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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions >> R v S [2019] EWCA Crim 1728 (17 October 2019) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2019/1728.html Cite as: [2020] 1 WLR 109, [2020] Crim LR 634, [2019] Lloyd's Rep FC 529, [2020] WLR 109, [2019] WLR(D) 572, [2020] BPIR 278, [2019] EWCA Crim 1728, [2020] 1 Cr App R 13 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE CENTRAL CRIMINAL COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE EDIS
and
MR JUSTICE ANDREW BAKER
____________________
R |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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S |
Respondent |
____________________
Mr Pavlos Panayi QC for the Respondent
Mr Joseph Curl for the Interested Parties (the Trustees in Bankruptcy of S)
Hearing date: 4 October 2019
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Davis:
Introduction
Background
Events following the Restraint Order
The legal scheme and applicable principles
"The first condition is that
(a) a criminal investigation has been started in England and Wales with regard to an offence, and
(b) there are reasonable grounds to suspect that the alleged offender has benefited from his criminal conduct."
Section 41(1) then provides:
"If any condition set out in section 40 is satisfied the Crown Court may make an order (a restraint order) prohibiting any specified person from dealing with any realisable property held by him."
We should note the provisions of s.41(7B), inserted by amendment in 2015:
"The court
(a) must include in the order a requirement for the applicant for the order to report to the court on the progress of the investigation at such times and in such manner as the order may specify (a "reporting requirement"), and
(b) must discharge the order if proceedings for the offence are not started within a reasonable time (and this duty applies whether or not an application to discharge the order is made under section 42(3))."
That connotes, among other things, that the court in such circumstances can act of its own motion.
"(5) The court-
(a) may discharge the order;
(b) may vary the order.
(7) If the condition in section 40 which was satisfied was that an investigation was started
(a) the court must discharge the order if within a reasonable time proceedings for the offence are not started;
(b) otherwise, the court must discharge the order on the conclusion of the proceedings."
" It is plain that contracting states cannot blame unacceptable delays on a general want of prosecutors or judges or courthouses or on chronic under-funding of the legal system. It is, generally speaking, incumbent on contracting states so to organise their legal systems as to ensure that the reasonable time requirement is honoured. But nothing in the Convention jurisprudence requires courts to shut their eyes to the practical realities of litigious life even in a reasonably well-organised legal system. Thus it is not objectionable for a prosecutor to deal with cases according to what he reasonably regards as their priority, so as to achieve an orderly dispatch of business. It must be accepted that a prosecutor cannot ordinarily devote his whole time and attention to a single case. Courts are entitled to draw up their lists of cases for trial some time in advance. It may be necessary to await the availability of a judge possessing a special expertise, or the availability of a courthouse with special facilities or security. Plans may be disrupted by unexpected illness. The pressure on a court may be increased by a sudden and unforeseen surge of business. There is no general obligation on a prosecutor, such as that imposed on a prosecutor seeking to extend a custody time limit under section 22(3)(b) of the Prosecution of Offences Act 985, to show that he has acted "with all due diligence and expedition". But a marked lack of expedition, if unjustified, will point towards a breach of the reasonable time requirement, and the authorities make clear that while, for purposes of the reasonable time requirement, time runs from the date when the defendant is charged, the passage of any considerable period of time before charge may call for greater than normal expedition thereafter."
" where a party has obtained a Mareva injunction, that party is bound to get on with the trial of the action not to rest content with the injunction."
(1) The length of time that has elapsed since the Restraint Order was made;(2) The reasons and explanations advanced for such lapse of time;
(3) The length (and depth) of the investigation before the Restraint Order was made;
(4) The nature and extent of the Restraint Order made;
(5) The nature and complexity of the investigation and of the potential proceedings;
(6) The degree of assistance or of obstruction to the investigation.
Investigation and disclosure obligations before starting a prosecution
"Is there any other material that might affect the sufficiency of evidence?
Prosecutors must consider at this stage and throughout the case whether there is any material that may affect the assessment of the sufficiency of evidence, including examined and unexamined material in the possession of the police, and material that may be obtained through further reasonable lines of inquiry."
"The particular challenges presented by large and complex criminal prosecutions require an approach to disclosure which is specifically tailored to the needs of such cases. In these cases more than any other is the need for careful thought to be given to prosecution-led disclosure matters from the very earliest stage. It is essential that the prosecution takes a grip on the case and its disclosure requirements from the very outset of the investigation, which must continue throughout all aspects of the case preparation."
