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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Rockall v Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs [2007] EWHC 614 (Admin) (22 March 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2007/614.html Cite as: [2007] EWHC 614 (Admin), [2007] WLR 2666, [2007] 1 WLR 2666 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
DIVISIONAL COURT
ON APPEAL FROM LOWESTOFT MAGISTRATES' COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
and
MR JUSTICE DAVIS
____________________
ROCKALL |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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DEPARTMENT FOR ENVIRONMENT, FOOD AND RURAL AFFAIRS |
Respondent |
____________________
Mr Ian Mann (instructed by Department for Environment Food & Rural Affairs) for the Respondent
Hearing dates : 1st March 2007
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Latham :
"Proceedings for an offence under this section may be instituted with in six months from the first discovery of the offence by the person taking the proceedings, provided that no proceedings shall be instituted more than two years after the date of the offence."
"a. A letter from DEFRA addressed to the court, dated the 8th November 2005 [sic], enclosing the information for laying, together with a draft summons."
(The respondent never suggested that this letter had in fact been sent on the 8th November 2005).
b. A copy of the information signed by the prosecutor with a fax header line giving the following details:
10/02'06 16:01 FAX 020 7238 1218 Defra Legal B3 003,
c. A copy of a draft summons with the following fax header line details: 10/02'06 16:01 FAX 020 7238 1218 Defra Legal B3 002
d. A copy of the letter mention in (a) with the following fax header line details: 10/02/06 16:00 FAX 020 7238 1218 Defra Legal B3 001"
This letter had a handwritten endorsement "Summons rtd 14.2.06 TB".
e. A copy of the summons, dated 14.2.06, upon which "13.2.06" had been handwritten as the "Date of Information" alongside the rubberstamp signature "V Rees-Morgan AUTHORISED BY THE CLERK TO THE JUSTICES"
f. A fax transmission report produced by the respondent as a business record showing that a three page fax was sent to 901502513875 with a starting time of "10/02 16:00" and the result of that transmission being shown as "OK"."
"10. We considered the points raised and we concluded that upon physical transmission of the information to the office of the clerk to the justices, within business hours and within the six month time limit, the information had been received by a member of staff of the clerk to the justices, expressly or impliedly authorised to receive it. We were aware that a later date had been endorsed upon the summons, for whatever reason, but that had no affect (sic) upon our decision that there was good service of the information to the office of the Clerk to the Justices within business hours. We therefore found that we had jurisdiction to hear the case and, proceeded accordingly.
11. The questions for the consideration of the High Court are:
(1) On the basis that by "good service" we mean "effective laying of the information" whether there was evidence on which we could find that the said information was laid on the 10th February 2006, rather than on the 13th February 2006.
(2) Whether, on the said basis, we were entitled to find that the information had been laid on the 10th February 2006 when
(i) the letter from the respondent to the court dated 08/11/05 and faxed to the court at 4 p.m. on the 10th February 2006 enclosing the information "for laying" requested the court to return a copy of the information "duly stamped with the date of laying":
(ii) no evidence was adduced relating to the receipt of the said fax; and
(iii) the information was returned to the Respondent duly stamped by a person authorised by the clerk to the justices, and showing the Date of information as 13.2.06."
"Further to our recent telephone conversation, I enclose one information for laying (plus a copy of each) and one draft summons (plus 2 copies of each) against Michael J Rockall
.....
I shall be grateful if the issued summonses can be returned to this office for service by Recorded Delivery together with a copy of the signed information duly stamped with the date of laying of the informations."
"Proceedings in summary jurisdiction of this sort are instituted by the laying of an information and the issue of a summons, and, when the summons is issued, that is the institution of the proceedings."
"We were referred to a number of authorities which considered somewhat similar provisions, but all I glean from those is that the answer to the question when proceedings are instituted or begun depends on the context in which the words are used and the purpose of the provision."
"That in each case the information was laid when it was received at the office of the clerk to the justice by a member of the staff expressly or impliedly authorised to receive it......
...per curiam: the laying of an information is a matter for the prosecution. It is the prosecutor's duty, if he wishes to prosecute, to prepare and lay the information before the magistrates' court. The acts of delivery and receipt are ministerial and justices of the peace or clerks to the justices may delegate to an appropriate subordinate authority. But if a summons is required, the information must after receipt be laid before a justice or the clerk to the justices; the function of a justice or the justices clerk in determining whether a summons should be issued is a judicial one which must be performed judicially and which cannot lawfully be delegated to a subordinate."
