Beefbeefbeef 10 Posted April 9, 2013 Report Share Posted April 9, 2013 My first post!! I recently applied for a FAC for a .17HMR. Just as the FAC was about to be granted, I was told there would be a supervisory condition imposed (i.e I have to be accompanied by a FAC holder until I can demonstrate that this is no longer required) with no explanation provided. I can't find much on the internet so thought I would ask you guys: 1. As far as I'm aware, supervisory conditions on a FAC as for large calibres / centre fires but would be interested to hear others' opinions. It seems particularly odd as I have been a responsible shotgun shooter for 25+ years. 2. In due course, how does one go about having the supervisory condition removed? Is it just a letter from your supervisor? I guess it will vary between forces but would be interested to hear advice. Thanks Quote Link to post
paulus 26 Posted April 9, 2013 Report Share Posted April 9, 2013 there is no legal requirement in law that backs this up, are you a member of basc, sacs or any other shooting organization? Quote Link to post
rimmer 33 Posted April 9, 2013 Report Share Posted April 9, 2013 I think your condition will have been put on because you prob didnt have a shotgun cert before hand, which always helps as it shows a progression in experiance, and if you think about it, its only sensible that you be supervised if you can show no previous experiance of firearms. I had the same condition years ago on a center fire and my supervisor wrote to them after 6 months and the condition was removed. Quote Link to post
Beefbeefbeef 10 Posted April 9, 2013 Author Report Share Posted April 9, 2013 Yes, BASC. I spoke to one of their officers. Without telling me, he went straight to the issuing force and asked why, and then came back to me to say it happens (although not with .17HMRs). So I'm none the wiser. there is no legal requirement in law that backs this up, are you a member of basc, sacs or any other shooting organization? Quote Link to post
Beefbeefbeef 10 Posted April 9, 2013 Author Report Share Posted April 9, 2013 I've had a SC for 25 years. I think your condition will have been put on because you prob didnt have a shotgun cert before hand, which always helps as it shows a progression in experiance, and if you think about it, its only sensible that you be supervised if you can show no previous experiance of firearms. I had the same condition years ago on a center fire and my supervisor wrote to them after 6 months and the condition was removed. Quote Link to post
paulus 26 Posted April 9, 2013 Report Share Posted April 9, 2013 Yes, BASC. I spoke to one of their officers. Without telling me, he went straight to the issuing force and asked why, and then came back to me to say it happens (although not with .17HMRs). So I'm none the wiser. there is no legal requirement in law that backs this up, are you a member of basc, sacs or any other shooting organization? i would be ringing them back Quote Link to post
The one 8,482 Posted April 9, 2013 Report Share Posted April 9, 2013 Ask basc and the issuing force Why ?> Quote Link to post
MrDjk 3 Posted April 9, 2013 Report Share Posted April 9, 2013 Will you be going out on your own or with someone else at least to start with? If it is the latter is it actually going to make a difference? Get some experience under your belt and get whoever goes out with you to put something in writing after a few months and this would normally get it lifted. You only have the right to appeal a refusal or revocation not any conditions imposed. The fact that you have held a sgc for so long should make it a formality really. Quote Link to post
paulus 26 Posted April 9, 2013 Report Share Posted April 9, 2013 ADDITIONAL CONDITIONSON FIREARM CERTIFICATES[ADVICE FOR FIREARMS LICENSING STAFF]INTRODUCTIONFirearm certificate conditions have proliferated over the years and have become acause of friction between the police and certificate holders. Many certificate holders arefrustrated by restrictions on the way they are allowed to use their firearms where thereis no danger or logical reason for those restrictions.This fact sheet aims to provide advice to licensing staff and certificate holders aboutthe balanced application (if necessary) of additional firearm certificate conditions.FIRST PRINCIPLESSection 27(2) of the 1968 Firearms Act states;“A firearm certificate shall be in the prescribed form and shall specify the conditions -(if any) subject to which it is held”. [my underlining]This clearly infers that additional conditions should be the exception rather than therule.What are additional conditions?Conditions, other than the statutory conditions prescribed by the 1998 Firearms Rules,are a mechanism for the Chief Constable to regulate the behaviour of a certificateholder where necessary, on a case by case basis. The original 1969 Home OfficeGuidance on Parliament’s intentions within the 1968 Firearms Act shows this.Section 10.35 of the guidance says that the chief officer may impose extra conditions“if he feels that they are necessary to ensure effective operation of the firearmscontrols and minimise risk to public safety”.