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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions >> Ahmad & Anor v R [2012] EWCA Crim 391 (02 March 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2012/391.html Cite as: [2012] EWCA Crim 391, [2012] STC 1239, [2012] Lloyd's Rep FC 413, [2012] Crim LR 468, [2012] 2 Cr App R (S) 85, [2012] 1 WLR 2335, [2012] WLR(D) 62, [2012] 2 All ER 1137, [2012] STI 546 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE CROWN COURT AT NORTHAMPTON
FLAUX J
T20067108
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
SIR CHRISTOPHER HOLLAND
and
RECORDER OF NOTTINGHAM
(SITTING AS A JUDGE OF THE COURT OF APPEAL CRIMINAL DIVISION)
____________________
SHAKEEL AHMAD SYED MUBARAK AHMED |
Appellants |
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- and - |
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THE CROWN |
Respondent |
____________________
SIR D. SPENCER QC and MR J. KINNEAR appeared for the Respondent.
Hearing date: 14th July 2011
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Hooper:
Background
The facts- a broad overview
The benefit
"There might be circumstances in which orders for the full amount against several defendants might be disproportionate and contrary to article 1 of the First Protocol, and in such cases an apportionment approach might be adopted, but that was not the situation here and the total of the confiscation orders made by the judge fell well below the sum of which the Revenue had been cheated."
"[It] was divided, part of it being used to discount the sales through the carousel and part of it laundered into so-called cashing-up accounts of entities which were not concerned with the carousel transactions but which allowed their accounts to be used for these purposes. The money which went into these accounts was withdrawn in cash or used to buy gold bullion, neither of which could be traced."
Obtains property in connection with the commission of the offence
"13. ... 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." (Emphasis added)
"The section [section 71(1A) of the 1988 Act, the precursor to s 6 of POCA] is not to be construed so that a person may be held to have obtained property or derived a pecuniary advantage when a proper view of the evidence demonstrates that he has not in fact done so."
This passage was cited with apparent approval by the House of Lords in May, at paragraph 19.
"36. So far as the second limb is concerned -- that is in relation to the £55,000 being the purchase value of the motor vessel -- this was hardly pursued by Mr Newbury [counsel for the Crown]. It appears clear to us that, quite apart from the issue whether it could be a benefit to the appellant 'as a result of or in connection with' the offence that a boat was purchased in his name to use in the offence, the fact is that any such benefit which might otherwise have been arguable under the Act was not obtained by him, and certainly at the date of the confiscation order he had no such benefit, because of the boat itself being forfeited. In those circumstances the entirety of the sum which formed the basis of the certified sum, which led on to the sum by way of realisable assets which formed the basis of the confiscation order, falls away."
31. In their judgment the Court of Appeal touched only briefly on a further issue which "was hardly pursued" by counsel for the Crown in the proceedings before them. This related to the value of The Vertine which had been purchased in the respondent's name with moneys provided by Marriott. The argument for the Crown was that this was property which the respondent had obtained in connection with the commission of the offence. The Court of Appeal held that, even if the respondent had obtained any such benefit, he no longer had it at the date of the confiscation order since The Vertine had been forfeited. Mr Emmerson did not seek to support this aspect of the reasoning of the Court of Appeal, which is plainly inconsistent with the terms of sections 71(4) and 74(5). Not surprisingly, in view of the lack of prominence given to the issue before them, the Court of Appeal did not certify it as one of public importance and the House did not give leave to appeal in respect of it.
32. Nonetheless during the hearing Mr Mitchell argued that the respondent had obtained the boat in connection with the commission of the offence and that he had accordingly benefited to the extent of its value. Since I would allow the appeal and restore the confiscation order for £46,250, which exhausts the respondent's realisable assets, this point is entirely academic. In these circumstances I would say only this. Even on the Crown approach, it was not entirely clear, on the available evidence, what the value of the boat would have been to the respondent at the time when he obtained it (section 74(5)). For that reason I should not be taken as necessarily accepting the Crown's submission that the respondent had obtained property worth £55,000 to him by virtue of the transaction involving The Vertine.