".... First, in their criminal jurisdiction, what magistrates' courts have jurisdiction to try summarily is an information, and what is required to give them that jurisdiction is that an information has been laid before them. Secondly, in their civil jurisdiction, what magistrates' courts have jurisdiction to try is a complaint, and what is required to give them that jurisdiction is that a complaint has been made to them. Their jurisdiction in criminal cases does not depend upon a summons or a warrant being issued and their civil jurisdiction does not depend on a summons being issued ...
My Lords, it is of crucial importance to appreciate that the laying of an information is a matter for the prosecution just as the making of a complaint is a matter for the complainant. In each case it is for the prosecutor or the complainant to decide how the information or how the complaint shall be formulated. I agree with the Divisional Court in the present cases that the commencement of criminal proceedings lies in the hands of the prosecutor. It is, in my opinion, the prosecutor's duty, if he wishes to prosecute, to prepare and lay the information before the magistrates' court, which means a justice of the peace or the clerk to the justices. The laying of an information before or the making of a complaint to a justice of the peace or the clerk to the justices to my mind means, in reference to a written information or complaint, procuring the delivery of the document to a person authorised to receive it on behalf of the justice of the peace and the clerks. The acts of delivery and receipt are ministerial, and I see no reason why the justice of the peace or the clerk to the justices should not delegate an appropriate subordinate authority to receive the information which the prosecutor desires to deliver. It can sensibly be inferred that any member of the staff in the office of the clerks to the justices authorised to handle incoming post has such authority. Accordingly, once the information has been received at the office of the clerk to the justices, which today in most cases is likely to be at the magistrates' court house, the information in my view have been laid. No more is required of the prosecutor to launch the intended criminal proceedings. Similarly with a complaint - once the complaint is received at the office of the clerk to the justices no more is required of the complainant.
What happens thereafter is not within the province of the prosecutor or the complainant but of the court...... "
"I would answer the certified question by saying:
"An information is laid for the purpose of section 127 of the Magistrates' Courts Act 1980 when it is received at the office of the clerk to the justices for the relevant area."
I would add that is not necessary for the information to be personally received by justices of the peace or by the clerks to the justices. It is enough that it is received by any member of the staff of the clerk to the justices, expressly or impliedly authorised to receive it, for onward transmission to a to a justice of the peace, or to the clerk to the justices. The same applies to the making of a complaint."
"For the purposes of this Part, proceedings in relation to an offence are instituted –
(a) where a justice of the peace issues a summons under section 1 of the Magistrates' Court Act 1980, when the information for the offence is laid before him; "
"I see no reason why the justices of the peace or the clerks to the justices should not delegate to an appropriate subordinate authority to receive the information which the prosecutor desires to deliver."
"Mr Leighton Davies felt constrained – in my view, rightly so, – to accept that if the letter had been received on Friday but not opened until Monday, section 127 would have been satisfied. In 1988 and in the light of what Lord Roskill said in 1982, it appears to me quite unrealistic to suggest that there is any distinction between feeding information into a computer which is printed out on Monday and posting a letter which is opened on Monday. I regret that there is nothing that I can see in these applications despite all that Mr Leighton Davies has said on behalf of the applicants."
"The data giving rise to the printing of the summons in the magistrates' court shortly after the effluxion of the time limit may or may not have been in sufficient form at the initial data entry date or over the few days thereafter before the effluxion of that limit."
"It may be that the computer can be programmed so as to make readily retrievable any entries and their dates between the initial entry date and that of printing of the summons. Or it may be that it could be programmed so that there is no communication of entries on the police system to the magistrates' court terminals until validation, so that the date of validation would patently be the date of the laying of the information before the magistrates."
"If the information is in a letter posted on Friday and received on Monday the information, surely, is not laid until Monday. If however, the information which is fed into the computer on Friday is accessible by the justices or their clerk or a person authorised by them to receive it on Friday, then the information is laid on Friday though the authorised person does not in fact print it out until Monday. Such a case is rightly equated with the case of the letter being received on Friday and not opened until Monday."
Davis J. :