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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> East Riding of Yorkshire Council v Dearlove [2012] EWHC 278 (Admin) (27 January 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2012/278.html Cite as: [2012] EWHC 278 (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 CRANSTON
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EAST RIDING OF YORKSHIRE COUNCIL | Claimant | |
v | ||
DEARLOVE | Defendant |
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WordWave International Limited
A Merrill Communications Company
165 Fleet Street London EC4A 2DY
Tel No: 020 7404 1400 Fax No: 020 7404 1424
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Mr C Hassall (instructed by Amber Solicitors) appeared on behalf of the Defendant
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
"a. Mr Dearlove placed an advert for 'Executive Business Travel' in the 'Brough Guide' (a monthly free paper) in March 2009. This was reported and a copy of the advert faxed to the East Riding of Yorkshire Council on 19 March 2009. The advert stated 'Chauffeur driven BMW X6, VIP, Executive, Corporate, Business travel, Airport Connections, Male/Female Chauffeurs'. At the bottom of the advert an e-mail address was given as [email protected].
b. The East Riding of Yorkshire Council's records showed that Mr Dearlove was not licensed to offer the services in the advert.
c. Mr Paul Story, Licensing Officer liaised with Mr Dearlove via e-mail on 24th March 2009. Initially Mr Dearlove indicated that he would be pursuing licence applications. However, subsequently in a telephone call to Mr Story, on 27 March 2009 Mr Dearlove said that he would be using his vehicle for 'weddings and funerals' only, an activity which he had been advised did not require a licence. Furthermore, Mr Dearlove stated that he had had no work whatsoever.
d. On 17th June 2009 Louise Wilson, Senior Licensing Officer emailed Mr Dearlove reminding him of his licensing obligations if he was still minded to use his vehicle other than for weddings and funerals. In her e-mail she warned regarding the possibility of a test purchase and the fact that further action would be taken if Mr Dearlove did not respond. Mr Dearlove did respond the following day advising that he was not trading as a taxi and in fact had had no business at all.
e. On 4th August 2009 at the request of Louise Wilson, Debbie Smith made a telephone call to the number provided in the aforementioned advert. A taxi journey between Ferriby and Beverley was arranged for a fare of £100. Miss Smith had been instructed to ask if the fare included alcohol. This booking was not placed with Mr Dearlove.
f. On 12th August 2009 the 'test purchase' took place. Mr Dearlove was the driver of the vehicle and escorted Miss Debra Smith and Mr Daniel Hill as requested. Alcohol was offered at the start of the journey.
g. At the end of the journey Mr Dearlove accepted the £100 payment from Miss Debra Smith and gave a pre written receipt for the amount of £100 and a business card which reflected the advert as detailed in paragraph 2(a).
h. The Appellant interviewed Mr Dearlove under caution on 8th September 2009. During the interview Mr Dearlove stated that he was the owner, driver, operator of the vehicle on the day of the test purchase and the sole owner of Executive Business Travel. He accepted that he knew he needed to be licensed but accepted the job because it was a carrot being dangled.
i. The 'test purchase' took place in the absence of any suggestion, information or complaint that Mr Dearlove had breached the licensing laws. Throughout the whole of the period 19 March 2009 to 12 August 2009 there is no evidence before the court that would give rise to any suspicion whatsoever that Mr Dearlove had acted illegally by contravening the licensing legislation. The only evidence we have is that Mr Dearlove placed a single advert in March 2009 and no more and following that had no work whatsoever."
"...It is simply not acceptable that the state through its agents should lure its citizens into committing acts forbidden by the law and then seek to prosecute them for doing so. That would be entrapment...
...The difficulty lies in identifying conduct which is caught by such imprecise words as lure or incite or entice or instigate..."
Having dismissed as unsatisfactory a putative boundary based on mere passive observation by the police, he continued as follows in paragraphs 3 and 4:
"3. Moreover, and importantly, in some instances a degree of active involvement by the police in the commission of a crime is generally regarded as acceptable. Test purchases fall easily into this category. In Director of Public Prosecutions v Marshall [1988] 3 All ER 683 a trader was approached in his shop in the same way as any ordinary customer might have done. In breach of his licence he sold individual cans of lager to plain-clothes police officers. In Nottingham City Council v Amin [2000] 1 WLR 1071 a taxi was being driven in an area not covered by its licence. The driver accepted plain-clothes police officers as fare paying passengers. Police conduct of this nature does not attract reprobation even though, in the latter case, the roof light on the taxi was not illuminated. The police behaved in the same way as any member of the public wanting a taxi in the normal course might have done. Indeed, conduct of this nature by officials is sometimes expressly authorised by Act of Parliament. The statute creating an offence may authorise officials to make test purchases, as in section 27 of the Trade Descriptions Act 1968.
