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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions >> West, Re [2014] EWCA Crim 1480 (17 July 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2014/1480.html Cite as: [2014] WLR(D) 321, [2014] 2 Cr App R 28, [2015] 1 WLR 109, [2015] WLR 109, [2014] EWCA Crim 1480 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE CROWN COURT AT DURHAM
His Honour Judge Kelson Q.C.
Arising from Indictment No: T20147076
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
(SIR BRIAN LEVESON)
MRS JUSTICE PATTERSON D.B.E.
and
SIR RICHARD HENRIQUES
(sitting as a Judge of the Court of Appeal)
____________________
In the matter of: IAN STUART WEST |
Appellant |
____________________
Mr Oliver Glasgow as amicus curiae
Hearing date : 12 June 2014
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Sir Brian Leveson P :
The Facts
"MR WEST: Could we have it on the week of the 15th September?
JUDGE KELSON: It would be at a risk that week but then again, having read the interviews in the case, I wonder how much of a risk. He had something of a difficulty dealing with the wrap around the £1,000 didn't he?
MR WEST: He says he is not guilty so we will have to work on the basis that that is right
JUDGE KELSON: Mr West, of course he has pleaded [not] guilty, not your most helpful observation. To case manage the case properly, some clue as to the likely issues, even at this early stage, would be useful. I have deliberately made reference to the interviews because to the outside observer they appear to present him with a very substantial problem evidentially, so what I want from you, a little more helpfully, is there an issue over the admissibility of the interviews?
MR WEST: The answer is until I see them I do not know. The issue in the case generally is was he robbed as he says or did he steal the money as the Crown seem to think.
JUDGE KELSON: You have not got the interview?
MR WEST: I have got brief summaries of them, yes.
JUDGE KELSON: Have you had the chance to go through them with the defendant so far?
MR WEST: No, I have not.
JUDGE KELSON: I think perhaps you should really, to make it a useful hearing. What is the point of this hearing if you have not taken instruction?
MR WEST: I have taken instructions that he is not guilty "
"JUDGE KELSON: Of course. Everybody is assumed to be not guilty, but most people are then confronted
MR WEST: No, no. I am not assuming that. I have actually discussed it
JUDGE KELSON: by their interviews by any helpful advocate. You know, I mean, why have you not gone through the interviews with him so far?
MR WEST: Because he has been produced from Armley Prison. I have had about 20 minutes in the cells downstairs
JUDGE KELSON: Then have as long as you need.
MR WEST: Sorry?
JUDGE KELSON: Have as long as you need. I am here all day."
"MR WEST: I have had all the time I need. I know that it is going to be a not guilty trial. I do not need to through the short summaries of the interviews with him to change that position. He tells me is not guilty. We need to fix a trial date. I do not need any more time, thank you.
JUDGE KELSON: Do you not think it is an important part of preparation for this hearing to go through at least some of the evidence with a defendant rather than just take his bare assertion? At what stage
MR WEST: Who is saying I took his bare assertion?
JUDGE KELSON: At what stage were you proposing going through the evidence with him?
MR WEST: When I have got it.
JUDGE KELSON: I will put this case out till later today when you have conducted a proper conference with your client and we will revisit the case.
MR WEST: I will decide how long I spend in conference with him.
JUDGE KELSON: Mr West, we will come back to this case after two o'clock.
MR WEST: We can come back to it whenever you like but I
JUDGE KELSON: Don't be rude, Mr West. That was very rude. Don't be rude. All right. We will revisit the case at two o'clock. Thank you.
" if you can either have your position covered or the court will contact you but I am not satisfied so far that this is a useful hearing, that it serves the purpose that these hearings are meant to serve and accordingly I am going to give the defence the opportunity to make it a useful hearing. I am not asking them to put pressure upon their client. I am not asking them to interfere with his plea. I am asking them to conduct a useful hearing following a useful conference."
"MR WEST: Your honour, the solicitor, who is actually my solicitor, attends with me today.
