Contract p3 Fisher V Bell
Contract p3 Fisher V Bell
Contract p3 Fisher V Bell
270
Glasbrook Brothers, Limited Appellants; v. Glamorgan
House of Lords
1924 Dec. 19.
House of Lords
HL
Viscount Cave L.C., Viscount Finlay , Lord Shaw of Dunfermline, Lord Carson,
and Lord Blanesburgh.
Although the police authority are bound to provide sufficient protection to life and
property without payment, if in particular circumstances, at the request of an
individual, they provide a special form of protection outside the scope of their public
duty they may demand payment for it.
On the occasion of a strike a colliery manager applied for police protection for his
colliery and insisted that it could only be efficiently protected by billeting a police force
on the colliery premises. The police superintendent was prepared to provide what in
his opinion was adequate protection by means of a mobile force, but refused to billet
police officers at the colliery except on the terms of the manager agreeing to pay for
the force so provided at a specified rate:-
Held, (by Viscount Cave L.C., Viscount Finlay, and Lord Shaw of Dunfermline; Lord
Carson and Lord Blanesburgh dissenting), that there was nothing illegal in the
agreement, nor was it void for want of consideration.
Decision of the Court of Appeal [1924] 1 K. B. 879 affirmed.
APPEAL from an order of the Court of Appeal [FN1] affirming a judgment of Bailhache
J.
The action was brought by the respondents against the appellants to recover a sum of
2200l. 11s. for the services of police specially supplied by the respondents for the
appellants at their request and by agreement with the appellants.
The appellants, by their defence, alleged that there was no consideration for the
promise to pay, as it was the duty of the respondents to afford police protection
without payment and that the agreement was signed under compulsion, the signature
being extorted colore officii.
The appellants counterclaimed for 1330l. 4s., the cost of housing and feeding the
police so supplied.*271 Bailhache J. held that the respondents were entitled to the
relief claimed and he dismissed the counterclaim.
The Court of Appeal by a majority (Bankes and Scrutton L.JJ., Atkin L.J. dissenting)
affirmed the judgment of the learned judge.
The facts are fully stated in the report of the case before the Court of Appeal, and
they sufficiently appear from the opinion of the Lord Chancellor.
Representation1924.
Nov. 3, 4, 6. Sir John Simon K.C.and Montgomery K.C. (with them A. T. James) for
the appellants.
Where a police authority render police protection which they are under a duty to give
there is nothing to support a bargain for payment: Morris v. Burdett [FN2]; Collins v.
Godefroy [FN3]; Bilke v. Havelock [FN4]; Dew v. Parsons [FN5]; Morgan v. Palmer.
[FN6]Where there is a duty on the police authority to provide adequate police
protection and there is a discretion as to the way in which that shall be done the law
will not support a claim for payment by the police authority because the protection is
afforded in one way rather than in another. The discretion vested in the police
authority is not to be bought and sold. It is contrary to public policy to allow a public
authority clothed with a discretion as to the manner in which their public duty is to be
discharged to make a payment for exercising their discretion in the way in which the
subject asks, as the receipt of payment would tend to bias the authority in the
exercise of their discretion. Per Bayley J. in Morgan v. Palmer. [FN7] It is admitted
that police protection in some form was required, and yet the appellants have been
held liable to pay for the whole of it. The appellants' promise to pay was obtained
upon a demand made colore officii and was in law not a voluntary promise, but one
obtained under compulsion: Steele v. Williams [FN8]; Maskell v. Horner [FN9]; T. & J.
Brocklebank v. The King [FN10],*272 since reversed on other grounds. There was no
consideration for the promise to pay, because the police were merely discharging
their public duty in affording protection to the colliery. A public authority, having
public duties to perform, can only charge for their services when specially authorized
by Act of Parliament. Assuming that this argument does not prevail, the position is
this. A police authority cannot exact payment for anything which falls within the scope
of their duty; secus where they are doing something which they may do if they think
fit, but are not bound to do. They may make charges for works of supererogation
only, as, for example, where police constables are provided to attend a wedding.
Vaughan Williams K.C.(with him Trevor Hunter) for the respondents. For eighty years
the Legislature has recognized the practice of obtaining an agreement for payment for
special police services as a proper and legal practice. This, therefore, was a lawful
agreement. Then prima facie those who promise to pay must fulfil their promise
unless they can show no consideration. It is conceded that an agreement to pay for
something which there is a public duty to provide cannot stand, and if this charge
were made for carrying out the duty of rendering adequate protection to life and
property this action could never have succeeded. Where there is an agreement to
render services which the police authority are not under any duty as a police authority
to render at the request of an individual, there is no reason for saying that payment
cannot be demanded. The respondents' case is that the superintendent of police,
Colonel Smith, was affording adequate protection by a mobile force, quite apart from
the police garrison stationed at the colliery, and that the supply of this garrison was
an addition to the public duties of the police authority. Colonel Smith was the officer
who had the duty of deciding what protection was necessary, and, if he came to the
conclusion that people were suffering from undue nervousness, he was not bound to
take further measures. The test is, was the officer, apart from the appellants' request,
bound as part of his public duty to do the particular thing*273 requested? It was
competent for him to say,
"I consider this force unnecessary, but I am willing to provide it if you pay me."
