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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Gdansk Regional Court (Polish Judicial Authority) v Ulatowski [2010] EWHC 2673 (Admin) (26 October 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2010/2673.html Cite as: [2010] EWHC 2673 (Admin), [2011] Lloyd's Rep FC 18 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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Gdansk Regional Court (Polish Judicial Authority) |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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Bartlomiej Ulatowski |
Respondent |
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Mr J Blake (instructed by Lawrence & Co) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 5th October 2010
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Roderick Evans:
The Proceedings
Background
"(a) In the period from November 2000 to January 2001 in Gdynia, in a premeditated action taken together with Katarzyna Ulatowski and with the intention of misappropriating it, he drew PLN 63,542.89 in cash from the savings and settlement account number 10201853-401458-270-41 maintained by the Polish Public Savings Bank, Branch 1 in Gdynia to the detriment of that bank.
(b) In the period from July 2000 to January 2001 in Gdynia in a premeditated action taken with the intention of misappropriating it, he drew PLN 252,500.86 in cash from the account number 10201853-625346-270-1 maintained by the Polish Public Savings Bank, Joint Stock Company, Branch 1 in Gdynia i.e. property of substantial value, to the detriment of the Polish Public Savings Bank."
"Article 278.1 of the Penal Code in conjunction with Article 12 of the Penal Code and Article 294.1 of the Penal Code (penal Code Act of 6June 1997: Journal of Laws No. 88, it.553)."
Article 278.1
"Whoever, with the purposes of appropriating, wilfully takes someone else's moveable property shall be subject to the penalty of deprivation of liberty for a term of between 3 months and 5 years."
Article 294.1
"Whoever commits the offence specified in Article 278.1….with regard to property of considerable value shall be subject to the penalty of deprivation of liberty for a term of between 1 and 10 years."
(i) Whose accounts was the money taken from re both offences?
(ii) What actions did Mr Ulatowski make in order to withdraw the money?
(iii) Did he make any misleading statements?
(iv) Had he been informed that he was not to withdraw the money from the accounts?
(v) Is it alleged he was dishonest in making the withdrawals?
"1. The account number 10201851-401458-270-41 belonged to Bartlomiej and Katarzyna Ulatowski and it was their checking and current account opened by the said persons in 1995. There were two Visa Classic Debit Cards issued to accompany the account, one for Katarzyna Ulatowski and the other one for Bartlomiej Ulatowski and the owners committed themselves to making monthly contributions. The last monthly payment was made in December 2000. Additionally on 16th November 1999 the account owners signed with PKO Bank Polska SA an agreement for revolving credit facilities, the limit of which amounted to 20,000 zloty. That amount constituted the admissible overdraft that the named persons were allowed to draw on their account and on which interest was accrued in accordance with a credit agreement. The level of the overdraft allowed was exceeded in November 2000 and since January 2001, as a result of withdrawals of money being made by the named persons by means of their debit cards, the amount overdrawn amounted to 63,542.89 zloty.
2. The account number 10201853-625346-270-1 was opened in Oddzial PKO Bank Polska SA on 5th December 1999 for the current servicing of a trade and service company named Kodeks-Bis, the owner of which was Bartlomiej Ulatowski. To this account a European MasterCard Debit Card was issued with a limit of 50,000 zloty on a monthly basis. The said person was obliged to settle the debit balance created, but from July 2000 until February 2001 he feigned that obligation by paying into the account the total amount of 156,448 zloty, with the payments being made, however, only in the period from July and November 2000. On the other hand, over the same period i.e. from July 2000 to February 2001, he withdrew from the account 409,126.26 zloty.
In the opinion of the court, he was aware of acting to the detriment of the bank and against the provisions of the agreement relating to that account. He maintained the banks view on him as a good debtor by making payments to the account, yet despite the deepening debit on the account, he did not close the account and by doing so he committed a larceny of money. In both cases it is the bank that closed the account."
The hearing before the District Judge
"The prosecution do not deny this area of substantive domestic law has been fraught with difficulties especially at the material time of the instant conduct. To my mind Blackstone's is wise in counselling against theft charges. The enactment of the Fraud Act 2006 "solved", if that is the correct expression, many of the difficulties that bank credits and chose in action were found to have caused the substantive criminal law of theft. As I read the conduct specified in the instant EAW the complaint is not of a fraud ab initio but of manipulating the account to try and maintain credit facilities by drawing more than agreed and paying in somewhat less. I feel driven to conclude on the instant information the particularised conduct is not such as, at the material time, would/could have been an offence charged under the law in this jurisdiction."
