Everything about The Hunting Act 2004 totally explained
The
Hunting Act 2004 is an
Act of the
UK Parliament passed in 2004. The effect of the Act is to outlaw
hunting with
dogs (particularly
fox hunting, but also the hunting of
deer,
hares and
mink and organised
hare coursing) in
England and Wales from
18 February 2005. The pursuit of foxes with hounds was banned in
Scotland two years earlier under legislation of the devolved
Scottish Parliament, while it remains legal in
Northern Ireland.
Background
Many earlier attempts had been made to ban hunting. Two
private member's bills to ban, or restrict, hunting were introduced in 1949, but one was withdrawn and the other defeated on its
second reading in the
House of Commons.. The Labour government appointed the Scott Henderson Inquiry to investigate all forms of hunting. Opponents of hunting claimed that the membership of the committee was chosen to produce a pro-hunting report.
Twice, in 1969 and in 1975, the House of Commons passed legislation to ban hare coursing, but neither Bill became law. Three further private member's bills were introduced by
Kevin McNamara in 1992 (Wild Mammals (Protection) Bill), by
Tony Banks in 1993 (Fox Hunting (Abolition) Bill), and by
John McFall in 1995 (Wild Mammals (Protection) Bill) - all of which failed to go on to become law.
The Labour Party came to power in 1997 with a manifesto saying, "We will ensure greater protection for wildlife. We have advocated new measures to promote animal welfare, including a free vote in Parliament on whether hunting with hounds should be banned." A new private member's bill, introduced by
Michael Foster MP, received a second reading with 411 MPs voting in support, but failed due to lack of parliamentary time. The
Burns Report in 2000 concluded that hunting "seriously compromise the welfare of the fox", but (in line with its remit) didn't draw any conclusion on whether hunting should be banned or should continue. In a later debate in the House of Lords, the inquiry chairman,
Lord Burns also stated that "Naturally, people ask whether we were implying that hunting is cruel... The short answer to that question is no. There wasn't sufficient verifiable evidence or data safely to reach views about cruelty. It is a complex area." Following the Burns inquiry, the Government introduced an 'options bill' which allowed each House of Parliament to choose between a ban, licensed hunting, and self-regulation. The
House of Commons voted for a banning Bill and the
House of Lords for self-regulation. The
2001 General Election was then called and the Bill ran out of parliamentary time.
Following a series of evidence hearings in 2002, on
3 December 2002,
Rural Affairs Minister Alun Michael introduced a bill which would have allowed some licensed hunting. The Commons passed an amendment proposed by Tony Banks to ban hunting entirely, but the bill was rejected by the House of Lords.
The 2004 Bill
The identical Bill to that passed by the House of Commons in 2003 was reintroduced to the Commons on
9 September 2004. It received
Royal Assent as the Hunting Act 2004 on
18 November 2004 when the
Speaker of the House of Commons invoked the
Parliament Act, with the Bill not having received the approval of the House of Lords who had preferred an Act that regulated hunting with dogs.
The final passing of the legislation was considered very controversial with many newspapers and broadcasters condemning
Tony Blair's Labour administration for giving in to what they perceived as the prejudicial views of anti-hunting Labour backbenchers. MPs of all parties voting for the legislation asserted that hunting caused unnecessary suffering and said that they represented the majority of the public who favoured a ban on hunting with dogs. Their assertion of majority support for the thrust of the legislation seems to have some basis in evidence, a September 2002 survey commissioned by the Daily Telegraph indicated that a majority of people (57%) agreed with the statement that 'hunting with dogs is never acceptable'. A survey by MORI for the BBC carried out in February 2005 found that there was a plurality (47% supporting, 26% opposed) of support for the new legislation, but not an absolute majority.
Challenges
There have been a series of declarations by various groups of hunting activists (most notably the
Countryside Alliance) that that'll still go hunting in defiance of the law.
