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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 >> Gunn v Service Prosecuting Authority [2019] EWCA Crim 1470 (03 September 2019) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2019/1470.html Cite as: [2020] 1 Cr App R 9, [2019] 4 WLR 121, [2019] EWCA Crim 1470, [2019] WLR(D) 497 |
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ON APPEAL FROM COURT MARSHALL APPEAL COURT
HIS HONOUR JUDGE JAG
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MRS JUSTICE MCGOWAN
and
MR JUSTICE BUTCHER
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Neil Christopher Gunn |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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Service Prosecuting Authority |
Respondent |
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S.WHITEHOUSE QC (instructed by Service Prosecuting Authority) for the Respondent
Hearing dates : 30 July 2019
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Gross :
INTRODUCTION
"….The first ground advanced relates to the constitution of the Board. Mr Gunn serves in the RAF yet he was tried by an Army Board. We are troubled by the interplay between the Queen's Regulations for the RAF as to the constitution of the Board and the provisions of the Armed Forces Act. The Regulations suggest that the Board that tried Mr Gunn should have been differently constituted, including at least one representative from his service. We appreciate that the Regulations do not have the force of primary legislation but it is not clear to us…..what force they do have…."
LEGAL FRAMEWORK
"A Single System of Service Law
Until the seventeenth century, the enforcement of naval and military discipline in the Royal Navy and British Army was a matter flowing from the prerogative power of the Crown and the necessity for and legality of these powers were never questioned. From then until 1881, a series of Mutiny Acts began to codify some military offences, and to impose some statutory structures and requirements upon Court Martial. In 1866 the first Naval Discipline Act was passed and that was followed by the first Army Act in 1881. These Acts fully codified naval and military offences and the constitution and rules of Court Martial, partly within the statutes themselves and partly by the first sets of Rules of Procedure. The RAF adopted the Army system when it was established at the end of the First World War and these systems survived more or less intact until the mid-1950s….
The most significant changes flowed from the Armed Forces Act 1996, which responded to the expected fundamental criticisms of the fairness of the trial process by the European Court of Human Right (ECtHR)….most importantly the control of the proceedings at trial was acknowledged to have moved formally from the Service president to the independent judge advocate, whose control of proceedings guaranteed their independence and impartiality."
"Until the Armed Forces Act 2006 came into force Court Martial were ad hoc tribunals which had to be convened and dissolved on each occasion. Under s.154 of the Act 'the Court Martial' is established as a standing court which may sit anywhere in the world. It consists of a judge (….. 'the judge advocate'), who presides over the proceedings, and at least three or five lay members, depending on the seriousness of the charges…… The Act provides for mixed boards – that is comprising of officers or warrant officers from all three Services – but as a matter of practice the boards normally comprise officers and warrant officers from the same Service as the defendant. The most senior member of the board is automatically appointed as the 'president of the board'."
"….is to replace the three separate systems of service law with a single, harmonised system governing all members of the armed forces…."
Furthermore, as summarised by the Explanatory Notes (at [19]), the AFA 2006 provided for certain single-service offices and organisations to be replaced by tri-service equivalents:
" - the appointment of the Director Service Prosecutions to replace the existing three single-service prosecuting authorities;
- a standing court called the Court martial, to replace the current courts-martial which are set up for each case;
……
- the merger of the two offices of Judge Advocate General and Judge Advocate of the Fleet….. "
"[1] A Service defendant will ordinarily be tried by lay members of wholly his own service. [2] However, where a defendant is tried with a co-defendant from a different Service, the lay membership of the court will be a mixture of Service personnel from different Services. [3] Each defendant will always have at least one lay member of his own Service on the board…."
(Sentence numbers added.)
The Manual of Service Law (JSP 830, Chapter 28, para. 13, "the Manual") repeats the QR and is in the same terms as para. (4) of the QR.
THE RIVAL CASES
i) The primary legislation contained in the AFA 2006 did not prohibit mixed Boards or Boards drawing their lay members from a Service other than the defendant's.
ii) The QR could be viewed as not incompatible with the AFA 2006. If so, the Appellant's case fell away. Sentence [1] of para. (4) of the QR provided that a Service defendant would "ordinarily" be tried by lay members drawn from his own Service; that provision was not mandatory in all cases, nor did it mean that a Court Martial Board would be invalid if its composition was not drawn solely from the same Service as the defendant. Ms Whitehouse accepted, indeed averred, that the normal practice would be for a service man to be tried by lay members drawn from his own Service.
iii) If there was a conflict between the primary legislation contained in the AFA 2006 and the QR, then the primary legislation (passed by Parliament) took precedence over the QR, comprising, as the latter did, regulations issued or amended from time to time by the Defence Council.
iv) In any event, the Court Martial proceedings here had not been a nullity (even if the Board had been improperly constituted) and the Appellant's conviction was not unsafe.
DISCUSSION
i) Sentence [1] on the one hand and sentences [2] and [3] on the other, are differently worded. Even assuming that sentences [2] and [3] give rise to mandatory rules, there is no equivalent mandatory wording in sentence [1].
ii) The particular mischief at which sentences [2] and [3] are aimed (real or apparent service partisanship) is obvious and acute. Fairness may demand a special rule in such cases.
iii) By contrast, read in the light of the statutory steer from the 1964 Defence Act and the AFA 2006, there is insufficient reason to prohibit a departure from the usual or ordinary practice under sentence [1]. For example, in an appropriate case (where no specialist Service knowledge is required) the need for timely Court Martial proceedings may outweigh the desirability of following the ordinary same Service practice under sentence [1], without casting doubt on the fairness of the proceedings.
i) The primary legislation, contained in the AFA 2006, is permissive and does not prohibit Court Martial boards being comprised of suitably qualified officers and warrant officers drawn from any Service. This is in keeping with the tri-service philosophy of the AFA 2006 (even if the word "jointery" is perhaps unfortunate) and the legislation which preceded it, notably the 1964 Defence Act. That approach carries with it inherent flexibility, which would be constrained by a same, single, Service requirement.
ii) That said, the usual practice, embodied in sentence [1] of para. (4) of the QR is that a defendant will be tried by lay members of his own Service. That this should ordinarily be the mode of trial is eminently sensible; ordinarily, why should it be anything else? However, sentence [1] does not contain an invariable or mandatory rule, still less a rule with jurisdictional implications for the Court Martial, if breached.
iii) On this footing, ss.154 – 157 of the AFA 2006 and sentence [1] of para. (4) of the QR are not incompatible. The usual practice, set out in sentence [1] is comfortably accommodated within the broader ambit of the AFA 2006.
i) At the initial hearing on 10 January 2017, the Appellant was offered a Court Martial with an RAF Board but the date was not convenient for the Appellant's then counsel, who declined it in the knowledge that the Court Martial would proceed before an Army Board. We can see no good reason, on the facts of this case, why that decision of the Appellant's then counsel should now be reopened.
ii) The central issue at the Court Martial was one of the simplest fact – was a Battery proved against the Appellant to the criminal standard? This issue required no specialist knowledge whatever, in stark contrast to a case where such knowledge might be required (e.g., as to the technical details of aircraft or vessels) and where the advantages of the usual practice are eminently apparent. An Army Board was as well qualified to try this Court Martial as an RAF Board.
iii) With respect to the submissions advanced on his behalf to the contrary, the Appellant sustained no prejudice at all. As explained in our previous decision (at [26]), the question of the Appellant's presence in the junior ranks' accommodation did not feature at all in the Board's consideration prior to conviction.