"18. The judge was correct for a second reason which is based on comments which were made by Lord Rodger of Earlsferry in Cadman Smith case. He said, first, at paragraph 21:
'The measure of his benefit is the value of the property so obtained.'
Lord Rodger then went on to say at paragraph 23:
'...the courts have consistently held that 'payments' received in connection with drug trafficking mean gross payments rather than net profit and that 'proceeds' of drug trafficking mean a gross payments rather than net profit after deducting the cost of the drug trafficking operation.'
We accept that these comments relate to the proceeds of drug trafficking but, in our view, they are equally applicable to cases of evading duty and by analogy to circumstances such as those in the present appeal where the court is required to assess the benefit of criminal conduct involving importation of goods purchased abroad. In those circumstances, the court is not concerned solely with the duty evaded but, with the total value of the property involved. This value must include the purchase price of the goods."
"Our third reason for accepting the contentions of the respondent flows from the wording of the statutory provisions because the court has to ask itself two questions. The first is whether the defendant has benefited from his criminal conduct. In this case, the answer must be in the affirmative, as the appellant obtained tobacco which he purchased. The second question, based on section 76(4) is whether the appellant obtained property "as a result of or in connection with" the conduct of evading excise duty. In this case the answer must be that the appellant obtained property, namely the tobacco. This was the only property that he obtained and in reaching that conclusion, we have noted the width of the words used in the statutory provision because they talk about a person who obtains property "as a result of or in connection with his conduct". The words "as a result of" apply to any consequence, while the words "in connection with" widen that meaning. In our view, the acquisition of property and this tobacco falls clearly within both those categories."
"20. The fourth reason why we regard the respondent's submissions as being correct is the use of the word "property" in section 76(4). It is significant because the focus is not on the benefit which the appellant obtained as a result of his smuggling (namely the evasion of duty) but what "property" he received and again, that must be tobacco.
21. The fifth reason why we agree with the judge is that the submission of the appellant would mean that the statutory provision has to be re-written so that the word "profit" is introduced to define the word "property". That is not permissible and we have already stated that the Appellate Committee in May was saying that the words should be given their common sense meaning."
"No sooner did it appear that the Court of Appeal was, at long last, prepared to countenance a measure of proportionality in its approach to the confiscation legislation (see R. v. Sivaraman [2008] 8 Archbold News 3, C.A. (CLW/08/34/19)), than it takes two steps backwards. There has been a long and sorry history to the Court of Appeal's treatment of this legislation, and this represents a new low.
It is worth spelling out the practical effect of the decision. Had the offender succeeded in smuggling the tobacco into this country, he would have been in possession of tobacco for which he had paid £14,000 and he would have evaded paying the duty which he ought to have paid to the tune of £27,505. As it was, however, the goods which he had bought for £14,000 were forfeited, he was punished for the offence itself (18 months' imprisonment), and he was ordered to pay not only the duty notionally evaded (£27,500 - about which there was, and could be, no complaint: R. v. Smith (David) [2002] 1 WLR 54, H.L. (CLW/01/45/10)) but also the £14,000 which he had already paid over again. And this, the court seemingly regarded (see [23]), as a 'proportionate response'.
How was it possible for the Court of Appeal to arrive at this conclusion? It purported to rely on the legislation itself, and on the decisions of the House of Lords in Smith (David) and R. v. May [2008] 2 WLR 1131, H.L. (CLW/08/19/9). Anybody familiar with the Act and with those decisions will be bemused as to how they could lead to this result. As to Smith (David), the allegation was an identical one of smuggling tobacco. It was held by the House of Lords that the appellant had obtained a pecuniary advantage as a result of, or in connection with, his offence, even though the contraband had been recovered by Customs and Excise, the value of the pecuniary advantage being the amount of duty evaded. Under the legislation he was then to be taken to have obtained a sum of money equal to the value of the pecuniary advantage (see now s.76(5) of the 2002 Act (Archbold, 2008, § 5-637)). It was never once suggested in that case that the appellant actually obtained property (as opposed to being treated as if he had done so), and, certainly, it was never once suggested that he obtained the tobacco itself as a result of or in connection with the offence (i.e. as "property" within section 71(4) of the Criminal Justice Act 1988 (now s.76(4) of the 2002 Act)). On the contrary, Lord Rodger (at p.63A) contemplated the situation as it would have been had the appellant and his companions been successful in smuggling the tobacco. He said that had they been able to sell the cigarettes, 'then the money which they received from selling them would have been 'property' in terms of section 71(4). In that situation, they would not only have derived a pecuniary advantage in terms of section 71(5) from evading the duty but would also have obtained property in terms of section 71(4) in the form of sales receipts. Their benefit from the commission of the offence would have been made up of two elements.' According to the Court of Appeal in this case, however, the benefit was made up of two elements even where the contraband was seized before there was any opportunity for onward sale. Were there any substance to this proposition, it would surely have been made by the House of Lords in Smith (David).