Apart from the agreement, the police continued to exert every effort necessary for the
protection of the colliery, and, in fact, the colliery was protected twice over. For this
additional protection, afforded at the request of the appellants, the respondents are
entitled to demand payment. The issue is not whether Colonel Smith or the manager
of the colliery was right, but whether Colonel Smith, in taking up the position that the
protection already afforded was adequate, was acting in good faith, assuming that he
had some reasonable ground for his opinion. If that is so, then there was good
consideration for this contract. It cannot be suggested that there was here anything in
the nature of extortion. The respondents do not dispute the law laid down in the
authorities cited on behalf of the appellants, but they are very remote from the
present case. That the police may receive payment for their services in particular
cases is shown by England v. Davidson [FN11]; Thatcher v. England [FN12]; Bent v.
Wakefield and Barnsley Union Bank [FN13]; Neville v. Kelly. [FN14][He also referred
to Glamorgan Coal Co. v. Glamorganshire Standing Joint Committee. [FN15]] The
legality of payments for special services of the police has been universally assumed
for a great number of years, and the practice derives some support from the Police
Acts: see Special Constables Act, 1838 (1 & 2 Vict. c. 80); Police Act, 1840 (3 & 4
Vict. c. 88), s. 19 ; Police Act, 1890 (53 & 54 Vict. c. 45) , s. 16, sub-s. 1 (e)(now
repealed by the Police Pensions Act, 1921). There is no distinction in substance
between this case and the common case of lending the services of the police for a
wedding.
FN13 (1878) 4 C. P. D. 1.
"If one party to a dispute is threatened with violence by the other party he is entitled
to protection from such violence whether his contention in the dispute be right or
wrong, and to allow the police authority to deny him protection from that violence
unless he pays all the expense*278 in addition to the contribution which with other
ratepayers he makes to the support of the police is only one degree less dangerous
than to allow that authority to decide which party is right in the dispute and grant or
withhold protection accordingly. There is a moral duty on each party to the dispute to
do nothing to aggravate it and to take reasonable means of self-protection, but the
discharge of this duty by them is not a condition precedent to the discharge by the
police authority of their own duty."
With this statement of the law I entirely agree, and I think that any attempt by a
police authority to extract payment for services which fall within the plain obligations
of the police force, should be firmly discountenanced by the Courts. But it has always
been recognized that, where individuals desire that services of a special kind which,
though not within the obligations of a police authority, can most effectively be
rendered by them, should be performed by members of the police force, the police
authorities may (to use an expression which is found in the Police Pensions Act, 1890)
"lend" the services of constables for that purpose in consideration of payment.
Instances are the lending of constables on the occasions of large gatherings in and
outside private premises, as on the occasions of weddings, athletic or boxing contests
or race meetings, and the provision of constables at large railway stations. Of course
no such lending could possibly take place if the constables were required elsewhere
for the preservation of order; but (as Bankes L.J. pointed out) an effective police force
requires a margin of reserve strength in order to deal with emergencies, and to
employ that margin of reserve, when not otherwise required, on special police service
for payment is to the advantage both of the persons utilizing their services and of the
public who are thereby relieved from some part of the police charges. Atkin L.J. put
the contrary view in the form of a dilemma when he said [FN17]:
"Either they were performing this public duty in giving the protection asked for, in
which case I think they cannot charge, or, which no one suggests, they were*279 at
the request of an individual doing something which it was not their duty to do, in
which case it seems to me both public policy and s. 10 of the County Police Act, 1839,
make the contract illegal and void."
With great respect to the learned Lord Justice I am disposed to think that this
reasoning rests on an ambiguous use of the word "duty." There may be services
rendered by the police which, although not within the scope of their absolute
obligations to the public, may yet fall within their powers, and in such cases public
policy does not forbid their performance. I do not understand the reference in the
above passage to s. 10 of the Act of 1839.
