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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions >> Hussain v R. (London Borough of Brent) [2014] EWCA Crim 2344 (18 November 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2014/2344.html Cite as: [2015] HLR 8, [2015] PTSR D7, [2014] EWCA Crim 2344, [2015] Lloyd's Rep FC 102 |
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ON APPEAL FROM HARROW CROWN COURT
HHJ Mole Q.C.
S20110408
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE GREEN
and
SIR COLIN MACKAY
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Hussan Hussain |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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The Crown (London Borough of Brent) |
Respondent |
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E. Robb (instructed by London Borough of Brent) for the Respondent
Hearing dates : 4 November 2014
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Crown Copyright ©
Sir Colin Mackay:
Introduction
The Facts
"Cease the use of the premises as two or more flats and its occupation by more than one household and remove all fixtures and fittings associated with that use"
Confiscation Proceedings
The Grounds of Appeal
"A person benefits from [particular criminal] conduct if he obtains property as a result of or in connection with the conduct"
The appellant's first argument is that he has not benefited from his criminal conduct, namely his refusal to comply with the enforcement notice, and his actions in continuing to allow the premises to be occupied by numerous tenants in breach of planning control, i.e. the criminal offence of which he stands convicted. He says that these rents were "obtained" by Tusculum and he received no benefit, or at most the benefit he could be said to have obtained was the director's remuneration he received over the relevant period.
(1) Section 96 (3) which stated
"No rule of law relating to the validity or enforceability of contracts in circumstances involving illegality is to affect the validity or enforceability of
a) Any provision requiring the payment of rent…or
b) Any other provision of such a tenancy or licence.
(2) The 2004 Act also contained a statutory code by which "rent repayment orders" could be made against a person letting premises without a licence in contravention of the Statute by a tribunal on the application of the local authority – Section 96 (5) (b).
As Davis LJ pointed out (paragraph 37) the existence of that code necessarily contemplates that the landlord has in the interim lawfully received the rent or housing benefit.
"Thus it is clear that the legislation looks at the property coming to an offender which is his and not what happens to it subsequently; the court is concerned with what he has obtained "so as to own it, whether alone or jointly, which will ordinarily connote a power of disposition or control"; whatever disposition of that property is made …is irrelevant. If it was otherwise the court would be called upon to make a series of almost impossible value judgments: profit is not the test and the use of the words "true" or "real" to qualify "benefit" does not suggest to the contrary"
On that basis the court dismissed the appeal, and it is plain from the judgment of Davis LJ in Sumal that he accepted and did not dissent from this analysis of this position. It was binding on him as it is on us. He reached his conclusion, as we have set out above, influenced by the particular facts of the case that was before him.
Proportionality
"In the circumstances we reject the argument that the language of the statute permits the court to look at what Mr del Basso "actually made" net of all expenses: the reverse is the case as the first paragraph of the Endnote to May ("benefit gained is the total value of the property or advantage obtained, not the defendant's net profit after the deduction of expenses") makes abundantly clear"
"There may be other cases of disproportion analogous to that of goods or money entirely restored to the loser. That will have to be resolved case by case as the need arises. Such a case might include, for example, the defendant who, by deception, induces someone else to trade with him in a manner otherwise lawful, and who gives full value for goods or services obtained. … whether a confiscation order is proportionate for any sum beyond profit made may need careful consideration".
"To think that …would make the mistake of equating Mr Hussain's breach of the enforcement notice as being a failure to provide proper accommodation of tenants – but that is not the point in this case – it was against the law to provide the accommodation at all in breach of an enforcement notice, however good it [sc. the accommodation] was… The reasons for issuing the enforcement notice referred to planning detriment that had nothing to do with the standard of the flats but had to do with matters such as noise, disturbance of residential amenities and effect on the character of the area."
"I do however note the point in paragraph 34 [of Waya] as I have already indicated that while bearing in mind that the whole purpose of the legislation, and bearing in mind what Waya said is that what they say does not entitle a judge to simply take a lenient view as to what he thought "proportionate" would amount to and simply leave it to his discretion. The judge has to be very careful to bear in mind the purpose of the legislation and proportion is a different matter from just general feelings of fairness. But nonetheless it is, it seems to me, important for the judge at the end of the day to step back when he has got the figures in front of him and consider whether or not a confiscation order that goes beyond a profit is still proportionate".
Sentence