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To: E. Charters who wrote (82371)2/20/2002 1:35:03 PM
From: long-gone  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 116836
 
ot?
Metric martyrs lose battle for pounds and ounces
(Filed: 18/02/2002)

FIVE market traders, the so-called metric martyrs, have lost their High
Court battle for the legal right to trade in pounds and ounces.

Lord Justice Laws, sitting with Mr Justice Crane, rejected their claim that
domestic law provided a loophole which meant European Union directives
requiring goods to be sold in metric units did not apply in England and Wales.

Lawyers for the five had warned during a three-day hearing last November
that making it "a criminal offence to sell a pound of bananas in order to
please Brussels" threatened to cause a "deep constitutional crisis".

They received backing for their anti-metric battle from celebrities
including singer Elaine Paige, actor Edward Fox, comedian John Cleese and
Lord Tebbit. Mr Fox was in court this morning to see the judges dismiss
their application for judicial review.

All were fighting convictions and court orders against them after they
defied weights and measures inspectors.

Neil Herron, spokesman for the five traders, said defeat today meant "the
death of democracy" but pledged that the fight would continue. He said it
showed that an act of the UK Parliament could be overruled by a "mere
directive" from "an entity, a gathering of unelected bureaucrats over which
we have no democratic control".

The defeat highlighted "in no uncertain terms how a nation and its peoples
had been betrayed by the political elite".

The five traders faced legal action after the Government complied with
European metrication directives by making it a criminal offence to weigh
and sell goods only in imperial measures.

The case has gained worldwide attention and is being keenly watched as it
marks the first head-on legal clash since the UK joined the European
Community between laws made by Parliament and European law.

Michael Shrimpton, appearing for the five, told the two judges during a
three-day hearing last November: "It is a test case of constitutional
importance, we say, and the public and the country are entitled to know
what has been done in their name."

On the first day of the hearing, car horns tooted support for the "imperial
rebellion" at London's Law Courts, whilst about 200 protesters waved
placards and banners demanding "Keep our lb" and "No to Euro Fascism".

Members of the UK Independence Party set up a fruit and veg stall - selling
bananas and sprouts in imperial measures.

Mr Shrimpton argued the 1985 Weights and Measures Act authorised traders to
continue using imperial measures, even though the UK had signed up to the
1972 European Communities Act and became subject to European directives.

There was no "hierarchy of legislation", and the 1985 Act had just as much
legal weight as the 1972 Act. He said: "The later 1985 Act impliedly
repealed the earlier Act, in so far as it related to weights and measures."

The Government and the courts were now "duty bound" to apply the 1985 Act,
even though it "ran a coach and horses through a Commission Directive with
spectacular effect". Laws made by Parliament could undo, "in part or in
whole," the contents of the 1972 Act.

The metric martyrs include Steven Thoburn, from Sunderland. He was found
guilty in April last year and given a 12-month conditional discharge for
using two sets of imperial scales, which did not bear an official stamp, to
sell bananas by the pound.

The stamp had been obliterated by a trading standards officer on a previous
visit because his scales only weighed imperially. His lawyers say he had
the facility to serve in metric and had always dual priced his goods.

Fishmonger John Dove, of Camelford, Cornwall, was ordered to pay court
costs for selling mackerel at £1.50 a pound; Julian Harman, also of
Camelford, was ordered to pay costs for selling Brussels sprouts at 39p a
pound.

Hackney market greengrocer Colin Hunt was given a 12-month conditional
discharge in June last year for pricing pumpkins, sweet potato, cassava and
other vegetables by the pound, and ordered to pay £4,500 costs.

Street trader Peter Collins, of Sutton, Surrey, had his trading licence
revoked for using imperial scales. Mr Shrimpton described them as "ordinary
men without means or higher education but whose patriotism and courage puts
ministers to shame".

portal.telegraph.co.uk