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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions >> Crown Prosecution Service v C & Ors [2009] EWCA Crim 2614 (11 December 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2009/2614.html Cite as: [2009] EWCA Crim 2614 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CRIMINAL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM WOOLWICH CROWN COURT
HIS HONOUR JUDGE SHORROCK
T20097113, T20097121
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE TUGENDHAT
and
HIS HONOUR JUDGE PERT QC
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Crown Prosecution Service |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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C, M and H |
Respondents |
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Mr J Anders (instructed by JB Wheatley & Co Solicitors) for the Respondent C
Mr H Puri (instructed by MK Law Solicitors) for the Respondent M
Mr T Brown (instructed by Tuckers Solicitors) for the Respondent H
Hearing dates : 08th September 2009
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Rix :
The Criminal Justice Act 2003
"58.–(1) This section applies where a judge makes a ruling in relation to a trial on indictment at an applicable time and the ruling relates to one or more offences included in the indictment.
(2) The prosecution may appeal in respect of the ruling in accordance with this section.
(3) The ruling is to have no effect whilst the prosecution is able to take any steps under subsection (4).
(4) The prosecution may not appeal in respect of the ruling unless –
(a) following the making of the ruling, it –
(i) informs the court that it intends to appeal, or
(ii) requests an adjournment to consider whether to appeal, and
(b) if such an adjournment is granted, it informs the court following the adjournment that it intends to appeal.
(5) If the prosecution requests an adjournment under subsection (4)(a)(ii), the judge may grant such an adjournment…
(8) The prosecution may not inform the court in accordance with subsection (4) that it intends to appeal, unless, at or before that time, it informs the court that it agrees that, in respect of the offence or each offence which is the subject of the appeal, the defendant in relation to that offence should be acquitted of that offence if either of the conditions mentioned in subsection (9) is fulfilled.
(9) Those conditions are –
(a) that leave to appeal to the Court of Appeal is not obtained, and
(b) that the appeal is abandoned before it is determined by the Court of Appeal.
(10) If the prosecution informs the court in accordance with subsection (4) that it intends to appeal, the ruling mentioned in subsection (1) is to continue to have no effect in relation to the offence or offences which are the subject of the appeal whilst the appeal is pursued.
(11) If and to the extent that a ruling has no effect in accordance with this section –
(a) any consequences of the ruling are also to have no effect,
(b) the judge may not take any steps in consequence of the ruling, and
(c) if he does so, any such steps are also to have no effect.
(12) Where the prosecution has informed the court of its agreement under subsection (8) and either of the conditions mentioned in subsection (9) is fulfilled, the judge or the Court of Appeal must order that the defendant in relation to the offence or each offence concerned be acquitted of that offence.
(13) In this section "applicable time", in relation to a trial on indictment, means any time (whether before or after the commencement of the trial) before the time when the judge starts his summing-up to the jury.
"67.1–(1) This Part applies where a prosecutor wants to appeal under section 58(2) of the Criminal Justice Act 2003.
(2) A reference to an "appellant" in this Part is a reference to such a prosecutor.
67.2–(1) An appellant must tell the Crown Court judge of any decision to appeal –
(a) immediately after the ruling against which the appellant wants to appeal; or
(b) on the expiry of the time to decide whether to appeal allowed under paragraph (2).
(2) If an appellant wants time to decide whether to appeal –
(a) the appellant must ask the Crown Court judge immediately after the ruling; and
(b) the general rule is that the judge must not require the appellant to decide there and then but instead must allow until the next business day."
The factual background
The 27 May 2009 hearing
"K. Your Honour, before you make that direction, may I invite the court to postpone this case for a short time –
HHJ: No. Your application is refused.
K. – so that I can make some –
HHJ. You want go ahead, we will go ahead. Can I have a jury, please?
K. May I make one further submission in that case, your Honour? It seems to me – and I have to say, I have not come prepared to respond to this particular outcome – that the effect of your Honour's order, because, of course, your Honour, I do not have witnesses here to call –
HHJ. Indeed not, no. You are going to have to offer no evidence and somebody is going to have to go and explain to the victim why this has happened.
K. Your Honour, I understand that. It occurs to me, therefore, that in effect, what your Honour's order may be is effectively a terminating ruling against the Crown, for which we may have the right to appeal against. I think under the guidance, I am obliged to seek an adjournment, at least for a short time, to take instructions as to whether we would seek to appeal such a ruling. I can do that now or later in the day, but, your Honour, it seems to me that the effect of what your Honour is ordering is a terminating ruling or may well be argued as one in due course.
HHJ. Again, Mr Kelleher, I accept readily I am forcing your hand. I am going to ask for a jury to be brought into court and this trial will start as soon as it has been sworn in. You will then have to offer no evidence. If you want to go elsewhere and complain about what I have done, you are more than welcome to do so.
K. Very well.
HHJ. Do you want a jury?
K. Your Honour, there is no point because it is a matter of bringing twelve people in for me to say, "We are offering no evidence".
HHJ. Precisely so.
K. I have no instructions to offer no evidence.
HHJ. No, indeed you do not.
K. It would be wrong for me to simply say we are offering no evidence. We do have evidence. If a jury were sworn and your Honour adjourned for the rest of the day, I would have witnesses here who would, no doubt, be summoned. I would call them and then we would have a case against all three defendants.
HHJ. Assuming I were to adjourn the case for the rest of the day, but I can tell you now, I am not prepared to.
K. Well, in that case, it is entirely a formality. I have no evidence if forced to call it now, plainly.
HHJ. Then I am forcing your hand. Jury, please.
