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Brintons Ltd v Wyre Forest
District Council [1977] QB 178
This case rules a bailiff only has a right of
re-entry to a debtor's property if he has a valid
levy. If the bailiff enters a property does not
make a valid levy then he does not have a right to
re-enter the property by breaking into it.
A discussion about the debt and costs took place
between the debtor and the council representatives.
Payment was received without any paperwork being
prepared or other work done, but levy fees were
charged. This was standard practice not before
questioned but was found not to be lawful when
Brintons sued to recover the charges.
Judgment of Donaldson J: "Sir Tatton Brinton,
the chairman and managing director of Brintons Ltd,
manufacturers of carpets (the plaintiffs), set out
to protest against the increase in the rates
demanded by the Wyre Forest District Council. With
this in mind he withheld £83,000. The council took
out a summons before the local justices and Sir
Tatton made his protest. Whether it was effective
as a protest, I know not, but the justices were
bound to issue a distress warrant and did so.
The plaintiff's intention was to pay the rates
the next day, but the council moved with a speed
which is unusual in a local authority. No doubt
they had it in mind that the non -payment of these
rates was costing the general body of rate-payers
£24 a day by way of interest.
That afternoon Mr Williams, the council's chief
rating assistant, and Mr Dallow, a bailiff, went to
the plaintiffs offices and met Sir Tatton. They
were invited into the boardroom and the bailiff
told Sir Tatton that they had come to levy distress
for the outstanding rates and for costs. Sir Tatton
said that a cheque for the rates had been prepared
but it required a further signature. It was at this
stage that the bailiff informed Sir Tatton that as
he had come to levy distress under a warrant, the
plaintiffs would have to pay not only the amount of
the rates, but also the cost of levying distress.
This amounted to some £1,255.28. The plaintiffs,
having little alternative, drew a further cheque
for this sum which they delivered under
protest.
I am told that any bailiff would have acted in
the same way and that the correctness of this
course never seems to have been challenged.
However, the plaintiffs take the view that the
demand for £1,255.28 cannot possibly he justified.
If they are right, this case is of considerable
importance to all local authorities and the
plaintiffs second protest has probably been more
effective than their first.
The council does not seek to contend that it can
retain the money if it was not entitled to demand
it in the first place, nor does it contend that in
the circumstances of this case the delivery of the
plaintiffs cheque did not amount to a tender of the
rates and of the costs demanded. The plaintiffs,
for their part, do not seek to challenge the
arithmetic involved in arriving at a figure of
£1,255.28.
Mr. Shaw for the council puts his claim to be
entitled to this sum in two ways. First, he submits
that on the facts the bailiff levied a distress and
thereupon became entitled to the appropriate fee
under paragraph 3(1)(ii) of the Distress for Rates
Order 1972. Second, he submits that if the bailiff
did not get as far as levying a distress, the
council is entitled to a like sum under section
105(2) of the General Rate Act 1967.
The claim to have levied a distress for rates In
Mortimer v Cragg [1878] Brett U defined the stages
in the execution of a writ of fieri facias and the
sheriffs entitlement to poundage as follows:
"Where an execution issues the transaction may
be divided into four parts
(1) The delivery of the writ to the sheriff
(2) Seizure
(3) The possible payment of money after
seizure
(4) If no payment, sale
The first step does not entitle the sheriff to
poundage and if he does not seize Nash v. Dickenson
[1867] is an authority that he is not entitled to
poundage. Although he seizes, nothing may be
realised because the seizure may be wrongful. It
may be withdrawn by direction of the law, and then
the sheriff would receive no poundage. Then comes
the case after seizure. The money may be paid by
the execution debtor either directly or indirectly:
directly by virtue of the seizure to the sheriff;
indirectly where payment is made by means of a
compromise which is the consequence of the seizure.
In either of those cases the sheriff is entitled to
poundage. "
It is not suggested that any different principle
applies to the execution of a distress warrant for
rates. The issue is thus whether the bailiff in
fact seized any goods. In my judgment he did not.
As counsel for plaintiffs has pointed out, the
bailiff was not entitled to seize the whole of the
goods present in the offices and factory. He had to
select sufficient goods to cover the rates whilst
ensuring that the distress was not excessive. This
involved some process of selection before seizure
and the bailiff never started on this process. Nor
did he ever say that all or any of the goods were
seized or do anything which amounted to taking
possession.
