![]() |
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | |
England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Duggan v HM Prison Full Sutton & Anor [2004] EWCA Civ 78 (10 February 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2004/78.html Cite as: [2004] WLR 1010, [2004] Prison LR 340, [2004] 2 All ER 966, [2004] 1 WLR 1010, [2004] EWCA Civ 78 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Buy ICLR report: [2004] 1 WLR 1010] [Help]
COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
CHANCERY DIVISION
(MR JUSTICE HART)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE CHADWICK
and
LORD JUSTICE KEENE
____________________
JOHN WILLIAM DUGGAN |
Appellant |
|
- and - |
||
THE GOVERNOR HMP FULL SUTTON THE HOME OFFICE |
Respondent |
____________________
Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited, 190 Fleet Street
London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7421 4040, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Mr Jonathan Crow and Mr Steven Kovats (instructed by Treasury Solicitor, Queen Anne's Chambers, 28 Broadway, London SW1H 9JS) for the respondent
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Chadwick :
The regulatory framework
"43(3) Any cash which a prisoner has at a prison shall be paid into an account under the control of the governor and the prisoner shall be credited with the amount in the books of the prison."
"43(2) Anything, other than cash, which a prisoner has at a prison and which he is not allowed to retain for his own use shall be taken into the governor's custody. An inventory of a prisoner's property shall be kept, and he shall be required to sign it, after having a proper opportunity to see that it is correct.
(3) . . .
(4) Any article belonging to a prisoner which remains unclaimed for a period of more than 3 years after he leaves prison, or dies, may be sold or otherwise disposed of; and the net proceeds of any sale shall be paid to the National Association for the Care and Resettlement of Offenders, for its general purposes.
(5) The governor may confiscate any unauthorised article found in the possession of a prisoner after his reception into prison, or concealed or deposited anywhere within a prison."
"44(1) Any money or other article (other than a letter or other communication) sent to a convicted prisoner through the post office shall be dealt with in accordance with this rule, and the prisoner shall be informed of the manner in which it is dealt with.
(2) Any cash shall, at the discretion of the governor, be –
(a) dealt with in accordance with rule 43(3);
(b) returned to the sender; or
(c) in a case where the sender's name and address are not known, paid to the National Association for the Care and Resettlement of Offenders, for its general purposes:
Provided that in relation to a prisoner committed to prison in default of payment of any sum of money, the prisoner shall be informed of the receipt of the cash and, unless he objects to its being so applied, it shall be applied in or towards the satisfaction of the amount due from him.
(3) Any security for money shall, at the discretion of the governor, be –
(a) delivered to the prisoner or placed with his property at the prison;
(b) returned to the sender; or
(c) encashed and the cash dealt with in accordance with paragraph (2).
(4) Any other article to which this rule applies shall, at the discretion of the governor, be –
(a) delivered to the prisoner or placed with his property at the prison;
(b) returned to the sender; or
(c) in a case where the sender's name and address are not known or the article is of such a nature that it would be unreasonable to return it, sold or otherwise disposed of, and the net proceeds of any sale applied in accordance with paragraph (2)."
Restriction of access to cash
"11. Inmates are not allowed to have cash or the means to make payments to other inmates. There is a concern that if inmates could make payments to each [other] these payments might be used for illicit purposes, bullying or other behaviour not in accord with the good order and discipline of the prison."
"3. There is no requirement for approval by a Governor 1 or any staff at HMP Full Sutton for an inmate to open a bank or building society account.
. . .
7. Further, inmates who have a bank or building society account when they arrive at HMP Full Sutton, or who open one while at HMP Full Sutton, are allowed to manage their accounts.
. . .
10. An inmate is not allowed to keep a cheque book or savings account passbook in his own possession in his cell. Such documents are kept in the cashier's office. . . .
. . .
12. An inmate may send a cheque from the prison drawn on a bank or building society account. . . ."
"There shall be established at every prison systems of privileges approved by the Secretary of State and appropriate to the classes of prisoners there, which shall include arrangements under which money earned by prisoners in prison may be spent by them within the prison".
The position at HMP Full Sutton is described by Mrs Scaife at paragraph 8 of her witness statement:
"8. Limits are imposed on how much money an inmate should have at his disposal for his own private daily use and enjoyment at any one time. An inmate is allowed to have for such use only the money he receives for work carried out at the prison each week – his earnings – and also an additional sum from monies he has in his private cash account . . ."
The private cash account
"9. Money not available for an inmate's private use and enjoyment are held . . . in his private cash account and cannot be used for his own private daily use and enjoyment. There is no limit to the amount which an inmate can have to his credit in a private cash account."
"12. . . . An inmate may also ask for a cheque to be sent by the prison drawn on his credit . . . , exceptionally, in his private cash account. Monies paid from an inmate's private cash account should not be intended for his own daily private use and enjoyment."