The above view of the law is in accordance with certain passages in the judgments of
Phillimore and Pickford L.JJ. in the previous Glamorganshire case cited above [FN18],
but in that case the point did not actually arise. The argument also derives
considerable support from the statutes dealing with the police. By the Police Act, 1838
(1 & 2 Vict. c. 80), it was provided that when the appointment of special constables
had been occasioned by the behaviour or by reasonable apprehension of the
behaviour of the persons employed upon any railway, canal or other public work
made or carried on under the authority of Parliament, the justices might make orders
upon the company making or carrying on such railway, canal or other public work for
the payment to such special constables of reasonable allowances for their trouble, loss
of time, and expenses. By the County Police Act, 1840 (3 & 4 Vict. c. 88, s. 19) , it
was enacted that it should be lawful for the chief constable of any county with the
approval of the justices in quarter session on an application of any person showing
the necessity thereof to appoint and cause to be sworn in any additional number of
constables at the charge of the person making such application, but subject to the
orders of the chief constable and for such time as he should think fit. It is true that
the provisions of this section are confined to the appointment of "additional"
constables; but it would seem somewhat absurd to require that, if in any case where
constables are required for special duty there are*280 members of the existing force
who can be spared for the purpose, the services of those constables shall not be
utilized but additional constables shall be appointed. And by the Police Act, 1890 (53
& 54 Vict. c. 45, s. 16), it was provided that there should be carried to the pension
fund of every police force among other sums "(e) such proportion of any sum received
on account of constables whose services have been lent in consideration of payment
as the police authority may consider to be a fair contribution to the pension fund in
respect of those constables." No doubt the above provision of the Act of 1890 was
repealed by the Police Pensions Act, 1921 ; but that repeal was rendered necessary
by reason of the fact that by s. 22 of that Act all pensions were directed to be paid
out of the police fund and the pensions funds were abolished, and the repeal does not
detract from the significance of the fact that by the terms of the Act of 1890 the
lending of the services of constables in consideration of payment was expressly
recognized by the Legislature. I find it difficult to believe that if the Legislature had
considered the practice of lending constables for special duty, which in the year 1890
was of daily occurrence, to be against public policy, it would have provided for the
application of payments received in consideration of such lending to pension
purposes; and it appears to me that this statutory recognition of the practice in
question affords a strong argument in favour of its legality.
I conclude, therefore, that the practice of lending constables for special duty in
consideration of payment is not illegal or against public policy; and I pass to the
second question - namely, whether in this particular case the lending of the seventy
constables to be billeted in the appellants' colliery was a legitimate application of the
principle. In this connection I think it important to bear in mind exactly what it was
that the learned trial judge had to decide. It was no part of his duty to say - nor did
he purport to say - whether in his judgment the billeting of the seventy men at the
colliery was necessary for the prevention of violence or the protection of the mines
from criminal injury. The duty of*281 determining such questions is cast by law, not
upon the Courts after the event, but upon the police authorities at the time when the
decision has to be taken; and a Court which attempted to review such a decision from
the point of view of its wisdom or prudence would (I think) be exceeding its proper
functions. The question for the Court was whether on July 9, 1921, the police
authorities, acting reasonably and in good faith, considered a police garrison at the
colliery necessary for the protection of life and property from violence, or, in other
words, whether the decision of the chief constable in refusing special protection unless
paid for was such a decision as a man in his position and with his duties could
reasonably take. If in the judgment of the police authorities, formed reasonably and
in good faith, the garrison was necessary for the protection of life and property, then
they were not entitled to make a charge for it, for that would be to exact a payment
for the performance of a duty which they clearly owed to the appellants and their
servants; but if they thought the garrison a superfluity and only acceded to Mr.
James' request with a view to meeting his wishes, then in my opinion they were
entitled to treat the garrison duty as special duty and to charge for it. Now, upon this
point the Divisional Superintendent Colonel Smith, who was a highly experienced
officer, gave specific and detailed evidence; and the learned judge having seen him in
the witness box and heard his examination and cross-examination accepted his
evidence upon the point, as the following extract from the judgment shows:
"Colonel Smith says that if the matter had been left entirely to him without this
requisition, he would have protected this colliery, and he would have protected it
amply, but in quite a different way, and I accept his evidence that that is so. He
would not have sent this garrison there, and in my judgment, while not desiring for a
moment to suggest that it was not the bounden duty of the county council to protect
this colliery, and not for one moment suggesting that the performing of a legal duty
will support a promise to pay, I have come to the conclusion that when a colliery
company or an individual requisitions*282 police protection of a special character for
a particular purpose, he must pay for it, and he must pay for it whether he makes a
contract to pay or whether he does not - a promise to pay would be implied under
those circumstances. In this case, of course, there is an express promise, and in my
judgment this promise is not without consideration and must be fulfilled."
Upon this point Sir John Simon in his powerful argument for the appellants contended
that the true inference to be drawn from the evidence was that the police authority,
having a discretion to elect between protecting the collieries (which admittedly
required protection in some form) by means of the "mobile body" to which Colonel
Smith referred or by means of a garrison, chose the latter alternative in consideration
of payment, and that they could not so (as he put it) "sell their discretion." Upon the
evidence, I do not think that they did anything of the kind. Colonel Smith said clearly
that the police garrison was no part of his scheme of protection and did not help him
in his scheme at all; that he had an ample force by which to protect the collieries from
outside and was well able to cope with the situation. It does not appear that the
provision of the garrison, who were brought in from distant parts of the county,
relieved the force on the spot from any of their duties, or that the local force was
reduced in consequence; and I think that the true inference is that the garrison
formed an additional and not a substituted or alternative means of protection.