“Public safety” must not be extended to include restrictions on the shooting of certainlegal quarry species. Public safety relates to the holders competence to take a safeshot when using a firearm over land. This assessment is dealt with at initial grant andvia land checks. For example: stopping a certificate holder shooting a fox with a rifleheld for deer has nothing to do with public safety. A backstop is always required.It is ultra vires for police to impose conditions preventing a certificate holder fromcarrying out an operation that would otherwise be lawful. Police have an enforcementrole with regard to the law; not to role to invent or embellish it.Are conditions linked to ‘good reason’?Conditions are not linked to “Good Reason”, neither do they automatically flow from it.Whilst conditions often happen to list the primary reason conditions were not devisedto be used as a statement of good reason. A certificate may be granted once goodreason is met with or without conditions. Conditions should form no part of the processfor determining whether the applicant has satisfied “good reason”. Once good reasonhas been satisfied, then an appraisal may be made to see whether it is appropriate forany conditions to be imposed.Once good reason has been demonstrated for the initial possession of a firearm,additional conditions should be applied to allow other lawful uses. Paragraphs 13.14 &13.22 of “Firearms Law – Guidance to the police 2002” make this clear.What does the Home Office Guidance say about additional conditions?13.14 “Good reason” to possess particular firearms will generally be linked to thequarry species found on the land concerned, for example on a farm or estate. However,conditions for the possession of such firearms should allow the certificate holder to dealwith reasonable eventualities, for example pest or game species or the humanedestruction of injured animals on the estate.13.22 Chief officers of police will wish to be mindful that quarry species are mobile andapplicants may not be able to always predict their presence on land on a consistentbasis. Certificate conditions should therefore allow the applicant flexibility in dealingwith quarry species.Note: In a letter to police licensing staff from the Home Office titled “reasonableness”and dated 9th December 2002 (ref: TDD-0372) it says;“Guidance says that allowance should be made for ‘reasonable eventuality’ of gamebeing present on the land (see paragraph 13.14). Whilst this appears to sometimes becontrary to the table in Chapter 13, it should be remembered that the table is there toestablish the ‘good reason’ for the possession of the gun in the first place and shouldnot necessarily be used to impose overly restrictive conditions.”Note: In an email to a BASC member from a Home Office official dated 18th August2000 it says;“I should make clear, firstly that the guidance is just that, and is not intended to setthe absolute limits of acceptable practice.Secondly, the guidance was intended to deal mainly with the ‘good reason’ to acquireweapons rather than their use as such. We would certainly not wish to force shootersto acquire more guns than they need or to leave guns unattended because they areobliged to carry a selection.”THE CASE OF REGINALD BUCKLAND - 1997 (CAMBRIDGE CROWN COURT)Paragraph 10.33 of “Firearms Law Guidance to the Police” states;“As the courts have held (R v Cambridge Crown Court ex parte Buckland, 1998) thatthere is no right of appeal against the imposition of conditions (as opposed to a refusalto grant or renew a certificate) chief officers will wish to be cautious in imposingconditions that might amount to a constructive refusal to grant or renew a certificate,that is additional conditions that would make possession or use so difficult as to beredundant in practice.”The lack of an appeal procedure for a certificate holder aggrieved by a condition makesit incumbent upon Chief Constables to be reasonable in imposing conditions. Conditionsmust be competent in law and ‘Wednesbury reasonable’.In his Judgement on the Buckland case, His Honour Judge J Haworth said: “That upona grant the Chief Constable shall specify any conditions, subject to the test ofWednesbury reasonableness.”Irrationality/Wednesbury unreasonablenessWednesbury unreasonableness is a standard used in assessing applications for judicialreviews of decisions by public authorities under English law. It applies to a decision,which is "So outrageous in its defiance of logic or accepted moral standards that nosensible person who had applied his mind to the question to be decided could havearrived at it." [Lord Diplock in Council of Civil Service Unions v Minister for the CivilService (the GCHQ case 1983)]. Whether a decision falls within this category is aquestion that judges should be well equipped to answer. It is possible for a decision tofail a proportionality test without being Wednesbury unreasonable.In the words of Lord Greene [Associated Provincial Picture Houses v. WednesburyCorporation 1947]:“It is true that discretion must be exercised reasonably. Now what does that mean?Lawyers familiar with the