In relation to the execution of a warrant of
fieri facias the dividing lint between what is and
what is not a seizure is shown by comparing Nash v
Dickenson (1867) which seems to me to be
indistinguishable from the present case and
Bissicks v Bath Colliery (1877) which is
distinguishable because the sheriffs officer
threatened to leave a man in possession of the
goods and both parties treated the action of the
sheriff's officer as having amounted to a
seizure.31 The claim to poundage on this basis
therefore fails.
The claim under section 105(2) of the General
Rate Act 1967
Section 105 is in the following terms. The side
note reads: "Abatement of proceedings on payment of
rate and costs. "
The section provides:
"(1) If after proceedings have been taken under
this Part of this Act against a person to compel
payment of any sum for rates, but not after he has
been imprisoned in default of a sufficiency of
distress, that person pays or tenders to the rating
authority, or to some other person authorised to
receive the rates, the sum sought to be recovered
together with the amount of all costs and charges
up to that time incurred in the proceedings, the
rating authority or other person shall accept the
amount so paid or tendered and no further
proceedings shall be taken for the recovery
thereof. (2) If after the issue of a warrant of
distress under this Part of this Act for a rate the
person against whom it is issued tenders the amount
of the rate before any levy is made, he shall
nonetheless be liable to pay the cost of the
warrant and of any person for his attendance to
make the levy."
Subsection (1) is concerned with the stage
between the issue of a summons for a warrant of
distress and the issue of that warrant. Payment or
tender of the rates and the costs and charges of
the authority to date operates as an immediate stay
of all further proceedings. Subsection (2) is
concerned with the stage between the issue of the
distress warrant and the seizure of the goods. If
the rate-payer tenders the amount of the rate
before any seizure is made his remaining liability
is to pay the cost of the warrant and the cost of
any person, and I quote, for his attendance to
make the levy. The question is what is this
cost.
Counsel for the plaintiffs suggests that it is
an apportioned part of the bailiff's salary and
pension, together with his traveling expenses, but
this seems to me to be an unlikely construction.
Counsel for the local authority submits there is so
little difference in point of time and expense
between attending to make a levy and actually
levying a distress that Parliament must have meant
to refer to the fees payable on the making of the
levy itself. I do not agree. If this had been what
had been intended the section would have read, "He
shall nonetheless he liable to pay the costs of the
warrant and the minimum fees, charges and expenses
which would have been payable if the levy had been
made." In my judgment the intention of Parliament
is clear. It contemplated that the Minister would
make an order under section 101 of the Act which
would specify the costs recoverable for attending
to levy a distress. Section 101 (1) provides:
"The Minister (now the Secretary of State for
the Environment) may make an order regulating the
charges in respect of, and incidental to, the
levying of distress for rates; and a warrant of
distress under this Part of this Act may provide
that the charges attending the distress, to the
amount authorised by the order, shall be levied
under the warrant."
For one reason or another, perhaps due to an
oversight, he has not done so. As it has not been
contended that in the absence of such an order
"reasonable costs are recoverable, no costs are
recoverable and the plaintiffs are entitled to be
repaid the sum of £1,255.28. No doubt the Minister
will wish to consider amending the Distress for
Rates Order 1972, as a matter of urgency."
Comment:
This case continues to be of interest because it
is surprising how often it happen that a bailiff
gains entry to a debtor's premises and then fails
to conduct a levy, - instead merely discussing how
the debt will he repaid.
The judgment in Brinton's makes clear that such
a discussion is not a levy.
Levying distraint involves some process of
inspecting and selecting goods sufficient to cover
the debt and costs (see Rai & Rai v Birmingham
City Council) combined with some clear declaration
or indication that this is being done.
In Brinton its no such process took place and,
in its absence, there was no levy and no
entitlement to levy fees.
This will still be the situation today, - if the
bailiff fails to levy during a visit he cannot add
fees for a seizure nor - of course - would he have
any rights to force entry and remove goods at a
later time.
The alternative argument was made that, in the
absence of a specified charge for a visit on the
fee scale then in operation, some sort of general
staff overhead could be recovered. This was not
accepted and bailiffs should always be careful to
stay within the strict form of the applicable
scale.
It is also interesting to note how the court was
content to apply law developed on the context of
executions to levies of statutory distraint. In
many respects, the basic practice is identical in
all forms of seizure of goods and rules of
fundamental procedure are transferable.
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