[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
United Kingdom Supreme Court |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Supreme Court >> Hemming (t/a Simply Pleasure Ltd) & Ors, R (on the application of) v Westminster City Council [2015] UKSC 25 (29 April 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKSC/2015/25.html Cite as: [2015] AC 1600, [2015] WLR(D) 193, [2015] 3 CMLR 9, [2015] PTSR 643, [2015] 4 All ER 471, [2015] 2 WLR 1271, [2015] BLGR 753, [2015] LLR 564, [2015] UKSC 25 |
[New search] [Printable PDF version] [Buy ICLR report: [2015] 2 WLR 1271] [Buy ICLR report: [2015] PTSR 643] [View ICLR summary: [2015] WLR(D) 193] [Help]
Easter Term
[2015] UKSC 25
On appeal from: [2013] EWCA Civ 591
R (on the application of Hemming (t/a Simply Pleasure Ltd) and others) (Respondents) v Westminster City Council (Appellant)
before
Lord Neuberger, President
Lord Mance
Lord Clarke
Lord Reed
Lord Toulson
JUDGMENT GIVEN ON
Heard on 13 January 2015
Appellant Nathalie Lieven QC David Matthias QC Jacqueline Lean (Instructed by Westminster City Council Legal Services) |
Respondents Philip Kolvin QC Victoria Wakefield (Instructed by Gosschalks Solicitors) |
|
Interveners (1-4) Timothy Dutton QC Robert O'Donoghue (Instructed by Russell-Cooke LLP) |
||
Interveners (5 and 6) Michael Fordham QC Hugh Mercer QC (Instructed by Bevan Brittan LLP) |
||
Intervener (The Local Government Association) Written Submissions Only (Instructed by The Local Government Association Corporate Legal Advisor) |
||
Intervener (Her Majesty's Treasury) George Peretz QC (Instructed by Government Legal Department) |
Interveners
1. The Architects Registration Board ("ARB")
2. The Solicitors Regulation Authority ("SRA")
3. The Bar Standards Board ("BSB")
4. The Farriers Registration Council
5. The Law Society
6. The Bar Council
7. The Local Government Association
8. Her Majesty's Treasury
LORD MANCE: (with whom Lord Neuberger, Lord Clarke, Lord Reed and Lord Toulson agree)
"An applicant for the grant, renewal or transfer of a licence under this Schedule shall pay a reasonable fee determined by the appropriate authority."
"(2) Authorisation procedures and formalities provided for by a competent authority under an authorisation scheme must not -
(a) be dissuasive, or
(b) unduly complicate or delay the provision of the service.
(3) Authorisation procedures and formalities provided for by a competent authority under an authorisation scheme must be easily accessible.
(4) Any charges provided for by a competent authority which applicants may incur under an authorisation scheme must be reasonable and proportionate to the cost of the procedures and formalities under the scheme and must not exceed the cost of those procedures and formalities."
Under regulation 4:
"'authorisation scheme' means any arrangement which in effect requires the provider or recipient of a service to obtain the authorisation of, or to notify, a competent authority in order to have access to, or to exercise, a service activity …"
"Authorisation procedures and formalities shall not be dissuasive and shall not unduly complicate or delay the provision of the service. They shall be easily accessible and any charges which the applicants may incur from their application shall be reasonable and proportionate to the cost of the authorisation procedures in question and shall not exceed the cost of the procedures."
"Member States shall not make access to a service activity or the exercise thereof subject to an authorisation scheme unless the following conditions are satisfied:
(a) the authorisation scheme does not discriminate against the provider in question;
(b) the need for an authorisation scheme is justified by an over-riding reason relating to the public interest;
(c) the objective pursued cannot be attained by means of a less restrictive measure, in particular because an a posteriori inspection would take place too late to be genuinely effective."
Article 4(6) contains this definition:
"'authorisation scheme' means any procedure under which a provider or recipient is in effect required to take steps in order to obtain from a competent authority a formal decision, or an implied decision, concerning access to a service activity or the exercise thereof …"
"(39) The concept of 'authorisation scheme' should cover, inter alia, the administrative procedures for granting authorisations, licences, approvals or concessions, and also the obligation, in order to be eligible to exercise the activity, to be registered as a member of a profession or entered in a register, roll or database, to be officially appointed to a body or to obtain a card attesting to membership of a particular profession. Authorisation may be granted not only by a formal decision but also by an implicit decision arising, for example, from the silence of the competent authority or from the fact that the interested party must await acknowledgement of receipt of a declaration in order to commence the activity in question or for the latter to become lawful. …
(42) The rules relating to administrative procedures should not aim at harmonising administrative procedures but at removing overly burdensome authorisation schemes, procedures and formalities that hinder the freedom of establishment and the creation of new service undertakings therefrom.
(43) One of the fundamental difficulties faced, in particular by SMEs (small and medium sized enterprises), in accessing service activities and exercising them is the complexity, length and legal uncertainty of administrative procedures. For this reason, following the example of certain modernising and good administrative practice initiatives undertaken at Community and national level, it is necessary to establish principles of administrative simplification, inter alia through the limitation of the obligation of prior authorisation to cases in which it is essential and the introduction of the principle of tacit authorisation by the competent authorities after a certain period of time elapsed. Such modernising action, while maintaining the requirements on transparency and the updating of information relating to operators, is intended to eliminate the delays, costs and dissuasive effects which arise, for example, from unnecessary or excessively complex and burdensome procedures, the duplication of procedures, the 'red tape' involved in submitting documents, the arbitrary use of powers by the competent authorities, indeterminate or excessively long periods before a response is given, the limited duration of validity of authorisations granted and disproportionate fees and penalties. Such practices have particularly significant dissuasive effects on providers wishing to develop their activities in other Member States and require coordinated modernisation within an enlarged internal market of 25 Member States."
Recital (49) also expressly contemplates that there can be fees of a supervisory body.
Type A: Applications for licences are made on terms that the applicant must pay:
i) on making the application, the costs of the authorisation procedures and formalities, andii) on the application being successful, a further fee to cover the costs of the running and enforcement of the licensing scheme.
Type B: Applications for licences are made on terms that the applicant must pay:
i) on making the application, the costs of the authorisation procedures and formalitiesii) at the same time, but on the basis that it is refundable if the application is unsuccessful, a further fee to cover the costs of the running and enforcement of the licensing scheme.
Westminster City Council has until now operated a scheme of type B, as set out in paras 2 and 3 above.
i) First, the respondents submit that a requirement to make even a refundable payment could have a "potentially dissuasive" effect on applicants.
ii) Second, they submit that even a refundable payment constitutes a charge, and that such a charge infringes article 13(2) because it exceeds the cost, understood as the cost to Westminster City Council, of the procedures.
(1) whether the requirement to pay a fee including the second refundable part means, as a matter of law and without more, that the respondents incurred a charge from their applications which was contrary to article 13(2) in so far as it exceeded any cost to Westminster City Council of processing the application, or
(2) whether a conclusion that such a requirement should be regarded as involving a charge - or, if it is so to be regarded, a charge exceeding the cost to Westminster City Council of processing the application - depends on the effect of further (and if so what) circumstances, for example: (a) any evidence establishing that the payment of the second refundable part involved or would be likely to involve an applicant in some cost or loss, (b) any saving in the costs to Westminster City Council of processing applications (and so in their non-refundable cost) that would result from requiring an up-front fee consisting of both parts to be paid by all applicants.
No authority addressing these questions was cited to the Supreme Court, and the answers to them are in my view unclear. Accordingly, it is, I consider, necessary for the Court to make a reference to the Court of Justice in Luxembourg on this point.