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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 >> Winters v R [2008] EWCA Crim 2953 (10 December 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2008/2953.html Cite as: [2009] Lloyd's Rep FC 189, [2008] EWCA Crim 2953 |
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Attorney General Ref: 2-2008 |
COURT OF APPEAL (CRIMINAL DIVISION)
Reference by the Attorney General and appeal from the Crown Court at Winchester
HHJ Hooton
T20037191
Royal Courts of Justice Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE DAVIES
and
DAME HEATHER STEEL DBE
Attorney General's Reference No. 2 of 2008 (Andrew James Winter)
Between:
____________________
Andrew James Winters |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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Regina |
Respondent |
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WordWave International Limited
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S Whitehouse and S Donnelly for the Respondent
Hearing date: 18 November 2008
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Crown Copyright ©
LORD JUSTICE HOOPER:
"What, he was living off the income that you've seen, along with my mum, along with her pension, along with whatever she was getting for her disability, whatever that was, whenever that came about. My dad was getting a carer's allowance as well. He was getting help from the council regarding various things about the property and disability."
"Subject to sub-sections (4) and (5) below, the Crown Court, for the purpose-
(a) of determining whether the defendant has benefitted from drug trafficking, and
(b) if he has, of assessing the value of his proceeds of drug trafficking,
make the required assumptions."
"The required assumptions are:
(a) that any property appearing to the court-
(i) to have been held by the defendant at any time since his conviction, or
(ii) to have been transferred to him at any time since the beginning of the period of six years ending when the proceedings were instituted against him,
was received by him … as a payment … in connection with drug trafficking carried on by him ;
(b) that any expenditure of his since the beginning of that period was met out of payments received by him in connection with drug trafficking carried on by him;
(c) …
"The words "appearing to the court" [in the similarly worded section 2 of the Drug Trafficking Offences Act 1986] in our judgment mean that if there is prima facie evidence that any property has been held by the defendant since his conviction or was transferred to him since the beginning of the relevant period, the judge may make the assumption that it was a payment or reward in connection with his drug trafficking.
Likewise with expenditure, once there is prima facie evidence of expenditure by the defendant since the beginning of the relevant period, the judge can assume that it was met out of payments received by him from drug trafficking."
"A resulting trust may arise solely by operation of law, as where, upon a purchase of land, one person provides the purchase money and the conveyance is taken in the name of another; there is then a presumption of a resulting trust in favour of the person providing the money, unless from the relation between the two, or from other circumstances, it appears that a gift was intended."
60. ... The search is to ascertain the parties' shared intentions, actual, inferred or imputed, with respect to the property in the light of their whole course of conduct in relation to it.
"114. ... Where there is evidence of the parties' respective contributions to the purchase price (and no other relevant evidence) and one of the parties has contributed X%, the fact that the purchase is in the sole name of the other does not prevent the former owning X% of the beneficial interest on a resulting trust basis. Indeed, it is because of the resulting trust presumption that such ownership arises. It seems to me that consistency suggests that the party who contributed X% of the purchase price should be entitled to X% (no more and no less) of the beneficial interest in the same way if he is a co-purchaser. The resulting trust presumption arises because it is assumed that neither party intended a gift of any part of his own contribution to the other party."
"It was understood that we would continue to pay the mortgage and my wife and I would continue to live in the house which would remain our property."
"We continued paying the mortgage and we had an expectation that when the business got on its feet Andrew would repay money (sic). However the business went bust and we were never repaid."
"By [1987] our son Andrew, had got into financial difficulties and needed to raise cash. We wanted to help him and we decided to re-mortgage the property. We approached the Woolwich for this purpose. However, my wife and I were considered too old to take on the re-mortgage. By then I had retired from my occupation as a toolmaker. The company suggested that if the title in the property was transferred to our son, Andrew, then they could offer the mortgage. We agree to this because we wanted to help our son but all of us regarded the transfer of ownership as a device to allow the re-mortgage. My wife and I remained the owners of the house. No payment from Andrew or ourselves was required for the re-mortgage. All of the money received from it went to Andrew to allow him to pay his debts. I believe he received about £20,000 for this purpose."
The following facts support the presumption [that with the appellant's legal ownership went the beneficial ownership]:
(i) The offender declared himself to be the owner when he borrowed £42,000 from the Woolwich Building Society in June 1987. On the basis of this assertion the building society extended loan facilities to him and took a charge over the property to secure his borrowings. If he was not the legal and beneficial owner then the loan was obtained fraudulently.
(ii) If the offender had defaulted on his mortgage repayments the Building Society would have been entitled to seek repossession of 2 Stavordale Road to recover the funds. There would have been no question of beneficial ownership being vested in Mr. and Mrs. William Winters.
(iii) At the end of 2002 the offender applied for a mortgage to buy a property at 6 Apers Avenue. The offender's evidence at the confiscation hearing was that this property was for his ailing parents. The fact that the offender required a mortgage to buy this property suggests that 2 Stavordale Road was not to be sold to fund the purchase but, rather, retained for the offender's use as the owner while his parents moved into 6 Apers Avenue. In the mortgage application form the offender confirmed that he would not be selling 2 Stavordale Road (see Document bundle p. 84). It appears that contracts were exchanged in relation to this property but the transaction was never completed.
(iv) The offender also sought a re-mortgage of £135,000 at the end of 2002 (Document bundle p. 49). The application was granted by Halifax Bank of Scotland PLC. The offender requested that the surplus funds of £67,000 arising from the re-mortgage be paid into his own current account (Document bundle p. 65). These funds do not appear to have been paid to the offender's father.
(v) Extracts from intercepted telephone conversations between the offender and a co-offender, Paul Murphy, in April 2003 include references by the offender to "his" mortgage with the Woolwich. The offender spoke of re-mortgaging Stavordale Road for an additional £60,000 in order to raise funds for a deposit on another property. The inference to be drawn is that this was Apers Avenue.
(vi) In another intercepted conversation in April 2003 the offender spoke of his mortgage being "bang up to date" and said that he had recently re-negotiated his mortgage to reduce the payments still further. The implication is that the offender viewed 2 Stavordale Road as his property to use as he thought fit.
(vii) Cautions were registered on 2 Stavordale Road by Maria Winters and by the trustee in bankruptcy. No protest was made at the time that the property was owned by Mr. and Mrs. William Winters rather than the offender.
(viii) William Winters and his wife made a declaration to The Land Registry that 2 Stavordale Road was transferred to the offender for consideration of £55,000. It appears that that was a lie and that there was no consideration. The house was transferred as a gift. (Document bundle p. 11).
(ix) The offender stayed at 2 Stavordale Road whenever he was in the United Kingdom and was at that address when he was arrested. He declared on his mortgage application forms that it had been his home for 25 years. (Document bundle pp. 38, 79).
(x) The Judge found that the offender was making the mortgage repayments on the property between 1st January 2000 and 1st April 2004."