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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Siddall, R (on the application of) v Secretary of State for Justice [2009] EWHC 482 (Admin) (16 March 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2009/482.html Cite as: [2009] EWHC 482 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
THE HON MR JUSTICE SWEENEY
____________________
THE QUEEN (ON THE APPLICATION OF JOHN SIDDALL) |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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SECRETARY OF STATE FOR JUSTICE |
Defendant |
____________________
Hugo Keith (instructed by Treasury Solicitor) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 24th February 2009
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Leveson:
"While he [the Justice Secretary] accepts that Mr Siddall's convictions were reversed on the basis of a new or newly discovered fact, he is not of the opinion that they were reversed 'on the ground that a new or newly discovered fact showed beyond reasonable doubt that there had been a miscarriage of justice'. In particular, he does not think that it is beyond reasonable doubt that your client has suffered a miscarriage of justice, in the sense that he should not have been convicted (see the speech of Lord Bingham in R (Mullen) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2005] 1 AC 1, as applied in R. (Clibery) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2007] EWHC 1855 (Admin), R. (Harris) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2007] EWHC 3218 (Admin) and Re Boyle [2007] NIQB 88)."
The Factual Background
"The Commission's review has uncovered no evidence of improper behaviour on the part of West Yorkshire Police in the manner in which they investigated the allegations made against Mr Siddall. In the absence of any such evidence, or leads for further investigation, the Commission has no basis on which to take this matter further."
"(A) Allegations of rape made by RW but not disclosed by RW in the course of her disclosures to officers responsible for Operation Clyde (the relevant police investigation into incidents at Rivendell and Westfields) and Operation Care (another investigation in relation to a care home on Merseyside to which RW was subsequently sent). These allegations derived from information contained in contemporaneous records recovered by the CCRC (1) from Nugent Care Society files relating to RW's time at Clarence House in Merseyside which themselves contained information about RW's time at Westfields and (2) from Social Services files compiled in and around 1998 in connection with care proceedings relating to RW's children;
(B) Other information contained in these files;
(C) Information contained in applications to the Criminal Injuries Compensation Authority ("CICA") in relation both to Siddall and another person, this time at Clarence House, Wilfred Jollie who was tried in Liverpool in May 2001 but against whom the Crown decided to proceed no further as a result of RW's cross-examination;
(D) Allegations made, subsequent to trial, by JF of penetrative sex by Siddall, no such allegations having been made by JF during the trial of the counts of indecent assault of which Siddall was in any event acquitted."
"[W]e have decided that it is impossible for us to be certain that, if the full picture had been before the jury with a proper and careful direction, they would have convicted the appellant. On the basis of R v Pendleton [2002] 1 WLR 72 we have no option but to quash the convictions on counts 4 and 5 which relate to RW.
"In the light of the jury's inability to reach a verdict in relation to JF and the quashing of the verdict in relation to RW, we cannot think that the convictions relating to PW alone are safe and they will have to be quashed."
"Many of the same considerations apply to Brooke's appeal. RW did not disclose that she had been abused by Brooke at Westfields until 1999. Her reason for withholding that disclosure at the time when she was disclosing abuse by Siddall was that Brooke's abuse was much worse and, indeed, the worst she had experienced. Brooke's defence team did not know that RW had in July 1998 used almost the same words to describe the abuse she had suffered at the hands of [a former partner]."
The Statutory Regime
26. Gradually a fundamental human right to compensation for miscarriages of justice evolved. The Universal Declaration of Human Rights (1948) made no provision for such a fundamental right. The European Convention on Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms (1950) ["ECHR"] in its original form also did not contain such a provision. The American Convention on Human Rights, 1969, contained in article 10 a weak provision which left it to states to make suitable provision for compensation in accordance with law. The breakthrough came with the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights ["ICCPR"].
27. On 19 December 1966 the ICCPR was adopted by the General Assembly of the United Nations and opened for signature at New York. On 20 May 1976 the United Kingdom ratified the ICCPR. On 20 August 1976—three weeks after Mr Jenkins' statement—the required number of ratifications was attained and the ICCPR entered into force. Article 14 contained two relevant provisions, namely:
"2. Everyone charged with a criminal offence shall have the right to be presumed innocent until proved guilty according to law.