JUDGE KELSON: Excellent
MR WEST: He cannot stay longer. I am not going to discuss the evidence in the case
JUDGE KELSON: Two fifteen, Mr West
MR WEST: with my client without a solicitor
JUDGE KELSON: possibly later; in fact probably later, the longer you go on, but certainly you will be here at 2.15.
MR WEST: You are assuming that.
JUDGE KELSON: Mr West, you will be here at 2.15. Now, mind your manners and sit down. Sit down.
MR WEST: Excuse me.
JUDGE KELSON: Sit down, Mr West, or I will take this further. Sit down.
MR WEST: In what
JUDGE KELSON: Sit down, Mr West.
MR WEST: I am not used to be spoken to
JUDGE KELSON: You are an impertinent barrister.
MR WEST: I am
JUDGE KELSON: Do as you are told or sit down.
MR WEST: I am apparently
JUDGE KELSON: Sit down. Very good. Mr Ingham, we will come back to this case."
"JUDGE KELSON: The hearing, whether you liked it or not and obviously you did not, was adjourned over to the afternoon.
MR WEST: Yes. That is what your Honour ordered in the morning, and I think I made it pretty plain that I did not see any point in doing that other than
JUDGE KELSON: I appreciate your position but at the end of the day a judge had ordered the case over into the afternoon.
MR WEST: You are perfectly entitled to order the case to be put over to the afternoon. Whether I attend any hearing in the case is a matter for my professional judgment in consultation with the solicitor who instructs me and my lay client and if, as I perceived it, your Honour was simply adjourning the case over because you wanted to punish me, not Mr Ingham, for not having, as you saw it, taken instructions on matters that you think I should have done, from a position of complete ignorance you had no idea whether I had taken instructions on those matters or how long I had spent with the client you
JUDGE KELSON: Well, I have. You told me you had spent 20 minutes with him.
MR WEST: I had. I had spent 20 minutes with him before the hearing but my solicitor had been down to Armley Prison and spent an hour with him last week, but you did not trouble to ask me that.
JUDGE KELSON: Try not to be rude. Just let's be polite, if we can."
"I said I had not discussed them in detail, your Honour, but all of that is comprised within the issue of whether or not I was instructed sufficiently to conduct the hearing and in my judgment, and it is my judgment that matters, I was. The defendant indicated clearly both to my solicitor last week and to me that the case is to be contested, we had set a timetable for the trial to take place and issues around specific matters of the evidence are for a later stage when the evidence is served in its full and proper form, and there was no purpose, as I tried to make clear, in me going down and having it out with the defendant about what your Honour wanted me to have it out with him about why he had on the police summary changed his account. There was no point in me having that conference. That is why I did not do it."
"The qualified privilege that your Honour's position attracts when making comments from the bench is one that requires, because it is vouchsafed only to those who are thought to be capable of exercising it responsibly, carries with it the responsibility not to make off the cuff comments from a position of ignorance about the way in which advocates and solicitors who appear in your court conduct themselves. You have no idea how I conduct my practice or how I had dealt with Mr Ingham's case and yet you were willing to criticise me and my instructing solicitors on the basis of no evidence whatsoever and I think I am entitled and do ask for an apology from your Honour for that (Pause). I see none is to be forthcoming"
"I think you are an impertinent barrister. Yesterday I thought your behaviour was appalling in open court. I think leaving court when you were required here in the afternoon was monstrous. You will receive no apology whatsoever from me."
"The old days of keeping one's powder dry and treating the pre-trial procedure as some sort of game are long gone. Mr West in my view has signally failed to discharge his duty. My request to discover whether there was to be an issue in respect of the admissibility of the interviews was, in my view, entirely reasonable and not (given the extent of the evidence bundle) premature. I afforded Mr West more than sufficient time to comply with my request. Mr West's conduct in refusing to assist was improper and unreasonable."