Prison Service Instruction 79/97
"6. MANDATORY: Prisoners may not keep cash with them while they are in prison and accounts are to be maintained on their behalf.
7. MANDATORY: Prisoners will be allowed to spend whatever they can earn from purposeful activity but access to private cash will be capped according to the weekly limits set by the level of the incentive scheme they are on. . . . "
Banking prisoners' monies
"Only public money should be paid into a public bank account and money should not be drawn from it except to meet payments properly chargeable to the account. . . ."
The guidelines require that balances of cleared funds in public bank accounts should be minimised; in particular, government departments should not agree to maintain balances on public bank accounts in return for reduced bank charges. Where cleared balances are held, the department should negotiate for the payment of interest; but interest received in respect of monies held in public bank accounts must be surrendered to the Consolidated Fund. Paragraph 28.5.30 of Government Accounting 2000 is in these terms:
"Any non-public monies managed by departments (for example where they hold private sector monies in trust while ownership is being resolved) should not be held in public bank accounts and a standing balance may be appropriate. This may be particularly so where the private sector monies cannot be debited to cover associated banking costs."
These proceedings
The judge's reasons
"18. . . . Assuming for the sake of argument that the relationship envisaged by Rule 43(3) must be regarded as either a debtor/creditor or a trustee/beneficiary relationship, the argument for the former relies on the words "the prisoner shall be credited with the amount in the books of the prison", and the argument for the latter relies on the words ". . . shall be paid into an account under the control of the governor".
19. [Counsel for the claimant] submitted that it was a necessary implication of the requirement that the cash be paid into such an account that a trust was created in relation to the cash. He shrank from saying that the governor was obliged to open (or control) a separate account for each prisoner. Rather he suggested, the governor's obligation was to have, or control, an account in which the cash of his prisoners would be mixed and to which resort might be had whenever a prisoner "spent" money within the prison, or asked for reimbursement when leaving prison. The critical feature of the account was, he submitted, that it was intended to be separate from any account used by the prison for its own expenditure.
20. That seems to me to involve getting far more out of a few words than can sensibly be done. Furthermore, even if the sub-Rule does posit such a collective account as the nature of the account in contemplation, it is not clear to me why such an account should be assumed to be an interest-bearing account. The assumption that it is an interest bearing account can only be derived from the proposition that a trust to "invest" is implied.
21. If the draftsman of the rules had intended to create a trust, with a concomitant obligation to "invest", it would be relatively easy to say so. The language is, however, otherwise. The cash has simply to be "paid" into the account, and then "the prisoner shall be credited with the amount in the books of the prison". To the extent to which these words seek to create a relationship in private law it is clearly the relationship of debtor and creditor.
22. The requirement that the cash be paid into an account is simply there, in my judgment, because completeness and good order require that something be said about what is to happen to the cash. Rather than direct, as in the case of the prisoner's other property – see Rule 43(2) – that it simply be taken into the governor's custody, the provision is that it be paid into an account under his control. The prisoner loses his rights to the notes or coins thus taken from him in a way in which he does not lose his rights to his other property. For his right to "own" that cash, there is substituted a monetary credit. It may incidentally be noted that in relation to "securities for money" (see Rule 44(3)) amongst the options given to the governor are either to place them with the prisoner's property at the prison, or to encash them and deal with the cash under Rule 44(2) and thence under Rule 43(3). These are set out as apparently equivalent modes of treatment. This seems to me to emphasise how very far from the draftsman's mind was any thought that the purpose of Rule 43(3) was to impose a trust to invest cash on the prisoner's behalf in an interest bearing account."
Did the judge adopt the correct approach?
"I think this argument is fallacious. A person solely entitled to the full beneficial ownership of money or property, both at law and in equity, does not enjoy an equitable interest in that property. The legal title carries with it all rights. Unless and until there is a separation of the legal and equitable estates, there is no separate equitable title. Therefore to talk of the bank "retaining" its equitable interest is meaningless. The only question is whether the circumstances under which the money was paid were such as, in equity, to impose a trust on the local authority. If so, an equitable interest arose for the first time under that trust."
Possession and ownership
Whether there is anything in the circumstances which should lead equity to impose a trust?
Conclusion
Keene LJ:
Peter Gibson L.J.:
"For the purposes of this Convention, the term "trust" refers to the legal relationship created – inter vivos or on death – by a person, the settlor, when assets have been placed under the control of a trustee for the benefit of a beneficiary or for a specified purpose.
A trust has the following characteristics –
(a) the assets constitute a separate fund and are not a part of the trustee's own estate;
(b) title to the trust assets stands in the name of the trustee or in the name of another person on behalf of the trustee;
(c) the trustee has the power and the duty, in respect of which he is accountable, to manage, employ or dispose of the assets in accordance with the terms of the trust and the special duties imposed upon him by law."