. . .
6. When a person has by a final decision been convicted of a criminal offence and when subsequently his conviction has been reversed or he has been pardoned on the ground that a new or newly discovered fact shows conclusively that there has been a miscarriage of justice, the person who has suffered punishment as a result of such conviction shall be compensated according to law, unless it is proved that the non-disclosure of the unknown fact in time is wholly or partly attributable to him." (My emphasis)
From 1976 to 1985 the United Kingdom purported to fulfil its international obligations under article 14(6) under the extant ex gratia scheme."
"(1) Subject to subsection (2) below, when a person has been convicted of a criminal offence and when subsequently his conviction has been reversed or he has been pardoned on the ground that a new or newly discovered fact shows beyond reasonable doubt that there has been a miscarriage of justice, the Secretary of State shall pay compensation for the miscarriage of justice to the person who has suffered punishment as a result of such conviction or, if he is dead, to his personal representatives, unless the non-disclosure of the unknown fact was wholly or partly attributable to the person convicted.
(2) No payment of compensation under this section shall be made unless an application for such compensation has been made to the Secretary of State.
(3) The question whether there is a right to compensation under this section shall be determined by the Secretary of State.
(4) ….
(5) In this section 'reversed' shall be construed as referring to a conviction having been quashed-
(a) on an appeal out of time; or
(b) on a reference-
(i) under the Criminal Appeal Act 1995; or ..."
"The expression 'wrongful convictions' is not a legal term of art and has no settled meaning. Plainly the expression includes the conviction of those who are innocent of a crime of which they have been convicted. But in ordinary parlance the expression would, I think, be extended to those who, whether guilty or not, should clearly not have been convicted at their trials. It is impossible and unnecessary to identify the manifold reasons why a defendant may be convicted when he should not have been. It may be because the evidence against him was fabricated or perjured. It may be because flawed expert evidence was relied on to secure conviction. It may be because evidence helpful to the defence was concealed or withheld. It may be because the jury was the subject of malicious interference. It may be because of judicial unfairness or misdirection. In cases of this kind, it may, or more often may not, be possible to say that a defendant is innocent, but it is possible to say that he has been wrongly convicted. The common factor in such cases is that something has gone seriously wrong in the investigation of the offence or the conduct of the trial, resulting in the conviction of someone who should not have been convicted."
"The expression 'miscarriage of justice' in section 133 is drawn directly from the English-language text of article 14(6). In the article the expression describes a concept which is autonomous, in the sense that its content should be the same in all states party to the ICCPR, irrespective of the language in which the text appears. None the less, 'miscarriage of justice' is an expression which, although very familiar, is not a legal term of art and has no settled meaning. Like 'wrongful conviction' it can be used to describe the conviction of the demonstrably innocent…But, again like 'wrongful conviction' it can be and has been used to describe cases in which defendants, guilty or not, certainly should not have been convicted……"
"The intention is that states would be obliged to compensate persons only in clear cases of miscarriage of justice, in the sense that there would be an acknowledgement that the person concerned was clearly innocent. The article is not intended to give a right of compensation where all the preconditions are not satisfied, for example, where an appellate court had quashed a conviction because it had discovered some fact which introduced a reasonable doubt as to the guilt of the accused and which had been overlooked by the trial judge."
"... the autonomous meaning of the words 'miscarriage of justice' extends only to 'clear cases of miscarriage of justice in the sense that there would be acknowledgement that the person convicted was clearly innocent' as it is put in the explanatory report."
Developments subsequent to Mullen
"Lord Bingham ...considered two different situations, each of which he considered fell within the description of 'miscarriage of justice' in section 133 of the 1988 Act. The first is where new facts demonstrate that the claimant was innocent of the offence of which he was convicted. In such circumstances, it is possible to say that if the facts in question had been before the jury, he would not have been convicted. The second is where there were acts or omissions in the course of the trial which should not have occurred and which so infringed his right to a fair trial that it is possible to say that he was 'wrongly convicted'. In such circumstances it is appropriate to say that the claimant should not have been convicted. This is the situation that Lord Bingham had in mind when he spoke of someone who should not have been convicted."
"26. It is the claimant's misfortune that he is unable to bring himself within either of the categories of miscarriage of justice to which Lord Bingham [in Mullen] referred. Miss Williams has accepted that it is not possible to demonstrate beyond reasonable doubt that he was innocent of the offence of which he was convicted. The most that can be said is that if the jury had had advance notice of the lies that the complainant told after her husband's trial they might not have convicted him. It is a matter of speculation whether such knowledge would have resulted in a different verdict……. [Lord Phillips' emphasis].
27. Miss Williams argued that there had been a 'serious failure of the trial process' such as to bring this case within Lord Bingham's second category of miscarriage of justice. This is manifestly not the case. There was nothing that went wrong in the investigation of the offence or the conduct of the trial, let alone seriously wrong. All that occurred is that the complainant's conduct after the trial raised doubts about her credibility. Such a situation does not fall within Lord Bingham's second category"
"[I]t is plain that the critical feature of the extended interpretation of 'miscarriage of justice' which [Lord Bingham] was prepared to contemplate is that "something has gone seriously wrong in…..the conduct of the trial": see the concluding words of paragraph 4. That is made the plainer by his references to a defendant who "should clearly not have been convicted" (paragraph 4) and "certainly should not have been convicted" (paragraph 9(1)) [my emphasis]."
"In the present case there was nothing which went wrong with the conduct of the trial, whether seriously or otherwise. In speaking of 'flawed expert evidence' it is clear that Lord Bingham cannot have been contemplating evidence which was conscientiously given and based upon sound expertise at the time of trial. The most that could be said against the expert evidence given at this trial is that it might need adjustment in the light of new medical research and/or thinking. In any event, the medical evidence given at time of trial has not been demonstrated to be flawed, even in this limited sense. As the passages from the judgment of the CACD which I have cited show, this court's decision went no further than to say that the differences of medical opinion needed to be resolved by a jury."
"In the present case, the applicant contends that there has been a failure in the trial process. On Lord Bingham's approach a "miscarriage of justice" arises not only where it has been demonstrated that the applicant is innocent, which is not the present case, but also where the applicant should not have been convicted. However the new or newly discovered facts referred to above do not establish that the applicant "should not" have been convicted. As Carswell LCJ stated in quashing the applicant's conviction ... the new or newly discovered facts rendered the conviction unsafe because the Court of Appeal could not determine what view the trial Judge would have taken of the evidence had he known that it appeared that there were two versions of the interview notes for interview five. The trial Judge might have taken the view that it had fatally undermined the credibility of the interviewers and removed the evidence from the area of proof beyond reasonable doubt to some lesser area, or he might have said that he nevertheless accepted that the evidence was reliable in substance and that the interviews reflected what was said. All that can be said is that the trial Judge may or may not have convicted the applicant had he known what is now known. Accordingly as in Magee's Application and in Clibery, the applicant does not satisfy Lord Bingham's wider interpretation of "miscarriage of justice" as an applicant in respect of whom it has been established that he "should not" have been convicted."
Does Mr Siddall's claim qualify?
The Second Limb of Lord Bingham's analysis
The true meaning of s. 133
"However, on reflection, ... I have become convinced that ordinary parlance cannot yield the correct construction of section 133. The reasons which lead me to that conclusion are largely those very clearly set out in the opinion of Lord Steyn in Mullen and there is no occasion for me to attempt to re-state them. I mention as briefly as I can some additional factors which have thus persuaded me:
i) I do not myself think that ordinary parlance can be a reliable guide to the meaning of an expression found in an international treaty, at least when it is an expression which can mean a great variety of things to different people in different circumstances. For some, it would embrace every defendant whose conviction is quashed, on whatever grounds, who may be said to have suffered a miscarriage of justice in the sense of an unsafe conviction, but it is clear that section 133 cannot mean this. Lord Bingham's reference in paragraph 4 of his speech in Mullen (cited above at paragraph 24) to judicial misdirection provides an example of exactly this difficulty. One would not ordinarily, as it seems to me, categorise as a miscarriage of justice every case in which a conviction is quashed by the Court of Appeal on grounds of some misdirection by the trial Judge. Nor, as it seems to me, would one speak of every such case as involving something going seriously wrong with the conduct of the trial. Unless, therefore, some method is to be found of distinguishing those misdirections which amount to something going seriously wrong with the trial from those which merely justify a conclusion that the conviction is unsafe, resort to ordinary parlance cannot provide the necessary test. Moreover, a misdirection case would not ordinarily be within section 133 in any event, because the appeal would not depend on any new or newly discovered fact.
