SMITH v. THE UNITED KINGDOM
Doc ref: 14455/88 • ECHR ID: 001-960
Document date: September 4, 1991
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AS TO THE ADMISSIBILITY OF
Application No. 14455/88
by Ruby, John and Tommy SMITH
against the United Kingdom
The European Commission of Human Rights sitting in private
on 4 September 1991, the following members being present:
MM. C.A. NØRGAARD, President
F. ERMACORA
G. JÖRUNDSSON
A.S. GÖZÜBÜYÜK
A. WEITZEL
J.-C. SOYER
H.G. SCHERMERS
H. DANELIUS
Mrs. G. H. THUNE
Sir Basil HALL
MM. F. MARTINEZ RUIZ
C.L. ROZAKIS
Mrs. J. LIDDY
MM. L. LOUCAIDES
J.-C. GEUS
A.V. ALMEIDA RIBEIRO
M.P. PELLONPÄÄ
B. MARXER
Mr. H.C. KRÜGER, Secretary to the Commission
Having regard to Article 25 of the Convention for the
Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms;
Having regard to the application introduced on 14 October 1988
by Ruby, John and Tommy SMITH against the United Kingdom and registered
on 8 December 1988 under file No. 14455/88
Having regard to the report provided for in Rule 47 of the
Rules of Procedure of the Commission;
Having regard to:
- the Commission's decision of 5 September 1989 to bring
the application to the notice of the respondent Government
and invite them to submit written observations on its
admissibility and merits;
- the observations submitted by the respondent Government on
6 April 1990 and the observations in reply submitted
by the applicant on 9 July 1990.
Having deliberated;
Decides as follows:
THE FACTS
The applicants are gypsies born in 1949, 1947 and 1945
respectively. They have lived in Hereford all their lives. They are
represented before the Commission by Mr. L. Clements, solicitor of
Messrs Thorpes, Hereford.
The facts of the case may be summarised as follows.
After the entry into force of the Town and Country Planning
Act 1947, the Highways Act 1959 and the Caravan Sites and Control of
Development Act ("the 1960 Act") it became, in practice, very
difficult for gypsies to find accommodation. At least partly in
response to such problems, the Caravan Sites Act 1968 ("the 1968 Act")
was passed. The 1968 Act provides inter alia as follows:
"Section 6
(1) Subject to the provisions of this and the next following
section, it shall be the duty of every county council ...
to exercise their powers under Section 24 of the Caravan
Sites and Control of Development Act 1960 (provision of
caravan sites) so far as may be necessary to provide
adequate accommodation for gypsies residing in or resorting
to their area.
...
Section 9
...
(2) The Minister may, if at any time it appears to him to be
necessary so to do, give directions to any [county council]
requiring them to provide, pursuant to the said Section 6,
such sites or additional sites, for the accommodation of
such numbers of caravans, as may be specified in the
directions; and any such directions shall be enforceable, on
the application of the Minister, by mandamus. ..."
Several studies were subsequently made into the position of
gypsies, in particular the Cripps Report (presented to the Minister of
Housing and Local Government in December 1976), a report by
Mr. I. McGill of Brighton Polytechnic in 1979/80 and a review on the
effectiveness of policy in the area of providing gypsy sites by
Professor Wibberly in 1986. Specific provision was made for gypsies
in departmental circular 28/77 of 25 March 1977 to County and
District Councils and London Borough Councils; in departmental
circular 57/78 of 15 August 1978; in the Local Government, Planning
and Land Act 1980 (which provided for 100 per cent grants for the
establishment of gypsy caravan sites (since April 1990 any such
moneys do not count against other capital expenditure allocations);
also in other circulars, for example 8/81.
In 1978, the applicants, with other members of the Hereford
Traveller Support Group, petitioned the Secretary of State for the
Environment ("the Secretary of State") for the provisions of adequate
stopping sites within the area of the former Hereford County Council.
The Secretary of State declined to use his powers under the 1968 Act
by letter of 2 June 1978.
After various disputes between the applicant and the Hereford
and Worcester County Council, in early 1986 the applicants' solicitors
instituted judicial review proceedings for declarations that the
County Council was in breach of its Section 6 duties and that the
Secretary of State had wrongly failed to exercise his Section 9
direction giving powers. They also requested an order that the County
Council acquire specific land for extra pitches, decide on the
location and extent of further sites and acquire or appropriate land
for such further sites within 24 months.