There is another argument to be noticed. It was said that if the police garrison had
not been provided the "safety men" would not have attended to work the pumps and
the mines would have been flooded, and from this it is inferred that the garrison was
necessary for the protection of the appellants' property. I think that there was
evidence to that effect, but it does not appear to me to follow that it was the duty of
the police authority to provide the garrison. They were no doubt bound to protect the
"safety men" from violence, but it was not for the safety men to decide the form in
which that protection should be given; and if they declined to safeguard the collieries
from flooding unless protection*283 was given in a particular form which the police
authorities thought unnecessary, it was for the owners of the collieries and not for the
police to overcome their reluctance.
Upon the whole matter, I have come to the conclusion that the decision of the learned
trial judge and of the Court of Appeal was right, and that the appellants, who
deliberately entered into an agreement to pay for the services and maintenance of the
police garrison and did not dispute their liability until they had had the benefit of
those services for a period of nearly two months, cannot now repudiate their
agreement upon any of the grounds put forward. In my opinion, therefore, this appeal
fails and should be dismissed with costs.
VISCOUNT FINLAY.
My Lords, the appellants are the owners of collieries on the Garngoch Common in the
county of Glamorgan. In 1921 there was a national coal strike which began on April 1
and lasted till July 4, at which date work was generally resumed. The men at the
appellants' collieries were, however, dissatisfied with the terms of settlement and
refused to resume work. In these collieries over 1000 men had been employed, and
they remained idle until September 4, 1921. The "safety men," as they are called,
who were engaged in working the pumps on which the preservation of the mine from
flooding depended, remained at work. If the working of the pumps had been stopped
the mine in the course of a few days would have been most seriously damaged by the
accumulation of water. The strikers endeavoured to get these "safety men" to join in
the strike, the effect of which would have been that in three or four days the mine
would have been drowned out. Under these circumstances the agent of the owners,
Mr. Alfred James, went to the Gowerton Police Station to arrange with the
superintendent, Colonel Smith, for police protection. He asked that an adequate force
of police should be billeted in the houses in the immediate vicinity of the collieries.
Colonel Smith thought that protection would be best afforded by a flying column
moving from point to point as required, but Mr. Alfred James insisted that a "garrison"
near the*284 mines should be provided, and Colonel Smith acquiesced. Mr. James in
his evidence described what ensued as follows (Appendix, p. 35):-
"Q. Did he then tell you something about a form?
"A. Yes.
"Q. What did he say exactly about the form?
"A. As near as I remember he said: 'You will of course have to sign a form of
requisition.' I said: 'Yes - that is the usual procedure in matters of this description' -
and he told me it was, so I said: 'All right, I will sign the form.'" The form was
accordingly signed. It is headed: "Form of Requisition for Special Services of Police."
It stated that certain men, seventy in all, were required for special duty at the
Garngoch and Cape Collieries on the occasion of a strike from 6 P.M. on July 9. The
form concluded -
"I hereby guarantee payment on the conditions specified in Clause 'C' in the Second
Schedule to this form." This was signed by Mr. James and addressed to the chief
constable. The schedule stated the terms as to payment, accommodation and food.
The seventy men arrived on the evening of the same day. The safety men remained
at work, and it was admitted at the trial that police protection in some shape or form
was required. No pressure was put upon Mr. James to sign the requisition; as his
evidence shows, he was prepared to sign it and knew that it was usual in such cases.
The action in this case was brought to recover the amount due on the terms of the
requisition.
The colliery owners repudiated liability on the grounds that there was no consideration
for the promise to pay for the police protection and that such an agreement was
against public policy. The case was tried by Bailhache J. and he entered judgment for
the plaintiffs, saying:
"There is an obligation on the police to afford efficient protection, but if an individual
asks for special protection in a particular form, for the special protection so asked for
in that particular form, the individual must pay."
This decision was affirmed by a majority on the appeal*285 (Bankes and Scrutton
L.JJ.; Atkin L.J. dissenting). The colliery owners now appeal and ask that judgment
should be entered for them.
It appears to me that there is nothing in the first point made for the colliery owners
that there was no consideration for the promise. It is clear that there was abundant
consideration. The police authorities thought that it would be best to give protection
by means of a flying column of police, but the colliery owners wanted the "garrison"
and promised to pay for it if it was sent. I pass at once to the second objection made
by the colliery owners, on which we have had a prolonged argument.
A great number of cases have been cited to us in which it has been held that fees
extorted colore officii must be returned. These authorities seem to me to have no
application to the present case.
