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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Jersey Unreported Judgments >> Lidgett -v- AG [2005] JRC 152 (03 November 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/je/cases/UR/2005/2005_152.html Cite as: [2005] JRC 152 |
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[2005]JRC152
ROYAL COURT
(Appeal from the Magistrate's Court)
3rd November 2005
Before: |
M.C. St. J. Birt, Esq., Deputy Bailiff, and Jurats Le Breton and Clapham. |
Between |
Terence Alwyn Lidgett |
Appellant |
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And |
HM Attorney General |
Respondent |
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The appellant appeared in person.
Advocate J Hawgood for the Attorney General.
judgment
deputy bailiff:
1. This is an appeal against conviction in the Magistrate's Court on 23rd May 2005 of two counts of parking contrary to Article 6(4) of the Road Traffic (St Helier) (Jersey) Order 1996 ("the Order") by using a vehicle, other than a vehicle delivering or collecting goods or merchandise, to wait on an unloading bay. The appeal raises an issue of general importance in relation to this provision of the Order.
The facts
2. The facts are not in dispute. The appellant operates a business outside St Helier which requires him quite frequently to deliver merchandise from his warehouse in St John to shops in St Helier which have ordered his merchandise. He often parks in the unloading bay on the southern side of Beresford Street near the market, which is where he parked on the two occasions in question. On both occasions he was delivering boxes of batteries to shops. On 14th December 2004 he delivered them to Woolworths, to a shop in Charing Cross and to another in Bath Street. He quite often has to wait, particularly at premises such at Woolworths, until someone has checked the items which he is delivering and signed for them. On this occasion he accepts that he was away from the vehicle for a period of some 40 minutes during which no activity took place in relation to his vehicle. It was a busy time at Woolworths leading up to Christmas and he had to wait for some time. On 7th April 2005 he accepts that no activity took place around his vehicle for some 35 minutes and during this time he was again delivering merchandise to two of the shops described above and was delayed in the process of delivery. On each occasion he displayed a parking disc showing his time of arrival and a card stating his business name and address.
3. The Magistrate referred to another decision of his (Mayger 15th November 1999), where he had set out the principles applicable to prosecutions under Article 6(4). He held that in this case the periods of 35 and 40 minutes respectively during which no activity was taking place at the appellant's van were too long and that accordingly the vehicle could not be said to be 'delivering or collecting goods or merchandise'. He therefore found the appellant guilty.
4. The appellant now appeals saying that the Magistrate misdirected himself in law. We can deal very briefly with a preliminary ground of appeal. The appellant submits that the Magistrate should have referred the case to another Magistrate because he was applying the law which he personally had laid down in the case of Mayger. There is nothing in this point. A judge is not prevented from sitting merely because he is being asked to consider the correctness of a previous decision of his.
The Order
5. Although the charge was brought under Article 6(4) of the Order, it is necessary, for reasons which will become clear, to refer also to another provision, namely Article 6(1)(b). The two provisions are as follows:-
6. The relevant part of Article 39 is as follows:-
Article 39(3) deals with a number of matters but provides that a vehicle may not be parked for longer than the period specified in Schedule 10 in relation to the particular road. In the case of Beresford Street, which is listed in Schedule 10, there is a maximum time of one hour between 10.00 a.m. and 6.00 p.m.
7. As can be seen, these provisions are not consistent with each other. The following differences appear:-
8. One might have thought that these inconsistent provisions were clearly intended to apply to different areas of the road and that an 'unloading bay' for the purposes of Article 6(4) would not be on a road specified in Schedule 10. However in this case the relevant part of Beresford Street is listed in Schedule 10. It is also accepted by all parties to be an unloading bay although there is no procedure set out in the Order for designating parts of a road as an unloading bay. In this case the relevant part of the road is painted with the words 'Unloading Bay' and the signs adjacent thereto read "Unloading Bay' 2.00 a.m. - 6.00 p.m. Disc 1 hour limit 10.00 a.m. - 6.00 p.m. Display business name and address".
