Freeman Stephen wrote:I am just trying to make sense of the judges remark. i know that the violent always have the upper hand at the spur of the moment but purely in a legal sense vanilla your view seems at odds with that of the judge who seems to have held that denial of right to access is possible but not in this instance. would you expand on your view to explain the legality of this practice in light of the judges remark?
I never said that they couldn't be denied the right to access... just like anyone else, the police can be trespassers unless they have a lawful excuse.
What I was saying is that it makes sense that the police should have some powers to enter property when they legitimately suspect certain types of crime are being or have been committed. It may be that suspicion of drink driving isn't considered sufficient justification in law to be a defence against trespassing, but I don't have any solid info either way.
In case anyone is interested, the original text from the book is below:
One case in which the precise connotations of swear words was judicially examined was
Snook v Mannion (1982). The Divisional Court held that the words ‘fuck off’, when said to
police officers by a man on his front driveway, were not clear enough to indicate that the man
wanted to revoke their implied licence to be there.
Quite what words would have been clear enough to revoke the officers’ implied licence to be
on the driveway was not explained in any great detail by Mr Justice Forbes. This is curious.
Someone who steadfastly remained somewhere, having been told what the officers were
told, might be opening themselves to an enquiry from their aggressor such as ‘What part of
“fuck off” do you not understand?’ However, the court’s unusual interpretation of language
might be explicable when the wider story of the case is taken into account.
On 17 April 1981, Brian Snook had been out drinking when he drove his Ford Cortina home
near Lydney in Gloucestershire. He drove in an erratic manner and reached speeds of
55 mph in a built-up area. Two policemen followed him home in a police car. Mr Snook drove
up his front driveway, got out of the car, and then threw his keys into a flowerbed. The officers
walked on to his drive and told him they suspected him of driving while under the influence
of alcohol. They requested a breath sample. He declined, saying he was on his own drive.
He was eventually arrested and convicted for drink-driving. The court decided that police
officers, like other citizens, had an implied licence to be on someone’s driveway between
the front gate and the front door if they thought they had legitimate business with the
occupier. In this case, the words ‘fuck off’, uttered by a man who had been drinking, were not
‘a sufficiently express rebuttal’ of the implied licence the police officers had to be on the
drive.