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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Skinner v Director of Public Prosecutions [2004] EWHC 2914 (Admin) (29 November 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2004/2914.html Cite as: [2004] EWHC 2914 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
DIVISIONAL COURT
Strand London WC2 |
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B e f o r e :
(Vice President of the Court of Appeal, Criminal Division)
MR JUSTICE PITCHFORD
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MARY TERESA SKINNER | (CLAIMANT) | |
-v- | ||
THE DIRECTOR OF PUBLIC PROSECUTIONS | (DEFENDANT) |
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Computer-Aided Transcript of the Stenograph Notes of
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MR N LEY (instructed by Byrne Frodsham & Co, Widnes) appeared on behalf of the CLAIMANT
MR R BENDALL (instructed by CPS Surrey, Guildford) appeared on behalf of the DEFENDANT
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Crown Copyright ©
"I indicated that in my view the pre-trial order could not have been intended to 'join' these defendants' cases such that they became co-defendants in one trial with all the procedural implications that would follow, as there is nothing in the facts of the offences to connect them. The only common feature is that the same breathalyser machine was used to obtain breath samples. However, in my view it was procedurally permissible to 'hear the cases together' to avoid the same expert evidence having to be repeated and I refused to re-open DJ Clarke's decision and hear the cases separately."
"During the course of Ms Skinner's defence case, application was made to call Professor Makin to give evidence, in addition to Dr Trafford. The written statements served under the Magistrates Courts (Advance Notice of Expert Evidence) Rules 1997 are required to set out the expert evidence to be adduced. Dr Trafford's statement contained a paragraph as follows: 'This statement should be read in conjunction with Professor Makin's statement of 14th November 2002 and relates to defendants currently being tried at Staines Magistrates' Court. I adopt that report and am in complete agreement with his conclusions contained therein'. Dr Trafford having been called to give that evidence, I ruled that it was not in the interests of justice to delay proceedings and incur additional costs by having Professor Makin called simply to repeat the same expert evidence."
"Mr Ley further submitted that by convicting Mr Farley I had indicated acceptance of the prosecution evidence, and therefore, in the interests of justice, I should not continue with the trial against Ms Skinner. I rejected this application as Mr Farley's conviction was based on other considerations. I provided Mr Ley with a copy of my decision in that case (which he had not seen before making his submission) and no further representations were made on this point. I exhibit my decision in the case of Mr Farley as KJM1."
I should add that the District Judge also exhibited to her decision the judgment which she gave on 2nd February 2004 in relation to the appellant.
"Mr Ley, on behalf of Ms Skinner, sought to cross-examine Mr Stephens. I ruled that Mr Ley was not entitled to 'cross-examine' an expert witness called on behalf of one of the other defendants, in the same way that he was not entitled to cross-examine other prosecution or defence witnesses not relevant to Ms Skinner's case. Had evidence in the form of a statement from Andrew Stephens been served on the Crown in advance of the hearing on behalf of Ms Skinner, Mr Ley would have been entitled to call Mr Stephens as an expert witness. However, in the absence of such a statement, I declined to grant leave under rule 5 Magistrates' Courts (Advance Notice of Expert Evidence) Rules 1997 to allow Mr Ley to adduce expert evidence from Mr Stephens. I indicated that as this witness had only been called on behalf of Mr Farley, I would be confining his evidence to Mr Farley's case and would not take into account any evidence given by Mr Stephens when considering the case against Ms Skinner or Mr Sanders."
"a) Mary Skinner was driving a Vauxhall motor vehicle on London Road at about 00.10 on 17.10.02.
b) It remained a possibility that she might have had alcohol present in her stomach at the time she provided breath tests.
c) A roadside test was administered, and she provided a positive specimen.
d) The standard breathalyser procedure was gone through on the Intoximeter EC/IR at Staines police station. Ms Skinner indicated that she had not consumed or taken any of the things listed in the MGDDA that might affect the accuracy of the analysis.
e) The Evidential Breath Testing Machine (EBTM) used to analyse Ms Skinner's breath specimens was an intoximeter EC/IR.
f) Ms Skinner provided two specimens for analysis on the EBTM at 01.00 and 01.03, the readings both being 72.
g) The Staines machine does not accurately detect Mouth Alcohol (MA) on each and every occasion when it is present.
h) The machine was serviced at regular intervals. On each occasion the engineer visited the machine was described as fully operational and calibration noted to be OK. On service visits, the engineer issued a certificate stating that the instrument complied fully with the requirements in the Home Office Quality Framework Document (HOQFD).
i) The machine had not been installed anywhere other than Staines Police Station, or returned to the laboratory.
j) No alterations had been made to the machine that would affect the analytical part of the instrument (calibration of the chemical fuel cell).
k) The Infrared (IR) cell had not been changed.
l) The settings under which the Staines machine operated may have been altered."