phraseology used in relation to exercise of statutorydiscretions often use the word ‘unreasonable’ in a rather comprehensive sense. It hasfrequently been used and is frequently used as a general description of the things thatmust not be done. For instance, a person entrusted with a discretion must, so to speak,direct himself properly in law. He must call his own attention to the matters, which heis bound to consider. He must exclude from his considerations matters, which areirrelevant to what he has to consider. If he does not obey those rules, he may truly besaid, and often is said, to be acting ‘unreasonably’. Similarly, there may be somethingso absurd that no sensible person could ever dream that it lay within the powers of theauthority.A typical example of unreasonableness that relates to firearms licensing is whenconditions are applied to make a lawful activity unlawful, for example; to impose acondition restricting a person to shooting “foxes whilst deer stalking”.The “foxes whilst deer stalking” condition prohibits night shooting as deer can only belegally shot during daylight hours; the condition also prohibits a rifle being used onland where the deer e.g. herding species have moved away, albeit temporarily orwhere there are no deer in the first instance. Such a condition only seeks to force theholder to obtain another rifle which the police feel is appropriate for unrestricted foxcontrol and to make secondary trips after stalking has ceased (see email above fromRichard Worth). Aside to night shooting, to make separate visits is often incompatibleas foxes are active at the same time as deer at dawn and dusk.In essence an applicant is either safe to have a rifle or not, if he needs a specific calibreby law for deer stalking and the application is approved for the person to shoot thelargest quarry species in the UK, then shooting a fox with the same rifle will also besafe, humane and legal. The process of taking a safe and humane shot is identicalacross the species and must of course includes a safe backstop. The aspect that policeare looking to be satisfied about is the competency of the applicant to take a safe shotevery time. The shooting of any quarry requires a safe backstop for the shot, and theprocess/experience is translatable between quarry species.Aside to an applicant’s ability to take a safe shot, police also allege that larger calibrescapable of humanely shooting the largest species of deer are ‘unsuitable’ or ‘overkill’for smaller species such as fox. The primary concern for police is whether there areissues around an application due to lack of energy to achieve a humane kill, not toattempt to measure excess energy which will be absorbed by the backstop.Some notes about additional conditions:When it necessary to impose conditions, they must have the following attributes:They must be….o LAWFULo UNAMBIGUOUSo WRITTEN IN PLAIN ENGLISHo REASONABLEo PROPORTIONATEo NON-CONTRADICTORYo DEMONSTRABLY BENEFICIAL TO THE PUBLIC SAFETYo PROPERLY NOTIFIEDo EVIDENCEDLAWFUL• Must not permit or incite someone to do something which is illegale.g. to shoot deer with a rifle which does not satisfy the ballisticminima of the Deer Act.• They must not impose restrictions upon actions which are otherwisepermitted by law, whether explicitly or implicitly.• May not modify or otherwise circumvent one or more of the statutoryconditions.• May not require the certificate holder to obtain something for whichno authority is required e.g. The fitting of an integral soundmoderation system or to restrict the purchase of a particular ‘design’of a firearm proven to be Section 1. The Act doesn’t provide for thechief officer to be arbiter of taste in firearms.Note: A condition which is incompetent in law does not bind the certificate holder.UNAMBIGUOUS• Must be in terms which are certain.• Should not have a double meaning.WRITTEN IN PLAIN ENGLISH• They should be clearly written and couched in clear terms andlanguage.• Should be pitched at the lowest level of education.• Should be tested by an impartial independent source - peer review.REASONABLE• Statute law governs many aspects of firearms use. This should notbe modified by administration other than for a very good reason, onan individual basis, and with clear and evidenced benefits.• It is unreasonable to restrict the types of quarry. What quarry is shoton land is a matter for the law and the landowner, not anadministrator.PROPORTIONATE• Should be tailored to the individual circumstances and should notrestrict the use of firearms more than is necessary – the burden ofproof in this case falls on the police.• Risk assessment of individuals – only the minimum level ofrestriction which would neutralise that clearly defined risk should beimposed.Note: Richard Worth (Home Office 1999) said; “In general we would advise the policeto exercise caution in imposing conditions that are unduly restrictive”.NON-CONTRADICTORY• The wording of some conditions has often been contradictory, notonly one with the other, but also within a single condition, where onephrase may contradict another. This is normally caused by the word“Only”.