I think the case sh'e's referring to is going to be big in the pseudo-legal sphere.
The case of Leighton v Bristow and Sutor is being touted elsewhere on the pseuodlegalverse as a finding that liability orders are unenforceable
https://the98thmonkey450.substack.com/p ... now-become . However the fact that someone is trying to
appeal this decision implies that it didn’t go as well as that. That’s also suggested by the fact that it appears that the judge didn’t order the claimant his full costs, which implies either misconduct on the part of the claimant, or only a partial win.
On the 98th Monkey website we’re told that the judgement has rendered unlawful all liability orders. It appears from this application that that was indeed what the claimant was arguing. However reading between their lines it looks as if the judge didn’t find that, but did find that execution of the subsequent warrant of control was invalid becuase the bailiff should have produced the warrant, not just an email saying there was one. There is a theory going the rounds (the Peacekeepers are very keen) arguing that unless the court generates a paper liability order- which courts no longer do, they make the order, record it in their register and leave it to the council to notify defendants - the order is unenforceable. Leighton has clearly tried to argue this and failed.
There’s no sign of the case on the National Archives or in Bailli and since the case was apparently decided in September, it would be there by now. If the judgement only decided that “authority” in Schedule 2 Tribunal Courts and Enforcement Act means showing the occupier the warrant of control, then the judge might not have considered it worth reporting. The Act says that the bailiff must produce his authority to enter, and it wouldn’t be surprising if the judge found that that meant the warrant.
So Leighton is trying to appeal the decision, even though he appears to have won on the warrant of control point, because he wants to win on the liability order point as well. Another pseudo-legal website (Martin Geddes) says he was awarded £4k in damages against the bailiffs and the council. It appears the case was brought under para 66 of Sched 12 of the Tribunals etc Act, which is about damages against bailiffs, which again implies that no decision was made about the validity of the actual debt, or the liability order which enabled the council to enforce, or even the validity of the warrant of control itself.