"2. Was I entitled to conclude, as a matter of law, that in the absence of any admissible evidence to the contrary, the prosecution were entitled to rely on a presumption that the EC/IR, being an approved device, was operating with the correct type approved software in the case?
3. Was I entitled, as a matter of law, to rule that there was a presumption that, in the absence of sufficient evidence to challenge it's reliability, a machine I had found to be an intoximeter EC/IR and an approved device, was operating correctly (including operating with the correct software) at the time the specimens were provided?
4. With regard to the conduct of the trial, was I entitled to
a) Commence the trial knowing that it would have to be adjourned part-heard for over 3 months before its conclusion?b) Continue with the trial part-heard in November 2003 and again in February 2004, the trial having commenced in July 2003?c) Interpret a previous decision to 'join' cases together as a direction that they be 'heard together' rather than legally joined where there were no connecting facts relating to the offences and where the only connecting feature was the use of the same breathalyser machine to obtain evidential specimens on different dates?d) Continue to hear the informations together to avoid the need for similar expert evidence to be repeated in separate trials, albeit that the cases were in fact concluded separately?e) Refuse to allow cross-examination of an expert witness not called on behalf of Ms Skinner where no advance statement of evidence from that witness in relation to her case had been served on the Crown and where that evidence would not be taken into account in determining her case?f) Refuse to allow the defendant to call a second expert whose evidence was the same as the expert called on behalf of Ms Skinner and who would not give any new evidence that was materially different from that already given by the previous defence expert witness?g) Continue with the case against Ms Skinner having concluded the case against Mr Farley?"
"As the Government and the Commission have pointed out, in principle the Contracting States remain free to apply the criminal law to an act where it is not carried out in the normal exercise of one of the rights protected under the Convention and, accordingly, to define the constituent elements of the resulting offence. In particular, and again in principle, the Contracting States may, under certain conditions, penalise a simple or objective fact as such, irrespective of whether it results from criminal intent or from negligence. Examples of such offences may be found in the laws of the Contracting States."
Lord Bingham goes on: "It also sanctions, but in a qualified way, the application of factual and legal presumptions." Lord Bingham then quoted from paragraph 28 of the judgment in Salabiaku and went on:
"Thus the question in any case must be whether, on the facts, the reasonable limits to which a presumption must be subject have been exceeded."
"The intoximeter machine has embedded in it software which governs its operation. The software version for the EC/IR is specified in the TA order issued on 1.3.98 by the then Secretary of State as version 5.23. There is no direct evidence before the court confirming that the Staines machine is running on version 5.23 ... The defence must meet an evidential burden with regard to raising TA issues analogous to reliability issues. In other words, defence must put some evidence before the court that the machine is not in fact operating with the correct software before the CPS are put to strict proof on this point. To find otherwise would mean that the defence need only assert that the software might not be 5.23 and the CPS would be put to formal proof of the version of software installed in every case."
It will be noted that those comments amplify the conclusions in the case stated which I have earlier rehearsed.
"The starting point is simple. Justice must be done. The defendant is entitled to a fair trial: and, which is sometimes overlooked, the prosecution is equally entitled to a reasonable opportunity to present the evidence against the defendant. It is not however a concomitant of the entitlement to a fair trial that either or both sides are further entitled to take as much time as they like, or for that matter, as long as counsel and solicitors or the defendants themselves think appropriate. Resources are limited. The funding for courts and judges, for prosecuting and the vast majority of defence lawyers is dependent on public money, for which there are many competing demands ... the sensible use of time requires judicial management and control."
Mr Bendall submits that those observations are as apt in relation to trial by justices as they are in relation to trial before a judge and jury at the Crown Court. With that submission I agree. In the light of it, the conclusion in the case stated which I have already rehearsed in paragraph 9 above, explaining why the District Judge did not permit Professor Makin to be called, seems to me to be well-founded.
(1) the machine was in all observable respects compliant with the approval, and it was common ground between the prosecution and the defence that, subject to the question of operating software, it was compliant;(2) the machine, when supplied, should have had version 5.23 operating software installed since those were the terms of the approval;
(3) the machine had been inspected and calibrated on several occasions, on each occasion the engineer described the EC/IR as fully operational and properly calibrated;
(4) no instance of malfunctioning was noticed and there was no occasion of out of service recorded, in particular it had never been returned to the laboratory for modification; and
(5) as to changes in machine settings which may have taken place, these would not have involved any change to the software programme and had nothing to do with the gas delivery system.