In a judgment of 28 April 1988 Mr. Justice Henry found as
follows:
"In Hereford and Worcester, the situation is even worse than
it is nationwide. Annual counts show that in January, 1982
75% of all caravans in the country council area were on
unauthorised spaces, in January, 1986 that was down to 66%,
and in January, 1987 it was 62% - this against the national
average of about 33%. To look at the problem from another
angle, as early as 1979 the county council had concluded
that four hundred pitches were needed in its area: two
hundred and thirty to be provided by the local authority,
one hundred by the private sector and seventy transit
pitches. The Department has accepted, and still accepts,
that such figure would be adequate provision. Of the two
hundred and thirty that were to be provided by the local
authority, to date only seventy-two have been. Twelve of
these were provided as long ago as 1964, another fifteen in
March of 1974, a further fifteen in July, 1977, and thirty
on 2nd February, 1980. Additionally to these seventy-two,
firm proposals or commitments have been made to a further
twenty-nine. Beyond that there is no certainty where the
remainder of the sites will be. So, eighteen years after
the Act came into force, the county council is not even half
way to its own target for local authority provision. In
those circumstances it is scarcely surprising that the
applicants have obtained legal aid and come to this Court.
...
... it should be noted that in 1968 when the Act was
passed, public law challenges to local authorities for
failure to perform statutory duties were virtually unheard
of. The concept of public law was relatively unfamiliar.
Any private law challenge to the actions or inaction of the
county council or Secretary of State would have encountered
a real obstacle in the House of Lords decision in Pasmore
-v- Oswaldtwistle Rural District Council (1898) AC 387."
The judge then found that there could be a breach of the
Section 6 duty even though there had been no prior direction under
Section 9.
In the context of the test to be applied in determining
whether a breach of Section 6 existed, he found:
"The manifest intention of Parliament was that there should
be sufficient sites to accommodate the whole of the gipsy
community within the law: That is to say at sites properly
supervised and properly situated so that as at worst to
reduce to a minimum the tensions that have often existed
between gipsies and the ordinary house dwelling community,
and at best to integrate the gipsies.
The need for such a policy is patent. The social damage
caused by there not being sufficient sites to accommodate
the nation's gipsies goes beyond the obvious effect of
homelessness on the families concerned and on the conscience
of the community. If there are not sufficient sites where
gipsies may lawfully stop, then they will be without the law
whenever and wherever they do stop. This will result either
in them being harried from place to place, or in them being
allowed to remain where they should not lawfully be.
If moved on, they and their children will suffer from
society's failure to provide for them, and the effect of
forced departures on education and employment opportunities
will not only perpetuate the cycle of deprivation, but is
likely in itself to foster unlawful and anti-social
behaviour in them. Their plight will or should be an
affront to the national conscience.
On the other hand, if allowed to remain as trespassers, not
only are the tolerated sites likely to be in the wrong place
(gipsy sites are not perceived to be the best of neighbours
even when properly sited and supervised), and therefore both
objectionable and conspicuous, but the community will be
indignant to witness necessary laws not being enforced. Too
selective an approach to law enforcement undermines the
rule of law. Either result points to the urgent necessity
to make adequate provision for gipsies.
...
It follows then that on the bare numerical review of the
figures for site provision in each county already set out in
this judgment, I must find the county councils of Hereford
and Worcester in breach of their duty under Section 6 of the
Act."
The judge concluded that eighteen years was long enough for
county councils to have complied with their obligations, and that
where they had not made adequate provision, there was a breach of
the statute.
As to the refusal of the Secretary of State to give a Section
9 direction, the judge summed up as follows:
"Ultimately the questions seem to me to be:
(1) Has the Secretary of State properly appreciated the
urgency that the passage of eighteen years has injected into
the finding of a solution to this problem? On the evidence
before me, I have to conquer the doubts that the bald
outline of the facts arouse in me, and pay regard to the
care, attention to detail, and quality of reasoning set out
in Mr. McNulty's [of the Department of the Environment]
affidavits. It indicates a lively appreciation of the
problem. Whatever lack of past political will may have
contributed to the present position, in assessing whether it
is necessary now to give a direction, Mr. McNulty is in an
infinitely better position than the court to judge the
presence of the necessary political will in these counties.
Parliament entrusted him with the performance of that duty
on behalf of the Secretary of State, and there is nothing in
the evidence that would permit me to find that his judgment
on this matter could be set aside on the tests indicated.