The need for a clear strategy, and for an approach to disclosure recorded in a Disclosure Management document, is further stressed at paragraph 51.
"The DMD is a living document and should be started by allocated prosecutors at the very outset of the case. It is essential that disclosure issues are addressed pre- charge where possible and that disclosure is approached by both investigator and prosecutor through the exercise of judgment and not simply as a schedule completing exercise."
It is also indicated that such document is to be served on the defence and the court prior to the PTPH. There is further emphasised, in Chapter 29, the need for careful administration and preparation in large scale cases.
"Once a case is charged, the prosecution team is bound by the pre-trial timetable. If the initial disclosure exercise is not complete at the time of charging experience shows that the prosecution can quickly get into difficulty.
That is why 'it is essential that the prosecution takes a grip on the case and its disclosure requirements from the very outset of the investigation' "
It is stated as a Principle:
"In any serious or complex case the CPS Prosecutor will not authorise charging, notwithstanding the strength of the evidence, unless the disclosure exercise has been front loaded."
Indeed it is also said that serving initial disclosure at or around the time of charging has a number of (identified) advantages: which are then listed.
"In order to lead (or drive) disclosure, it is essential that the prosecution takes a grip on the case and its disclosure requirements from the outset. To fulfil its duty under section 3, the prosecution must adopt a considered and appropriately resourced approach to giving initial disclosure. Such an approach must extend to and include the overall disclosure strategy, selection of software tools, identifying and isolating material that is subject to legal professional privilege ("LPP") and proposing search terms to be applied. The prosecution must explain what it is doing and what it will not be doing at this stage, ideally in the form of a "Disclosure Management Document". This document, as recommended by the Review and the Protocol, is intended to clarify the prosecution's approach to disclosure (for example, which search terms have been used and why) and to identify and narrow the issues in dispute. By explaining what the prosecution is and is not doing, early engagement from the defence would be prompted. Plainly such an approach requires early and careful preparation from the prosecution, tailored to the needs of the individual case. This approach is now embodied in the process for the document-heavy cases forming part of the Better Case Management ("BCM") initiative. Moreover, it is reflected in the approach to "initial disclosure" (see further below) adopted by the Serious Fraud Office, as helpfully summarised in the respondents' Focused Response, at paras 20-22."
In fact, R can, on its facts, be taken as almost a paradigm of the disasters that can ensue if the disclosure obligations are not sufficiently addressed and disclosure schedules prepared before charge but are left to the course of the proceedings themselves after they have been started. (The prosecution in R was in fact the subject of the further decision in R and W cited above.)
The application before and the decision of the judge
"In this case due to the complexities in the evidence, the need to ensure that the disclosure schedules and Disclosure Management Document are ready and fit for purpose and the additional enquires that are being made the charging decision has not yet been made but it is anticipated that once the matters outlined above are successfully resolved the case can progress to charge."
It was also stated that, while leading counsel continued to advise, no advice on charging had been given. The chronology concluded:
"It is anticipated that, subject to the requirements of the Code and the [Full Code Test] being met, the case is now moving towards a charging decision."
" the CPS could intervene and if appropriate apply for a further RO. It seems to me that such an application is only likely to succeed if by then charges have been preferred or, at the very least, are imminent."
That last observation is particularly puzzling, not least given that the judge proceeded to discharge the Restraint Order on the basis that proceedings had not been started within a reasonable time.
"Whilst it might be argued that the investigation is proceeding methodically, that is not the test which is, for me, a simple one: whether the time taken by the CPS to charge (or not to charge) is reasonable."
"On balance I have concluded that s 42(7) is satisfied and that I must discharge the RO. There must be a reasonable requirement to act as rapidly as possible where a draconian order such as the RO in this case is in place with the financial detrimental consequences to [S] and more importantly to others which are set out in the material which has been produced to me by those acting for the TIBs and by Mr Georgiou instructed by [S]. The test of what is a reasonable time must, in my view, depend on the circumstances and here the circumstances are that there is an all assets RO in place. An analogy can, in my view, be drawn between the need to act expeditiously when a defendant is in custody and more laxity allowed for someone on bail. The test of what is/is not a reasonable time will be different in those different circumstances."
Submissions of the parties
Disposal
Conclusion