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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Director of Public Prosecutions v Moore [2010] EWHC 1822 (Admin) (02 March 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2010/1822.html Cite as: [2010] EWHC 1822 (Admin), [2010] RTR 36 |
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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 OWEN
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THE DIRECTOR OF PUBLIC PROSECUTIONS | Respondent | |
v | ||
CHRISTOPHER JOHN MOORE | Appellant |
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Mr S Heptonstall (Instructed By Crown Prosecution Service) Appeared On Behalf Of The Defendant
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Crown Copyright ©
"The prosecution called PC Williams, who together with another officer was manning a gate in the perimeter fence of the AWE at Aldermaston, in the early hours of 14th December 2007. He stated that at the time the area inside the fence was not open to the public.
"He was approached by the appellant who requested that he be allowed to collect his car from the recreational facility within the fence. He drove the appellant to where his car was parked, about 100 metres from the gate. He smelt alcohol on the appellant's breath as he was leaving the car. PC Williams returned to the gate in the perimeter fence.
"He saw the appellant approaching the open gate in his car; he signalled for him to stop about 10 metres from the gate and about 15 metres from the A340 which was the only place he would have been able to drive to.
"A positive breath test was provided, the appellant was arrested and after caution he replied: 'I need to drive my friend home now'. In the police station he provided a positive sample for analysis and was charged.
"Under cross-examination PC Williams stated that the appellant said his friend was waiting now but the officer did not see anybody waiting outside the gates."
"1. Was I correct in concluding that the offence of attempting to drive a motor vehicle on a road after consuming alcohol in excess of the prescribed limit could be committed when the vehicle was not on a road?
2. Was I right to reject the submission of no case?"
The legal framework.
"(a) drives or attempts to drive a motor vehicle on a road or other public place.
"(b) is in charge of a motor vehicle on a road or other public place, after consuming so much alcohol that the proportion of it in his breath, blood or urine exceeds the prescribed limit..."
"(1) Subsections (2) to (5) below shall have effect, subject to subsection (6) below and to any inconsistent provision in any other enactment, for the purpose of determining whether a person is guilty of an attempt under a special statutory provision.
"(2) For the purposes of this Act an attempt under a special statutory provision is an offence which -
"(a) is created by an enactment other than section 1 above, including an enactment passed after this Act; and.
"(b) is expressed as an offence of attempting to commit another offence.
"(3) A person is guilty of an attempt under a special statutory provision if, with intent to commit the relevant full offence, he does an act which is more than merely preparatory to the commission of that offence."
"The appellant suffered from angina pectoris which made strenuous physical exertion inadvisable. He drove his car uphill at the bend of a road when the car stopped because, unknown to him, the clutch had ceased to function properly. He allowed the car to run backwards and across the road until its rear wheels rested against the kerb on the far side. Sitting in the driver's seat he accelerated the engine in the hope that the clutch, which he then realised was defective, would allow the car to be driven a short distance. In fact the clutch had burnt out, so that the car could not be propelled by its engine and could not be moved by the appellant unaided."
"If somebody is sitting at the driving seat of the car either attempting to start it or attempting to put it in gear or accelerating the engine to try to make the car go forward, he is attempting to drive it, and the fact that there is some intervening factor which in the end will prevent him from fulfilling his attempt does not prevent it from being an attempt to drive."
"The defendant was seen by police officers in the driving seat of a stationary vehicle on the grass verge, which formed part of the road, outside the defendant's home. The defendant was breathalysed and was found to be over the prescribed limit. He admitted that, prior to the arrival of the police, he had been sitting in the driving seat of the vehicle 'wheels spinning', which involved the engine running and the use of the accelerator, clutch and steering wheel, with the vehicle in gear and the handbrake on. The Justices dismissed an information against the defendant for driving with excess alcohol ... Finding that the defendant had no intention at any stage of moving the vehicle from the verge and holding that wheels spinning did not constitute driving the vehicle as it did not move at all, either forwards or backwards."