Attempts by pro-hunting groups to challenge the Act by questioning the legality of the Parliament Act in the
High Court and
Court of Appeal failed, and the ban took effect on
18 February 2005. The House of Lords agreed with the lower courts in a ruling published on October 2005.
A separate application for judicial review was made to the
English High Court, arguing that the
anti-hunting legislation contravenes individual human or property rights protected in the
European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR) and under
European Community law, that's the
free movement of goods and services. Some believed that there was a possibility that the challenges could obtain a degree of compensation for some of those adversely affected, although the Scottish courts didn't reject the equivalent Scottish law, the Protection of Wild Mammals (Scotland) Act 2002, which also lacked any compensation provision. The application was dismissed by the High Court in July 2005 An appeal to the
Court of Appeal was heard in March 2006, but dismissed in a judgment published in June 2006. Permission was subsequently granted for an appeal to the House of Lords, and this appeal was heard in October 2007 and rejected in November 2007.
Enforcement of the Hunting Act
Police forces have said, on a number of occasions, that enforcement of the Hunting Act is a low priority for them, although they say that that'll enforce the law, most notably by investigating evidence of illegal hunting. Frustrated by this, animal welfare groups like the
League Against Cruel Sports have taken on a self-appointed role of monitoring hunts that they believe may be breaking the law and, in some cases, taking private prosecutions themselves.
Convictions under the Hunting Act
Despite claims that the Hunting Act is unworkable, at least twenty one people have been convicted under it, including six hunt officials. Two of these convictions have been upheld after appeal by a High Court Judge.
A number of prosecutions have been out on hold due to legal uncertainty over the question of whether the Hunting Act contains a
reverse burden of proof in situations where accused hunters claim to be following an
exemption in the Hunting Act. Section 101 of the
Magistrates' Courts Act 1980 says
» "Where the defendant to an information or complaint relies for his defence on any exception, exemption, proviso, excuse or qualification, whether or not it accompanies the description of the offence or matter of complaint in the enactment creating the offence or on which the complaint is founded, the burden or proving the exception, exemption, proviso, excuse or qualification shall be on him"
This view has been upheld by a High Court Judge in one Crown Court case The cases are suspended pending an appeal by the
Crown Prosecution Service to the
High Court against this latter judgement.
What the law stops: the exemption/loophole issue
The meaning of the Hunting Act is a matter of substantial public dispute. The
Countryside Alliance claim that the Act is unclear, The difference between the two centres around the alternative views that the Act contains either "tightly drawn exemptions" or "glaring loopholes."
For example, letters from Countryside Alliance officials to a series of local newspapers around the UK in early 2006 say, "The act makes it an offence to hunt a mouse with a dog but not a rat, you can legally hunt a rabbit but not a hare. You can flush a fox to guns with two dogs legally but if you use three it's an offence. You can flush a fox to a bird of prey with as many dogs as you like." The sections below examine whether such exemptions allow loopholes.
Hunting mice, rats, rabbits and hares
The Hunting Act bans activities that Parliament believed to be cruel sports and permitted activities that it believed to be necessary for land managers. Parliament accepted the view that, where rats and rabbits were pests, hunting them was legitimate. MPs didn't believe that there was any necessity to use dogs to hunt mice and believed that hare hunting was cruel, which is why these activities were not exempted from the Act.
These two exemptions don't make it possible for "traditional" hunting to continue. Rabbits tend to stay very close to their warrens and will go underground at the sight of dogs, thus not providing the chase that hunts need.
Flushing wild mammals to guns
Traditionally, in some upland areas, foxes were flushed by packs of dogs to be shot. This activity is still permitted in Scotland under the Protection of Wild Mammals (Scotland) Act 2002. However MPs, in making law for England and Wales, decided that this activity did result in unnecessary suffering, not least because it's more difficult to control a large number of hounds in dense woodland where this activity used to take place. The restriction to two dogs was written to ensure that foxes were flushed to be shot rather than being chased to be killed by hounds.
