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Tribunal Upholds Appeal Against Dumpster Grant

20th March 1964, Page 55
20th March 1964
Page 55
Page 55, 20th March 1964 — Tribunal Upholds Appeal Against Dumpster Grant
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Which of the following most accurately describes the problem?

PAA S a result of a decision by the Transport Tribunal in London last week, Cleansing Services (Southern Counties) Ltd. of Botley, Hants, will have to withdraw its Dempster Dumpster refuse collecting vehicle within a fortnight.

The Tribunal reversed a decision 'of the Western Licensing Authority, who last September granted Cleansing Services a B Licence for the vehicle to operate within a -50-mile radius of Box (Wilts).

R. C. E. Hutton Ltd., and three other hauliers; all from Bristol, in which area the vehicle was being . operated, had appealed against the Authority's decision.

President of the Tribunal, Mr. G. D. Squibb, said if The Licensing Authority was wrong in granting the application merely, as appears to be the.case, because he thought that [his new method of refuse collection should be encouraged ".

Mr. M. H. Jackson-Lipkin, counsel for Cleansing Services, said the company had acquired eight new customers and 18 containers, since the licence was granted. Mr. Squibb allowed 14 days for alternative arrangements to be made.

Mr. M. McGregor-Johnson, for the other three appellants, said that if his appeal was dismissed then basically there would be no licensing system. The case was of the highest importance. His grounds of appeal were that Cleansing Services had not proved a need for the vehicle, that no customer was called to give evidence, that the grant would cause wasteful competition, and that the decision was made against the weight of evidence. He added that the only evidence called before the Authority by Cleansing Services were letters.

Mr. Jackson-Lipkin said the Authority was entitled to consider, when he was dealing with an improvement in method, evidence of a much smaller degree than would be necessary in an application for additional vehicles which would be put into a pool to abstract given work from given customers.

In announcing the Tribunal's decision,

Mr. Squibb said: In our view, it would he entirely wrong to depart from the recognized prineipJes on which a licence is granted merely because what is being sought is a licence for some new or improved method of operation."

He added: "We consider the evidence produced before the Licensing Authority was quite insufficient to justify the grant of a licence for whatever kind of vehicle it was proposed to work."


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