From: Matthew Hoyle <MHoyle@oeclaw.co.uk>
Sent: Friday 11 October 2024 18:11
To: obligations@uwo.ca
Subject: Newcomer injunctions in the English courts
Members of
the group with an interest in remedies may remember that last year the UKSC
held in Wolverhampton CC v London Gypsies and Travellers [2023] UKSC 47
that the English courts had the power to issue “newcomer” injunctions:
injunctions which bind persons who were not presently committing, nor
threatening to commit, any wrong against the applicant, and were not yet joined
to proceedings (or even yet identified). In essence, the court can generally
criminalise (in a specific geographic area) what would otherwise only be
tortious conduct.
Various
concerns have been raised about this power in the interim, including by some on
this list, but one point which struck me at the time is the assertion of Lords
Reed, Briggs and Kitchin (with whom Lord Hodge and Lloyd Jones agreed) at [225]
that: “It is to be remembered that this is an exceptional remedy”.
That to me
sounded similar to the reassurance given by judges in the 1970s about the new
forms of injunction then being developed, e.g.: “such an order can only be
justified in the most exceptional circumstances” (Anton Pillar
[1976] Ch 55, 58). In other words, not in the gift of the court, and likely to
be proved untrue very quickly: as Millett LJ observed in Credit Suisse Fides
Trust SA v Cuoghi [1998] QB 818 , 824E of the other ‘nuclear weapon’
innovated at the same time: "The Mareva jurisdiction was established in
1975 as an exceptional remedy to prevent a foreign defendant from defeating any
ultimate judgment by removing his assets from the jurisdiction. It was
progressively extended” – extended to the point that just this week,
Popplewell LJ declared that it was wrong to think of freezing orders as a
“nuclear weapon” given how often they are issued: Unitel v dos Santos
[2024] EWCA Civ 1109 at [128] (and agreed with Flaux C that the correct merits
test was “serious issue to be tried”).
So it is
with “newcomer injunctions”: today, Julian Knowles J handed down two such
injunctions (London City Airport v Persons Unknown [2024] EWHC 2557 (KB)
and Thurrock Council v Adams [2024] EWHC 2576 (KB)) and in both
judgments cited 7 other cases since the decision in Wolverhampton where
such injunctions have been granted. He makes no reference to “exceptional
remedy” in doing so.
I would be
interested to know from members outside of England (given the UKSC doesn’t seem
to engage in much comparative analysis in Wolverhampton) whether their courts
have claimed a similar power, and whether the results have been similar: a
rapid proliferation of such orders.
Matthew Hoyle
Barrister
One
Essex Court
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