Speak to a BAILIFF Expert - £35
McLeod v Butterwick [1996] 3 All
ER 236, [1996] 1 WLR 995
Ceases from April 06 2014. See Regulation 4(1) of the Taking Control of Goods Regulations 2013 now defines goods exempt for the purpose of civil enforcement.
Repealed by Section 65 of the Tribunals, Courts and Enforcement Act 2007.
The plaintiff, Mrs McLeod, brought and lost
proceedings in the county court against various
parties. One issued a writ against her for
£7,295.43 which was directed to the Sheriff of
Greater London the defendant Mr. Butterwick.
On January 24 1995 a sheriff's officer attended
Mrs McLeod's home in Greenford and claimed formally
to have seized the goods then in the premises,
although Mrs McLeod refused to enter into a
walking-possession agreement.
She brought unsuccessful interpleader
proceedings, after which the sheriff was instructed
to continue with the execution no earlier than
December 18 th 1995.
On 19th December 1995 an officer attended at the
house to execute the writ. Mrs McLeod was out at
work. Finding the door locked the officer called a
locksmith, forced entry and new locks fitted so
that the premises would be secure after he
left.
Having been alerted by a neighbour, Mrs McLeod
returned home but, despite her protests, the
officer removed the goods to which, in accordance
with the order in the interpleader proceedings, he
considered that he was entitled.
Mrs McLeod started some further unsuccessful
court proceedings and then on December 27 issued a
writ in Chancery Division of the High Court seeking
damages for trespass arising from the illegal entry
combined with an injunction against sale of her
goods or re-entry into her home.
The injunction application was heard by Roger
Cooke J on February 13 th 1996 and was
dismissed.
He concluded there had been a valid seizure
followed by a lawful re-entry by force and that the
sheriff was lawfully entitled to sell. Mrs McLeod
appealed to the Court of Appeal.
Passages from the Judgment
By her appeal Mrs. McLeod seeks from this court
the interlocutory relief she sought from Judge
Roger Cooke, namely an injunction restraining the
sheriff from selling the goods removed from her
home on 19 th December 1995 and an injunction
restraining him from entering her home save
pursuant to an order of a court of competent
jurisdiction made after hearing both parties.
There has been no trial and we are not concerned
with whether she is entitled to any damages,
including the aggravated and exemplary damages she
has claimed.
In passing I observe that we were not referred
to any statutory provision applicable to a sheriff
comparable to Distress for Rent Act 1737 section
19.
Mrs. McLeod criticised the judge's uncritical
acceptance of the sheriffs allegations of seizure
and impounding on the occasion of his first visit
on 24 January 1995. In her affidavit sworn on 11 th
January 1996 she had stated in unambiguous terms
that there had been no indication of seizure,
merely a demand for payment of the judgment
debt.
She was not cross-examined on that affidavit at
the hearing of the interpleader proceedings before
Mr. Baker. The oral evidence which Mr. Baker
accepted was the one-sided version of the sheriff's
officer. She submits with some force that the
so-called finding of Mr. Baker was not made after
hearing oral evidence on both sides and is open to
challenge by her.
But the judge only found that on the application
before him he should he slow to regard this issue
as a serious one to be tried. He proceeded on the
basis that the issue was likely to he decided in
all probability in the sheriff's favour. For my
part I think that the judge was in the
circumstances entitled to take that approach. He
was not deciding the issue, merely weighing it for
the purpose of exercising his discretion.
I pass then to the question whether the
sheriff's re-entry on 19 th December 1995 was
lawful or not.
I have already quoted the passage from the
judge's judgment in which he concluded that point
against Mrs. McLeod.
He did so on the footing that the door was
locked and that was sufficient justification for
the forcible re-entry, notwithstanding that no
notice had been given to Mrs. McLeod of his
intention to re-enter.
For the reasons I have already given I disagree
with the judge's conclusion. In my judgment, the
sheriff's forcible re-entry on 19' December 1995
was unlawful and a trespass.
It may he that it will be held at the trial that
Mrs. McLeod is entitled to damages on account of
that trespass but it does not follow at this stage
that she is entitled to either of the injunctions
she seeks.
The judge held that in the absence of a
walking-possession agreement the sheriff does not
have to remain in close possession to avoid
abandoning possession of the goods seized.
He concluded that notwithstanding the interval
of 11 months between the first entry and the second
there had been no abandonment because of the
prosecution of the interpleader proceedings.
In my view he was right in respect of both
matters. Thus at the time of the forcible re-entry
the sheriff was in possession of the goods which,
by virtue of section138 of the 1981 Act, he had
been entitled to seize and was entitled to
sell.
In these circumstances, I do not see how an
injunction to restrain the sale of the goods so
seized and now stored in a warehouse off Mrs
McLeod's premises could be justified. Mrs. McLeod
has not paid the judgment debt and, apparently, has
no intention of doing so. As pointed out in Lee v
Gansel, though the re-entry may have been wrongful
the removal of the goods was not. The statutory
right to sell continues to subsist and I see no
reason to inhibit its exercise.
The same point may he made with regard to the
injunction sought to restrain entry except pursuant
to an order of the court. The sheriff does have a
right to re-enter otherwise than pursuant to an
order of the court, namely if removed or excluded
by force. But I have no reason to think that he
threatens and intends to re-enter the home of Mrs.
McLeod otherwise than as permitted by law as
established by the decision of this court on these
appeals. Though his re-entry on 19 th December 1995
was unlawful and a trespass, there is no reason to
think that it will he repeated unless an
interlocutory injunction is granted. It may well he
that at the trial it will be appropriate, if the
judge thinks fit, to make a declaration as to the
unlawfulness of the re-entry as well as giving
judgment for such damages as Mrs. McLeod may
establish. But, in my judgment, there is no good
reason for granting the injunction sought at this
stage.
It follows that, as in Khazanchi v Faircharm
Investments Ltd, though for different reasons, I
see no reason to interfere with the order the judge
actually made.
Accordingly, though I disagree with the judge's
conclusion on the lawfulness of the re-entry, I
would dismiss this appeal.
Conclusion
In the event, I would dismiss both appeals
though, in each case, I have concluded that the
judge was wrong on the important point of
principle. This may appear to be an unsatisfactory
result for in one sense it means that an illegal
act has been inflicted on the plaintiffs without
any immediate means of redress being afforded to
them by the law.
But this is the consequence of the application
to the facts of the provisions of Distress for Rent
Act 1737 section 19 in the one case and the
circumstances including the fact that there has not
yet been a trial in the other. However, it should
be noted that in cases such as these there may be a
sanction pursuant to either Criminal Damage Act
1971 section1 or the Criminal Law Act 1977 section
6
It was accepted that forced re-entry to premises
to remove goods previously levied even though
this practice is not established by law, but the
Court of Appeal decided that this was incorrect
after reviewing the case law.
The right to force re-entry arises only where
the bailiff is being deliberately excluded and
accordingly was the case in Khazanchi and
McLeod.
Minimal force should be used and the bailiff
must not cause a breach of the peace.
Khazanchi - the wrongful re-entry was treated as
an irregularity under section 19 of the Distress
for Rent Act 1737 so only the special damages
proved could be recovered but none were shown.
McLeod was refused two injunctions but she did
not make a claim for damages or trespass.
The court noted nothing in sheriff's law equates
to Section 19 of the Distress for Rent Act 1737 and
as a result a wrongful re-entry could render a levy
invalid.
|