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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions >> Jawad v R [2013] EWCA Crim 644 (03 May 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2013/644.html Cite as: [2013] 1 WLR 3861, [2013] EWCA Crim 644, [2013] WLR(D) 209, (2013) 177 JP 436, [2014] 1 Cr App R (S) 16, [2013] Crim LR 698 |
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ON APPEAL FROM BRISTOL CROWN COURT
His Honour Judge Picton
T20097457
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE FOSKETT
and
HIS HONOUR JUDGE DAVID RADFORD
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Mohid Jawad |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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The Queen |
Respondent |
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Andrew Mitchell QC and Will Hays (instructed by Crown Prosecution Service) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 21 March 2013
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Hughes:
i) Because the bank had asked the Crown to make application for a compensation order, it had "started proceedings" against the defendant in respect of its loss. Accordingly section 6(6) of POCA applied to convert the statutory duty to make a confiscation order into a mere power. The court was thus, independently of the principle in Waya, free to reduce the confiscation order by the £64000, and should have done so.ii) The confiscation order was in any event based on the wrong benefit figure (£174000 odd). That is because this was a lifestyle case. In a lifestyle case, says Mr Krolick, the relevant benefit is, by section 6(4)(b) the benefit from general criminal conduct, rather than from particular criminal conduct which is the measure under section 6(4)(c) in a non-lifestyle case. The £64000 was benefit from particular criminal conduct and therefore, he submits, should not have been included in the benefit figure in a lifestyle case.
R v Waya: A1P1
i) at [24] that the jurisdiction to modify a confiscation order for demonstrated disproportion does not invest the judge with a general discretion to make only such order as he thinks fair;ii) at [25] that in most lifestyle cases there will be little occasion for a separate test of disproportion to be applied to calculations of benefit resulting from the statutory assumptions in section 10, because those assumptions are in any event not to be made if there is a risk of serious injustice arising from them;
iii) at [26] that an order is not to be regarded as disproportionate simply because it removes from the defendant more than may in fact represent his net profits from crime; this is one reason why there is no governing concept of "real benefit"; examples are given, and compare R v May [2008] UKHL 28; [2008] AC 1028; and
iv) at [28]-[29] that one example of an order which may be disproportionate is the case where proceeds of crime which have been restored intact to the loser are nevertheless counted as part of the benefit; it is by consideration of disproportion that this kind of case now falls to be decided rather than by resort to the jurisdiction to stay for abuse of the process of the court.
Confiscation and Compensation
"13 Effect of order on court's other powers
(1) If the court makes a confiscation order it must proceed as mentioned in subsections (2) and (4) in respect of the offence or offences concerned.
(2) The court must take account of the confiscation order before—
(a) it imposes a fine on the defendant, or
(b) it makes an order falling within subsection (3).
(3) These orders fall within this subsection—
(a) an order involving payment by the defendant, other than an order under section 130 of the Sentencing Act (compensation orders)…;
(b) ….
(c) ….
(d) ….
(4) Subject to subsection (2), the court must leave the confiscation order out of account in deciding the appropriate sentence for the defendant.
(5) Subsection (6) applies if—
(a) the Crown Court makes—
(i) both a confiscation order and a compensation order under section 130 of the Sentencing Act,
(ii) ….
(iii) ….
against the same person in the same proceedings, and
(b) the court believes he will not have sufficient means to satisfy both the orders … in full.
(6) In such a case the court must direct that so much of the compensation … as it specifies is to be paid out of any sums recovered under the confiscation order; and the amount it specifies must be the amount it believes will not be recoverable because of the insufficiency of the person's means."
This section thus creates two rules for the case where both compensation and a POCA order may be involved.
i) The POCA confiscation order is generally to be taken into account when deciding whether to make any other order which requires payment by the defendant, such as a fine, (section 13(2)) but a compensation order is an exception to this rule (section 13(3)(a)).
The section is easily misread because of its rather convoluted structure and it is easy to think that a compensation order is an order within section 13(2) via section 13(3)(a), but in fact the statute says the opposite. It follows that there is no mandatory duty under the Act to take the POCA confiscation order into account when deciding on a compensation order.
ii) In the particular case of a defendant whose means appear to be insufficient to meet both a POCA confiscation order and a compensation order, the court is required to order the compensation which would otherwise not be paid to be met out of the sum recovered under the POCA confiscation order: section 13(5) and (6).
These rules can co-exist with the general provision in section 130(11) Powers of Criminal Courts (Sentencing) Act 2000, which requires a court to have regard to the means of the defendant when determining whether to make a compensation order and, if so, for how much. The prospect of a compensation order which is rendered unpayable by a POCA confiscation order which has taken everything the defendant has is avoided by sections 13(5) and (6). It is not clear whether a compensation order is included in the expression "sentence" in section 13(4) and we think it likely that it is not, for otherwise a specific right of appeal against it would not have to be given by sections 132(3) and (5)(b) Powers of Criminal Courts (Sentencing) Act 2000, as it is. But it makes no difference for present purposes whether it is or is not.
i) Section 13 means that the court must determine the POCA confiscation order first;ii) In fixing the amount of the POCA confiscation order the court must follow the mandatory terms of the Act and particularly of section 6;
iii) It follows that any possible (and subsequent) compensation order is irrelevant to the calculation of the POCA confiscation order and the duty to make it;
iv) Therefore in the present case the fact that the compensation order was made cannot mean that the POCA confiscation order was wrong, nor can the calculation of that order be impugned.
i) (by section 76(1) of the Magistrates Courts' Act 1980) commitment to prison by the magistrates; the term is in the discretion of the magistrates subject to the maximum being that specified by the Crown Court or, if none, that available to the magistrates; the term which can be specified is the same as can be specified in default of payment of a fine: section 41(8) and (8A) and Schedule 9 paragraph 10 of the Administration of Justice Act 1970. [We are grateful to counsel for the Crown for referring us to Komsta & Murphy (1990) 12 Cr App R (S) 63, but after a legislative oversight the position we have set out was definitively settled through section 23(3) of the Criminal Justice Act 1991]; the period actually served is, as with sentences of imprisonment generally, half the term imposed by the magistrates: section 258 Criminal Justice Act 2003;ii) a warrant of distraint: section 76(1) of the Magistrates' Courts Act 1980;
iii) those methods of enforcement available in respect of a judgment of the High Court or County Court, but excluding fi fa or other process against goods (no doubt because of the availability of distraint), and excluding also attachment of earnings; such right to enforce is conferred on the magistrates' clerk and not on the loser or intended beneficiary under the compensation order: Osbourne v Kendrick [2001] EWCA Civ 690.
Section 6(6) – "proceedings"
Section 6(4): general and particular criminal conduct
Order in the present case
Note: Change of law and extension of time