"... first, a test of degree of control over the movement and direction of the vehicle, there was a sufficient degree of control being exercised by the defendant, by ensuring that the handbrake prevented the movement of the vehicle despite the fact that the wheels were turning, to say that the defendant was driving the vehicle; that, applying, secondly, a test of whether what was being done fell within the ordinary meaning of 'driving', a person wheel spinning could properly be said to be 'driving' a vehicle within the ordinary meaning of that word, in that a person wheel spinning was driving a vehicle in such a way as to seek to ensure that it did not go forward whilst its wheels were turning; and that, therefore, the justices erred in law in concluding that there had to be some movement of the vehicle before the defendant could be said to be driving it, and the case would be remitted to the justices with a direction to convict."
See also in this context Hoy v McFadyen [2000] SLT 1060, and in particular the passage cited by Harrison J in giving the judgment in Alderton:
"The question of movement of the car is not essential if the driver's activities have got beyond the stage of mere preparation for driving but have got to the stage when there is active intervention on his part to prevent movement and direction of the vehicle".
"Where a defendant, having consumed alcohol in excess of the prescribed limit, expresses an intention to drive a motor vehicle and in furtherance of that intention proceeds to open the door of that motor vehicle, is the act of the defendant in opening the vehicle capable of being characterised as more than merely preparatory to the act of driving the vehicle and, accordingly, can the defendant properly be convicted of an attempt to drive the vehicle contrary to section 5(1)(a) of the Road Traffic Act 1988."
"In this case, the substantive offence or the 'full offence', as it is referred to in the 1981 Act, is driving. In my view the appellant could not be said to have embarked on the 'crime proper', in the language of Lord Lane, until he did something which was part of the actual process of putting the car in motion. Turning on the engine would have been such a start, but starting to open the door of the car in my view was not capable of being so."
"At approximately 10.40 pm on 23 November 1972 the defendant entered Bristol Omnibus Station car park at Marlborough Street and walked over to a motor cycle parked in the car park. He placed his haversack on the platform of the motor cycle and then pushed the motor cycle for a distance of approximately six yards towards the entrance of the car park, which abutted on to the public road. He was stopped approximately seven yards from the entrance and before he had left the car park. On being asked where he was going he stated that he wanted to go for a ride."
"If, with intent to commit an offence to which this section applies, a person does an act which is more than merely preparatory to the commission of the offence, he is guilty of attempting to commit the offence".
The editorial note reads:
"Subsection (1) does an act which is more than merely preparatory. The Law Commission in para 2.48 of its Report rejected the terms already used in reported cases to describe what acts were sufficiently proximate to the full offence to create liability as being too restrictive or ambiguous. It quoted Lord Reid's dictum in Haughton [1975] AC, 476, 499 that: "no words unless so general as to be virtually useless can be devised which will fit the immense variety of possible cases. Any attempted definition would, I am sure, do more harm than good. It must be left to common sense to determine in each case whether the accused has gone beyond mere preparation".
It is plain from the statutory language that the fact that an act is preparatory does not necessarily mean that it cannot constitute an attempt. Section 1(1) excludes acts which are 'merely' preparatory. Nearly 30 years later the Law Commission has reviewed the case law in this area in its Consultation Paper on Conspiracy Attempts LCCP No. 183. It is critical of the case law for an absence of clear consistent guidelines as to the application of the 'more than merely preparatory' test of proximity. It is indeed difficult if not impossible to reconcile all the decisions and some of them seem frankly rather surprising. That said, the Law Commission has offered its own interpretation of the test as follows:
14.4 D's merely preparatory acts are excluded from the ambit of the offence under the 1981 Act. However, it should have been clear from the wording of the 1981 Act that D may nonetheless be liable for attempt even though his or her own final act was not the last act necessary for the commission of the substantive offence and was still in some sense 'a preparatory act'. 14.5 To elaborate further, preparatory conduct by D which is sufficiently close to the final act to be properly regarded as part of the execution of D's plan can be an attempt. Such conduct is not merely preparatory but more than merely preparatory. It is, for want of a better expression, "executory". It is the preparatory conduct associated with the actual execution of D's plan when, as a matter of common sense, D can properly be said to be 'on the job'. In other words, it covers the steps immediately preceding the final act necessary to effect D's plan and bring about the commission of the intended offence".
"To elaborate further, preparatory conduct by D which is sufficiently close to the final act to be properly regarded as part of the execution of D's plan can be an attempt…In other words, it covers the steps immediately preceding the final act necessary to effect D's plan and bring about the commission of the intended offence."