There is no doubt that it is the duty of the police to give adequate protection to all
persons and to their property. In discharging this duty those in control of the police
must exercise their judgment as to the manner in which that protection should be
afforded. If a particular person desires protection of a special sort and the police can
give this without interfering with the discharge of other duties elsewhere, it is difficult
to see on what ground of public policy it should be illegal that a charge should be
made in respect of special protection. The police must, of course, have a certain
margin of strength to draw upon as from time to time occasion may arise, and for this
purpose it is essential to have at the disposal of the authorities a force in excess of
the bare amount which would in normal circumstances be sufficient for the discharge
of their duties. For a long series of years it has been the practice to supply special
police protection on the promise of payment. There has been a great deal of
legislation about the police, but no attempt has ever been made to interfere with this
practice. On the contrary it has been recognized and regulated by the authorities. I
may refer in illustration to the memorandum from the Home Office, dated January,
1892, as to receipts in respect of the services*286 of constables lent to private
employers. Of course, if it were illegal to take such payments no amount of sanction
by Government Departments would legalize what was against the law. But the fact
that the Home Office has regulated such payments goes a long way to show that
there is nothing illegal about them. We have not been furnished with any substantial
argument on the ground of public policy against such payments. Why should not the
reserve strength of the police be used in this way on the terms that those who desire
such special protection should make payment for it in aid of the expenses of
maintaining the force, and so to that extent relieving the ratepayer? It was suggested
that such a practice would enable those who could afford to pay for it to get special
police protection which would not be given to their poorer neighbours. The police
authorities may be trusted to see that such special service is never to be allowed in
cases where it would interfere with the other duties of the force. I can see no ground
of public policy on which employers should not make some contribution to the special
cost of police required on emergency for the protection of their works.
I have referred to the fact that the Legislature has never interfered with this practice,
the existence of which for eighty years or upwards has been known to every one. But
the Legislature has actually made provision as to the application of the moneys to be
derived from such payments. The Police Act, 1890 (53 & 54 Vict. c. 45), by s. 16,
sub-s. 1, made the following provisions:
"There shall be a pension fund of every police force and there shall be carried to that
fund .... (e) Such proportion of any sum received on account of constables whose
services have been lent in consideration of payment as the police authorities may
consider to be a fair contribution to the pension fund in respect of these constables."
The subsequent repeal of this Act as no longer necessary does not affect the inference
to be drawn from this recognition of the practice. It was indeed a recognition that the
practice was legal, as it cannot be supposed that Parliament would have directed such
application of payments which were in themselves illegal.
*287 A much earlier statute, the County Police Act, 1840 (3 & 4 Vict. c. 88), by s. 19,
makes provision for the appointing and swearing in of special constables "at the
charge of the person or persons by whom the application shall be made," such special
constables to be discontinued on the request of those who have applied for their
appointment. This enactment seems to me to destroy the contention of the appellants
that there is some legal principle which makes it illegal to pay for special police
assistance.
The case for the appellants is summarized in a sentence of the dissenting judgment of
Atkin L.J. as follows (Appendix, p. 76):
"Either they were performing this public duty in giving the protection asked for, in
which case I think they cannot charge, or, which no one suggests, they were at the
request of an individual doing something which it was not their duty to do, in which
case it seems to me both public policy and s. 10 of the County Police Act, 1839, make
the contract illegal and void."
I think that this argument, like most arguments put in the form of a dilemma, fails to
cover the whole ground. There was no duty on the police to give the special
protection asked for, but it does not follow that it was their duty not to give it. Sect.
10of the Act of 1839 seems to me to have no relevance to the circumstances of the
present case, as it merely prohibits constables from taking for hire or gain work other
than in the execution of their duties under the Act. It has no reference to special
protection given by the police authorities to particular persons and the work done by
the constables in that respect under their orders.
It would be useless to go through the cases in which exactions by officials of fees to
which they have no right have been treated as illegal. The question here is an entirely
different one. It is simply whether a charge may be made for special police protection
desired by a particular person for which he is willing to pay and which the police are in
a position to render without interfering with their ordinary duties. Beyond all question
it is the duty of the police to give protection to the persons and property of all His
Majesty's subjects. The police must never be taken off for special duty so as to*288
withdraw such protection as is wanted elsewhere. The fact that the system has so
long existed without giving rise to any complaint that it interferes with the ordinary
duties of the police is the best evidence that the objections to the practice are not
real. These objections are indeed merely theoretical. The practice has existed for
nearly a century and has not been attended by any of the mischiefs which it has been
suggested might follow. If a particular person gets special police protection in a
particular form on his promise to pay for it, he is bound by his contract legally as well
as morally.
In my opinion this appeal must be dismissed with costs.
LORD CARSON.
My Lords, I am of opinion that this appeal should be allowed. The questions raised are
of great public importance, and as the decision I have come to is at variance with that
of the three noble and learned Lords who have already addressed this House, I feel
bound to state my reasons for the conclusions at which I have arrived at some length.