ii) It follows that unless the correct construction is Lord Steyn's I cannot see where the meaning of 'miscarriage of justice' can logically, or even sensibly, stop short of every case of appeal allowed on grounds of new or newly discovered fact.
iii) Whilst I agree of course that the CACD does not ordinarily address the question of guilt or innocence, but only the safety of the conviction, those cases where the innocence of the convicted defendant is genuinely demonstrated beyond reasonable doubt by new or newly discovered fact will be identifiable in that court and the judgment will, in virtually every case, make plain that this is so. Accordingly I respectfully part company from with the view expressed by Schiemann LJ, when Mullen was in the Court of Appeal, that the approach of the CACD makes the operation of section 133 difficult or unworkable unless a broader definition of miscarriage of justice is adopted. On the contrary, as it seems to me, the operation of the section poses very real difficulties if the broader definition is adopted, for then it becomes necessary to ask in every case of conviction quashed on grounds of fresh evidence whether it satisfies the section 133 criterion of miscarriage proved beyond reasonable doubt or is merely a case of doubt raised to the extent that the conviction is unsafe. If, however, miscarriage of justice means the establishment of innocence beyond reasonable doubt, there will usually be no difficulty in those cases being apparent from the judgments of the CACD.
iv) Cases in which police or similar malpractice is established beyond reasonable doubt will ordinarily give rise to irresistible claims for compensation under the ordinary law of tort, even if innocence is not conclusively demonstrated.
"...the circumstances in which he was deported from Zimbabwe were deliberately concealed from him before and at his trial. If they had been disclosed the trial would have been stopped."
Unequal Treatment
"… it is irrational and unlawful for the [Justice Secretary] not to accept him onto the miscarriage of justice scheme when he has already allowed Mr Brooke, whose conviction was quashed by the Court of Appeal at the same time as the Claimant's conviction was quashed (and on the basis of the same newly discovered facts), onto the scheme, and there is no discernible difference between the two cases."
"[28] The principle of equal treatment is well recognised in administrative law. Having quoted Sir John Donaldson MR in R (Cheung) v. Hertfordshire County Council [1986] that "It is a cardinal principle of good public administration that all persons who are in a similar position should be treated similarly" Girvan J in Re Colgan's application (1996) NI 24 stated at page 44 –
"A decision which results in an unjustifiable inequality of treatment is open to challenge on the ground of unreasonableness since if there is no logical difference between two situations justifying a differential treatment, logic and fairness require equality of treatment."
[29] De Smith, Woolf and Jowell in Judicial Review of Administrative Action 5th Edition at paragraph 13-036 describe two aspects of formal equality. The first aspect is a consistent application and enforcement of the law in the interests of legal certainty and predictability. The other aspect is that of ensuring that all persons similarly situated will be treated equally by those who apply the law and this aspect is stated to be the central aim of formal equality."
"If similar cases are treated differently then that is unreasonable unless it can be justified by the decision maker. The three cases … are similar to the present applicant. The different treatment requires justification. In the interpretation of legislation a decision maker with the benefit of legal advice is entitled to alter his approach to the statutory provision, subject to the legality and reasonableness of the new approach (in the wider sense of making a rational decision on the basis of relevant considerations) and the requirements of procedural fairness. In the present case, the approach to the interpretation of s. 133 of the 1988 Act was altered in the light of legal advice that took account of developing jurisprudence. A review of the previous approach was a step which the Secretary of State was entitled indeed obliged to undertake. A change of approach to the statutory provision was something the Secretary of State was entitled to undertake. The change that was undertaken has not resulted in an approach which could be treated as unlawful or unreasonable or procedurally unfair."
"…it is only one facet, and the imperative of consistency may have to yield to the larger imperative of justice in the particular case achieving a result which is proper and fair to the interests of both payer and recipient." (per Lord Carswell at para 88)
Other Grounds
Conclusion
Mr Justice Sweeney: I agree.