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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Williams v Patrick & Ors [2014] EWHC 4120 (QB) (15 December 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2014/4120.html Cite as: [2014] EWHC 4120 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ELECTION COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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IN THE MATTER OF THE REPRESENTATION OF THE PEOPLE ACT 1983 AND IN THE MATTER OF A LOCAL GOVERNMENT ELECTION FOR THE KING'S PARK WARD OF THE LONDON BOROUGH OF HACKNEY HELD ON 22 MAY 2014 VERNON WILLIAMS |
Petitioner |
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- and - |
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SHARON PATRICK TOM RAHILLY REBECCA RENNISON TIM SHIELDS |
First Respondents |
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Annabel Lee of counsel, for the First Respondents
Timothy Straker QC and Sappho Dias of counsel, for the Second Respondent
Hearing date: 19 November 2014
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Crown Copyright ©
Introduction
The declared result of the election
The allegations in the petition
(i) Acting in breach of rule 45(3A) of the Parliamentary Rules, contained in Schedule 1 to the 1983 Act, which provides:"The returning officer shall take reasonable steps to begin counting the votes given on the ballot papers as soon as practicable within the period of four hours starting with the close of poll".The petitioner argues that rule 45(3A), which relates to the conduct of parliamentary elections, applies to local government elections by virtue of the provisions of section 36(2) of the 1983 Act. The petitioner complains that the count at the election was delayed until well into the day after the close of poll, when the Returning Officer had no legal authority to do so.(ii) Storing the ballot boxes, containing the ballot papers, overnight in the Britannia Leisure Centre, which was not a fit place for the purpose of storing ballot boxes and their contents, because it had no inherent security features for such storage. The overnight storage of the ballot papers raises a rebuttable presumption that interference and tampering of the boxes and ballot papers took place, as there was a breach of the statutory requirement to begin the count within four hours after the close of poll.
(iii) Failing to provide the petitioner with an up-to-date and complete absent voters list for the King's Park Ward.
(iv) Failing to provide the petitioner with maps of the King's Park Ward showing recent boundary changes
(v) Giving instructions to absent voters which favoured the Labour Party candidates.
(vi) Giving voters at some polling stations pencils to mark the ballot paper.
The legal background to the election as outlined on behalf of the Returning Officer
Evidence as to the steps taken by the Returning Officer to prepare for the May 2014
elections
Evidence as to the events on polling day and at the count
Other relevant evidence
The submissions of the Returning Officer
Rule 45(3A) of the Parliamentary Rules
"36. Local elections in England and Wales.
(1) Elections of councillors for local government areas in England and Wales shall be conducted in accordance with rules made by the Secretary of State.
(2) Rules made under this section shall apply the Parliamentary Rules in Schedule 1 to this Act, subject to such adaptations, alterations and exceptions as seem appropriate to the Secretary of State."
The first respondents submitted that the language of section 36(2) make it mandatory to apply the Parliamentary Rules to local elections, unless they have been adapted, altered or subjected to an exception in the local rules. There is no provision in the 2006 Principal Areas Rules equivalent to rule 45(3A). Therefore, it was submitted, as rule 45(3A) has apparently not been adapted, altered or subjected to an exception in the 2006 Principal Areas Rules, it applies to local elections. However, even if it does apply, the first respondents submit that the Returning Officer did in fact take reasonable steps to begin counting votes as described in his witness statement. Apart from this point, the first respondents adopted the submissions made by the Returning Officer.