The urgency has been properly appreciated.
(2) Has the Secretary of State properly evaluated the
present factual position, and each county's plans for the
future? I have already made the point that he is properly
informed. (A) In Hereford and Worcester, the most
up-to-date affidavit is Mr. McNulty's of 30th September
1987. He there looks at future plans and concludes: 'As
much is being done by the county council at the moment as
would be likely to be achieved were a direction to be given
by him'. The situation is being kept under review with
quarterly reporting. The minutes of the meeting of the
Members Gipsy Group on 3rd December 1987 do not, in my
judgment, invalidate the opinion he formed. Those minutes
show that the minority of four of the nine members are
clearly pressing hard for sites and impatient as to delays,
but I would take this to be a healthy sign for the future,
rather than as showing that it demonstrated such an obvious
lack of political will in the majority as to make any
decision not to give directions as perverse.
It seems to me that Mr. McNulty's view is one which
it is a view open to him within the boundaries of his
discretion, and cannot properly be upset by this court.
...
... having to answer the question as to whether the county
councils have the necessary political will for this task in
these proceedings has vividly demonstrated to me that the
Department, doing its job properly, will be infinitely
better placed to answer that question than the court can be
expected to be.
Having said that, as I have already indicated, I do
not believe that Parliament could have envisaged that making
adequate provision for gipsies should take this long, and
surely the time must have now come when the Department will
be intensifying its pressure on the counties nation-wide to
demonstrate that this relatively small but serious problem
must be solved, and its solution must be given priority."
As to relief, the judge refused to make an order that the
Secretary of State should make a Section 9 order, and also refused to
make a specific order against the County Council:
"Parliament entrusted the Secretary of State with responsibility
for deciding first, when to give a direction, and second, when to
give additional teeth to that direction by coming to the court
for an order of mandamus to enforce it. That clearly must
mitigate strongly against the court, in the exercise of its
discretion, short-circuiting the procedure provided by itself
issuing a direct mandamus against the county council concerned.
Such a course would seem to be, in any case such as the present
cases, wrong for the following reasons: (i) It shows the court
and the Secretary of State (whose original responsibility
Parliament made it) to be at odds as to what is necessary to
achieve provision of adequate accommodation for gipsies. (ii) The
Secretary of State will almost invariably be in the better
position to judge what is necessary and what will work towards
that goal.
I am strongly of the view that even in the truly
exceptional case it might be right to grant mandatory
relief against a county council other than in support of
a Section 9 direction, it would be quite wrong for that
relief to impose a fixed time limit for the provision of
sites, ... because the court is not in a position to
know how long it will take the county council, in the
proper discretionary exercise of their various statutory
duties, to achieve the required target. Therefore, to
make such an order would be for the court to order what
might prove impossible, in circumstances where the
pressure from such an order might put the county councils
in danger of breaking other conflicting legal duties."
Finally, a declaration that the county council was in breach
of its obligations under Section 6 was granted.
Shortly after the judgment, counsel advised the solicitors
that the applicants had no prospect of obtaining mandatory relief or
damages and that nothing would be achieved by an appeal. On
22 November 1988 this was confirmed by a written opinion in which he
stated inter alia:
"I am of the firm opinion that the English courts will not grant
gypsies anything more than a declaration against offending county
councils ...
It follows that any appeal would be pointless as far as English
law is concerned. As such legal aid would definitely not be
available. I have met the applicants. They are virtually
illiterate having received little education. They could not
possibly conduct a case without legal representation. Nor could
they afford to pay privately for representation in the Court of
Appeal."
COMPLAINTS
The applicants allege violations of Articles 3, 8, 13 and 14
of the Convention, and of Articles 1 and 2 of Protocol No. 1.
The applicants submit that gypsies in general and themselves
in particular have been forced to move from one unsatisfactory
stopping place to another time after time by local and national
government, and that the manner in which they have been forced from
one location to another amounts to degrading treatment, lack of
respect for their private and family lives and their homes and a
denial of the right to peaceful enjoyment of their possessions. As a
consequence of such forced moves and the failure to provide sites,
gypsy children (including the applicants' children) receive little or
no education and grow into illiterate or barely literate adults. The
applicants submit that these denials of human rights would not be
tolerated at all if the victims were United Kingdom
house-dwellers, and that this constitutes discrimination within the
meaning of Article 14 of the Convention.