9. The Magistrate stated in the course of his judgment that, in order for a vehicle to be lawfully parked in this area, it would have to comply with the requirements of both Article 6(1)(b) (which incorporates Article 39) and Article 6(4); the provisions were to be read cumulatively. We would respectfully disagree with that analysis. Each provision is a stand alone provision and does not refer to the other. Thus there is no reference in Article 6(4) to Article 39 and it is therefore impossible by any canon of construction to read into Article 6(4) a need to comply with the requirements of Article 39. Furthermore, if one removes the qualified negative in each case, Article 6(1)(b) allows parking on a road specified in Schedule 10 provided that Article 39 is complied with and Article 6(4) allows a vehicle to park in an unloading bay provided that it is delivering or collecting goods or merchandise.
10. If the Committee had applied these separate provisions to separate areas of road, no difficulty would have arisen by reason of the inconsistent requirements of the two provisions. But, as the Committee has chosen to apply both provisions to this section of Beresford Street - and, it would appear, to other roads such as the area of Halkett Place outside the market - the resulting situation is extremely confused and unsatisfactory. Thus, the signs in Beresford Street state that parking may only occur for one hour; that a disc must be displayed; and that the business name and address must be displayed. This is in fact all quite erroneous. Because the area is also an unloading bay, a vehicle may lawfully park there provided that it complies only with Article 6(4). Thus a private shopper may park there provided that the vehicle is delivering or collecting goods or merchandise. There is no need under Article 6(4) to display a parking disc or a business name and address. Furthermore, in the unlikely event of the delivering or collecting of goods or merchandise taking more than one hour (e.g. collecting a large amount of furniture which has just been purchased for a house) the vehicle could remain there for more than one hour despite what is said on the sign and despite the terms of Article 39(3). Because the Committee has applied both provisions to the same stretch of road, a person cannot be successfully prosecuted under Article 6(4) or Article 6(1)(b) if he is complying with the requirements of either one of them.
11. We recommend an urgent review of the situation by the Committee. The current road signs are misleading and erroneous and the resulting legal situation is highly unsatisfactory. Either the Committee should differentiate between those areas which are unloading bays for Article 6(4) and those which are listed in Schedule 10, or Article 6(1)(b) and Article 6(4) must be brought into line insofar as their conditions and requirements are concerned. The present position is a recipe for confusion.
Requirements under Article 6(4)
12. The charges in this case were under Article 6(4). Notwithstanding the muddled and misleading signage put up by the Committee and the appellant's understandable belief that he was allowed up to one hour for his collection and delivery, we must consider what is meant by the words used in Article 6(4). The Magistrate had to consider this provision in the earlier case of Mayger. He quoted from a passage from Wilkinson's Road Traffic Offences at para 6.2.99. We were referred to the 13th Edition which reads as follows:-
From this the Magistrate summarised the position in Mayger by saying that a vehicle only falls within the terms of Article 6(4) if:-
13. The appellant criticised the Magistrate's reliance on Wilkinson and pointed out that the passage in question referred to 'No Waiting' streets (which we do not have as such in Jersey) and was not concerned with the interpretation of 'unloading bays' as established in Jersey under the Order. This is clearly correct but the passage in Wilkinson was discussing how the English courts have interpreted the expression 'loading or unloading' which has often been a permitted exception to the prohibition on parking in 'No Waiting' streets. We think therefore that the Magistrate was fully entitled to have regard to this passage in Mayger in order to assist him in interpreting Article 6(4). However it must be pointed out that the relevant expression in Article 6(4) is 'delivering or collecting' not 'loading or unloading' and, although there is a passing reference to 'delivery' at the beginning of the second paragraph of the passage from Wilkinson, the context in which that expression was used is not clear and the passage as a whole seems to have been primarily concerned with the expression 'loading or unloading'.