"48. …[the] appellant did not obtain the items in connection with any criminal conduct. His criminal conduct in participating in the conspiracy formed no part of the transactions by which he acquired the various items. Their acquisition was by way of lawful purchase for value. We accept that these transactions were entered into for the purpose of criminal conduct, but that is not necessarily a state of affairs caught by section 76(4)."
"22. Giving the judgment of the court [in R v Simpson [2003] EWCA Crim 1499], Lord Woolf CJ started by setting out the established situations in which the Court of Appeal could depart from one of its previous decisions, as summarised in Halsbury's Laws of England 4th Ed Vol 37 para 1242:
'(i) where the Court has acted in ignorance of a previous decision of its own court or a court of coordinate jurisdiction which covered the case before it. If this is the case the Court must decide which case to follow;
(ii) where the Court has acted in ignorance of a decision of the House of Lords;
(iii) where the Court has given its decision in ignorance of the terms of a statute or a rule having statutory force; or
(iv) where in exceptional and rare cases, the Court is satisfied that there has been a manifest slip or error and there is no prospect of an appeal to the House of Lords.'
None of these was applicable. Lord Woolf then commented at paragraph 27:
'…the paragraphs in Halsbury should not read as if they are contained in a statute. The rules as to precedent reflect the practice of the courts and have to be applied bearing in mind that their objective is to assist in the administration of justice. They are of considerable importance because of their role in achieving the appropriate degree of certainty as to the law. This is an important requirement of any system of justice. The principles should not, however, be regarded as so rigid that they cannot develop in order to meet contemporary needs.'
Lord Woolf then referred to two statements made by Lord Diplock. The first, as Diplock LJ in R v Gould [1968] 2 QB 65 at p. 68 was to the effect that the Criminal Division of the Court of Appeal is not rigidly bound by the doctrine of stare decisis. The second, in DPP v Merriman [1973] AC 584 at p. 685 stated that the liberty of the Criminal Division to depart from precedent which it was convinced was erroneous was restricted to cases where the departure was in favour of the accused.
23. Lord Woolf commented:
'34. There is nothing to suggest in Merriman that Lord Diplock was reminded of what he said in Gould. We appreciate that there may be a case for not interpreting the law contrary to a previous authority in a manner that would mean that an offender who otherwise would not have committed an offence would be held to have committed an offence. However, we do not understand why that should apply to a situation where a defendant, as here, wishes to rely upon a wrongly decided case to provide a technical defence. While justice for a defendant is extremely important, justice for the public at large is also important. So is the maintenance of confidence in the criminal justice system. If the result in the Palmer case had to be applied to other cases even though the Court of Appeal had acted in ignorance of the appropriate approach this would indeed, reveal a most unattractive picture of our criminal justice system's ability to protect the public.
35. Here we prefer the approach indicated in Bennion on Statutory Interpretation (4th ed, 2002) at p. 134 which states:
'The basis of the per incuriam doctrine is that a decision given in the absence of relevant information cannot be safely relied on. This applies whenever it is at least probable that if information had been known the decision would have been affected by it.'"
Realisable assets
"the court must make a confiscation order for the full value of the benefit and has no discretion to order confiscation of a lesser sum."
