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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> End Violence Against Women Coalition, R (On the Application Of) v Director of Public Prosecutions [2021] EWCA Civ 350 (15 March 2021) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2021/350.html Cite as: [2021] 2 Cr App R 2, [2021] 1 WLR 5829, [2021] WLR(D) 152, [2021] EWCA Civ 350 |
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HEARING THE MATTER OF A JUDICIAL REVIEW
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD CHIEF JUSTICE OF ENGLAND AND WALES
THE RT HON LORD JUSTICE HOLROYDE
and
THE RT HON LADY JUSTICE ELISABETH LAING DBE
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THE QUEEN (On the application of END VIOLENCE AGAINST WOMEN COALITION) |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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THE DIRECTOR OF PUBLIC PROSECUTIONS |
Defendant |
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Tom Little QC and Clair Dobbin (instructed by The Government Legal Department) for the Respondent
Hearing dates: 26 and 27 January 2021
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Crown Copyright ©
Covid-19 Protocol: This judgment was handed down remotely by circulation to the parties' representatives by email, release to BAILII and publication on the Courts and Tribunals Judiciary website. The date and time for hand-down is deemed to be 10:30am on 15 March 2021.
LORD BURNETT OF MALDON CJ:
Introduction
"The fundamental complaint made by the claimant is that the defendant has changed the policy of the Crown Prosecution Service ("the CPS") in relation to the prosecution of rape and other sexual offences since about late 2016. The claimant submits that there has been a change of policy from the merits-based approach to the bookmaker's approach, which is unlawful. In the alternative, the claimant contends that the defendant has taken steps which amount to a change in practice. Even if not in policy. The defendant denies that there has been any change of policy or practice." (para 2)
a) it was irrational.
b) It led to a risk of systemic illegality because it created confusion in the mind of prosecutors about the test they should apply in making decisions whether or not to prosecute.
c) It was unlawful because the DPP should have consulted 'stakeholders' before making the decision, as, by reason of the DPP's previous practice of consultation, they had a legitimate expectation that they would be consulted.
d) The decision was made in breach of section 149 the Equality Act 2010 ('the 2010 Act').
e) The decision was a breach of the DPP's duty of transparency to publish her policies.
The functions of the Director of Public Prosecutions
The statutory provisions
"giving guidance on general principles to be applied by [prosecutors]
(a) in determining in any case –
(i) whether proceedings for an offence should be instituted, or where proceedings have been instituted, whether they should be discontinued; or
(ii) what charges should be preferred; and
(b) in considering, in any case, representations to be made by them to any magistrates' court about the mode of trial suitable for that case."
The merits-based approach
"a purely predictive approach based on past experience of similar cases (the bookmaker's approach) he might well feel unable to conclude that a jury was more likely than not to convict the defendant. But for a Crown prosecutor effectively to adopt a corroboration requirement in such cases, which Parliament has abolished, would be wrong. On the alternative "merits based" approach the question whether the evidential test was satisfied would not depend on statistical guesswork."
Introduction to the facts
"must proceed on the factual basis put forward by the defendant or resolve any disputes of fact in the defendant's favour. This principle has been frequently applied."
It has particular salience in this case because the DPP has put forward a multiplicity of witness evidence, coupled with contemporaneous notes, to rebut the case advanced by the claimant.
The facts
a) It ran counter to common sense to prosecute cases which experienced prosecutors knew they were "bound to lose".
b) It was not in the interests of rape victims to get their hopes up "when we know that the outcome will be unpleasant [cross examination] followed by an acquittal".
c) It meant that prosecutors were applying a lower standard to rape cases than to other offences.
d) It was potentially unfair to defendants to put them through a trial which "we know" will result in an acquittal especially when the complainant is protected but the defendant ends up all over the newspapers.
She hoped to show that "some of these criticisms…are actually wrong" and "even those that are correct are outweighed by the advantages" of the merits-based approach.
"In the context of sexual offences, what this means is that even though past experience might tell a prosecutor that juries can be unwilling to convict…where, for example, there has been a lengthy delay in reporting the offence or the complainant had been drinking at the time the rape was committed, these sorts of prejudices against complainants should be ignored for the purposes of deciding whether or not there is a realistic prospect of conviction.