Before examining the facts of the present case it is necessary to make it perfectly
clear what the duties of the police as preservers of the King's peace are in cases
where either the person or the property of a subject is criminally assailed or
threatened by the action of any other person or persons. I do not think, my Lords,
that upon this point there is any difference of opinion. I notice that the Lord
Chancellor, in the speech which he has just read, has stated as follows:
"No doubt there is an absolute and unconditional obligation binding the police
authorities to take all steps which appear to them to be necessary for keeping the
peace for preventing crime or protecting property from criminal injury and the public
who pay for this protection through the rates and taxes cannot lawfully be called upon
to make a further payment for that which is their right."
He quotes with approval the statement made by Pickford L.J. in the case of
Glamorganshire Coal Co. v. Glamorganshire Standing Committee [FN20], and he
adds:
LORD BLANESBURGH.
My Lords, during the national coal strike which was settled on July 4, 1921, the safety
men at the collieries throughout the country were left undisturbed. The responsible
leaders of that strike, shrinking, as they rightly as well as wisely did, from the
wantonness of wrecking the mines on which the livelihood of the miners themselves
ultimately depended, refused to countenance the policy of withdrawing the safety
men from their posts, when effective pressure short of such a step could be brought
to bear upon the employers.
In the sectional strike at the appellants' collieries which persisted after the national
strike had ended, the ability of the strikers to impose their will upon the owners was
obviously less compelling, and, very likely for that reason, the withdrawal of the
safety men became apparently very soon an objective of the strike. On July 7, after a
demonstration in front of one of the appellants' collieries, a deputation of the strikers
sought an interview with the safety men still at work there and pressed them to come
out in sympathy. Their reply was that their own association had decided that
work*301 was to continue and they were resolved to remain. As the men were not to
be persuaded, it was necessary to determine whether they were to be coerced.
Accordingly a mass meeting of the strikers was held later in that afternoon; and it
was then decided that all the safety men should be compelled to come out. On the
next morning this resolve, which had doubtless already become notorious in the
district, was communicated by the workmen's committee to the appellants' manager,
Mr. James, and he, when he sought to reason with the committee, was informed that
the matter was no longer one for discussion and that the decision was final.
This decision I should have thought changed the whole character of the strike,
although it does not seem so to have struck the police superintendent, Colonel Smith,
who apparently assumed that the orderly character of the national strike would
continue to be preserved. What had happened, however, was that a campaign which
hitherto had been constitutional and responsible had become one charged with the
possibility of serious disorder. Indications of the change were soon apparent. Atkin
L.J. gives one in his judgment. On Friday, July 8, the superintendent of police
attending at Tirdonken, an adjoining colliery affected also by the strike, with thirty-
four extra men had met a crowd of 800 strong led by three rows of women carrying
babies in the front rank. The crowd was hostile to the management and police; and a
new attitude of menace was assumed towards the safety men. As early as the
afternoon of the 7th, the winding engine man was stopped by strikers on the common
and prevented from reaching the colliery, and on the next morning one of the safety
men was pulled off his bicycle on his way to work and hostile demonstrations were
being made outside their homes.
All this had, and very naturally, an immediate effect upon these men. On the morning
of the 8th one only turned out; on the 9th none of them appeared at all. During the
afternoon of the 8th they had as a body met and decided to cease work, and Mr.
James was informed that they had thus decided because of the severity of the
pressure brought to*302 bear upon them and the insufficiency of the police
protection afforded them. It was conveyed, however, to him that with adequate
protection they would be willing to return. Now, the police protection which they
regarded as insufficient had been in operation on the 7th and 8th. Their lack of
confidence in it, confirmed possibly by the events of the 8th, had doubtless
contributed to the resolution of that afternoon, and was the explanation of their
complete absence from work on the 9th. The form of protection so far in force and to
which Colonel Smith remained wedded as being best in the circumstances, had as its
main feature the provision of what he termed a mobile body of police with scouts and
telephone arrangements, whereby the column could always arrive at a threatened
colliery in advance of any crowd. The safety men were not impressed. Like some
people in other circumstances, they preferred cash to credit. The support of the visible
presence of the police while they were working the pumps seemed to them to be
essential. They were, perhaps, less confident in the complete mobility of the Colonel's
column than he was. Scouts are sometimes at fault; telephones do not always work;
tyres puncture even when no strikes are on. All the mischief might be done before
any column arrived, and not necessarily by crowds. Mr. James put their view in his
evidence. He told Colonel Smith on the 9th, he said, that it was hopeless to try and
keep the safety men at work with the local police dodging about in motor cars from
one place to another. Accordingly, at his instance and on terms which are the subject
of this appeal, the following protective scheme was ultimately adopted. A garrison of
police was located at each of the appellants' three collieries: the safety men were
billeted there: and their homes were protected by the outside police. These
arrangements, when completed, were entirely successful. The reassured safety men
returned to work, and they and the collieries were kept in safety till the strike was
ended.
In the course of his evidence Mr. James was asked:
"In your opinion, if you had not had this force of police at the collieries would you
have been able to get your safety men*303 to work?"
And his answer, which is neither cross-examined to nor contradicted by any other
witness, was "No, absolutely not."
My Lords, it is unfortunate that owing to the intervention of the learned judge, the
appellants' witnesses on this part of the case were not fully heard. But I cannot doubt,
from a survey of the evidence which was adduced, that, almost as a matter of
common consent, this statement of Mr. James's expressed the actual situation.
And there is no suggestion, either in the police reports at the time or anywhere else,
that the requirements of the safety men were unreasonable or their conduct
unworthy. As Atkin L.J. says, it is perhaps easier to be heroic in London years after
the occurrence than at Gorseinon in July, 1921. The men exhibited notable moral
courage in returning to work at all, and it must be remembered that although they
had in preserving the mines the same real interest as the strikers they were under no
higher duty in that matter than any other of His Majesty's subjects. Why, then, should
any exceptional exhibition of physical hardihood be expected or required of them?
What, however, is more immediately relevant is that without a force of police at the
collieries the appellants could not have induced these safety men to take the place of
the marine stokers who were unequal to the work, and there is no suggestion that in
the emergency any other men were obtainable on any terms at all. No laxity or
default of any kind in this matter is attributed by anybody to the appellants. In these
circumstances the sufficiency of the police protection for their collieries must, I think,
be determined from the standpoint indicated by the learned judge, when he says that
it was of course very necessary that the safety men should remain working the pumps
in order to keep the collieries from being flooded, because every one who knows
anything about collieries knows that that is absolutely necessary, and when he adds:
"There is no doubt that the safety men got very frightened, and there is no doubt that
the safety men would not have continued to work without*304 police protection;
indeed, as a matter of fact, they did abstain from work - perhaps that is the right way
to put it - for a period of four or five days. Their places were endeavoured to be filled
by some marine stokers, but those marine stokers proved inefficient and ultimately
the safety men were induced to come back"
by, I may add, the police dispositions, which had by that time been made and were
thenceforth continued.
In view of that statement by Bailhache J., it is interesting to inquire what was the
precise ground on which the learned judge nevertheless decided that the appellants
must pay for the protection afforded by these dispositions. The answer is not in
doubt. It was because he accepted Colonel Smith's evidence that he would have given
adequate protection in another and a different form, that is to say, by his mobile
column, and the learned judge proceeds:
"While not desiring for a moment to suggest that it was not the bounden duty of the
County Council to protect this colliery and not for one moment suggesting that the
performing of a legal duty will support a promise to pay, I have come to the
conclusion that when a colliery company or an individual requisitions police protection
of a special character for a particular purpose he must pay for it, and he must pay for
it whether he makes a contract to pay or whether he does not - a promise to pay
would be implied under these circumstances."
Now, my Lords, Colonel Smith was undoubtedly convinced of the efficiency of his own
scheme, and if the whole of his evidence with reference to it is borne in mind his
opinion that the mobile force method would have given ample protection may, open
to criticism as it is, be accepted, as the learned judge accepted it. But an examination
of Colonel Smith's evidence shows what I think the learned judge did not perhaps
fully appreciate, that that opinion was held by him, so to say, in vacuo. So far as the
safety men were concerned his view was never more than this, that, if they had been
as wise as he, they would have recognized that his mobile column was as complete a
protection for them as the actual presence of the police at the collieries. Colonel
Smith, however,*305 nowhere suggests that the safety men did so believe or that
they could timeously have been induced so to believe. In truth, in propounding and
adhering to his scheme, the attitude of these men towards it so graphically described
by Mr. James, was discounted by him if indeed it was not entirely ignored. The
superintendent, convinced of the sufficiency of his proposals in the abstract, never
seems to have even asked himself the question whether any scheme was in the
circumstances of any value at all if it was not, by reassuring the safety men and
bringing them back to the pumps, effective to protect the collieries from the only
danger which threatened them.
While, therefore, Colonel Smith's opinion may so far be accepted, I nevertheless
conclude, on what I consider to be the uncontradicted evidence in the case, that that
scheme, however technically adequate, was lacking in the one thing needful to make
it of any practical utility. It has, in my judgment, been shown that in the then
emergency it was no alternative to the garrison scheme which was adopted with
complete success. It is also to my mind shown that there was no other scheme either
suggested or offered which would have had the same result. The liability of the
appellants to bear the expense of the protection they were in fact afforded must, I
think, be determined on that footing.
Now, my Lords, with reference to the garrisons actually set apart for the duty of
protection, it is to be observed that the number of men employed was fixed by
Colonel Smith himself and that the number was altered from time to time at his
direction. The men remained throughout under his control. They had their part in the
measures from time to time taken by him to maintain order. They made the situation,
as Colonel Smith admitted, very much stronger for him. In a word, they were and
remained integral units of the divisional police as truly as any other constables under
Colonel Smith's command. Nor did the setting apart of the men for that garrison duty
in any way interfere with the discharge by the county police force of its other duties.