The applicants state that, notwithstanding a clear statutory
duty on county councils and other local authorities, the only remedy
they have is to seek a declaration that the local authority is in
breach of its duty. No right to sue for damages exists nor is other
compensation available.
The applicants state that since the declaration was made in
April 1988, no noticeable effect has been discerned in the local
authorities' behaviour; the County Council of Hereford and Worcester
had a declaration of a breach of Section 6 made against it and
thereafter made less progress in the provision of gypsy sites than it
had stated it would make before the declaration was granted. The
consequence of this is that no effective remedy before a national
authority exists for gypsies such as the applicants who take legal
proceedings which result in a clear judicial decision that a law meant
for their benefit and the benefit of their families has been disobeyed
to a substantial extent for many years.
PROCEEDINGS BEFORE THE COMMISSION
The application was introduced on 14 October 1988 and
registered on 8 December 1988. On 5 September 1989 the Commission
decided to bring the application to the notice of the respondent
Government and to invite them to submit written observations on its
admissibility and merits. The respondent Government submitted their
observations on 6 April 1990 after an extension of the time limit to
12 January 1990 and the applicants submitted their observations in reply
on 9 July 1990 after an extension of the time limit to 13 July 1990.
THE LAW
1. The applicants complain that they are unable to find
satisfactory lawful stopping places. The Commission has examined this
complaint under Article 8 (Art. 8) of the Convention, which provides as
follows:
"1. Everyone has the right to respect for his private
and family life, his home and his correspondence.
2. There shall be no interference by a public authority
with the exercise of this right except such as is in
accordance with the law and is necessary in a democratic
society in the interests of national security, public safety
or the economic well-being of the country, for the
prevention of disorder or crime, for the protection of
health or morals, or for the protection of the rights and
freedoms of others."
The Government consider first, that the applicants have failed
to exhaust domestic remedies in that they did not appeal against the
part of the judgment of Mr. Justice Henry of 28 April 1988 which
refused them the relief they sought beyond a declaration.
Secondly, the Government consider that the applicants' complaints
do not come within the scope of Article 8 (Art. 8) of the Convention
because the complaints in respect of their homes are tantamount
to a claim to a right to a home or to housing. They contrast the
provisions of the Convention and in particular Article 8 (Art. 8) with
Article 16 of the European Social Charter and Article 11 of the
International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights,
which make clear and express provision for a right to housing.
As to the question of domestic remedies, the applicants point
out that, although the Government indicate the scope of the powers of
the Court of Appeal on appeal from the High Court, they do not indicate
any possible grounds of appeal. The applicants consider that this is
because there were none. As to the merits of the Article 8 (Art. 8) issues,
the applicants consider that their homes are their caravans, and that
if the local authority had obeyed the domestic laws, respect would
have been shown for their homes.
Concerning exhaustion of domestic remedies, the
Commission recalls that Article 26 (Art. 26) of the Convention only
requires the exhaustion of such remedies which relate to the breaches
of the Convention alleged and at the same time provide effective and
sufficient redress. An applicant does not need to exercise remedies
which, although theoretically of a nature to constitute a remedy, do
not in reality offer any chance of redressing the alleged breach (cf.
No. 9248/81, Dec. 10.10.83, D.R. 34 p. 78).
The Commission recalls that in the present case, shortly after
Mr. Justice Henry gave his judgment on 28 April 1988, counsel for the
applicants expressed his opinion to the applicants' solicitors that
the applicants had no prospect of obtaining mandatory relief or
damages and that nothing could be achieved by an appeal. This oral
opinion was confirmed, in the course of the Commission's proceedings,
by an opinion of 22 November 1988. It is true that the applicants did
not apply for legal aid for an appeal, but given that the barrister
involved in the case at first instance had concluded that there was no
prospect of a successful appeal, and that the same barrister may have
been called on to give an opinion if legal aid had been applied for,
the Commission finds that the failure to apply for legal aid is not
conclusive for the question whether the applicants have exhausted
remedies.
