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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Squire v Thames Valley Police & Anor (R. on the Application of) [2016] EWCA Civ 1315 (21 December 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2016/1315.html Cite as: [2016] EWCA Civ 1315 |
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ON APPEAL FROM ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Mr Justice Mitting
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LADY JUSTICE RAFFERTY DBE
and
LORD JUSTICE FLOYD
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MICHAEL SQUIRE |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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(1) THE QUEEN (on the application of the Chief Constable of Thames Valley Police) and (2) THE POLICE APPEALS TRIBUNAL |
Respondent |
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David Lock QC and Stephen Morley (instructed by Thames Valley Police Legal Services) for the 1st Respondent
Hearing date: 6th December 2016
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Crown Copyright ©
Lady Justice Rafferty:
"…[Ms Evans] gave her evidence in a direct manner with no uncertainty and no hesitation. She did not alter her evidence over the course of some seven hours of questioning. Her account of the salient features of each incident was cogent, credible and consistent throughout. She appeared to us to be someone who was doing her best to help us…..We did not find DI Squire to be a convincing witness. He gave answers to questions that were guarded and short. His answers frequently appeared to us to be the product of an analysis of the allegations rather than his simply recounting the facts as he remembered them…in general terms, we prefer her evidence to his…..DI Squire's conduct during cross examination sadly did not mirror the comments made in either his PDR's or testimonials, his answers were vague and obtuse (sic) and we believe that this was deliberate…"
"The evidence relied upon …included hearsay…. We ruled that that evidence was admissible despite it being hearsay. However when the witnesses came to give-oral evidence, none of that evidence was supported by the officers who were mentioned as having made the comments. In the circumstances we did not consider it to be fair to DI Squire for us to place any reliance on any evidence of that type."
"…most of the makers of the statements were not only available but gave evidence before the panel. It follows that the hearsay element of DC Payne's statement relating to the Roxborough, Neal, Wise comments was inadmissible, at least until those witnesses had given evidence….Central to our decision is our finding that the panel wrongly admitted hearsay evidence of a prejudicial nature. Having done so, the panel went on to assess the credibility of the two main protagonists, DI Squire and Mrs Evans and found against the Appellant on allegations where it was only Mrs Evans' word against DI Squire's"
"...[there was] ....a real possibility or danger that the panel was biased and that a fair-minded and informed observer would have so concluded or perceived it to be……..the panel, having decided to admit hearsay evidence, misdirected itself, thus making its decision as to its finding unreasonable."
"These were not conclusions the [PAT] was entitled to reach…..The panel was a professional or semi-professional panel. It made it clear beyond doubt that it had put DC Payne's evidence, except that about the complaints made to her by Jaimie Evans, entirely out of account when assessing the strength of the case against DI Squire. In the absence of evidence to show that it did not do so, its reasoning is to be accepted, as the Tribunal itself recognised…..There was no such evidence, other, perhaps, than the [PAT]'s reasoning about the three incidents. It is only if that reasoning must be accepted that the [PAT]'s conclusion on this issue might be capable of being sustained. It cannot be."
As to unreasonableness he found that no matters:
"…could reasonably lead the [PAT] to have concluded that the core evidence of Jaimie Evans was undermined, let alone so undermined that the panel was bound either to disbelieve it or to treat it as unreliable."
Discussion and conclusion
"….the panel itself had admitted DC Payne's evidence in the knowledge that other witnesses' statements did not support her and in the almost certain expectation that the witnesses would not do so when they came to give evidence, as, indeed, was the case."
"...the panel ought to have stated in its findings that it had considered the point, gone on to explain how it had approached it and given its conclusions upon it."
"I am sorry to have to say that the reasoning of the Tribunal was flimsy and illogical. Its conclusion is unsustainable and cannot stand. Its reasoning and conclusions do not begin to undermine the clearly stated and well-reasoned conclusion of the panel that in her core account about the most serious of the allegations Jaimie Evans told the truth. On that basis, there was no room for the finding that the proceedings before the panel were unfair, or that their approach to their task or their conclusion were unreasonable."
"DI Squire appealed against the sanction of immediate dismissal. For obvious reasons, the appeal tribunal made no finding on that submission. It should now do so. Accordingly I remit the appeal to the same panel, if possible, for it to consider the appeal against sanction."
Lord Justice Floyd:
Lord Justice Gross: