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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions >> Lunn, R v [2008] EWCA Crim 2082 (03 September 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2008/2082.html Cite as: [2008] EWCA Crim 2082, [2009] 1 Cr App Rep (S) 93, [2009] 1 Cr App R (S) 93 |
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CRIMINAL DIVISION
Strand London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE JACK
SIR CHARLES GRAY
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R E G I N A | ||
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JOSEPH JOHN LUNN |
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"You were the manager of a licensed house, a public house, and your responsibilities in running a public house are very much higher than the responsibilities of an ordinary member of the public to prevent the smoking of cannabis. You have a public duty, because you were the manager of a public house. If a private individual allows his own home to be used for the smoking of cannabis, that is a serious matter, but if the manager of a public house allows the public house to be used for the smoking of cannabis, that is much more serious. I look at the circumstances.
On 27th April 2007, police officers came to the road where your public house was situated and the evidence is quite clear, that the smell of cannabis from your public house was so strong that it was immediately apparent to the officers when they parked their car fifty yards away. As the police officers walked the fifty yards from their car to your pub, the smell got stronger and stronger. When they went into the pub, the smell of cannabis in the pool room was very strong indeed and there was evidence, immediate evidence, that cannabis had been supplied in the pub and smoked in the pub.
When the police searched the premises, they found evidence relating to the pool room, they found some cannabis in your bedroom, a small quantity in your bedroom, and they also found a substantial quantity in the private room at the back of the pub in the staff living room. The police officers were asked [in evidence] if it was possible that this cannabis had been smoked by a group of people whom you had just evicted and the police officers replied that that made no sense at all, such was the intensity of the smell of the cannabis that it could only mean that people had been smoking there all day long. That degree, that intensity of cannabis smoke could not have been caused by a group of people who had been smoking for a short time . . .
I cannot accept the proposition that you had taken serious steps to prevent cannabis smoking, which had been going on for many hours.
It is argued that you had taken active steps to discourage cannabis smoking, that you had attended a local forum with the police. The police confirmed that you did attend one meeting, but that you did not do anything significant to participate in that meeting. It is argued that there were posters displayed. Posters are no use unless you, the manager, take steps to enforce the message that drug smoking is not permissible on licensed premises, or at all . . .
The trial started on 13th March, and a fortnight before the trial commenced, those officers went to your public house for a reason that had nothing to do with drugs. They went to the public house in response to a report that there had been an assault . . . but when they got to the pub at 7 minutes past 11 they found that the door was locked. There were people in the pub and they knocked on the door. Someone looked out and shouted 'It's the police'. The curtains opened and then closed again and the police could see people running around inside the pub and it took several minutes before the doors were opened. The police repeatedly knocked on the door and shouted 'Open the doors', but the doors remained closed until you yourself opened them and when the police went into the pub, there was a strong smell of cannabis and there was evidence of cannabis smoking. There were Rizla papers, there were broken down cigarettes. It was obvious that there had been smoking going on, but the five minutes or so that the police had been kept waiting was sufficient to dispose of most of the evidence.
There were only two police officers at that time and it was impossible, in the circumstances, for them to carry out any arrests or carry out any proper investigation and you were never charged with the matter on 1st March, but it was adduced in evidence in the trial and it demonstrated your attitude towards cannabis smoking in the pub, even though you were on bail and were due to face a trial in a fortnight, you were continuing to allow your pub to be used for the smoking of cannabis.
Now I say at once, you are not to be punished for what happened on 1st March, because you have never been charged with that. The significance of the 1st March evidence is solely the light that it throws on what had happened on the previous occasion, 27th April 2007. I am sentencing you for that day and that day alone, but I look at what happened on that day in the light of what happened subsequently and I am forced to the conclusion that you . . . as a manager were perfectly prepared to allow your pub to be used for the purpose of smoking cannabis . . . "