"The issue is over and above Mr West's deeply unpleasant style of advocacy which was highly impertinent and somewhat confrontational, if not pugnacious. I make allowance for vigorous advocacy. This was much worse than that. Archbold 28-52 makes it plain that to disobey an order of the court properly made is a contempt. The orders set out therein are plainly different but an order was made and defied. The procedural rules set out in Archbold 28-101 and the following paragraphs, Part 62 of the Criminal Procedure Rules 2013 assist; Rule 62.5.1(a) applies. I observed obstructive conduct in the courtroom affecting the proceedings as I have set out. Case management was deliberately thwarted by Mr West and the dignity and authority of the court were undermined by his conscious and deliberate act of defiance in failing to attend court in the afternoon. Rule 62.5.1(e) may also apply. In any event, rule 62.9.1(a) applies since Mr West's said conduct is captured thereby
I am not at all persuaded that Mr West's deluded perception that I was merely trying to punish him rather than trying to further the administration of case management of this case should afford him any assistance."
"The choice was not then his as to whether he attended or not. His conduct is an assault upon the dignity and the authority of the court."
Procedural defects
"(a) explain, in terms the respondent can understand (with help, if necessary)
(i) the conduct that is in question,
(ii) that the court can impose imprisonment, or a fine, or both, for such conduct,
(iii) (where relevant) that the court has power to order the respondent's immediate temporary detention, if in the court's opinion that is required,
(iv) that the respondent may explain the conduct,
(v) that the respondent may apologise, if he or she so wishes, and that this may persuade the court to take no further action, and
(vi) that the respondent may take legal advice; and
(b) allow the respondent a reasonable opportunity to reflect, take advice, explain and, if he or she so wishes, apologise."
"(2) The court must arrange for the preparation of a written statement containing such particulars of the conduct in question as to make clear what the respondent appears to have done.
(3) The court officer must serve on the respondent
(a) that written statement;
(b) notice of where and when the postponed enquiry will take place; and
(c) a notice that
(i) reminds the respondent that the court can impose imprisonment, or a fine, or both, for contempt of court, and
(ii) warns the respondent that the court may pursue the postponed enquiry in the respondent's absence, if the respondent does not attend.
Power to direct counsel to attend
Contempt of Court
"I would therefore hold that the mens rea required in the present case is an intent to interfere with the course of justice. As in other branches of the criminal law, that intent may exist, even though there is no desire to interfere with the course of justice. Nor need it be the sole intent. It may be inferred, even though there is no overt proof. The more obvious the interference with the course of justice, the more readily will the requisite intent be inferred."
"It is not every act of discourtesy to the court by counsel that amounts to contempt, nor is conduct which involves a breach by counsel of his duty to his client necessarily in this category. In the present case, the appellant's conduct was clearly discourteous, it may have been in breach of rule 11 of Ord 16 and it may, perhaps, have been in dereliction of his duty to his client, but in their Lordship's opinion it cannot properly be placed over the line that divides mere discourtesy from contempt."
"I have no doubt that if a solicitor deliberately fails to attend - with intent to hinder or delay the hearing, and doing so - he would be guilty of a contempt of court. He would be interfering with the course of justice. But in this case the conduct of the solicitor was not done with intent to hinder or delay the hearing. So, while the solicitor was in breach of his duty, it was not a contempt of court. The proper way to deal with it would be by reporting it to the Law Society."
"But not every failure to co-operate, or refusal to assist the court, is a contempt, and not every dereliction of duty or discourtesy to the court is a contempt and although I sympathise with the judge in regarding the appellant as contumacious, I do not think that the appellant's conduct went so far beyond the limits of non-co-operation or discourtesy as to harden into contempt of court."
"Case management was deliberately thwarted by Mr West and the dignity and authority of the court were undermined by his conscious and deliberate act of defiance in failing to attend court in the afternoon."
Conclusion
"In truth, the time of the court has been taken up and other cases delayed. The valuation of that cost and whether it ought to be recoverable is a matter which ought perhaps to be considered. An appropriately senior prosecutor could have been called to court to explain the failure, although that would only take the prosecutor away from work on other cases. None of these solutions is ideal and there is a similar problem in relation to defence failures to comply with judicial directions or the Rules. All this needs review, for the court does require mechanisms to ensure that the objectives of the Criminal Procedure Rules are met and failures adequately admonished and subject to sanction."
This unfortunate episode simply provides further evidence of this lacuna.