K. Your Honour, it is a pointless exercise, with great respect, your Honour. If your Honour, in effect, means, I am forced to offer no evidence, then that is what I must do, but as your Honour knows, I have no instructions to do that.
HHJ. No, no. I quite appreciate that…I am trying to protect you…Then you can say, "I had no choice in the matter."
K. Your Honour, there is a representative, fortunately, from the Crown Prosecution Service in court. He hears what is going on. I think in those circumstances there is really no point in having twelve people brought in for the sake of it for an outcome which is obvious, so, your Honour, I have to offer no evidence…
HHJ. ...In those circumstances, no evidence having been offered against each of the defendants on both of the counts on the indictment, I formally acquit each of the three of you in relation to these two counts. I order that verdicts of not guilty be entered on the file in relation to each of you. So far as this court is concerned with regard to this case, that is the end of the matter…Mr Kelleher…I repeat, I know it is not your fault…but this kind of thing has been happening far too frequently here. If it takes a serious case to make sure that the wheels start to turn properly and on time, well, it has at least served its purpose."
"Where a defendant arraigned on an indictment or inquisition pleads not guilty and the prosecutor proposes to offer no evidence against him, the court before which the defender is arraigned may, if it thinks fit, order that a verdict of not guilty shall be recorded without any further steps being taken in the proceedings, and the verdict shall have the same effect as if the defendant had been tried and acquitted on the verdict of a jury or a court."
"instructed to notify the court that the Crown will be seeking an appeal under section 58 of the Criminal Justice Act in relation to what will be submitted as a terminating ruling…I think there is a slight ambiguity in the rules as to whether the ruling having been made and the consequences that have flown from it having happened, whether we are still under a duty to notify your Honour. For the avoidance of doubt, I do so. We will obviously serve notice on all parties in due course."
The submissions
The jurisprudence on section 58
"…and in this particular case its effect, unless successfully appealed would have been to require the prosecution to offer no further evidence, thus in effect terminating the trial."
"it is very difficult to see why the rules should mandate so rigid and inflexible approach as advanced…and there is good practical reason why it should not."
"prosecuting counsel must be alive to the fact that if a ruling is made they will either have to take an immediate decision or they will have to request an adjournment to consider whether to appeal."
Therefore the prosecution's application for leave to appeal was likely to "fail at the first hurdle", and this was emphasised by the terms of Rule 67.2 with its repeated use of the word "immediately".
"The prosecutor could have given notice under Article 4 that he intended to appeal the first ruling, and if he had, that ruling would then have been of no effect pending appeal: see Article 4(10). However, he did not do so. Instead, the ruling was given effect by the directed acquittal of the defendant on the first charge of unfitness to drive. There is no power to appeal, under Article 4, following acquittal by the tribunal of fact. Nor would there be any such power to appeal under s 58 Criminal Justice Act 2003 following acquittal by a jury in the Crown Court. The prosecution has no appeal against acquittal; the only possible procedure open to it is a reference on a point of law by the Attorney-General under s 36 Criminal Justice Act 1972. That of course is a procedure which determines the law but does not affect the acquittal of the particular defendant. No such reference is before us. For these reasons, we cannot entertain the Crown's appeal in respect of the first charge of unfitness to drive."
"23…Thus [article 4(4)] stipulates that the prosecution can only appeal if it tells the court it is going to do so, either immediately following the ruling or after time to reflect has been granted. But the Order (like the statute) goes on to impose a further condition on when the prosecutor can inform the court that it intends to appeal. The further condition is in Article 4(8)…
24. The transcript demonstrates that at no time on 13 December [the day of the rulings] did the prosecutor inform the court that he agreed that the defendant should be acquitted of either charge if the paragraph 9 conditions should be fulfilled…The article 4(8)/s 58(8) undertaking (or 'acquittal agreement': see R v. R [2008] EWCA Crim 370 at para 19) is crucial to this new right of appeal. It is that which determines whether there is a right of appeal or not…The criterion for the right to seek leave to appeal is the giving of the acquittal agreement as acceptance of the price of failure. In the present case the Crown did not accept this price of failure until service of the written notice of appeal…"
"26…But whatever may be the precise Parliamentary history, we are unable to see how these statutory provisions can be read as meaning anything other than that there is no right of appeal unless the undertaking is given to the court of trial at the time of the announcement of the intention to appeal. The Order, with s 58 if the Criminal Justice Act 2003, represents a major departure from the former law. The Crown is given a right of appeal in relation to trial on indictment for the first time. Moreover, it is given a right of interlocutory appeal. The new right is given on strict terms. It may be that the new right could have been as effectively controlled if the statute and order had provided that whether or not an undertaking in the terms of article 4(8) was given in open court, any appeal was to be on terms that if leave were refused, or the appeal abandoned, or it failed in due course, acquittal should follow. Or it may be that alternative form of control would not be so effective. What is clear is that alternative form of control is not what has been enacted. The words 'may not…unless, at or before that time' must be given their effect. They require the giving of the undertaking in open court at the time of invocation of the right of appeal and they say that the prosecution "may not" inform the court it intends to appeal, unless this is done…
27. As we have made clear, Article 4 of the Order is in terms materially identical to section 58 Criminal Justice Act 2003. Prosecutors who wish to launch appeals against rulings must give the article 4(8)/section 58(8) undertaking in open court at the time of invoking the right of appeal. We are not asked to consider whether it can be given in shorthand or by reference to the statute; given, however, it must be, and that must happen at or before the time of invoking the right of appeal."
Discussion on jurisdiction
Reasonableness of the ruling
Conclusion