• Where one condition contradicts one or more others, they may all beinvalid. This reduces any utility as it would be difficult for aprosecution to succeed.DEMONSTRABLY BENEFICIAL TO PUBLIC SAFETY• They should be imposed for a specific reason, not merely as a catchall. The burden of proof in this area falls on the police.• They should not be imposed merely to prosecute the certificateholder in the case of a breach of those conditions.• They should not be imposed if it is already an offence to do aparticular act i.e. forbidding the certificate holder to perform anaction which is already illegal e.g. armed trespass, shootingsomething out of season or ammunition not conforming to the DeerActs. Such conditions place the certificate holder in double jeopardy.PROPERLY NOTIFIED• Section 29(1) of the 1968 Firearms Act give the chief officer of policethe power to change conditions by providing notice in writing tothe certificate holder. If no such notice is given it may be that theamendment is unlawful.EVIDENCEDWhere conditions need to be employed, they should be evidenced and the evidenceshould be;• Thoroughly thought out – not just that which may suit an opinion• Objectively considered – looking at all the facts without bias• Recorded – the reasons for the application of those conditions.NEGOTIATIONWhen there is disagreement with the wording of conditions, such conditions must benegotiable. Where a request is made for a condition to be changed, the burden shouldfall upon the police to justify its retention, rather than vice versa.Please listen to the concerns of your customers and be prepared to justify anddocument your actions. If you fail to do this you leave yourself open to complaint andpossible public censure.END NOTEThe right to impose conditions places considerable power in the hands of FirearmsLicensing staff. At a stroke you can make that which is otherwise lawful, unlawful.It is ultra vires for you to impose conditions preventing a certificate holder fromcarrying out an operation that would otherwise be lawful.BASC recommends that licensing staff always ask themselves what the benefits anddisadvantages of imposing a particular condition may be.For preference, unless the individual circumstances clearly justify them, conditionsshould be avoided. If conditions are used the evidence for applying conditions shouldbe documented.If additional conditions must be used, please use them sparingly & wisely, and with aclear and evidenced record of their benefit to the public safety.ENQUIRIES TO: Phone 01244-573010E-mail: firearms@basc.org.uk© BASC December 2012 Quote Link to post
The one 8,482 Posted April 9, 2013 Report Share Posted April 9, 2013 It no legal to enforce so suppose you agree ,get your cert then go out by yourself what can the lawfully do to you ?. Quote Link to post
b53hunt 15 Posted April 9, 2013 Report Share Posted April 9, 2013 very strange never heard of anyone having that condition for a rimfire but they do these things might well be you just do what they ask and get a letter from someone saying your fine then happy days condition lifted or join a rifle club and chairman will vouch for you atb Quote Link to post
Beefbeefbeef 10 Posted April 10, 2013 Author Report Share Posted April 10, 2013 I may just keep my head down and apply to get the supervisory condition taken off in a few months. Still have no real idea how I go about doing that - you would think the police would provide advice or at least explain their reasoning. I guess a letter from my local keeper will suffice. Any ideas welcome. Quote Link to post
Ratsmasher 36 Posted April 10, 2013 Report Share Posted April 10, 2013 NEGOTIATION When there is disagreement with the wording of conditions, such conditions must be negotiable. Where a request is made for a condition to be changed, the burden should fall upon the police to justify its retention, rather than vice versa. As I read it you should ring up your FEO and quote that^ bit and they should at least explain their reasoning. I may just keep my head down and apply to get the supervisory condition taken off in a few months. Still have no real idea how I go about doing that - you would think the police would provide advice or at least explain their reasoning. I guess a letter from my local keeper will suffice. Any ideas welcome. Quote Link to post
charlie caller 3,654 Posted April 10, 2013 Report Share Posted April 10, 2013 (edited) I may just keep my head down and apply to get the supervisory condition taken off in a few months. Still have no real idea how I go about doing that - you would think the police would provide advice or at least explain their reasoning. I guess a letter from my local keeper will suffice. Any ideas welcome. That would be the best option,the police can( within reason)impose any conditions they like,and we are going to see this more and more,but in some cases (note I said some) this is a good thing,get out with your mentor,put plenty of rounds through your rifle,get the experience,get your mentor to sign you off as safe,condition removed, simples. Edited April 10, 2013 by charlie caller Quote Link to post
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