offence took place (the point of enforcement) the driver by reference to the route taken thereto has been given (or drivers generally have been given) adequate guidance of the speed limit to be observed at that point on the road by the traffic signs referred to in s. 85(4) that are on the relevant part or parts of the road?
i) the terminal signs are important (and I agree with this on the basis that they mark the beginning and end and thus a change in the relevant speed limit),
ii) they are thus on a part of (even if only at the beginning of) the relevant stretch of road, and therefore part of the signage referred to in s. 85(4), and
iii) as they were not illuminated in accordance with the 2002 Regulations
guidance was not given to drivers in the manner set out in s. 85(4) and indeed that the terminal signs are not "traffic signs mentioned in ss. 85(1) or (2)".
i) signs that are completely compliant with all requirements of the 2002 Regulations (the sense asserted by the Appellant), to
ii) signs in so far as (and thus to the extent that) they are compliant with the 2002 Regulations.
The top end of that range (which represents the interpretation relied on by the Appellant) is at odds with the answer to the second question posed for the court in Peake, namely that if the signage was adequate, minor breaches of the regulations did not impact on the legality and enforceability of the speed limit. I accept that that answer might be explained by an application of the de minimis principle, or on the basis that there was complete compliance on the relevant parts of the road. But, the lack of any such explanation supports the view that the court was not directing its attention to the central question I am now addressing relating to the degree of compliance with the 2002 regulations that is necessary to comply with the duty imposed by s. 85(2) RTRA 1984 and thus, by reference to s. 85(4) (with the cross reference written in – see paragraph 33 above) "to give effect to the 2002 Regulations for the purpose of securing that adequate guidance is given to drivers of motor vehicles as to whether any, and if so what, limit of speed is to be observed on any road".
i) a sign, on the relevant part or parts of the road (and thus its effect), can only be taken into account in determining whether a motorist has been given adequate guidance of the relevant speed limit in the manner mentioned in s. 85(4) if and so long as it complies completely with the 2002 Regulations, or
ii) the absence of, or a defect in, a sign required by the 2002 Regulations means that the other signs on the relevant part or parts of the road (and their effect) cannot be taken into account in determining whether adequate guidance of the relevant speed limit has been given in the manner referred to in s. 85(4),
I respectfully disagree.
" When Parliament prescribes the manner or form in which a duty is to be performed or a power exercise, it seldom lays down what would be the legal consequences of failure to observe its prescriptions. The courts have therefore formulated their own criteria for determining whether the prescriptions are to be regarded as mandatory, in which case disobedience will normally render invalid what has been done, or as directory, in which case disobedience may be treated as an irregularity not affecting the validity of what has been done. (5-049)
These terms, like the others we have been considering in this chapter, often cause more problems than they solve. The law relating to the effect of failure to comply with statutory requirements thus resembles an inextricable tangle of loose ends and judges have often stressed the impracticability of specifying exact rules for the assignment of a provision to the appropriate category ------ (5-050)
A second reason for the tangle in this area is the use of the terms "mandatory" and "directory"; the latter term is especially misleading. All statutory requirements are prima facie mandatory. However, in some situations the violation of a provision will, in the context of the statute as a whole and the circumstances of the particular decision, not violate the object and purpose of the statute. Condoning such a breach does not, however, render the statutory provision directory or discretionary. The breach of the particular provision is treated in the circumstances as not involving a breach of the statute taken as a whole. Furthermore, logically, a provision cannot be mandatory if the court has discretion not to enforce it. (5-052)
Lord Hailsham expressed this point well in London and Clydeside v Aberdeen District Council where he distinguished two ends of a spectrum. At the one end are cases "where a fundamental obligation may have been so outrageously and flagrantly ignored or defied that the subject may safely ignore what has been done and treat it as having no legal consequence". At the other end of the spectrum the defect may be "so nugatory or trivial" that the authority can proceed on the assumption that "if the subject is so misguided as to rely on the fault, the courts will decline to listen to his complaint". Lord Hailsham considered that language like "mandatory", "directory", "void", "voidable" and "nullity" only served to confuse the situation and stretch or cramp the facts of the case into rigid legal categories or "on a bed of Procrustes invented by lawyers for convenient exposition. (5-053)
