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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Stody Estate Ltd v Secretary of State for Environment, Food And Rural Affairs [2018] EWHC 378 (Admin) (06 March 2018) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2018/378.html Cite as: [2018] EWHC 378 (Admin), [2018] WLR(D) 148 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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Stody Estate Limited |
Claimant |
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Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs |
Defendant |
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- and – |
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National Farmers' Union |
Intervener |
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George Peretz QC (instructed by Government Legal Department) for the Defendant
John Robb (instructed by the National Farmers' Union) for the Intervener
Hearing dates: 19 December 2017
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Crown Copyright ©
Mrs Justice May:
Introduction
Stody Estate and Allen Lambert
The Regulatory framework
"Article 23 Reduction or exclusion from payments in the event of non-compliance with cross compliance rules
1. Where the statutory management requirements or good agricultural and environmental condition are not complied with at any time in a given calendar year...and the non-compliance in question is the result of an act or omission directly attributable to the farmer who submitted the aid application in the calendar year concerned, the total amount of direct payments granted or to be granted, following application of Articles 7, 10 and 11 to that farmer, shall be reduced or excluded in accordance with the detailed rules laid down in Article 24."
"(a) 'farmer' means a natural or legal person, or a group of natural or legal persons, whatever legal status is granted to the group and its members by national law, whose holding is situated within Community territory, as defined in Article 299 of the Treaty, and who exercises an agricultural activity;
(b) 'holding' means all the production units managed by a farmer situated within the territory of the same Member State;"
"1. A farmer receiving direct payments shall respect the statutory management requirements listed in Annex II and the good agricultural and environmental condition referred to in Article 6.
…
2. The competent national authority shall provide the farmer, inter alia by use of electronic means, with the list of statutory management requirements and the good agricultural and environmental condition to be respected."
"1. The statutory management requirements listed in Annex II shall be established by Community legislation in the following areas:
(a) public, animal and plant health;
(b) environment;
(c) animal welfare.
2. The acts referred to in Annex II shall apply as in force and, in the case of Directives, as implemented by the Member States."
"You must not
Intentionally kill, injure or take any wild bird.
..."
"Reductions and exclusions should be established having regard to the principle of proportionality and the special problems linked to cases of force majeure as well as exceptional and natural circumstances. In the case of cross-compliance obligations, reductions and exclusions may only be applied where the farmer acted negligently or intentionally. Reductions and exclusions should be graded according to the seriousness of the irregularity committed and should go as far as the total exclusion from one or several aid schemes for a specified period. They should, with regard to the eligibility criteria, take into account the particularities of the various aid schemes."
"Article 47 General rules concerning non-compliance
...
2. The 'extent' of a non-compliance shall be determined taking account, in particular, of whether the non-compliance has a far-reaching impact or whether it is limited to the farm itself.
3. The 'severity' of a non-compliance shall depend, in particular, on the importance of the consequences of the non-compliance taking account of the aims of the requirement or standard concerned.
...
Article 71 Application of reductions in the case of negligence
1. Without prejudice to Article 77, where a non-compliance determined results from the negligence of the farmer, a reduction shall be applied. That reduction shall, as a general rule, be 3% of the total amount as referred to in Article 70(8).
However the paying agency may, on the basis of the assessment provided by the competent control authority in the evaluation part of the control report...decide either to reduce that percentage to 1% or...not to impose any reductions at all.
...
Article 72 Application of reductions and exclusions in cases of intentional non-compliance
1. Without prejudice to Article 77, where the non-compliance determined has been committed intentionally by the farmer, the reduction to be applied to the total amount referred to in Article 70(8) shall, as a general rule, be 20% of that total amount.
However, the paying agency may, on the basis of the assessment provided by the competent control authority in the evaluation part of the control report ..., decide to reduce that percentage to no less than 15% or, where appropriate, to increase that percentage to up to 100% of that total amount."
The CJEU decision in Van der Ham
"Can "intentional non-compliance" be attributed to the beneficiary of the aid if a third party carries out the works on his instructions"
"44. As the Advocate General has observed in point 58 of her Opinion, the system of penalties was laid down…to penalise beneficiaries of aid if they do not meet, on all of their holding, the mandatory requirements of cross compliance…
45. Under [the prior regulation, in the same form as Article 23], penalties are to be applied only in the case of infringement of the cross-compliance requirements by negligence or intentional non-compliance.
46. Nevertheless, as the Advocate General noted in point 61 of her Opinion, the EU legislature wanted to make the beneficiary of aid responsible both for his own acts or omissions and those of third parties.
47. The question therefore arises of the criteria according to which beneficiary of aid may be held responsible for the act or omission of a third party who caused the non-compliance with the rules on cross-compliance.
48. It must be stated that that responsibility falls within the rules on liability for that beneficiary's own act or omission.
49. Consequently, to hold a beneficiary of aid responsible for an act or omission of a third party who carried out work on his plot on his behalf, it is necessary that the conduct of that beneficiary is intentional or negligent.
50. In such a case, even if the beneficiary of aid's own conduct is not directly the cause of that non-compliance, it may be the cause through the choice of the third party, the monitoring of the third party or the instructions given to the third party.
51. Moreover the responsibility of a beneficiary of aid for his negligence or his intentional conduct may be established independently of the intentional or negligent nature of the conduct of the third party who was the cause of the non-compliance with the rules on cross-compliance.
52. That interpretation is consistent with the objective of penalties for infringement of the rules on cross-compliance which seek to incentivise farmers to observe the existing legislation in the various fields of cross-compliance. First, the requirement that there must be intentional or negligent conduct by a beneficiary of aid for him to be held responsible for acts or omissions of third parties enables the incentive effect of those penalties…to be maintained. Second such an interpretation enables abuse to be prevented, since the beneficiary of aid cannot exculpate himself by sub-contracting the agricultural work on his plot, nor diminish his liability by adducing evidence that the third party concerned, for example, acted negligently in order to exclude his liability for non-compliance committed intentionally.
53. Consequently, the answer to the third question is that [Article 23] must be interpreted as meaning that, in the event of an infringement of the requirements of cross-compliance by a third party who carries out work on the instructions of a beneficiary of aid, the beneficiary may be held responsible for the infringement if he acted intentionally or negligently as a result of the choice or the monitoring of the third party or the instructions given to him, independently of the intentional or negligent nature of the conduct of the third party." (emphasis added)
"58. [Recital 75, set out at para 18 above] may be understood as confirming this approach. It states that a penalty system should be set up where beneficiaries receiving payments do not meet the mandatory requirements provided for…on all of their holding, taking into account the severity, extent, permanence and repetition of the non-compliance. If, on the other hand, the non-compliance does not originate with the beneficiary, there is no cause for a penalty. (emphasis in original)
…
61. Considered together, the origin of [regulations dealing with cross-compliance breaches] point to the conclusion that a non-compliance is to be penalised only on the basis of the personal responsibility of the aid beneficiary, but that he need not have committed the non-compliance in person."
Parties' arguments as to effect of the regulations
Discussion and conclusions