In other words, the prosecutor should proceed on the basis of a notional jury which is wholly unaffected by myths or stereotypes of the type which, sadly, still have a degree of prevalence in some quarters.
Instead of asking necessarily what is the LIKELIHOOD of conviction we should ask ourselves, what are the MERITS of a conviction - taking into account what we know about the defence case.
May sound like a subjective approach, even a morality judgment.
But it is not; the merits-based approach simply reminds prosecutors of how to approach the evidential stage of the Full Code Test in tricky cases.
It does not establish a different standard for sexual offences."
"Decisions in rape cases are made by specialist prosecutors who operate in [RASSOs] and have received extensive training on how to eliminate so-called myths and stereotypes from their analysis of the evidence. That being said, there is evidence that some degree of oversteering may have taken place since the judgment in FB. Some prosecutors appear to have interpreted the guidance as meaning that all complaints should result in prosecution even when this involves ignoring obvious flaws in the case."
The Merits-based Approach Guidance
"there is the greatest risk that myths and stereotypes will influence a jury and in which, therefore, an assessment based on a predictive or bookmaker's [sic] is most likely to involve a failure to apply the Code. Decisions should not be based on perceptions of how myths and stereotypes might lead a particular jury to reach a particular conclusion. The [merits-based approach] is closely linked to the CPS's determination to avoid flawed review decisions. The word "approach" does not indicate any change to what is always required when applying the [Code], which calls on prosecutors to assess whether a particular outcome is more or less likely, assuming that the case will be considered by 'an objective impartial and reasonable jury or bench of magistrates or judge hearing the case alone, properly directed and acting in accordance with the law."
- The MBA is not a different test, merely the approach we must take in applying the Code test.
- The MBA does not change, or differ from, the Code test.
- It is not new. It is just a different way of expressing what has always been there.
- It applies in all cases, not just rape cases.
- It reflects the requirement to assume that every case will be considered by an objective, impartial and reasonable tribunal, properly directed and acting in accordance with the law, who will decide cases in the light of the evidence they have heard in court without being influenced by anything else.
- It requires an objective assessment of the factors which potentially undermine the case for the prosecution or assist the case for the defence. It does not involve suspending judgement but it does require prosecutors to take objective decisions which are fair and reasonable. Any decision which takes into account subject matters like myths and stereotypes, preconceptions and predications based on previous cases cannot be an objective decision
The decision under challenge
"[My] experience was that some prosecutors understood the merits-based approach was encompassed within the evidential test in the Code…but that others thought the merits-based approach implied a presumption of prosecution. There was a concern on my part that there was inconsistency across the country. That there was an issue is borne out by the work done by Mr McGill in 2016."
"the core message that RASSO prosecutors were to approach the evidential test disregarding myths and stereotypes and were not to use the bookmaker's approach".
"felt that there was (a) an expectation that they should be prosecuting cases of rape without properly applying the evidential test and (b) there was confusion as to how to properly apply the full Code test."
The RASSO roadshows
"whether you are off course in the first place. So I hope to reiterate the approach we should be taking and give some practical advice on how to apply it – if that is the course you are already steering, perfect – don't change a thing. If not, then I hope what I say helps"
The aim was to help prosecutors to feel "more confident" when making decisions and to "put the merits-based approach in its proper place…"
- The belief that the MBA permits or even requires them to charge despite factors which undermine the evidence pointing to guilt;
- The 'enduring impression' from the lectures delivered by Ms Levitt that charging was to be encouraged in, for instance, a "one person's word" case; and
- A concern/fear that their decision might be overturned on [victim's right of review].
Changes to the CPS Guidance
The live grounds of challenge
Discussion
The legal effect of the decision
Was the decision irrational?
Did the decision create a risk of systemic illegality?
Should the DPP have consulted before making the decision?
Did the DPP breach section 149 of the Equality Act 2010?
Did the DPP breach the duty of transparency?
Conclusion
"...the claimant's grounds of challenge all, with the possible exception of [transparency], rest upon a factual foundation which is fundamentally disputed by the [DPP]."
She explained why in law the evidence filed for the DPP should be preferred and then why the claim was bound to fail.