"6. These appeals concern the proper approach the court should take where a defendant is found not to have told the truth about his realisable assets. The essence of the appeals of both appellants is that the judge failed correctly to apply the provisions of s.71(6) of the 1988 Act. The appellants contended that they had no realisable assets. The judge disbelieved both of them. He concluded that they had concealed their assets. It was at that point, so it was argued, that he misdirected himself in law: the judge regarded his finding that the appellants had hidden assets as compelling him to make a confiscation order in the full sum of the benefit figure. On the contrary, submitted the appellants, a court is not required to make an order in the full amount of the benefit figure merely because it concludes that a defendant has not told the truth about his realisable assets. A court may reject a defendant's evidence that he has no assets or reject his evidence that he has some assets, but of insufficient value to meet the full benefit figure. In neither case, so it was argued, is the court bound to make an order in the full amount of the benefit.
7. S.71(6) provides:-
'Subject to subsection (1C) above the sum which an order made by a court under this section requires an offender to pay shall be equal to –
(a) the benefit in respect of which it is made; or
(b) the amount appearing to the court to be the amount that might be realised at the time the order is made,
whichever is the less.'
This provision requires the court to assess what amount appears to the court to be realisable. It is now settled that the burden of proving that the amount that might be realised is less than the benefit rests on the defendant. In R v Barwick [2001] 1 Cr App R (S) 129 the rationale advanced by Auld J in Rees (19 July 1990, unreported) was adopted: the nature and value of his assets are essentially within a defendant's personal knowledge. But it should be noted that in Barwick the judge, at the confiscation hearing, disbelieved the defendant but nevertheless concluded that his realisable assets were less than the amount of the full benefit figure ("doing as broad a justice in this case as I feel able to do", cited paragraph 8). While this court counselled against any assumption that a defendant would invest the proceeds of crime (paragraph 39), it upheld the factual conclusions of the judge and thus his acceptance that the realisable assets were less than the full amount of the benefit, notwithstanding that the defendant's evidence hid the truth.
8. In May ... Lord Bingham, in giving the opinion of the Committee, identified the objective of the statutory scheme: to deprive defendants of the benefit from their criminal conduct, "within the limits of their available means" (paragraph 48 B). It would, he said, be unjust to imprison a defendant for failure to pay a sum he cannot pay (paragraph 35). But Lord Bingham stressed the need to focus on the statutory regime in which no discretion survived, save in relation to the application of the statutory assumptions (paragraph 43). Accordingly, although he acknowledged Lord Steyn's reference in R v Revzi [2002] 2 Cr App R 2 to the need for "standing back and deciding whether there is or might be a risk of serious injustice", that approach could only be adopted within the confines of the statute itself (paragraph 43). Lord Bingham made it clear that the injustice in ordering a defendant to pay more than he was able was recognised by and catered for in the provisions of the statute itself:
'It has also been recognised that it would be unjust to imprison a defendant for failure to pay a sum which he cannot pay. Thus provision has been made for assessing the means available to a defendant and, if that yields a figure smaller than that of his aggregate benefit, making a confiscation order in the former, not the latter, sum.' (our emphasis) (May, paragraph 35)
9. Accordingly, there is no room, outwith the statute, for any residual discretion in the court to relieve a defendant, who has failed to prove that his assets are less than the full amount of the benefit. Mr Farrell QC, on behalf of McIntosh, argued that the court should always bear in mind the injustice of ordering a defendant to pay more than his resources permitted. He drew attention to Lord Steyn's dicta in Revzi (cited above) and Toulson LJ's emphasis, in Alan Glaves v Crown Prosecution Service (q.v. supra) on the need for justice and proportion (paragraph 56). Toulson LJ drew on Pill LJ's reminder in Re O'Donoghue [2004] EWCA Civ 1800, that however uncooperative or dishonest a defendant may be, the court must retain a sense of justice and proportion.
10. But that approach can only be deployed within the statutory scheme. The court must strive to achieve justice and proportionality within the confines of the statutory scheme. The court can and should exercise those judicial virtues at the time when it answers the statutory question posed by s. 71(6), namely, whether it appears to the court that the realisable amount is less than the amount of the benefit.
11. When Toulson LJ recognised that a defendant may be ordered to pay more than he has, he was not imposing a third, extra-statutory test for assessing the realisable amount. On the contrary, he was recognising that the statutory scheme may lead to a result where:-
'a confiscation order is properly made in a larger sum than the defendant in truth is able to pay.' (paragraph 52)
12. O'Donoghue and Glaves were cases in which an appellant sought a certificate of inadequacy, but the courts' dicta were relevant to the statutory scheme in relation to confiscation. Telli was also such a case but Mr Farrell suggested that courts had been applying dicta of mine in a rigid and unlawful manner, in those cases where a court concluded that a defendant had failed to disclose the true extent of his current assets. In Telli, a case under the Drug Trafficking Act, 1994, I said:
'10. Prima facie, the court is required to order recovery of the full value of the defendant's proceeds of drug trafficking. The court has no power to make an order for any lesser sum unless it is satisfied that the total of the values at the time the confiscation order is made of all the property held by the defendant is less than the value of his proceeds as assessed according to s.4.
11. If a defendant fails to satisfy a court of the value of that realisable property then the court is bound to make a confiscation order in the full value of his proceeds. This is of significance in the instant appeal. A defendant should not, if the statutory scheme is properly followed, be able to avoid an order recovering the full value of his proceeds unless he identifies the realisable property he holds. If he refuses to do so then the court has no option but to order the full amount.
...
30. I should stress the significance, in the statutory scheme, of the Customs officer's conclusion that by no means all of Telli's realisable assets had been identified. As has so frequently been observed, the extent of realisable assets at the time of conviction is likely to be peculiarly within a defendant's own knowledge (see Lord Lane C.J. in Dickens [1990] 2 A.C 102 at 105E). The statute requires a defendant, if he can, to prove, for the purposes of s.5(3) that the amount which might be realised at the time the confiscation order is made, is less than the amount to be assessed to be the value of his proceeds of drug trafficking. Accordingly, if a defendant is found not to have disclosed the nature and extent of his realisable assets, a correct view of the statutory scheme is that he cannot satisfy a court that the total value of all his realisable property is less than the value of the proceeds of his drug trafficking. The court ought not, therefore, issue any certificate pursuant to s.5(3).'
This rigid statement of principle was qualified at 31:
'For the reasons I have given, absent identification of all the realisable property held by him, a defendant normally will be unable to satisfy the court that the amount that might be realised at the time the confiscation order is made is less than the amount assessed to be the proceeds of his drug trafficking.'
13. The dicta in Telli, so Mr Farrell told us, have been adopted as the source of a requirement to make a confiscation order in the full amount of the benefit in any case where a defendant fails to persuade the court that he has revealed the true current extent and true value of his assets. In any case where a defendant has been found to have lied and diminished or hidden their true value, the court is bound to make an order in the full amount of the benefit.
14. The Crown submitted in Glaves that it was not open to a defendant to persuade a court that his assets were inadequate once it had been found that he had failed to disclose their full extent. This submission was rejected on the basis that Telli does not go that far; it must be confined to the circumstances of that case where it was plain that the assets which Telli had failed to reveal may, for all the court knew, have been ample to meet the full value of the benefit despite the loss of the statue of Dionysus.
15. In the light of Glaves and May there is no principle that a court is bound to reject a defendant's case that his current realisable assets are less than the full amount of the benefit, merely because it concludes that the defendant has not revealed their true extent or value, or has not participated in any revelation at all. The court must answer the statutory question in s.71(6) in a just and proportionate way. The court may conclude that a defendant's realisable assets are less than the full value of the benefit on the basis of the facts as a whole. A defendant who is found not to have told the truth or who has declined to give truthful disclosure will inevitably find it difficult to discharge the burden imposed upon him. But it may not be impossible for him to do so. Other sources of evidence, apart from the defendant himself, and a view of the case as a whole, may persuade a court that the assets available to the defendant are less than the full value of the benefit."