Certainly, "traditional" hunts can perform this activity, and the mounted field can watch a legal activity. But such flushing should be differentiated from chasing. The Hunting Act requires, amongst other things:
- that the flushing can only be done "for the purpose of preventing or reducing serious damage which the [flushed] wild mammal would otherwise cause" (rather than, say, for sport or entertainment);
- that "reasonable steps are taken for the purpose of ensuring that as soon as possible after being found or flushed out the wild mammal is shot dead by a competent person"; and
- that "each dog used in the stalking or flushing out is kept under sufficiently close control to ensure that it doesn't prevent or obstruct achievement of the objective [ofshooting the fox]."
This exemption was tested in court in the private prosecution brought by the
League Against Cruel Sports against the huntsman of the Exmoor Foxhounds in August 2006. In his judgement, the
judge said:
that the conditions are "a very tight test";
that, "after the fox is flushed, the hounds should be called off"; and
that, if "long after the foxes had been flushed they were still being pursued or driven by the hounds", this would be hunting not flushing
The Judge also raised the question "whether it could ever be possible, save in some limited areas of woodland or similar cover, to utilise the exemption with foxhounds." The judgment was successfully appealed against.
This exemption was also claimed by the three stag hound packs in the Exmoor area. In an appeal judgement following the conviction of two stag hunt officials, the judge said that such hunting conducted for recreation was illegal.
Flushing a fox to a bird of prey
Many traditional hunts have bought birds of prey and say that they're using hounds to flush foxes so that the bird of prey can hunt them. The Act requires that the intention must be "for the purpose of enabling a bird of prey to hunt the wild mammal."
It seems reasonable to assume that the judgement (above) describing the limits on flushing foxes to guns will be advisory on courts considering cases of the flushing of foxes to birds of prey.
Hunting below ground
Hunting below ground takes place with terriers. The Act outlaws hunting with terriers (also known as terrier work of fox baiting) with a narrowly drawn exemption, described by the Minister, Alun Michael MP as existing "for gamekeepers". The Act requires that any hunting below ground must comply with a number of conditions:
The activity must be carried out "for the purpose of preventing or reducing serious damage to gamebirds or wild birds which a person is keeping or preserving for the purpose of their being shot."
The person using the dog must have with them written evidence that the land used belongs to them or that they've been given permission to use the land by the occupier. This permission must be shown immediately to a police officer on request.
Only one dog may be used underground at any one time.
Reasonable steps must be taken to ensure that:
- the mammal is flushed as soon as found
- the mammal is shot as soon as flushed,
- the manner in which the dog is used complies with a code of practice, and the dog must be under sufficient control so as not to prevent this, and
- the dog isn't injured.
Long Title & Enacting Formula
An Act to make provision about hunting wild mammals with dogs; to prohibit hare coursing and for connected purposes.
BE IT ENACTED by the Queen's most Excellent Majesty, by and with the advice and consent of the Commons in this present Parliament assembled, in accordance with the provisions of the Parliament Acts 1911 and 1949, and by the authority of the same, as follows.
The Protection of Wild Mammals (Scotland) Act
The equivalent law in Scotland, the Protection of Wild Mammals (Scotland) Act 2002, similarly makes it illegal to chase or deliberately kill mammals with dogs. There are a number of differences between the two Acts:
- The Scottish Act doesn't place a two dog limit on the flushing of a mammal to guns in order to shoot it;
- With respect to flushing foxes above ground to guns to shoot them, only the Scottish Act permits this to be done to protect game birds;
- With respect to flushing foxes below ground to guns to shoot them, only the Scottish Act permits this to be done to protect livestock;
- The Scottish Act allows someone convicted to be sentenced for up to six months in prison, there's no such power in the Hunting Act.
Footnotes
Further Information
Get more info on 'Hunting Act 2004'.
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