[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions >> Cartwright, R. v [2020] EWCA Crim 369 (28 February 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2020/369.html Cite as: [2020] EWCA Crim 369 |
[New search] [Printable PDF version] [Help]
CRIMINAL DIVISION
Strand London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
MRS JUSTICE CHEEMA-GRUBB
HER HONOUR JUDGE MUNRO QC
(Sitting as a Judge of the CACD)
____________________
R E G I N A | ||
v | ||
JOHN ANTHONY CARTWRIGHT | ||
MICHAEL JOHN BANCROFT | ||
DAVID JOHN MILLS |
____________________
Epiq Europe Ltd, Lower Ground, 18-22 Furnival Street, London EC4A 1JS,
Tel No: 020 7404 1400 Email: [email protected]
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Mr S Reevell appeared on behalf of the Applicant Bancroft
Mr K Vaughan QC & Mr S Baker appeared on behalf of the Applicant Bancroft
Mr A Bunyan appeared on behalf of the Crown
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
i. "That was at the cost of enormous losses to the Bank of Scotland of some £245,000,000, I acknowledge a gross figure, as I conceded in my observations with Mr Vaughan earlier in the day. Some of the connections were already significantly in debt and the loss attributable to the actions of you, Mr Scourfield and Mr Mills and, in part, Mr Bancroft, do not extend nearly to that sum.
ii. But also the cost, in many respects worse in my judgment, was that destruction along the way of the livelihoods of a number of innocent, hard-working people. Some of these connections were, at the very least, potentially capable of rescue but what you, Mr Scourfield, let happen through Mr Mills and Mr Bancroft predominantly ensured that they would not and could not."
i. "If any business of a company is carried on with intent to defraud creditors of the company or creditors of any other person, or for any fraudulent purpose, every person who was knowingly a party to the carrying on of the business in that manner is liable..."
i. "If any business of a company is carried on for any fraudulent purpose every person who is knowingly a party to the carrying on of the business in that manner commits the offence of fraudulent trading ...
ii. A person is a party to the carrying on of a business if he is running the business or exercising a controlling or managing function in it such as would enable to have some say in what activities it should be involved in. It does not mean that he has to hold any formal post or title."
i. "For Mr Cartwright there are four questions. Has the Crown made you sure that the defendant held a controlling or managing function in the business of the company during the period identified in the count? If no, you proceed to question 3; if yes, you go on to question 2.
ii. Question 2: has the Crown made you sure that while Mr Cartwright held that function the company was being carried on by him dishonestly for a fraudulent purpose, namely personal gain, to which he or any of his co-accused were not entitled? If the answer to that is no you proceed to question 3. If the answer to that is yes Mr Cartwright would be guilty essentially as a principal rather than as a secondary party because the questions under question 3 and 4, as you have seen elsewhere, deal with the issue of potential liability as a secondary party.
iii. So, question 3 in relation to Mr Cartwright: has the Crown made you sure that Mr Mills or Mr Bancroft is guilty of this count? If no, the verdict in relation to Mr Cartwright would be not guilty; if yes, you would proceed to question 4.
iv. Question 4: has the Crown made you sure that Mr Cartwright at the time Mr Mills or Mr Bancroft was committing the offence: (1) knew that Mr Mills or Mr Bancroft was doing so; and (2) intentionally assisted Mr Mills or Mr Bancroft to commit [the offence]? If no, the verdict is not guilty; if yes, the verdict is guilty."
i. "The cases to which we were referred upon the matter offer very little guidance. In our view, section 458 is designed to include those who exercise a controlling or managerial function or who, in Lord Lane's phrase, are 'running the business'. A salesman who is not a manager and who sells shares he knows are worthless can be charged with offences under the Theft Act or with conspiracy. Circumstances will vary infinitely but we accept the force of Mr Barnes' second proposition that where there is an issue as to whether or not a defendant comes within the ambit of the section, that issue should be put to the jury together with clear guidance, appropriate to the facts of the case, as to the meaning of 'party to the carrying on of the business of the company'".
i. "Section 332(1) reads as follows: 'If in the course of... winding up ... it appears that any business of the company has been carried on with intent to defraud ... or for any fraudulent purpose, the court ... may... declare that any persons who were knowingly parties to the carrying on of the business in manner aforesaid shall be personally responsible ... for all or any of the debts or other liabilities of the company as the court may direct."
i. "Where any business of a company is carried on with such intent or for such purpose as is mentioned in subsection (1) ... every person who was knowingly a party to the carrying on of the business in manner aforesaid, shall be liable on conviction on indictment..."
i. "In the present case it was open to the jury to find, if not inevitable that they would find, that whoever was running this business was intending to deceive or was actually deceiving..."
i. "Given the conclusion that not all those working for a company are 'party' to the carrying on of its business, the most obvious division seems to be that between the company's 'brains' and its 'hands' -- between those officers (called in the Draft Code 'controlling officers') whose acts are the company's acts and others. This is a well-established distinction even if the precise line of demarcation is not always clear; and it would be undesirable to have to draw two separate lines dividing those working for the company. If a person's acts are the company's acts it seems reasonable to say that he is party to the carrying on of its business.
ii. A person who is party to the carrying on of the business is a principal offender. Does this leave any room for the application of the principles of secondary liability? These principles apply unless they are expressly or impliedly excluded. If they apply, then the limited construction put upon 'party' is much less significant. Provided that someone was party to the carrying on of the business, anyone who knowingly gave assistance or encouragement would be equally liable. Even if the appellant was, as he contended, 'merely a salesman acting under orders' he would be an abettor if he knew the relevant facts. The fact that he was acting under orders would have been no defence. The question of secondary liability is not discussed by the court though it refers to an argument of the Crown: 'The appellant and Linsdell [who was convicted] could equally have been liable on the basis of a joint enterprise.' Joint enterprise is only an instance of secondary liability. The quashing of the conviction might then be thought to suggest that these principles have no application, but it would be unjustifiable so to conclude. Even if they do apply the court might have been unwilling to uphold a conviction on that basis unless the jury had been directed about it."
i. "In Miles, 'however it was said that the section was designed to include only those who exercise a controlling or managerial function, or who are 'running' the business. A person is not a party to the carrying on of a business merely because he is involved in the activities of the business. At first sight this is a significant narrowing of the offence. But the prosecution presented its case on the basis that Miles did have a managerial role. He claimed that he was only a salesman, acting under orders. The jury were directed that the offence could be committed by 'concurring in the trade which is involved in the business of the company'. The Court of Appeal seems to have concluded that this was a misdirection in view of the issue raised. 'Concurring in the trade which is involved in the business of the company' is not the same thing as participating in a fraud. It does not follow that only a person 'running' the business is a party to the carrying on of the business.
ii. Indeed, it is now clear that that test is too narrow in at least one respect, because it would exclude altogether persons who deal with the organisation carrying on the fraudulent business but are not its employees or agents. Re Bank of Credit and Commerce International SA concerned a claim against Banque Arabe under the Insolvency Act 1986, s.213(2) on the round that Banque Arabe had been party to the fraudulent carrying on of business by BCCI. Banque Arabe sought to raise as a preliminary issue the question whether it could be liable under s.213(2) if it had not exercised a controlling or managerial function within BCCI. Neuberger J held that it could, and that the contrary view was not arguable. Indeed the words 'any persons who were knowingly parties to the carrying on of the business in the manner above mentioned' referred more naturally to third parties than to persons employed by the company conducting the fraudulent business. He concluded that
iii. 'a company or other entity which carries on (so far as it is concerned) a bona fide business with the company, does not fall within s.213(2), but a company which is involved in, and assists and benefits from, the offending business, or the business carried on in an offending way, and does so knowingly and, therefore, dishonestly does fall or at least can fall within s.213(2)."
i. "Even if Miles is authority for the proposition that an employee is not 'a party to' the carrying on of the fraudulent business merely because he plays a minor part in it, it may still be arguable that he commits the offence because he aids and abets those who are parties to it. Indeed the Crown argued in Miles that the conviction could be sustained on this ground. The court did not expressly decide the point. It may be arguable that by quashing the conviction, it implicitly rejected the argument. If so, this could only be on the basis that the fraudulent trading provisions by implication exclude the ordinary principles of secondary liability. But it is more likely that the court was simply unwilling to uphold the conviction on a basis other than that on which the jury had been directed."
i. "You may argue that some discount for delay attributable to prosecution failures was appropriate. The Court may wish to consider whether a defendant who stands trial merits a lesser discount for delay than one who pleads guilty and also whether the enjoyment of a luxury lifestyle whilst on remand (attributable to the criminal conduct alleged and subsequently proven), distentitles a defendant to a discount for delay that he would otherwise receive. You may also submit that the total sentence was manifestly excessive."
i. "You are, in my judgment, a thoroughly corrupt and devious man, adept at exploiting the weaknesses of others, particularly where that weakness is money and adept, too, in getting others to do your dirty work for you. Standing in the shadows, you had Mr Bancroft and his loyal lapdog, Mr Cartwright, to get their hands dirty at your direction and for your mutual financial advantage, in your case, compared to them, it has to be said, a staggering financial advantage."
i. "I accept that there were serious failings on the part of the Crown to get to grips properly with the exercise of disclosure and this explains at least two years of that delay to which I have referred and to a limited extent in reaching what I consider to be the just sentences for all of you in this case, I have taken that into account.
ii. For some of you I am not entirely persuaded that this has really added anything to your plight. Had, for example, you admitted your offending to the police or pleaded guilty in 2013 and then had, for example, to wait an inordinate amount of time for sentence because others had insisted on a trial, the delay would, of course, be of much greater significance and value to you now.
iii. Indeed, I am quite sure that Mr Mills, for example, has simply and smugly continued to enjoy the fruits of his wrongdoing and really could have no complaint about the delay that there has been."
i. "22. However, there is one feature of this case that was not expressly taken into account by the judge, namely delay. This case is an example of the increasingly common and unjustified delay between offending and charge. The appellant was arrested in September 2017 but not notified that she was to be prosecuted until August 2018, by way of postal requisition.
ii. 23. Such delay causes injustice to both sides, especially in this sensitive type of case. The entire sentencing landscape may change. Victims and their families have to endure the wait with all the extra stress that that brings. Whilst it is true that it was the appellant's choice not to admit the offence straightaway, she is not to be punished for that choice. The case was relatively simply and the delay appears to be unjustified. Where there is unjustifiable delay, it imposes extra strain on a defendant, particularly where, as in this case, not just the defendant but also her family will be affected. In such circumstances [it] may be justifiable for a court to take account of unjustified delay."
i. "Mr Bancroft, you were already clearly a thoroughly dishonest man as is shown by what happened at Ritz, as I say, an aggravating feature in my judgment in your case. You were Mr Mills' frontman and heavily engaged in the process of maintaining the hold both you and he had on. Mr Scourfield. You are clearly a bully when it suits you to be and with Mr Mills you plundered Theros, MSG and Remnant for fees and any useful assets you could get your hands on.
ii. In the extraordinary letter you sent to me, written, it seems, before verdict but rightly anticipating what that verdict, or, rather, what those verdicts would be, you profess remorse for what you describe as mistakes but you told me nothing about why you made them and you ask me to take into account how affected your family will be by your incarceration.
iii. You have, in fact, put up no case since 2010 when you were first arrested and interviewed and none in this trial and the only conclusion that I have been able to reach is that this is because you remain the sidekick of your old friend.
iv. Mr Mills, and you couldn't countenance doing anything that might harm his interests, for example by pleading guilty. So I conclude you have put his interests first and your own before those of your family, yet now you ask me to think of them for you."
Epiq Europe Ltd hereby certify that the above is an accurate and complete record of the proceedings or part thereof.
Lower Ground, 18-22 Furnival Street, London EC4A 1JS
Tel No: 020 7404 1400
Email: [email protected]