4. Thus, there are occasions when it is necessary for the police to resort to investigatory techniques in which the police themselves are the reporters and the witnesses of the commission of a crime. Sometimes the particular technique adopted is acceptable. Sometimes it is not. For even when the use of these investigatory techniques is justified, there are limits to what is acceptable. Take a case where an undercover policeman repeatedly badgers a vulnerable drug addict for a supply of drugs in return for excessive and ever increasing amounts of money. Eventually the addict yields to the importunity and pressure, and supplies drugs. He is then prosecuted for doing so. Plainly, this result would be objectionable. The crime committed by the addict could readily be characterised as artificial or state-created crime. In the absence of the police operation, the addict might well never have supplied drugs to anyone."
"23. ...On this a useful guide is to consider whether the police did no more than present the defendant with an unexceptional opportunity to commit a crime. I emphasise the word unexceptional. The yardstick for the purpose of this test is, in general, whether the police conduct preceding the commission of the offence was no more than might have been expected from others in the circumstances. Police conduct of this nature is not to be regarded as inciting or instigating crime, or luring a person into committing a crime. The police did no more than others could be expected to do. The police did not create crime artificially...
28. ...The greater the inducement held out by the police, and the more forceful or persistent the police overtures, the more readily may a court conclude that the police overstepped the boundary: their conduct might well have brought about commission of a crime by a person who would normally avoid crime of that kind. In assessing the weight to be attached to the police inducement, regard is to be had to the defendant's circumstances, including his vulnerability. This is not because the standards of acceptable behaviour are variable. Rather, this is a recognition that what may be a significant inducement to one person may not be so to another. For the police to behave as would an ordinary customer of a trade, whether lawful or unlawful, being carried on by the defendant will not normally be regarded as objectionable."
"On the one hand it has been recognised as deeply offensive to ordinary notions of fairness if a defendant were to be convicted and punished for committing a crime which he only committed because he had been incited, instigated, persuaded, pressurised or wheedled into committing it by a law enforcement officer. On the other hand it has been recognised that law enforcement agencies have a general duty to the public to enforce the law and it has been regarded as unobjectionable if a law enforcement officer gives a defendant an opportunity to break the law, of which the defendant freely takes advantage, in circumstances where it appears that the defendant would have behaved in the same way if the opportunity had been offered by anyone else."
As Lord Hoffman observed at paragraph 54, what Lord Bingham meant by that last observation was that the policemen had behaved like ordinary members of the public in flagging the taxi down. They did not wave £50 notes or pretend to be in distress.
"We were of the opinion that the actions of the Local Authority were excessive in the absence of any criminal activity on Mr Dearlove's part and as such we found it would be unfair to allow the proceedings to continue and ordered a stay of the proceedings.
In coming to this decision we were guided by the relevant direction given in the case of R v Loosely and considered;
- the reason for the test purchase and any reasonable grounds for suspicion.
- the nature and extent of Local Authority's participation in the crime with regard to the defendant's circumstances including his vulnerability.
There was no evidence whatsoever that Mr Dearlove was engaged in any criminal activity. Indeed there was no evidence of any suspicion that he had done so.
He placed a single advert in March and then entered into correspondence with the Local Authority regarding his licensing obligations. This resulted in him advising the Council that he was not pursuing a taxi licence, would restrict any work to weddings and in fact had not had any business whatsoever.
It cannot then be said that the Local Authority established reasonable grounds to suspect that offences were being committed prior to the deployment of the test purchase.
As a result of the correspondence that had taken place between Mr Dearlove and the prosecution, the East Riding of Yorkshire Council had specific knowledge of Mr Dearlove and his business circumstances.
In this regard the Council cannot be said to have done no more than an ordinary member of the public would do. It is not a case of a random test purchase, but is more akin to 'virtue testing' in circumstances where the Local Authority were aware that Mr Dearlove had had no work and may well be financially vulnerable to such testing.
For the same reason the case can be distinguished from that of Nottingham City Council v Amin [2000], 1 Criminal Appeal Reports 426. The random flagging of what appears to be a taxi on the street cannot be said to be the same some as a pre-planned test purchase some 5 months after a single advert is placed, particularly where there is no suspicion of any criminal activity at all and the specific knowledge came about through the correspondence that had taken place."
"i) In the light of Loosely ... in which the House of Lords summarised the relevant principles did the magistrates err in law in finding the investigating officers' conduct went beyond simply providing Mr Dearlove with an opportunity to commit a crime.
ii) Did the Magistrates err in law in determining that the information available to the appellant prior to the test purchase did not amount to reasonable grounds that criminal activity was taking place.
iii) Did the Magistrates err in law in distinguishing the facts of this case from the case of Nottingham City Council v Amin...in that a test purchase by telephone booking or waving down a vehicle was no different."