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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions >> CPS (Durham) v N [2009] EWCA Crim 1573 (28 July 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2009/1573.html Cite as: [2010] 1 Cr App Rep (S) 82, [2009] EWCA Crim 1573, [2010] 2 WLR 788, [2010] QB 678, [2010] 1 QB 678, [2009] Crim LR 811, [2010] 1 Cr App R (S) 82 |
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2008/05591/D5(2) 2008/02215/B2(3) |
COURT OF APPEAL (CRIMINAL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE CROWN COURT AT DURHAM (1)
MR RECORDER ATHERTON
ON APPEAL FROM THE CROWN COURT AT NOTTINGHAM (2)
HIS HONOUR JUDGE TEARE
ON APPEAL FROM THE CROWN COURT AT LUTON (3)
HIS HONOUR JUDGE KAY QC
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE COLLINS
and
MR JUSTICE OWEN
____________________
CPS (Durham) |
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- v - |
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N (1) CPS (Nottingham) V P (2) R -v- Paulet (3) |
____________________
Mr W Grier for Nelson (1)
Mr S. Farrell QC and Mr J. Ashley-Norman for the CPS (Nottingham)
Mr R.C. Mayo and Miss Carter-Manning for Pathak (2)
Mr T. Owen QC and Mr A. Bodnar for Paulet (3)
Mr S. Farrell QC for the Crown
Hearing dates : 9th June 2009
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Crown Copyright ©
The Lord Chief Justice of England and Wales:
John Nelson – the facts
Didier Paulet – the Facts
Ramesh Pathak
Jurisdiction
Abuse of Process
"This jurisdiction must be exercised with considerable caution, indeed sparingly. It must be confined to cases of true oppression. In particular, it cannot be exercised simply on the grounds that the judge disagrees with the decision of the Crown to pursue confiscation, or with the way it puts its case on that topic."
We repeat what was said in this court at an earlier hearing involving Paulet.
"The abuse of process jurisdiction is one which needs to be exercised with great circumspection. The jurisdiction cannot be converted on a case by case basis into a structure which involves, on proper analysis, something like wholesale undermining of the statutory provisions. It is not easy to conclude that it is an abuse of process for those responsible for enforcing legislation to see that it is indeed properly enforced."
"…the critical time at which the court looks to ascertain whether a benefit has been obtained is the date when the offence is committed. It is not for the court, as the House of Lords have said, to have regard to the subsequent consequences of the crime or events which may befall the property".
The "benefits" are to be assessed in accordance with the statutory provisions, and in the light of the statutory assumptions. The assessment having been made, the defendant must be ordered to fund the confiscation order from the proceeds of his crime if they are available, or, if he has dissipated the proceeds, from funds lawfully available to him.
"…
(i) Principles to be applied when determining whether a defendant's case properly falls within the relevant statutory regime for confiscation.
(ii) Two examples of how the principles apply to particular sets of facts.
(iii) The exercise of the prosecutor's discretions.
(iv) Some examples of when it may be inappropriate for prosecutors to decide to instigate confiscations proceedings."
"If confiscation is to be tempered by the existence of an expectation of recovery proceedings taken by the victim, why should it not likewise be tempered by the more favourable fact that the victim has already been compensated by the time the confiscation proceedings are taken?" (Paragraph 19)
The court answered:
"We have strained to find an answer to this conundrum. The discretion which is imported by section 6(6) giving rise to the power to make a just order is very strictly limited. It does not appear to us…that there is any simple answer to the question. It seems to us on further reflection that the question must be this. Where at the time of making the confiscation order there are proceedings or anticipated proceedings for the compensation of the victim, the court does have the power to temper the confiscation order to ensure that the victim receives his compensation, the amount of which at the time of those proceedings or intended proceedings may still be uncertain
The court concluded:
Where, however, at the time of the consideration of the confiscation order there is no remaining issue as to compensation, there is accordingly no need for any such tempering and the court is then required to examine in the conventional way, under the strictly drawn provisions of the Act, the amount of the benefit and the amount of the available assets which in many cases, though not this case, will by then have already been reduced by the payment of compensation so as to bring the available assets below the amount of the benefit so assessed."
Conclusion – Nelson
"There is a real danger in judicial exegesis of an expression with a plain English meaning, since the exegesis may be substituted for the language of the legislation. It is, however, relevant to remember that the object of the legislation is to deprive the defendant of The product of his crime or its equivalent, not to operate by way of fine. The rationale of the confiscation regime is that the defendant is deprived of what he has gained or its equivalent. He cannot, and should not, be deprived of what he has never obtained or its equivalent, because that is a fine. This must ordinarily mean that he has obtained property so as to own it, whether alone or jointly, which will ordinarily connote a power of disposition or control, as where a person directs a payment or conveyance of property to someone else".
Within the present context, the confiscation order did not amount to a fine.
Conclusion – Paulet
Conclusion – Pathak