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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Commissioner of Police of the Metropolis v Copeland [2014] EWCA Civ 1014 (22 July 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2014/1014.html Cite as: [2015] 3 All ER 391, [2014] EWCA Civ 1014 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
The Hon. Mr Justice Hickinbottom
HQ12X03657
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
VICE-PRESIDENT OF THE COURT OF APPEAL, CIVIL DIVISION
LORD JUSTICE MOSES
and
LORD JUSTICE PATTEN
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The Commissioner of Police of the Metropolis |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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Angel Copeland |
Respondent |
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Ms Heather Williams QC and Mr Jude Bunting (instructed by Fisher Meredith Solicitors) for the Respondent
Hearing dates: 14th-15th April, 2014
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Moses:
Burden of Proving that PC Bains Lied (Ground 1)
"Has the Commissioner proved (i.e., is it more likely than not) that PC Bains did not deliberately fabricate the allegation he made to PC Derbyshire that Ms Copeland had hit him in the face?"
To this question, the jury answered "no". The Commissioner now appeals on the ground that the judge erroneously placed the burden of proving that PC Bains had not lied on the Commissioner, and not where it should have been placed, on she who made the allegation, namely, Ms Copeland.
"1. Did the arresting officer suspect that the person who was arrested was guilty of the offence? The answer to this question depends entirely on the findings of fact of the officer's state of mind.
2. Assuming the officer had the necessary suspicion, was there reasonable cause for that suspicion? This is a purely objective requirement to be determined by the judge, if necessary on facts found by a jury.
3. If the answer to the previous two questions is in the affirmative, then the officer has a discretion which entitled him to make an arrest and in relation to that discretion the question arises as to whether the discretion has been exercised in accordance with the principles laid down in Wednesdbury". (Paragraph 42, citing Castorina at 249)
Auld LJ derived the following relevant propositions on the authorities:-
"1. In determining all Castorina questions, the state of mind is that of the arresting officer, subjective as to the first question, the fact of his suspicion, and objective as to the second and third questions, whether he had reasonable grounds for it, and whether he exercised his discretionary power of arrest, Wednesbury reasonably.
2. It is for the police to establish the first two Castorina requirements, namely, that an arresting officer suspected that the claimant had committed an arrestable offence and that he had reasonable grounds for his submission - …
3. If the police established those requirements, the arrest is lawful unless the claimant can establish on Wednesdbury principles that the arresting officer's exercise or non-exercise of his power of arrest was unreasonable…" (paragraph 83)
"The question which arose for decision…was whether what Mrs Yates did went beyond laying information before police officers for them to take such action as they thought fit and amounted to some direction, or procuring or direct request, or direct encouragement, that they should act by way of arresting these defendants." (604h)
In short, the question was not whether the arresting officers had acted innocently but whether the arrest was unlawful by reason of the conduct of the informant in procuring or directly encouraging that arrest by false evidence.
"Lawfulness or unlawfulness is an attribute of the conduct of the defendant which caused the claimant's loss of liberty."
He recognised the principle at common law that:-
"There may be false imprisonment by A, although it was B who took the person into custody and B acted lawfully, provided that A directly caused B's act and that A's act was done without lawful justification."
Were the Terms of Question 6 Sufficient to Establish that PC Bains was the Prosecutor for the Purposes of the Allegation of Malicious Prosecution? (Ground 2)
"If the discretion is misled by false information, or is otherwise practised upon in order to procure the laying of the charge, those who thus brought about the prosecution are responsible." (Commonwealth Life Assurance Society Limited v Brain [1935] 53 C.L.R. 343 at 379)
"The circumstance that a defendant in an action of malicious prosecution was not technically the prosecutor should not enable him to escape liability where he was in substance the person responsible for the prosecution having been brought." (86B)
"Where an individual falsely and maliciously gives a police officer information indicating that some person is guilty of a criminal offence and states that he is willing to give evidence in court on the matters in question, it is properly to be inferred that he desires and intends that the person he named should be prosecuted." (86G)
"Where the circumstances are such that the facts relating to the alleged defence can be within the knowledge only of the complainant, as was the position here, then it becomes virtually impossible for the police officer to exercise any independent discretion or judgment, and if a prosecution is instituted by the police officer the proper view of the matter is that the prosecution has been procured by the complainant," (page 86H)
Mr Garnham QC argued that it could not possibly be said that it was "virtually impossible" for PC Cooper to exercise an independent discretion or judgment, still less for the CPS, and in those circumstances PC Bains could not be regarded as the prosecutor for the purposes of the claim.
"She claims that not only did she not strike PC Bains but he and other witnesses had deliberately lied about her hitting PC Bains in the face. In particular, she says that PC Bains has deliberately fabricated the story that she hit him – not that he is or might be mistaken but, knowing that she did not hit him, he has made an assertion that he was hit, first to PC Derbyshire very shortly after the events, and he has effectively conspired with at least Police Sgt. Constable, the custody sergeant, and two civilian witnesses who were present in the custody suite at the time, Neil Young and Mark Milsted-Smith, to prepare knowingly false statements upon which Ms Copeland was prosecuted."
Perversity
Lord Justice Patten:
Lord Justice Maurice Kay: