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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions >> Shillam v R [2013] EWCA Crim 160 (22 February 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2013/160.html Cite as: [2013] EWCA Crim 160 |
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ON APPEAL FROM BIRMINGHAM CROWN COURT
HHJ Henderson
T2011 7698
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE GRIFFITH WILLIAMS
and
MR JUSTICE STUART-SMITH
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WAYNE LEE SHILLAM |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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REGINA |
Respondent |
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Mr Anthony Potter instructed for the Respondent
Hearing date: 19 February 2013
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Toulson:
"JERMAINE ROBB, WAYNE SHILLAM and NATHAN REID between the 16th day of March 2011 and the 13th day of July 2011 conspired together and with Ned Stirling DEAN and Darren John VIZARD and with others unknown to supply class A drugs namely cocaine to another."
"It is not asserted that Reid and Shillam knew each other but both knew Robb and obtained their drugs from him in order to cut up and sell to others."
"…did the particular defendant whose case you are considering agree with at least one other person at some point during the period on the indictment that cocaine should be supplied to someone else?"
"Has the prosecution proved that the five named individuals all agreed to be part of a single plot to dilute and distribute cocaine?"
"Conspiracy, does it have to be between any two of Robb, Shillam or Reid or can it be any one of Robb, Shillam and Reid plus persons unknown? "
"The answer is the latter as a conspiracy is between two people. This indictment includes these three plus persons unknown, so it could be one of them plus a person unknown. "
"36. The authorities establish the following propositions:
1. A conspiracy requires that the parties to it have a common unlawful purpose or design.
2. A common design means a shared design. It is not the same as similar but separate designs.
3. In criminal law (as in civil law) there may be an umbrella agreement pursuant to which the parties enter into further agreements which may include parties who are not parties to the umbrella agreement. So, A and B may enter into an umbrella agreement pursuant to which they enter into a further agreement between A, B and C, and a further agreement between A, B and D, and so on. In that example, C and D will not be conspirators with each other.
37. These principles are illustrated by the well known lime fraud case of Griffiths ([1966] 1 QB 589). A supplier of lime to farmers, acting in concert with an employee, entered into agreements with several farmers to defraud the government by making false subsidy claims. There was no evidence that any of the farmers was aware of the arrangements being made between the principal defendant and any of the other farmers, but they were all charged with a single count of conspiracy. The Court of Criminal Appeal held that there was no evidence of a conspiracy between all those convicted, as opposed to a number of different conspiracies, and the convictions were quashed. Paull J gave an illustration which has been quoted in later cases:
"I employ an accountant to make out my tax return. He and his clerk are both present when I am asked to sign the return. I notice an item in my expenses of £100 and say: "I don't remember incurring this expense". The clerk says: "Well, actually I put it in. You didn't incur it, but I didn't think you would object to a few pounds being saved." The accountant indicates his agreement to this attitude. After some hesitation I agree to let it stand. On those bare facts I cannot be charged with 50 others in a conspiracy to defraud the Exchequer of £100,000 on the basis that this accountant and his clerk have persuaded 500 other clients to make false returns, some being false in one way, some in another, or even all in the same way. I have not knowingly attached myself to a general agreement to defraud."
"It may not be necessary to show that the persons accused of conspiring together were in direct communication with one another. Thus, it may be that the conspiracy revolves around some third party, X, who is in touch with each of D1, D2, D3, though they are not in touch with one another (a 'wheel conspiracy'). Provided that the result is that they have a common design – for example, to rob a particular bank – D1, D2 and D3 may properly be indicted for conspiring together though they have never been in touch with one another until they meet in the dock. The same is true of a chain conspiracy where D1 communicates with D2, D2 with D3, etc. In either case it must be proved, of course, that each accused has agreed with another guilty person in relation to that single conspiracy. Ardalan [1972] 2 All ER 257 at 261
"What has to be ascertained is always the same matter; is it true to say…that the acts of the accused were done in pursuance of a criminal purpose held in common between them?" [Meyrick [1929] 21 Cr App R 94 at 102.]."
"We venture to say that far too often…accused persons are joined in a charge of conspiracy without any real evidence from which a jury may infer that their minds went beyond committing with one or more other persons the one or more specific acts alleged against them in the substantive counts, or went beyond a conspiracy to do a particular act or acts."