14. Nevertheless we think that the conclusions which the Magistrate drew in Mayger were broadly correct although we would refine and re-state the requirements of Articles 6(4) as follows:-
1. The reference is to a vehicle delivering or collecting goods, not to the delivery or collection of goods by a person who happens to be in a vehicle. We agree therefore with the Magistrate that the goods or merchandise must be of a type for which a vehicle is needed. If they are capable of being carried by the particular driver e.g. a pen, a pair of shoes, documents in a briefcase, the exemption does not apply. The question is whether the goods or merchandise which are being delivered or collected are too heavy or bulky to be carried around the town by the particular driver.
2. For the same reason, it is the vehicle which must be engaged in the delivering or collecting of goods as distinct from the driver. This carries the necessary implication that, although clearly the court will allow a reasonable time for the process of collection and delivery by going to the relevant premises, the question is whether the vehicle, as opposed to the driver, is still involved in the process of collecting or delivering. The vehicle is only entitled to be parked in the unloading bay for such time as is required for such collecting or delivering.
3. In Mayger, the Magistrate appears to have drawn no distinction between the expression 'loading or unloading' and that of 'delivering or collecting'. In our judgment there is a difference of degree for two reasons:-
Where different words are used in a statute, there is a presumption that this is deliberate and that the words therefore have different meanings. This is particularly so if, as in Article 6(4), the different words are used in the same provision.
1. The natural construction of 'delivering or collecting' is a little wider than 'loading or unloading'. The latter expression relates very much to the physical process of putting the goods into or taking them out of the vehicle. Clearly they go a little wider than that because they must also encompass moving the goods into or from the relevant premises. But 'collecting and delivering' is a wider expression which encompasses the process of going somewhere to fetch or leave something. Nevertheless the expression is not open-ended. Although, unlike in Article 39 (which applies to Article 6(1)(b)) there is no reference to 'in the vicinity' there is in our judgment a necessary implication under Article 6(4) that the delivery or collection of the goods is in reasonable proximity to the unloading bay in which the vehicle is parked for the purpose of that collection or delivery.
4. Ultimately it is question of fact and degree for the Magistrate as to whether the time for which the vehicle is in the unloading bay, the nature and extent of the activities which have been undertaken in relation to the vehicle during that time, the nature of the goods or merchandise in question and the location of the premises where the delivery or collection is taking place lead him to conclude that the vehicle can properly be said to be engaged in 'delivering or collecting goods or merchandise' (so that parking is lawful) or whether it is not or is no longer so doing (in which event an offence has been committed).
Decision
15. Turning to the facts of this case, although the principles which we have described are similar to those set out by the Magistrate in Mayger, there are certain respects in which the Magistrate applied a different test in this case. Thus on page 12 of the transcript (when correctly saying that it was reasonable to allow a certain amount of time for the purposes of going to premises and dealing with matters) he went on to consider whether the vehicle was still involved in the process of 'loading or unloading'; similarly he made a reference to 'loading or unloading' on page 13 and referred to the need for it to be in relation to premises 'in a close vicinity'. This is the expression which relates to Article 6(1)(b) (via Article 39) and may no doubt have been considered by the Magistrate because he was of the opinion (incorrectly as we have held) that a driver must comply with the provisions of both Article 6(1)(b) and Article 6(4); but neither 'loading or unloading' or 'in the vicinity' are relevant expressions for offences under Article 6(4). It is true that elsewhere the Magistrate referred to consideration of whether the vehicle could be said to be delivering or collecting goods but, all in all, we think that there is some doubt as to the test which the Magistrate was applying and we think that the fair outcome is to allow the appeal and quash the conviction on that ground.
16. We wish however to emphasise that we are not saying that, if he had applied the principles which we have endeavoured to set out above, it would not have been open to the Magistrate to convict. On the contrary it would clearly have been open to him, depending upon all the circumstances, to conclude that a delay of 35 or 40 minutes during which no activity was taking place meant that an offence had been committed under Article 6(4). We are not saying that he would inevitably have reached such a conclusion but he might well have. Had he found the defendant guilty on application of the principles which we have described, we would not have interfered. It is only because he did not apply these principles that we are allowing the appeal.