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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions >> Dunn & Anor, R. v [2021] EWCA Crim 439 (26 March 2021) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2021/439.html Cite as: [2021] EWCA Crim 439 |
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202000115 B5 202000030 B5 |
ON APPEAL FROM THE CROWN COURT AT SNARESBROOK
HHJ Patricia Lees
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MRS JUSTICE WHIPPLE DBE
and
HER HONOUR JUDGE DEBORAH TAYLOR, THE RECORDER OF WESTMINSTER
____________________
(1) HENRY DUNN (2) CHRISTIAN JAMES KING |
Appellants |
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- and - |
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REGINA |
Respondent |
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Mr James Scobie QC (instructed by Metro Law Solicitors Ltd) for the 2nd Applicant
Ms Claire Harden-Frost and Mr Thom Dyke (instructed by the Crown Prosecution Service) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 4 March 2021
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Singh :
Introduction
Factual background
The first trial
"… You will be asked for a verdict on count two in respect of any defendant you found not guilty of count one."
The second trial
"(i) Counts 1 and 2 were so similar that they should not both have been on the same Indictment either as separate or alternative Counts.
(ii) The jury should not have been invited to consider Count 2 in the circumstances which arose, namely their inability to reach a verdict of at least 10 in respect of Count 1 and/or
(iii) The prosecution should not be permitted to retry Mr Dunn on Count 1 because he has been convicted of Count 2, on the basis relied on in (i) above – namely, it is founded on the same facts and because to permit a retrial of the more serious charge would offend not just the public perception of justice but should offend the court's sense of justice and propriety amounting to an abuse of the process by reason of convicting him twice of a single crime."
"In respect of (i):- in my judgment there is an important difference between Counts 1 and 2; the mental element and so the degree of criminal responsibility. The facts upon which each Count is based are largely the same but there is an important difference between the mental element required for each. That must also be why there is a significant difference as between the two offences as regards sentencing maxima. In any event, as the Crown rightly point out, this matter has already been ruled upon by this Court following an application made on behalf of Christian King. This Court has ruled that the Indictment containing two Counts is valid for the reasons provided at that time but that the Counts would be left to the jury as alternatives, with Count 2 only to be considered after finality had been reached in respect of Count 1.
It is accepted by Mr FitzGerald that these are not statutory alternatives and must therefore fall into the category of 'forensic alternatives' as referred to in R v Nelson [2016] EWCA Crim 1517.
In respect of (ii):- It was my stated view that the approach to be adopted was the approach ultimately taken. Counsel were given the opportunity to research that view overnight and submissions were invited. The prosecution research revealed that approach was a course approved in R v McEvilly [2008] EWCA Crim 1162, especially at paragraphs Q100-105. As Miss Harden-Frost and Mr Dyke set out, in Mr Dunn's case, finality was reached on Count 1 by discharging the jury from reaching a verdict as there was no realistic prospect of their agreeing. Having discharged the jury on Count 1, the Court was entitled to allow the jury to go on to consider Count 2. No submission to the contrary was received.
In respect of (iii):- it is as much in the interests of justice to ensure that the guilty are convicted as the innocent walk free. It is in my judgment also in the interests of justice for a court to know on what basis a person guilty of criminal activity should be sentenced. In this case complaint is made that Mr Dunn would, if convicted of Count 1, have two convictions. That is true, as it is for Mr Davis in respect of whom the prosecution required guilty pleas to both Counts. As I said when that was aired during legal submissions at the first trial, it is open to me when sentencing to reflect that fact and ensure fairness by for example passing concurrent sentences."
Submissions for the Appellant
(a) If Counts 1 and 2 are significantly different, then it is an abuse of process to prosecute the more serious offence, the jury having convicted the Appellant of the less serious offence. Whilst they are not statutory alternatives, they are genuine alternatives.
(b) If Counts 1 and 2 are so similar that any difference is de minimis, the two counts ought not to have been on the indictment together.
Submissions for the Respondent
(a) At the first trial the counts were left to the jury as forensic alternatives only, not as legal alternatives.
(b) Counts 1 and 2 "cover similar ground but are different offences with significantly different mental elements to them"; the difference in the statutory maximum penalties illustrates the distinction.
The appeal against conviction
"22. R v Elrington (1861) 1 B & S 688 has given its name to a principle which was only partly in issue in the case but which was articulated by Cockburn CJ. The defendant was indicted on three alternative counts of (1) assault causing grievous bodily harm, (2) assault causing actual bodily harm and (3) common assault. But he had previously been tried before the justices for the same assault and acquitted. There was a statutory bar on the subsequent prosecution provided by section 28 of the Offences against the Person Act 1828 (Lord Lansdowne's Act) but additionally the Chief Justice invoked a wider common law rule:
'…we must bear in mind the well-established principle of our criminal law that a series of charges shall not be preferred, and, whether a party accused of a minor offence is acquitted or convicted, he shall not be charged again on the same facts in a more aggravated form.'
As Lord Morris pointed out in Connelly (at 1315), this is clearly a reference to charges preferred after a previous one has been disposed of rather than to a series of charges in the same indictment, which latter course is perfectly proper. In the same case, Connelly, Lord Hodson aptly described the Elrington principle as a rule against 'an ascending scale' of charges. A good modern illustration is afforded by R v Beedie (supra). There a landlord failed to maintain a tenant's gas fire, resulting in the death of a tenant. He was prosecuted and convicted of offences under the Health and Safety at Work Act 1974, the death being proved as an aggravating feature of the offence. Later he was indicted for gross negligence manslaughter in respect of the same omission to maintain. This court held that the indictment ought to have been stayed on the Elrington principle. The Crown must ordinarily decide once and for all what charges are appropriate to alleged criminal misconduct and must prefer them. It is not normally open to it to proceed first for a minor offence and then later to charge a more serious one arising from the same facts.
23. In Connelly this principle was endorsed by Lords Morris, Hodson, Devlin and Pearce and there is no doubt that it represents good law. Lords Morris and Hodson regarded it as a modest extension of the pleas in bar of autrefois convict and acquit, but at that time (1963) the law relating to the limited power of a criminal court to stay a prosecution for abuse of process was in an early stage of development; this was long before the analysis in R v Horseferry Road Magistrates Court ex p Bennett [1994] 1 AC 42 and Attorney-General's Reference (No 1 of 1990) [1992] QB 278 – and see now Warren v Attorney General for Jersey [2011] UKPC 10; [2012] 1 AC 22. Lord Devlin's speech in Connelly itself contains an early and powerful enunciation of the existence of the power to control vexatious (or abusive) prosecutions, and he treated the Elrington principle as an aspect of it. As he observed, this is the better way to analyse the principle, because unlike the pleas in bar it does not provide an absolute bar to proceeding, but rather depends on the justice of the case. That is demonstrated by the long-standing exception to the principle where there has been a trial for an offence of violence, but the victim subsequently dies; in such a case a subsequent prosecution for murder has always been regarded as proper. For the same reasons, this court in Beedie treated the Elrington principle as an aspect of the (limited) abuse jurisdiction, and we agree that this is the best way to regard it in the modern context."
"… whether there is one count or two, there cannot be convictions for both of two offences which are properly mutually exclusive alternatives. If there were two counts, and no plea of guilty, the jury would try the defendant on both, but would not be permitted to return verdicts of guilty on more than one. In our view, the course now proposed by the Crown in this case would offend against this fundamental concept of alternative charges."
"34. But were these offences (possessing an article with intent to cause damage and possession of an offensive weapon) truly alternatives? As a matter of strict law, Mr Bennathan conceded that they were not, but argued that the effect of the way in which the case had been opened and left to the jury (with the prosecution asserting in opening and the judge directing that they were alternatives) meant that they had to be treated as such. At best, they were 'forensic' alternatives: if the jury convicted on count 1, the prosecution did not require consideration to be given to count 2. As Mr Heywood submitted, they were certainly not 'mutually exclusive alternatives' because they were not precisely the same in factual or legal description or in the mischief to which they were directed.
35. Possession of an offensive weapon can be and is a complete offence prior to any formation of the intention to cause damage and the two offences can be considered as separate in time: the offensive weapon offence was complete when the petrol and wicks were put into the bottles whereas the intention to cause damage need only have been formed later. Similarly, the two counts are totally different from classic mutually exclusive alternatives (such as theft and handling stolen goods) and different from murder and manslaughter (which was the subject of R v Saunders [1988] AC148 and R v Bayode [2013] EWCA Crim 356) because both depend on the same act, namely the killing, without any potential for a subsequent intent. Finally, they were not related to each other as a lesser included offence (whether at common law or by operation of section 6(2) or 6(3) of the Criminal Law Act 1967)."
"In our judgment, a different approach is entirely justifiable between those cases which are true alternatives (such as R v Bayode [2013] EWCA Crim 356) and those cases, described as forensic alternatives, which are not even though they are presented by the prosecution (and by the judge reflecting that approach) to the jury as such. In the circumstances, we conclude that although Judge Carr could have discouraged the prosecution from pursuing a retrial on count 1 (requiring further consideration of the public interest in the light of any comment he might have chosen to make), there was no impediment in law to the course which he took. In those circumstances, the appeal against conviction in relation to count 1 is also dismissed."
"Suspicion is a state of mind well short of belief and even further short of a belief in guilt or that guilt can be proved."
In that context Hughes LJ referred to the requirement in section 24(6) of the Police and Criminal Evidence Act 1984 that a police officer should have reasonable grounds for suspecting that a person has committed an arrestable offence in order to have the power to arrest that person. The distinction between suspicion and belief is also to be found in other statutory contexts.
Sentence
The decision of the Single Judge in the case of Dunn
"…
The relevant law and principles are set out at paragraphs 9-15 of the [Respondent's] Note. The applicable aggravating features are set out at paragraph 14 of the Note to which the Judge had regard. She set out the matter particularly clearly in her sentencing remarks at pages 2H – 4F. She had regard to the mitigation at pages 4G-5D.
Contrary to the submissions in the Advice and Grounds of Appeal, the Judge was entitled to regard you at the top of the conspiracy, involved with Mr King in the devising of the plan and organising its execution. That evaluation followed among other things from the detailed analysis of the information on your phones and the whereabouts of the use of your phones connected with your home, your movements and your frequent and significant contact with Mr King and Mr Davis. It also followed from your recruitment of Mr Griffin as the driver. The Judge had the benefit of being able to assess the matter, having heard your two trials in which the precise details of your telephone conversations were the subject of painstaking analysis. The Judge had the benefit of hearing you give evidence twice. The Judge took into account the short duration of the conspiracy.
The Judge also referred to the need for deterrent sentences and took into account the evidence provided by Detective Inspector McSheffrey about the recognised prevalence of similar offending in the Kent area: see sentencing remarks at page 4E-F. DI McSheffrey referred to the level of harm there being significantly higher than elsewhere due to the short Channel crossing, and the increase in illegal crossings being exceptional. This amounted to exceptional local circumstances which might influence sentencing levels: see R v Bondzie [2016] 1 WLR 3004 at paragraph 11.
The grounds of failing to give adequate weight to the mitigation are not well made out. The Judge considered your family circumstances, but balanced this against the knowledge that commission of serious crime puts family life at risk. The Judge took into account the absence of similar previous convictions. The seriousness of the offence was such despite this, it is not arguable that the sentence of 9 years was manifestly excessive or wrong in principle, nor does an appeal merit the consideration of the full Court."
Renewed application for leave to appeal against sentence by Dunn
The decision of the Single Judge in the case of King
"…
The relevant law and principles are set out at paragraphs 9-15 of the Note. The applicable aggravating features are set out at paragraph 14 of the Note to which the Judge had regard. This included the clear danger to lives of the Vietnamese youths and the disregard for their safety, the fact that their entry had been facilitated by strangers as opposed to members of their family, the significant amount of planning and the potential for significant financial gain in the enterprise. She set out the matter in her sentencing remarks at pages 2H – 4F. She had regard to the mitigation at pages 4G-5D.
The matters set out at paragraph 1 of the Draft Grounds of Appeal against Sentence do not provide a different perspective. The Judge was entitled to regard you (and Mr Dunn) at the top of the conspiracy and particularly in view of your supply of the boat and recruitment of Mr Davis. That was not the limit of your involvement. At the trial, there was detailed consideration of the telephone evidence particularly between you and Mr Dunn, showing your frequent and significant contact with Mr Dunn and Mr Davis. This took place with the use of what were described in the prosecution note on sentence as "'dirty' phones to maintain a sterile corridor between co-conspirators". The Judge had the benefit of being able to assess the matter following your trial and to reach the conclusion which she did. The Judge took into account the short duration of the conspiracy.
The Judge also referred to the need for deterrent sentences and took into account the evidence provided by Detective Inspector McSheffrey about the recognised prevalence of similar offending in this part of Kent: see sentencing remarks at page 4E-F. DI McSheffrey referred to the level of harm there being significantly higher than elsewhere due to the short Channel crossing, and the increase in illegal crossings being exceptional.
The ground of failing to give adequate weight to the mitigation is not well made out. The Judge considered your family circumstances but balanced this against the knowledge that commission of serious crime puts family life at risk. The Judge took into account the absence of similar previous convictions and certificates demonstrating achievements in custody and your working to reduce violence by others in custody. The seriousness of the offence was such that despite these points of mitigation, it is not arguable that the sentence of 9 years was manifestly excessive or wrong in principle nor does it merit the consideration of the full Court."
Renewed application for leave to appeal against sentence by King
Applications for extension of time