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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> McMillan v Crown Prosecution Service [2008] EWHC 1457 (Admin) (12 May 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2008/1457.html Cite as: [2008] EWHC 1457 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
DIVISIONAL COURT
Strand London WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE PENRY-DAVEY
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MCMILLAN | Claimant | |
v | ||
CROWN PROSECUTION SERVICE | Defendant |
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Mr R Spragg (instructed by CPS Northumbria) appeared on behalf of the Defendant
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"(a) On 4th July 2007, in the early hours of the morning, the appellant was in Cheltenham Road in a drunken state waving her arms around. PC 2541 Spackman and PC 526 Hempsall warned her of her behaviour and told her to go home which she did.
(b) The officers returned to the street and found the appellant outside 109 Cheltenham Road, shouting at the front door of the house.
(c) She was advised from the car to go home again which she did not immediately do.
(d) PC Spackman went into the garden to the front door to ask her to leave. The officer noted the signs of intoxication. She was shouting and swearing, although not abusive towards the officer. He took hold of her arm and took her from the garden.
(e) After being taken from the garden, the shouting and swearing continued on the path, therefore a public place, and as a result PC Spackman arrested her for drunk and disorderly."
"He stated he wanted to sort the problem out without an arrest . . . he took firm hold of her arm, not against her will, he escorted her as there were steps in the garden which were steep, and he wanted to steady her for her own safety. She came away from the door with no force or struggle . . . she continued shouting and swearing on the path and was warned several times of her behaviour. He then arrested her for drunk and disorderly."
The evidence of the appellant included a passage to the effect that:
"She could not get away from him, but did not struggle and said nothing at the time. He took her down the steps and put her in the car. There was nothing said between them from the front door to the car."
The Magistrates finally state in their document that:
"Both officers gave evidence that Mrs McMillan was drunk as she was unsteady on her feet and she had slurred speech. At 4.05 am, which was the second time they had seen the appellant, she was shouting, swearing and arguing on the public footpath. She was warned of her behaviour and arrested at the car . . . .
We accept the police officers' version of events and therefore find the matter proved beyond reasonable doubt."
The use of the word "arguing" in relation to events on the public footpath was the first use of that word in the case stated. The description deployed to describe the events in the garden and up until that point appears to have been limited to shouting and swearing.
"[A] broader exception has been created to allow for the exigencies of everyday life. Generally speaking consent is a defence to battery; and most of the physical contacts of ordinary life are not actionable because they are impliedly consented to by all who move in society and so expose themselves to the risk of bodily contact . . . Although such cases are regarded as examples of implied consent, it is more common nowadays to treat them as falling within a general exception embracing all physical contact which is generally acceptable in the ordinary conduct of daily life . . . [We] think that nowadays it is more realistic, and indeed more accurate, to state the broad underlying principle, subject to the broad exception."
He later added at page 1178:
"In each case, the test must be whether the physical contact so persisted in has in the circumstances gone beyond generally acceptable standards of conduct; and the answer to that question will depend upon the facts of the particular case."
It is abundantly clear from the terms of the case stated that those passages were cited to the Justices and they well understood that to be the requisite approach.
"(a) Whether we were correct to find that there was neither an assault nor an arrest when PC Spackman took hold of the appellant outside 109 Cheltenham Road?
(b) If the answer to (a) is no, how should that have affected our verdict?
(c) Having found that the appellant was on private property with when first approached by the police and that she was physically removed by the police from the private area, were we entitled to make a finding that she was committing the offence of being drunk and disorderly in a public place when she had been physically taken to the public area and there was no evidence that she was free to leave?
(d) Were we entitled in finding a case to answer after a submission made by the defence of no case to answer after the close of the prosecution case?
(e) Were we correct to find there were no grounds to exercise our discretion under section 78 of the Police and Criminal Evidence Act 1984 to exclude the evidence of the defendant's behaviour after she had been removed from the private area?"