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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions >> Henderson, R. v [2016] EWCA Crim 965 (27 May 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2016/965.html Cite as: [2016] 4 WLR 172, [2017] 1 Cr App R 4, [2016] EWCA Crim 965 |
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CRIMINAL DIVISION
Strand London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE JAY
HIS HONOUR JUDGE WAIT
(Sitting as a Judge of the CACD)
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R E G I N A | ||
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CHRISTOPHER HENDERSON |
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WordWave International Limited trading as DTI
165 Fleet Street London EC4A 2DY
Tel No: 020 7404 1400 Fax No: 020 7404 1424
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Mr T Probert-Wood appeared on behalf of the Crown
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Crown Copyright ©
LORD JUSTICE HAMBLEN:
Introduction
The outline facts
The ruling on submission of no case to answer
The grounds of appeal
(1) the judge erred in finding that the appellant could in law be guilty of having with him in a public place a bladed article;
(2) the judge accordingly wrongly rejected the submission of no case to answer at the close of the prosecution case and wrongly left the case to the jury at the conclusion of all the evidence;
(3) alternatively the judge failed to give the jury adequate directions on the particular facts of the case.
(1) "having with" is much narrower than possession and requires an immediacy and physical presence which were lacking in the instant case; and
(2) even though the knife was in a public place, the appellant was not and thus he did not have the knife with him in a public place or, if he did, this emphasises the inconsistency of the appellant having with him an item both in a public place and private place at the same time.
(1) whether the appellant had the knife with him as a matter of fact and degree was to be determined in each case;
(2) on the facts of the instant case the appellant had ready access to the car keys and was only a matter of yards from the car and therefore had sufficient ready access to the knife to be capable of having it with him;
(3) the knife was in a public place, namely The Broadway, as alleged in the indictment.
". . . I think the approach taken by the procurator fiscal depute has merit. The analogy drawn by him of a person in a friend's house regarding himself as 'having with him' a cassette in his car parked outside is in my view a good one. It seemed to me that the phrase 'has with him' if given its ordinary meaning can extend to situations such as this, where the article in question is in a car belonging to and under the control of the accused and the accused is in a house nearby. An ordinary person would in my view regard the accused as having the article with him ... I would in any event have upheld the submission on the basis that even if, while he was in the house, the appellant did not have the weapon with him, he had it with him when he was at the car, having opened the car."
"If we apply a purposive approach to the sections with which we have to deal, it appears to us that they are designed to prevent people in a public place having offensive weapons and knives available to them which they may be liable to use ... in his pocket the appellant had the keys to the car and the car was only some six feet away in a narrow lane in the early hours of the morning. The cosh was under the passenger seat and the knife under the driver's mat. These weapons would have been readily available to the appellant for use in the lane had he wished to make use of them. In our view on the basis of these facts the Sheriff was entitled to conclude that the appellant had the cosh and knife with him in the lane."
". . . the legislature has drawn a distinction between the person who has a firearm with him and a person who is in possession of a firearm ... The legislature must have had in mind that in regard to those offences where it is an offence for a person to have with him a firearm there must be a very close physical link and degree of immediate control over the weapon by the man alleged to have the firearm with him."
He further stated at page 1370:
". . . possession is not enough ... the law requires the evidence to go a stage further and to establish if the accused had it with him. Of course the classic case of having a gun with you is if you are carrying it, but even if you are not carrying it you may yet have it with you if it is immediately available to you. And if all that can be shown is possession in the sense that it is in your house or in a shed or somewhere where you have ultimate control,that is not enough."
" ... the words 'to have with him a firearm' must derive their colour from the purpose of the Firearms Act 1968. That purpose, in broad terms, is to combat the use of the firearms in and about the commission of crime and to protect public safety. The legislative technique, in so far as it is relevant, involves prohibitions on possession of firearms, and prohibitions on having a firearm. It was intended to be a relatively comprehensive statute. It is submitted that a distance of 50 yards between the men and the guns placed the men beyond the ambit of section 18(1). If that proposition is accepted, the 1968 Act is less effective than one would have expected. It seems to us that a court order ought to try to make sense of the statute and its purpose. If this purposive approach is adopted, it will still be necessary to consider the element of propinquity. But the emphasis must not be so much on exact distances between the criminals and their guns but rather on the accessibility of those guns, judged in a common sense way in the context of criminals embarking on a joint enterprise to commit an indictable offence."
(1) Possession of a weapon is a wider concept than having it "with him".
(2) Having a weapon "with him" is a wider concept than carrying it.
(3) The propinquity between the person and the weapon.
(4) Whether the weapon is immediately available to the person.
(5) The accessibility of the weapon.
(6) The context of any criminal enterprise embarked upon.
(7) The purpose of the applicable statute.
Decision
(1) The appellant was not near his car, as the defendant was in Smith v Vannet. He was in a second floor flat a considerable distance away.
(2) There was no evidence that the appellant had shortly left or was shortly to return to the car, as was the case in R v Pawlicki.
(3) There was no evidence that the knife in the car was linked in any way to his presence in the flat on that day or at all, unlike in R v Pawlicki.
(4) There was no evidence linking the knife to any ongoing or indeed any criminal enterprise, unlike in R v Pawlicki.
(5) The facts are comparable to the case of McVey v Friel in which the appeal was allowed.
Conclusion