Third and other grounds
A. Conduct of the prosecution. It is submitted that the prosecution misled the court by use of PII material; it continually served material late; the prosecution changed its case; failures in disclosure.
B. Disparity of the Crown's witnesses with the crown's own case. The witnesses John Hughes and Christine Harris gave evasive evidence and changed their accounts.
C. Conduct of the Judge The Judge failed to understand the facts of the original trial particularly the role of MST as a broker (not principal); the earning of interest on customers' monies and alleging other criminal conduct e.g money laundering. The Judge misdirected himself. He continually interrupted the appellants' cross-examination of witnesses and exaggerated the strength of the evidence against them in his judgment. The Judge misapplied the case law. He prevented the appellants from raising crucial evidence by threatening them with contempt of court. He took every opportunity to undermine them by referring to them as convicted criminals. He failed to consider the individual circumstances of each appellant. He incorrectly summed up the evidence. He failed to determine the correct source of documentary evidence.
Your Grounds of Appeal/handwritten comments on the judgment
I have considered these matters in conjunction with what is said about them in the Respondent's Notice at paragraphs 13.41.
Decision
The judge analysed the evidence at length and with care. He gave detailed reasons for each of the conclusions he reached. These conclusions were clearly ones that were open to him to draw, on his findings of fact. The findings of fact were for him to make having heard and considered the documentary and oral evidence, including from you in the witness box, and were ones he was entitled to make on the material before him. He also set out the procedural issues which arose, and how and why he dealt with them, as he did.
Nothing I have seen, and nothing said in either the Grounds of Appeal against Defendant's Confiscation Order or in the handwritten comments on the judgment/Detailed Grounds of Appeal gives me any reason to doubt that you had a fair hearing or that the findings made by the judge were not ones that were open to him on the facts or that he made any material error whether of fact or law.
None of the grounds you have advanced are remotely arguable in my view and I am not persuaded your requests for transcripts is justified. Your grounds consist to a considerable extent of assertion, and seem to me to be for the most part, a vexatious attempt to re-run and re-argue the hearing before the judge in toto or to re-open matters determined against you at the substantive trial or to raise matters which are simply irrelevant.
Is the total amount of money received into a bank account controlled by a defendant, as a result of the sale or purported sale of goods by a buffer company in the furtherance of an MTIC carousel fraud, property obtained by him as a result of or in connection with the commission of the offence, as defined by section 71(4) of the Criminal Justice Act 1988, so as to constitute his, or part of his, benefit?
Note 1 The Sentencing Guidelines Council Guidelines – Sentencing for Fraud Statutory Offences defines MT Missing trader intra-community fraud (“MTIC”) and Carousel frauds in this way: MTIC Frauds involve traders importing goods from the European Union free from VAT, charging VAT when they sell the goods and then keeping the money rather than paying it to HMRC. Carousel Frauds are MTIC Frauds where the trader sells the goods to another trader who re-exports them and claims back the VAT paid to the first trader from HMRC. Usually the goods are passed along a chain of traders between the missing trader and the broker known as ‘buffers’, in order to disguise the fraudulent nature of the activity. Having been exported by the broker, the goods are typically re-imported by the missing trader and pass through the same circle of transactions again and again in rapid succession.
[Back] Note 2 See MoJ Resource Accounts, http://justice.cjs.gov.uk/downloads/publications/corporate-reports/MoJ/2010/moj-resource-accounts-2010.pdf , page 114, para.22.3. The figure for unpaid confiscation orders has reportedly increased since the period covered by this Report. [Back] Note 3 It does not follow from the fact that a person is a conspirator that conspirator is to be taken as having jointly obtained the whole benefit obtained by "the conspiracy": see e.g. Allpress [2009] 2 Cr App Rep (S) 58. para. 31. [Back] Note 4 The evaded duty is calculated from the retail price. [Back] Note 5 Because we had referred in our draft judgment to two cases not cited in oral argument, we gave the parties an opportunity to both see the draft and make further submissions, which they did. [Back] Note 6 At para. 99 Flaux J pointed out that it was not a necessary part of the Crown’s case that the goods existed. [Back]