(i) The Act of 1983 distinctly provides for separate sets of rules for the conduct of local government elections to be made by the Secretary of State (section 36(1)). Separate sets of rules have always been made under section 36(1) for the election of councillors for different local government areas in England and Wales. Currently, these include the 2006 Principal Areas Rules, which apply to the election of councillors for principal areas, defined to mean, in England, a county, a district or London borough, and in Wales, a county or a London borough. A separate set of rules has been made under section 36(1) for the election of councillors of a parish or a community, currently the Local Elections (Parishes and Communities) (England and Wales) Rules 2006 ("the 2006 Parishes and Communities Rules"). Each set of rules is self-contained, and the relevant set of rules is applied by Returning Officers in England and Wales for the conduct of elections to principal areas or parishes and communities as appropriate.(ii) The Parliamentary Rules have been amended many times over the years. There are several examples of amendments that have been made to the Parliamentary Rules, which have not been mirrored and carried through into amendments of the 2006 Principal Areas Rules or the 2006 Parishes and Communities Rules. The reason for that is that it was the intention of Parliament that the relevant amendments to the Parliamentary Rules were only intended to apply to Parliamentary elections, and not to local government elections. An example of this is rule 6(2) of the Parliamentary Rules, which provides that the nomination paper of a candidate at a parliamentary election is no longer required to state his home address on the nomination paper. He is, however, required to state his home address in full on a separate home address form, which may contain a statement that he requires his home address not to be made public (rules 6(4) and (5)). These amendments to rule 6 were made by the Political Parties and Elections Act 2009. These amendments have not been mirrored in the rules relating to nomination papers in the 2006 Principal Areas, and Parishes and Communities Rules, and do not apply to local government elections. Rule 45(3A) of the Parliamentary Rules is a similar example of the same point.
(iii) The 2006 Principal Areas Rules have been amended since rule 45(3A) was inserted into the Parliamentary Rules in 2010. No amendments were made to mirror rule 45(3A) in the Principal Areas Rules, thus leaving in place conflicts between the provisions in the Parliamentary Rules and the Principal Areas Rules, which remained silent of that particular matter. That cannot have been the intention of the Secretary of State, or Parliament, which must have been that rule 45(3A) was only intended to apply to Parliamentary elections.
(iv) Legal text books dealing with election law state that rule 45(3A) applies to Parliamentary elections, but do not say that it applies by implication to local government elections (see eg. Halsbury's Laws of England, Vol 38, 5th edition, para 425). The Electoral commission do not advise that this rule applies to local government elections.
(v) Rule 53ZA in the Parliamentary Rules, introduced at the same time as rule 45(3A), requires that, if the counting at a Parliamentary election does not begin as required by that rule, a special report has to be made to the Electoral Commission in relation to the relevant election. This provision does not appear in the 2006 Principal Areas or Parishes and Communities Rules. If the argument of the petitioner and the first respondents were correct, rule 53ZA would also apply to local elections, but it does not. If it did, the Electoral Commission would have given clear advice to that effect, but has not done so.
(vi) Section 17(2) of the Interpretation Act 1978 provides that, where an Act repeals and re-enacts, with or without modification, a previous enactment, then any subordinate legislation is treated as done under that re-enacted provision. Accordingly, if, by the amendment to introduce rule 45(3A), the Parliamentary Rules were being re-enacted, the 2006 Principal Areas Rules would have been left in place as they were. It is inconceivable that an amendment expressed as relating to Parliamentary elections had the effect of re-stating the 2006 Principal Areas Rules in a different form silently and by implication. Further, by section 12 of the 1978 Act, a continuity of powers and duties is presumed, so that the Secretary of State can be taken to have fulfilled his obligation to make rules by leaving, as he has done, the 2006 Principal Areas Rules in place without amendment.
The overnight storage of the ballot boxes
Failure to provide information and materials
The documents required to be despatched for postal voting are all determined by regulations, namely the Representation of the People (England and Wales) Regulations 2001, in particular Part V. The Returning Officer complied with these provisions. There is no evidence or substance in the proposition that one party was preferred over another.
Providing voters with pencils in order to complete ballot papers
Summary of submissions
The decision and findings of the Court
"No local government election shall be declared invalid by reason of any act or omission of the returning officer or any other person in breach of his official duty in connection with the election or otherwise of rules made under section 36 [ie. the 2006 Principal Areas Rules] …above if it appears to the tribunal having cognizance of the question that –
(a) the election was so conducted as to be substantially in accordance with the law as to elections; and
(b) the act or omission did not affect the result."
The rule 45(3A) point
The factual evidence
Overnight storage of ballot boxes
Failing to provide information and materials
Giving instructions to absent voters which favoured the Labour Party candidates
Providing voters with pencils in order to complete ballot papers
Conclusion
RICHARD PRICE OBE QC
COMMISSIONER
(Sent to the parties and the Court by e-mail 28 November 2014)
(Handed down in Court at the Royal Courts of Justice on 15 December 2014)