The Appeal
(a) before extradition can be ordered the court must be satisfied to the criminal standard that the conduct complained of or relied upon in the EAW and the further information would have constituted an offence at the time under the law of England and Wales;
(b) the requesting state does not have to prove the guilt of the respondent of the domestic offence but only that the conduct, if proved, would constitute an offence;
(c) the court does not have to be satisfied that the Polish offence has a precise equivalent in this jurisdiction.
"1. Obtaining services by deception
(i) A person who by any deception dishonestly obtains services from another shall be guilty of an offence.
(ii) It is an obtaining of services where the other is induced to confer a benefit by doing some act or causing or permitting some act to be done on the understanding that the benefit has been or will be paid for.
(iii) Without prejudice to the generality of sub-section (2) above, it is an obtaining of services where the other is induced to make a loan, or to cause or permit a loan to be made on the understanding that any payment (whether by way of interest or otherwise) will be or has been made in respect of the loan."
" … In our judgment, there should no longer be any doubt but that dishonestly inducing a bank or other organisation to issue a credit card constitutes obtaining services. We also consider that the dishonest operation of a bank or building society account over a period and a dishonest use of a credit card over a period constitutes obtaining services within the section. We reach this conclusion … seeing no proper distinction between the opening of a bank account and its subsequent operation. What the bank provides in each instance is the benefit of their participation in the banking system which can, in our judgment, properly be described as a service or services. We do not need to decide for the purposes of the present appeal whether dishonestly inducing a bank to negotiate a single cheque or the dishonest use of a credit card on a single occasion would constitute obtaining services within the Section. Mr Counsens was inclined to concede that it would and we can see logically it might, given our earlier decisions."
"Deception means any deception (whether deliberate or reckless) by words or conduct as to fact or as to law, including a deception as to the present intentions of the person using the deception or any other person."
"We make two final points. First, this case again demonstrates the unnecessary technicality of English law of theft and fraud particularly in relation to funds in bank accounts and bank transfers. Offences under the Theft Act 1968 are perhaps the most common offences, and the law on them should be the most simple rather among the most technical. Secondly, it is scarcely surprising that information provided by foreign courts and prosecution authorities, which established an offence or offences under their own law, does not address specifically the technical requirements of English law … The conduct alleged in the German Arrest Warrant is very obviously criminal conduct of a most serious nature, and it would have been highly regrettable if extradition were not available … These points highlight the need for the court to consider the information provided for the purposes of extradition proceedings realistically rather than over critically."
"Davies v Flackett [1973] RTR 8 is not binding authority for the proposition that deception of a machine or computer is not deception for the purposes of the Theft Act. Ackner J so stated in terms in his judgment in that case. We nonetheless accept that "The prevailing opinion is that it is not possible in law to deceive a machine": see Smith, The Law of Theft, 8th ed (1997) p97 para 4-12 and Griew, The Theft Acts 1968 and 1978, 7th ed (1995), p148, paras 8-12 and 8-13".
"Deceit can be practised only on a human mind. Where D obtains property or a pecuniary advantage as the result of some dishonest practice on a machine, without the intervention of a human mind, he cannot be guilty of an obtaining offence."
"That where a bank transferred a sum into another account the new bank balance in the receiving account did not represent property belonging to another. Although the amounts may have been the same (in the sense that that one account's balance diminishes by £100 while the other increases by £100) what in fact occurred in such a situation was that the chose in action held by the bank in their balance was diminished or extinguished pro tanto. At the same time a new, fresh chose in action was created in the receiver's account of the equivalent value. In short it was not the same property.
When money was withdrawn from the Respondent's account that was in excess of his overdraft limit the money itself is still withdrawn from the Respondent's account, hence why the bank balance diminishes. It follows, therefore, that the instant case is governed by the analysis in Preddy and the application of the ratio in that case leads to the conclusion that the chose in action belonging to the bank has not been appropriated; it has been extinguished and a new chose in action has been created, vested in the bank but held against the Respondent".
The Order