The Government further consider that the written opinion
eventually proferred was wrong and that the Court of Appeal could have
granted mandatory or other further relief against the local authority
or the Secretary of State. However, the Commission notes, as the
applicants point out, that the Government do not indicate any specific
grounds on which the applicants could have relied on appeal. The
burden of proving the existence of available and sufficient domestic
remedies lies upon the State invoking the rule (cf. Eur. Court H.R.,
Deweer judgment of 27 February 1980, Series A no. 35, p. 15, para. 26,
and No. 9013/80, Dec. 11.12.82, D.R. 30 p. 96, at p. 102), and an
indication of the existence of a superior jurisdiction is not
sufficient to establish the existence of a remedy complying with
Article 26 (Art. 26): the State invoking the rule must show that the
remedy relied on is available and sufficient. In the absence of any
indication that there is a possible ground of appeal, the Commission
is unable to accept that the application should be declared
inadmissible for non-exhaustion of domestic remedies.
The Commission recalls that the traditional way of life of a
minority can, in principle, attract the guarantees of Article 8
(Art. 8) of the Convention (cf. Nos. 9281/81 and 9415/81, Dec.
3.10.83, D.R. 25 p. 30). The Commission also notes that since 1948,
in particular, a series of Acts of Parliament and other developments
have made life progressively more difficult for gypsies. In
recognition of this fact, Part II of the Caravan Sites Act 1968, which
entered into force on 1 April 1970, inter alia imposes a duty on local
authorities to make adequate provisions for gypsies in their area.
The Secretary of State is given various powers to ensure and coerce
local authorities in their duties; in particular by "designation" of
areas which have made adequate provisions (thereby giving local
authorities certain additional powers) and by giving "directions" to
local authority requiring them to provide sites. The present case
does not concern a designated area, and Mr. Justice Henry found (a)
that adequate provision had not been made for gypsies in Hereford and
Worcester, (b) that the Secretary of State could refuse to give a
direction and (c) that he (the judge) would not substitute his view
for that of the Secretary of State.
The question for the Commission is, accordingly, whether the
legislation and enforcement mechanisms referred to above, secure the
applicants' rights to respect for their private and family lives and homes.
In this regard, the Commission notes first that it is the
function of Article 13 (Art. 13) of the Convention, and not Article 8
(Art. 8), to guarantee remedies in respect of alleged violations of
the Convention. Moreover, the Convention does not as such create new
procedural rights. Accordingly the absence of a remedy cannot of
itself constitute a violation of Article 8 (Art. 8).
The Commission next recalls the finding of Mr. Justice
Henry that the Secretary of State had been alive to the problems
facing both the applicants and the local authority, that the
Secretary of State was better placed than he (the judge) to
assess the political climate in the county and that the factual
position had been fully evaluated.
The Commission recalls that Article 8 (Art. 8) of the
Convention does not contain an express right to living accommodation.
Moreover, although Article 8 (Art. 8) may require positive action from
Contracting States in certain circumstances, it is inevitable that
when questions of policy and implementation arise, a considerable
discretion must be left to them. The Commission finds that, in the
present case, questions relating to the immediate provision of gypsy
sites in Hereford and Worcester were broadly canvassed by the
Secretary of State and by the Court, and there is no indication that
the authorities acted in such a way as not to respect the applicants'
right under Article 8 (Art. 8) of the Convention.
It follows that this part of the application is manifestly
ill-founded within the meaning of Article 27 para. 2 (Art. 27-2) of
the Convention.
2. The applicants also allege a violation of Article 13 (Art. 13)
of the Convention in connection with the complaints under Article 8
(Art. 8).
The Commission has just declared inadmissible the applicants'
complaints under Article 8 (Art. 8) of the Convention. It finds that
they were not "arguable" within the meaning of the case-law of the
European Court of Human Rights (see, for example, Powell and Rayner
judgment of 21 February 1990, Series A No. 172, p. 14, para. 31 with
further references).
Accordingly, this complaint must also be declared manifestly
ill-founded within the meaning of Article 27 para. 2 (Art. 27-2) of
the Convention.
3. The applicants also allege violations of Articles 3 and 14 of
(Art. 3, 14) the Convention and Articles 1 and 2 of Protocol No. 1
(P1-1, P1-2).
The Commission has considered these complaints in the light of the
material submitted by the applicants. However, insofar as these matters
are within the Commission's competence and to the extent that the allegations
have been substantiated, the Commission finds that they do not disclose
any appearance of a violation of the rights and freedoms referred to.
This part of the application must therefore be rejected in
accordance of Article 27 para. 2 (Art. 27-2) of the Convention as
being manifestly ill-founded.
Accordingly, the Commission, by a majority,
DECLARES THE APPLICATION INADMISSIBLE.
Secretary to the Commission President of the Commission
(H.C. KRÜGER) (C.A. NØRGAARD)