There is no evidence that it involved the authorities in any expense which the county
would not otherwise have had to bear,*306 and it is admitted that the police
protection was required at the appellants' collieries in some shape or form.
Now, I am not myself disposed to underrate the responsibilities of the police in an
emergency like that with which your Lordships are here concerned. Their absolute
duty to afford protection to life and property was only, I think, limited by the extent of
their available resources and by the urgency of competing claims upon their services.
The protection in this case supplied was not made difficult of provision by any such
considerations. It was adequate, but not extravagant. It was not improper, because
otherwise it would not, I assume, have been rendered even in expectation of reward.
In these circumstances, accepting as I do the learned judge's view of the law, I am
myself unable to see how any payment for this police service can legally be
demanded. The request by the appellants to Colonel Smith to place these garrisons at
their collieries is, I think, shown to have been no more than a request to him as
representing the County Council to perform its legal duty in the only way in which that
duty could properly be discharged, and such a request cannot support a promise to
pay for what the Council were in the circumstances bound, as I think, to provide
without payment.
Accordingly, my Lords, I arrive at the conclusion which has also been reached by the
noble and learned Lord who has just spoken, and I reach it by reference to the facts
of this case as I see them, so that the important questions so powerfully discussed by
Atkin L.J. do not here, from my point of view, arise for decision.
I think it right to say, however, that in agreement with, I believe, all your Lordships, I
find myself unable to subscribe to the extreme position that arrangements under
which on the requisition of individuals police constables are assigned in consideration
of payment to perform duties in the nature of maintaining order or preventing crime
are necessarily either illegal or made without consideration. The legislative recognition
of the existence of some such arrangements to*307 which reference has already
been made was, I think, too emphatic to be ignored, and it would be highly
inconvenient if it were now to be declared that a promise to pay for such services can
never have any binding force.
But the discussion in this case has, I think, shown that the exaction of payment for
police services is only legitimate in exceptional circumstances, and it is, in my
judgment, unfortunate that it has apparently come to be regarded as a normal
incident more particularly in cases where the police are actually billeted in private
premises. It is true that while the duty of the police to afford protection is undoubted,
the nature of the protection to be supplied must primarily be left to them to
determine. If, however, such protection can only or best be afforded by placing
constables on garrison duty in private premises, payment cannot, as I think, properly
be exacted merely because the protection takes that form as seems at one time to
have been assumed on both sides in the present case.
On the other hand, such protection ought not to be provided even for payment if its
provision unduly interferes with the discharge by the police of their duties to others.
These considerations appear to lead inevitably to the conclusion that unless demands
of payment for police services are jealously safeguarded the power to make them
may readily become oppressive to the individual and injurious to the general interest.
Where payment is required for protection in the nature of a luxury rather than a
reasonable necessity, and where that protection is provided by the employment of the
margin of reserve strength of the force not at the time otherwise more urgently
employed, then, I suppose, every one would agree with Bankes L.J. that a demand
and promise of payment are advantageous to all concerned.
Where, further, an extra force being again available, protection beyond what the
police deem necessary is on requisition supplied, then a demand for payment of a
sum not greater in amount than the expense of the excess protection - which amount
may properly be agreed beforehand - might*308 well be justified. But when payment
is demanded irrespective of the necessity for protection and merely because
protection is afforded in a particular way and in response to an individual requisition,
and most especially when the payment represents the total cost to the police
authorities of the entire protection supplied, then the whole aspect of the
arrangement is altered. In many cases it would become, as Sir John Simon put it, a
mere sale of the police discretion, and such arrangements, if they came to be
regarded as always permissible, would be, I cannot doubt, vicious in tendency. The
possibility of making them would place the authorities in a position in which their
interest would frequently conflict with their duty, tending to relegate to a secondary
place their primary responsibility to provide adequate gratuitous protection to persons
and property within their area, and calculated, on the one hand, to lead to the
withdrawal or refusal of proper protection from or to an individual unable to pay for it
and, on the other, to a too ready compliance with the requisition of an individual
ready and willing to defray the total cost of the protection he receives, in relief it may
be of the rates, but in prejudice more than possibly of the general interest.
My Lords, this case will, I cannot doubt, be of great public advantage if it attracts the
attention of those concerned to a practice so far unregulated, but which, if not
carefully circumscribed, is readily open to unwitting abuse probably in most instances,
but only the more elusive on that account.
I am for allowing this appeal for the reasons I have given.
Representation
Solicitors for the appellants: Bell, Brodrick & Gray, for Kensholes & Prosser, Aberdare.
Solicitors for the respondents: John T. Lewis & Woods, for Andrew & Thompson,
Swansea.
Order of the Court of Appeal affirmed and appeal dismissed with costs.
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