In order to decide whether a presumption that a provision is "mandatory" is in fact rebutted, the whole scope and purpose of the enactment must be considered, and one must assess "the importance of the provision that has been disregarded, and the relation of that provision to the general object intended to be served by the Act". In assessing the importance of the provision, particular regard should be given to its significance as a protection of individual rights; the relative value that is normally attached to the rights that may be adversely affected by the decision, and the importance of the procedural requirements in the overall administrative scheme established by the statute. Breach of procedural or formal rules is likely to be treated as a mere irregularity if the departure from the terms of the Act is of a trivial nature, or if no substantial prejudice has been suffered by those for whose benefit the requirements are introduced. But the requirement will be treated as "fundamental" and of "of central importance" if members of the public might suffer from its breach. Another factor influencing the categorisation is whether there may be another opportunity to rectify the situation; of putting right the failure to observe the requirement. (5-054)"
i) introduces into the factors to be taken into account the public interest for road users in setting speed limits, here by s. 17 RTRA 1984, and in them being enforced, and
ii) indicates that this purpose and the public interest underlying it as well as the potentially competing purpose and public interest that underlies s. 85(4) RTRA 1984 are both relevant to the determination of (a) the breadth of the spectrum described by Lord Hailsham, one end of which equates to the de minimis principle, and (b) the impact of circumstances between the two ends of that spectrum.
i) the potentially competing public interests underlying the provisions of the RTRA 1984, namely the setting and enforcement of speed limits for the benefit and protection of road users and the protection of drivers from conviction if they have not been given adequate warning of the relevant speed limit by traffic signs (as defined and erected and maintained pursuant to the relevant duty and thus the 2002 Regulations),
ii) the expressed purposes in s. 64 and s. 85(1) and thus for signs in general and speed limit signs in particular,
iii) the wording of s. 85(4), particularly when the cross reference to ss. 85(1) and (2) are written in, which to my mind emphasises the importance of the expressed underlying purpose,
iv) the nature and detail of the duties both as to erecting, and as to maintaining, signs pursuant to the duties imposed by the 2002 Regulations (for example, the reversal of the mandatory and additional discretionary provisions as to illumination and reflection in Items 10 and 11 of Schedule 17 to the 2002 Regulations which are an example of the obvious point in respect of traffic signs that the intention of the Secretary of State is that they should be clearly visible to motorists) give rise to a number of possibilities that could, from time to time, lead to the result that there may not be full compliance by all of the signs on a relevant stretch of road but that the signage thereon that is complaint, or partially compliant, with the 2002 Regulations will fulfil the underlying purposes of s. 64, the 2002 Regulations, and s. 85 of the RTRA 1984, and
v) the consistent adoption of a purposive approach in the earlier cases referred to above (see in particular paragraphs 40 and 40 of the judgment of Elias LJ in Peake),
found the conclusion (which I have reached) that it is not only non-compliance with the 2002 Regulations that is within the de minimis principle that can be disregarded in determining whether a person has the protection from conviction given by s. 85(4) RTRA 1984.
i) in the application of the purposive approach I have described, to determining whether the local traffic authority has or has not complied with the duty imposed by s. 85(2) RTRA 1984 and thus to give effect to the 2002 Regulations, and so to determine
ii) whether the protection from conviction given by s. 85(4) RTRA 1984 applies
the appropriate question to determine this case (and perhaps others) is:
Whether by the point on the road where the alleged offence took place (the point of enforcement) the driver by reference to the route taken thereto has been given (or drivers generally have been given) adequate guidance of the speed limit to be observed at that point on the road by the signs on the relevant part of parts of the road in so far as (and thus to the extent that) those traffic signs comply with the 2002 Regulations?
Wyn Williams J: