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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions >> AYP, R. v [2024] EWCA Crim 952 (23 May 2024) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2024/952.html Cite as: [2024] EWCA Crim 952, [2024] WLR(D) 401, [2024] Crim LR 808, CLW/24/30/2, [2024] 2 Cr App R 23 |
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CRIMINAL DIVISION
The Strand London WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
(Lord Justice Holroyde)
MRS JUSTICE MAY DBE
MR JUSTICE BOURNE
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R E X |
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A Y P |
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Lower Ground Floor, 46 Chancery Lane, London WC2A 1JE
Tel No: 020 7404 1400; Email: [email protected] (Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Miss H Douglas appeared on behalf of the Respondent
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Crown Copyright ©
Thursday 23rd May 2024
LORD JUSTICE HOLROYDE:
"Well, it will not. I will be ordering it to lie on the file. I will indicate the defendant can be released. He has been in custody for a period way beyond any sentence that he would have to serve if convicted If the Crown seek to re-open it, they may get leave to re-open it, but if it is in front of me, I will then stay it as an abuse of process "
" whilst I understand the Crown thinking it is in the public interest, this is a case which is simply wasting the court's time when we have far more important and serious things to do, added to which you have been in custody now for a period beyond any sentence that could reasonably be imposed in the circumstances, should you be convicted. So for those reasons I am stopping the prosecution proceeding. We call it leaving the indictment to lie on the file and you will be processed downstairs by the officers and then released."
The judge then thanked counsel and concluded the hearing.
"The order I have made does not preclude, in the event of a future possession incident, the Crown from seeking to lift the stay, as opposed to an abuse of process stay, which is why I am not necessarily persuaded it is a terminatory ruling and in those circumstances it seems to me it is a proper course for the court to take. We have far more important and difficult matters to be dealing with, and it would not be a useful use of the court's time to allow the case to proceed. However, the public are protected by virtue of the fact there is a stay of the proceedings, rather than a final ruling, and that stay can be lifted "
"58 General right of appeal in respect of rulings
(1) This section applies where a judge makes a ruling in relation to a trial on indictment at an applicable time and the ruling relates to one or more offences included in the indictment.
(2) The prosecution may appeal in respect of the ruling in accordance with this section.
(3) The ruling is to have no effect whilst the prosecution is able to take any steps under subsection (4).
(4) The prosecution may not appeal in respect of the ruling unless
(a) following the making of the ruling, it
(i) informs the court that it intends to appeal, or
(ii) requests an adjournment to consider whether to appeal, and
(b) if such an adjournment is granted, it informs the court following the adjournment that it intends to appeal.
(5) If the prosecution requests an adjournment under subsection (4)(a)(ii), the judge may grant such an adjournment.
(8) The prosecution may not inform the court in accordance with subsection (4) that it intends to appeal, unless, at or before that time, it informs the court that it agrees that, in respect of the offence or each offence which is the subject of the appeal, the defendant in relation to that offence should be acquitted of that offence if either of the conditions mentioned in subsection (9) is fulfilled.
(9) Those conditions are
(a) that leave to appeal to the Court of Appeal is not obtained, and
(b) that the appeal is abandoned before it is determined by the Court of Appeal.
(10) If the prosecution informs the court in accordance with subsection (4) that it intends to appeal, the ruling mentioned in subsection (1) is to continue to have no effect in relation to the offence or offences which are the subject of the appeal whilst the appeal is pursued.
(11) If and to the extent that a ruling has no effect in accordance with this section
(a) any consequences of the ruling are also to have no effect,
(b) the judge may not take any steps in consequence of the ruling, and
(c) if he does so, any such steps are also to have no effect.
(12) Where the prosecution has informed the court of its agreement under subsection (8) and either of the conditions mentioned in subsection (9) is fulfilled, the judge or the Court of Appeal must order that the defendant in relation to the offence or each offence concerned be acquitted of that offence.
(13) In this section 'applicable time', in relation to a trial on indictment, means any time (whether before or after the commencement of the trial) before the [time when the judge starts his] summing-up to the jury."
"'ruling' includes a decision, determination, direction, finding, notice, order, refusal, rejection or requirement".
"Decision to appeal
38.2. (1) An appellant must tell the Crown Court judge of any decision to appeal
(a) immediately after the ruling against which the appellant wants to appeal; or
(b) on the expiry of the time to decide whether to appeal allowed under paragraph (2).
(2) If an appellant wants time to decide whether to appeal
(a) the appellant must ask the Crown Court judge immediately after the ruling; and
(b) the general rule is that the judge must not require the appellant to decide there and then but instead must allow until the next business day."
" In effect the Crown is bound to accept, as the price of bringing an interlocutory appeal under section 58, the consequence that if it fails the Defendant must be acquitted (as well as the possibility that this Court may order such acquittal on the grounds that it is necessary in the interests of justice to do so). "
Hence, obviously, an appeal will generally not be brought if the prosecution case is able to continue, notwithstanding the ruling concerned. But if the prosecution is prepared to pay the price required by section 58(8), any ruling within the definition in section 74 may be the subject of an appeal.
" But whilst the expression 'terminating ruling' may have, and has had, its convenience as shorthand, its use is best avoided when considering how the Act must be construed, for it appears nowhere in the statute. For that reason, we do not think that it is helpful to try to answer the jurisdictional question by asking whether or not the ruling presently in question would bring the prosecution to an end. "
It is more than 16 years since those wise words were spoken, and we once again emphasise their importance. The present case illustrates the misdirected focus which may result if a phrase which can be no more than a convenient shorthand is given an undue status.
"It is clear that either an adjournment must be sought immediately, or the decision to appeal and the acquittal agreement must be notified to the court immediately. In any event, the acquittal agreement must be provided by at latest the time when a decision to intend to appeal is notified. What in this context does 'immediately following the ruling' mean? In our judgment it means there and then and in any event before anything important has happened. We think that it would be going too far to say that it means simultaneously with the conclusion of the ruling, and section 58(3) suggests that the requirement has functional rather than merely temporal bite. Otherwise there would be no need for any provision to stop the clock (in the absence of an adjournment). But plainly there is no room whatsoever for temporising. "
"In each case therefore a careful examination of the facts is required to determine whether the prosecution has acted 'immediately' in the context of the case under consideration. Much will depend on the complexity of the case, whether the ruling is oral or handed down and whether the prosecutor has had an opportunity of discussing the position with the alleged victim or other interested parties. In simple cases, such a discussion can well be had, as the CPS guidance suggests, before the ruling. In other cases, where the issues are complex and the ruling complex, time must be afforded for proper consultation; the word 'immediately' must therefore allow time for such consultation. A sensible allowance for the requirements of justice and the practicalities of criminal trials must therefore be made. What the prosecution must not do is to 'temporise' and cause delay except in accordance with s.58(4) and the provisions of Crim PR 67."
" When an order is made by consent of both parties that the indictment shall remain on the file and shall not be prosecuted without the leave of the court, the matter is within the court's judicial discretion."