Full and frank disclosure by the Claimant (2)
There must be full and frank disclosure by the Claimant (applicant) seeking the injunction against the PUs.
Sufficient evidence to prove the claim (3)
There must be sufficient and detailed evidence before the Court on the summary judgment application to justify the Court finding that the immediate fear is proven on the balance of probabilities and that no trial is needed to determine that issue. The way this is done is by two steps. Firstly stage (1), the claimant has to prove that the claim has a realistic prospect of success, then the burden shifts to the defendant. At stage (2) to prove that any defence has no realistic prospect of success. In PU cases where there is no defendant present, the matter is considered ex-parte by the Court. If there is no evidence served and no foreseeable realistic defence, the claimant is left with an open field for the evidence submitted by him and his realistic prospect found at stage (1) of the hearing may be upgraded to a balance of probabilities decision by the Judge. The Court does not carry out a mini trial but does carry out an analysis of the evidence to determine if it the claimant’s evidence is credible and acceptable. The case law on this process is set out in more detail under the section headed “The Law” above. The defendant must be found unable to raise a defence to the claim which has a realistic prospect of success, taking into account not only the evidence put before the Court (if any), but also, evidence that a putative PU defendant might reasonably be foreseen as able to put before the Court (for instance in relation to the PUs civil rights to freedom of speech, freedom to associate, freedom to protest and freedom to pass and repass on the highway). Whilst in National Highways the absence of any defence from the PUs was relevant to this determination, the Supreme Court’s ruling in Wolverhampton enjoins this Court not to put much weight on the lack of any served defence or defence evidence in a PU case. The nature of the proceedings are “ex-parte” in PU cases and so the Court must be alive to any potential defences and the Claimants must set them out and make submissions upon them. In my judgment this is not a “Micawber” point, it is a just approach point. In interim injunction hearings, pursuant to American Cyanamid v Ethicon [1975] AC 396, for the Court to grant an interim injunction against a defendant the balance of convenience and/or justice must weigh in favour of granting the injunction. However, in PU cases, pursuant to Wolverhampton, this balance is angled against the applicant to a greater extent than is required usually, so that there
No realistic defence (4)
Balance of convenience – compelling justification (5)
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